or, after my journalism degree I went to work in a fishing factory in Greenland

I was gone all of last summer. 

I kept telling people I accidentally got a job in Greenland, which is not fully true. I got a job in Greenland because I applied for a job in Greenland. I applied for a journalism job too, but I accepted the one in Greenland before I heard back. Good. I didn’t get the other job anyway.

I think about it, sometimes, on a mountain top close to the house where I’m staying, in the small village in the north of Greenland. I walk up the cliffs in the evenings and think there as the sun doesn’t set. People ask me sometimes, about journalism. Would you not want the kind of job your degree suggests? Maybe. It’s not like it’s entirely self chosen, you know, to not have an amazing journalist job.

But also, I would be less of a journalist if I was one.

Maybe, if I worked my way to the top, I could be allowed to go on a reporting trip to a village like this.

But even then I would be outside the walls, not inside. Now I eat breakfast with my colleagues and learn how to say salt, and eggs, and cheese in greenlandic. One of my colleagues wears a red jacket and a pink children’s backpack, she has a pixie cut and smokes outside the factory doors. She handles the deliveries from the fishermen, drives the boxes up the 20 meters from the harbor. When she’s inside she always keeps an eye on the ocean. Another one of my colleagues talks and sings the loudest, but she gets quiet when one specific person walks into the factory. I’ve heard about the young man who drowned not too long ago. I’ve been in the house of the man who has a whole shelf of dogsledding race medals. I ate whale intestines and raw halibut at someone’s birthday party.

I’d rather be a worker here than any other kind of visitor.

For me, the whole career thing becomes so disconnected from what I want. It’s just about how I want other people to see me. And maybe, mainly, I wish I had the choice. I wish I was offered all the prestigious jobs in the world and turned them down just to be here, even if the result would be no different than being here now. It’s not as much about desire as it is about pride.

I don’t have a good way to sum up this text, because I don’t think I’ve let go of the pride. But I do remember a time before it. A few years ago, before my studies taught me what to want and who to impress, I wanted to study journalism just to incorporate the skills and ethics into things I already liked doing. I’ve absorbed much pride since, absorbed it like a poison that now starts to spread though me. But I do remember a time before it.

The Mona Lisa

Isn’t it messed up that Leonardo Da Vinci never knew he painted the Mona Lisa? Like he knew he painted a portrait of Mona Lisa, but he didn’t know he painted The Mona Lisa. It’s funny because it used to motivate me to think that every step of his career led up to that painting. That the first stick figure he made was the first draft of all those things he would later create. It helps me to create casually. Even if your creation sucks, it’s practice for the next one. (That is practice for the next one.) And so on.

But then, you never quite reach it. In my head there will come a day when it’s no longer practice for the next one, because I’ve actually reached that point. I’ve made it. But the truth is, we never arrive there, we never know our Mona Lisa. Because it’s not like Da Vinci just painted it and then hung it in the Louvre. He probably just started preparing the next canvas. As far as he knew it might have been just another painting in a long line of paintings, and he never reached “it”, or got “there”, wherever there is.