
My partner and I both work for a public university. Or, we did, until this week when we were told that admin decided to fire about 90% of the adjuncts, us included. We will be out of jobs and health insurance by the end of December. We have no idea what to do. Help?
โI Hate Surprises
Cards: Three of Cups (reversed), The High Priestess (reversed), The Hermit (reversed), Nine of Pentacles.
Dear Surprise,
I am so sorry that the rug got pulled out from under you, and so many others, in the middle of the semester. Thatโs exceptionally cruel and while itโs not uncommon in academia, itโs a fucking tragedy.
The Nine of Pentacles, the card of material well-being, is the only one right-side up, making it the most pressing, so the first thing youโre going to do is figure out your finances. Pull everything together and figure out what you have, if youโll be getting severance or unemployment, if you need/want to move, and how to cover the basics. The โgood newsโ is the healthcare marketplace is open, so you can get insurance for January.
With The Three of Cups, itโs also time to lean on friends and colleagues and anyone youโve gotten drunk with at a conference or chatted with on a panel. The good friends can help you out emotionally (or give you a couch to crash on or whatever) while the network-friends might help with job leads.
But, before you get to that step, you and your partner need to ask yourselves: what do I want?
The meat of this answer are two Major Arcana, The High Priestess and The Hermit, both of which involve a lot of deep searching. The High Priestess is not only a card of the unconscious but of secret desires. These can be a secret that we even keep from ourselves. So, in this time of transition, when nothing is certain, ask yourself: if you could do anything, what would it be?
Is it to go back to teaching? To pivot to an adjacent field? Or to do something completely different? At this stage, youโre just spitballing. But honestly let yourself explore the idea. Is there some job that rings out like a bell? Good.
Now, with The Hermit, youโll consider what it would mean to find a path forward towards that life. It could take timeโyou might need to go back to school for another three years or start cranking out screenplays, or develop a business plan and apply for loans. You might need to get day jobs that will float you while you work towards this one (unless you can luckily start your dream job in January.)
Talk to your partner about your wants and their wants. What do these paths look like? Can they exist in the same place? At the same time? What would that future look like? Of course, this conversation is SEVERAL steps down the road. Focus on finances now, and once you know you have a roof over your head somewhere, dive deep into your soul.
Best of luck my darlings.
Dear Oracle,
Iโm thinking about breaking up with my therapist. Sheโs said some shit that felt way out of line and I donโt know if I trust her anymore. What do the cards say?
โPissed off Patient
Cards: Ace of Swords, The High Priestess, The Hanged Man (reversed), Temperance
Dear POP,
While I often advocate for therapy in the column, I will admit: some therapists are terrible at their jobs. They can be actively harmful and if you think this therapist is doing damage, especially if there is a pattern, stop seeing her. The cards are moot.
Now, if your therapeutic relationship has been pretty good up until this point, I think a pause might be necessary. The Ace of Swords can be very black-or-white thinking, which could translate to feeling condemned if your therapist didnโt 100% agree with you. The High Priestess, like I mentioned above, is a card of the Unconscious and in Jungian psychoanalysis, itโs where the shadow lives. The shadow is a place where we stuff feelings we donโt want to experienceโthings we have been shamed for, things weโre afraid of, thoughts we donโt want to think and desires weโre scared to admit to. There are all sorts of things in the shadowโgood and badโbut itโs a tender spot. If someone pushes on it before weโre ready to talk about it, itโs like theyโre sticking their finger into an open wound: it hurts hell and we hate them for it.
With The Hanged Man, it feels like she might have misunderstood something that was far more fundamental than whatever specific thing she was talking about. She may have stuck her finger in a wound that has been open and oozing for years without realizing it. With that black and white thinking, it might be tempting to see your only options as โquitโ or โfinger in the woundโ but those arenโt the only options on the table. The Hanged Man does encourage a pause, a moment to stop and think. It might be true that your therapist had good intentions and said something shitty. Both can be true.
Temperance also discourages black-and-white thinking and encourages us to hold possibly conflicting truths at the same time. No relationship is all good or all bad all the time. Complexities exist and have to be acknowledged if we want to restore balance.
If you havenโt already, I encourage you to talk to your therapist and tell her exactly what upset you and your reaction to it. Together, you can address her hurtful actions and, if you feel like you can trust her, what may have triggered such a strong reaction. Sometimes a fight like this with a therapist can open the door to some deeper healing.
But, again, if you donโt feel safe with her, donโt go down the road with her. Find someone new.
I hope the conversation goes well, my dear.
Subscribe to Creative Loafing newsletters.
Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed
This article appears in Oct 26 – Nov 1, 2023.
