WHY I TKADID LIVIS Continued from page 9 room and woke Donna up. I shook her. "I’m getting out of the box busi ness,” I told her. "It’s not for me. I want to work with my hands. I want to fix cars. We’ll have to take a big cut in income. We can’t keep this house. But I promise I’ll take care of you and the kids. Is it okay?” I knew it was like saying, "I want all of us to hold hands and jump off the Empire State Building. Do you mind?” Donna blinked a couple of times and then burst into tears. "I knew something was wrong!” she sobbed. "But I thought it was another woman!” The owner of a small, neighbor hood garage hired me. Most people didn’t believe I had left my job volun tarily. They suspected I had been fired. I was accused by rumor of every thing from drug addiction to padding expense accounts. My mother wept. "Your dead father worked hard to send you to college,” she cried. "I’m glad he doesn’t have to see you in dirty overalls.” Selling the house We sold our house and moved into a small, rented cottage. The neighbor hood was quiet, clean and comfortable, but no one else on that block had been to college. "Can you find friends here, Donna?” I asked anxiously. "Os course I can!” she said. "The competition’s a little different, that’s all. Instead of worrying about my bridge score and my flower arrangements, 1 think about how white my wash is.” SHOULD YOU CHANGE YOUR JOB? HERE ARE FIVE POINTS TO CONSIDER Roger X’s” change of jobs was an unusually dramatic one. The decision to accept a major change in his social environment as well as a reduced income produced many anxious and unhappy moments before he and his wife said, "We’re glad we did it.” Many a man, however, can profit from Roger X’s experience by taking a new analytical look at his job. "Not every job shift means a reduction in status or an escape from pressure,” Dr. Arthur A. Hitchcock, executive Director of the American Personnel and Guidance Associa tion, told us. "Lots of men are anxious to accept more responsibility, shoulder more risks and assume more leader ship. It requires just as much nerve to step up as to step down.” Dr. Hitchcock’s test at right will help you make a decision and perhaps avoid a bump. Midnight crisis for a white-collar man My new job was no pushover. I made mistakes. Once I forgot to put oil in a car I had just overhauled. The customer drove it 40 miles and the engine burned up. He threatened to sue the garage. I fixed it free on my own time and paid for the engine parts. It takes time to become a really good mechanic. I think I’m a good one now. I went to night school and took a course at one of the major auto assembly plants. During that time, Donna got a job clerking at a depart ment store to make Christmas money. She had to work until 10 p.m. Christmas Eve. We had always deco rated our tree and wrapped packages together. When she walked in the living room and saw that I had finished the job, she burst into tears. But my wife has rarely nagged me about my job switch. It has paid off for her, too. Since I like myself better, I somehow’ love her more. We’re having more good laughs and real companion ship than we ever had before. We i Av I | "My new job -*■ ■- T woi no pulhover" /. .Money aside, do I find my work boring? Is there still enough challenge? Am I yawning, watching the clock? 2. It my prospect for advancement poor? What’s the seniority situation? Do higher jobs often open up? How* well qualified am I for them? 3. Has my job lost importance? Has automation or reor ganization caused a shift in my job status? 4. Is it really the Job that’s making me dissatisfied? Or is trouble elsewhere at home, for instance? 5. Most important —is this the work I really want to spend my life doing? Even though I’m using my skills and education, and making a good salary, is it consistent with the pattern of living to which I want to commit myself? spend more time together. We go camping at a state park instead of a private vacation resort. When my term on the school board was ended, they didn’t ask me to run again. Donna heard one woman tell another in the supermarket, "Who wants a grease monkey deciding what our children should learn?” What's ahead now? But on the other hand, I have time to serve as a Little League coach and I’ve joined the volunteer fire depart ment. We play pinochle and drink beer. I don’t think I’ll spend the rest of my life full-time in a grease pit. Our garage is opening a sports-car division. I think I’ll be made manager. But I always want a job where I can get my hands on an engine. My wife and I aren’t sorry I made the change, but we’re still learning how to live with it. Yesterday our older daughter, Ellen, who is 15, had a date with a boy she’d never gone out with before. I’d seen him around. He owns a rebuilt Jag. He drives it well. I wanted to meet him. He eased the car into the station. 1 went out to handle the pumps. He didn’t know’ who I was. He said, "Fill it, please.” I said, "Hi, Ellen.” She said, "Hi.” She didn’t intro duce me. One man I used to work with tells me l'ie betrayed the American dream, which is to move onward and upward. But I think I've defended it. Isn't one of our greatest freedoms the right to do the kind of uvrk we want to? YOUR\EYES ARE EXPOSED TO niiQT - 1111 ■■■■ o CLEANSE YOUR EYES WITH MURIME ■ w Handy squeeze . bottle / / / 1 - / \ /B / Also available in / glass bottle with separate dropper Quickly, safely Murine cleanses, soothes and refreshes your eyes. Washes away the discomforts of dust, smoke, wind, etc. Leaves your eyes with a comfortable, rested feeling and so relaxes tension. Keep Murine handy at home and work. 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