Ten years ago this summer I got fired for not getting along with my boss's brother. My boss was a self-made man who never wrote anything down and paid us straight out of his money clip. His brother was a hill of flesh who spoke no English except "waste-paper basket."
Without telling his employees, my boss had given his brother a job supervising us. He'd waddle up to us and point at a piece of garbage and shout "Waste-paper basket!" I told him to go to hell. I didn't know he was my supervisor or that he was the boss's brother, raised under communism and unable to shake the idea that being in charge means setting traps and shouting. So the boss called me in and fired me and took away my company apartment in Krakow. When he fired me he got my name wrong and it was hard to let the idea go that he'd actually fired that guy instead of me.
For a while I couch-surfed. I had this American friend who let me crash with her. She was in her late 20's with white hair and purple eyes. One of those unbeautiful women who is relentlessly cheerful. She fed me and tried to teach me how to peel onions and cook chicken. She lent me money I never paid back. I heard later that she'd given up on finding a husband in Poland and was back with her parents in Outstate Minnesota. I don't know if they were albinos too.
When I ran out of friends, I stayed at this hostel for migrant workers. They had these curfew rules about when you could and couldn't be there. If they caught you in your dorm reading on a Thursday afternoon, your name went on a list, and if you got on the list too many times they kicked you out for vagrancy. There were a lot of Romanians and Bulgarians in my dormitory. The guy on the bunk under mine told me how he used to be a veterinarian back home and had treated a stick insect. All those guys were friendly and polite; they helped me look for everything of mine that went missing.
I'd been caught in my dorm in the afternoon quite a few times, so I called up my friend Alan. We used to teach English in Warsaw. He was spending the summer working on an archeological dig in a small town near Lodz.
"You should come join the dig," he said.
"But I don't know anything about archeology."
"There's nothing to know. We just dig."
"What are you looking for?"
"I don't know."
"Have you found anything?"
"No."
"Are there Polish girls working on the dig?"
"No."
"Will I get paid?"
"No."
"OK, I'll hop on the train and be there tomorrow."
They billeted me in an unfinished house. It was a concrete shell with holes for windows but no windows in the holes. At night it breezed up and the crosswinds made sounds like a giant blowing on a bottle top. They were archeology grad students from the university of Warsaw and they spoke English very well. The weather was fantastic. We were digging in a grassy ridge next to a deep river. Every day they gave me a 10 centimeter by 10 centimeter by 10 centimeter cube of dirt to dig through with a little fondue fork. While digging, Alan and I would play this word game where we alternated adding letters to a word, trying to make the other guy finish the word. We spent a whole day arguing linguistically, etymologically, morphologically and metaphysically whether "rejoicers" is a word or not.
We heard on BBC World Service radio that Di was dead, then that she might not be dead, then that she was dead for sure. Alan and I went around giggling: "Did or didn't Dodi and Di die?" We were the funniest thing going.
One day I found what appeared to be a very old button. I slipped it into a baggie and took it to the dig leader. The DL was a clean-cut academic who spoke in nauseatingly correct British-Council-approved Received Pronunciation. He sat in a lawn chair revising articles and wore a baseball cap as a badge of his unpretentiousness.
"Hmm," he said. "Probably from the Napoleonic wars. There was a French soldiers' camp near here." I waited for him to congratulate me. At the same time, I felt stupid for not slipping this treasure into my pocket and smuggling it to Sotheby's. The dig leader just stared. "Well?" he said.
"'Well?' What are we going to do with it?"
"Throw it away. We're looking for a bronze age settlement."
"Oh. Right."
Instead of chucking it, I mailed it back to my family in Canada. Instead of an explanation, I let the artifact speak for itself. In transit it got pulverized and must have appeared to them, in its ziploc baggie, as a sample bag of what I was currently smoking.
Then there was the barrel of booze. Here's how it worked: they'd send a guy to the store to pick up lunch and a few bottles of Spiritus. That's pure mind-rotter: Polish vodka with 95% alcohol. There was a barrel on a chain floating in the river. We'd haul up the barrel and fill it with water, the Spiritus, and sugar. Then seal the barrel and toss it back in the water to mix and cool. At four we all dropped our fondue forks and retrieved the barrel and set it up on a cinderblock table with a spigot and drank till consciousness gave out. Those were strange nights. The lack of women left us no reason to pretend not to be a drunken gang of creeps. I remember beating this guy at chess and him cheerfully offering to fight me. Another time they were going to seal me in the barrel and toss me in the river for a few minutes as a joke, but I talked them out of it while they were carrying me down there. So the summer blazed by.
Alan heard from a friend that an ex-colleague of ours had gotten her own school to run in Bydgoszcz. I called her up and begged for a job. Having worked with me, she already knew I was an unreliable prick. I told her I had nothing left worth stealing, so my chances were dicey of being let back into the hostel in Krakow. I got the job. It was the beginning of ten years of work and school, schoolwork and working in schools. On the day I left the dig, the DL thanked me, searched my bag, and wished me all the best.
Recently I went through a stretch of unemployment that got me thinking about that summer ten years ago. Who the hell was this guy I used to be, and why did he react to unemployment as a call to adventure? At the time, I had a fatalistic, low-rent-romantic sense that my life was unsalvageable flotsam. I took each disaster as the wages of marooning myself in a strange land. To make sense of it all, I had this habit of composing self-deprecating cause-and-effect sentences about myself in the third person. To see myself, I had to step outside myself—as if I could. Another writer’s fantasy. Now when I remember those sentences, I cringe. But they were the start of something. Ten years on, and partially socialized income has taken all the frisson out of losing your job. Let’s just say that Unemployment 1997 was a lot livelier than Unemployment 2007.