The Devil Plays With Five-Year Plans
Janet Webber
Executive Director, SFU Public Square
We all have moments in our lives that we never forget. Instances that we recall as pivotal turning points, powerful experiences both scary and exciting, and things people have said to us that we seem to come back to again and again. As SFU Public Square is about to celebrate another birthday, I found myself reflecting back on my journey and how I came to be involved with this exciting project.
I have a vivid memory from when I was 17, on my way to finishing high school. My father, frustrated by my apparent lack of direction, and only now with the benefit of time do I understand, quite fearful for my future, provided me with a stern warning: 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 make decisions for your life鈥攜ou鈥檒l be stuck with only what鈥檚 left over."
I鈥檓 sure what he was trying to say had much more wisdom and nuance, but what I interpreted it to mean stayed with me as I moved through my life. What I thought he was saying was that if I didn鈥檛 have a solid plan, a firm and clear direction for my future which I was constantly working towards achieving, I was going to end up living a second-rate life, one over which I didn鈥檛 have any power, and that wouldn鈥檛 result in me seeing any real success.
As a result, I have always been jealous of those that seem to know exactly what they wanted to do. Those that create 鈥渇ive-year plans.鈥 It鈥檚 not that I didn鈥檛 try, not that I didn鈥檛 want a life calling颅鈥攊t鈥檚 just that nothing ever emerged, it wasn鈥檛 how things seemed to work for me. When a cool opportunity came my way, I pursued it, when a promising door appeared before me, I walked through it. You can definitely say that the last thing my career has been is clearly defined.
Another powerful remembrance, also from years ago, was from my last day of classes in the Semester in Dialogue program at SFU. My professor casually asked me 鈥淲hat are you doing next?鈥, to which I quickly responded with 鈥淐oming to work for you!鈥 He was surprised and asked me if I indeed did actually need a job鈥攚hich I did. He quickly whipped out a pen, wrote an e-mail down on a piece of paper, and the very next day, I had an interview for what turned into a very exciting seven-year position with a national leadership program. That job provided amazing experiences and possibilities for me, and I developed relationships both personal and professional that I still call upon today. Up until that day, I had no idea that the organization even existed. If I had had a five-year plan, I can guarantee, that job would not have been in it.
For many years, I considered getting that job as just a coincidence. And because of the wayward nature of my career, my reality has been very different from what I imagined it was supposed to be. As a result, I鈥檝e spent much of my working life doubting myself. I believed that I wasn鈥檛 measuring up, and that these seemingly random possibilities were just lucky breaks鈥
What I know now is that my performance in my classes and at my jobs, my personality, my curiosity, my skills, my competencies, and my willingness to learn and grow鈥攖hese very attributes鈥攁re what has allowed for these amazing options to come my way.
I have been creating these opportunities and making decisions for myself all along.
The last six years at SFU Public Square have been incredibly fulfilling. Due to the collaborative nature of our work (and despite all our planning), new projects are always emerging and we are never totally sure of what exciting possibility might come next. This changeability has led to some truly incredible events and unexpected collaborations. In the end, this is work I鈥檓 really proud to be a part of, and if I鈥檇 had a 鈥減lan鈥 this wouldn鈥檛 have been part of it. But it鈥檚 not lost on me that my previous experiences directly led me here.
So my advice to myself, that I still need to be reminded of every once in a while, is that it鈥檚 okay to not have a fully defined plan. By approaching my career with a keen eye to new opportunities, new ideas and people, I have not led myself to an inferior life鈥攁s measured against some societal scale鈥攂ut instead to one for which I am afforded the power to define my own success, according to my own values, and on my own terms.
Here鈥檚 to six fabulous years, and the many more to come.