Pregnant Pause
by Linda McKenney
I sat waiting, in a large theater, with hundreds of other high school students who’d passed an exam for state employment. We were interviewed according to our grade on the test. I was fourth in line. The position was beginning office worker, which meant you had to do whatever a superior desired. Responsibilities included typing, transcription, filing, making copies and other duties as assigned. I accepted.
My boss had a monotone voice, so I often dozed off while typing up his letters. The interesting aspect of that was I continued to type. Of course, the marks on the paper made no sense, so I had to begin all over again. If there was a need for more than one copy of the document, we used sheets of carbon paper. The ink would get all over your fingers and sometimes clothes. More than two copies required a mimeograph.
This printing process used an ink-filled cylinder and ink pad. Documents were prepared on a special wax-covered stencil on a typewriter that had its ribbon disengaged. The typewriter thus made impressions in the stencil, which was filled with ink and squeezed onto paper by the mimeograph’s roller.
I married six months after I graduated from high school. Shortly after that, I was interviewed for a promotion. The man who would be my new boss told me that while I was qualified for the position, he wasn’t going to hire me.
“I noticed that you are wearing a wedding ring,” he said. “In my experience, young married women get pregnant and then quit their jobs. I don’t want to invest time training you and have you leave.”
What he said made sense to me, so I never questioned his decision.
Six months later I was pregnant and quit my job.
IMAGE: “Pregnant Woman” by Otto Dix (1930).
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Linda McKenney is a Personal Life Coach, Motivational Speaker, and Writer, specializing in Mindful Living and Eating. She continually reinvents herself, and her new adventure is writing creative nonfiction. Her most recent work is published in Silver Birch Press, 101 Word Short Stories, The Survivor’s Review, The Rush, and Helen: A Literary Magazine. You can join Linda on her Mindful journey by visiting her blog –- majokmindfuleating.com. She also has an alter ego at Susanbanthony.live.
I remember all of this except the being pregnant part. We hate computers, but however frustrating, they so much better than the devices you and I remember. Yours is a provocative letter. Love the ending.
Ahh, Linda. All that early typing was just rehearsal for your current wonderful stories!
Great story, Linda. I love it! How technology has progressed since those days!