Looking forward to work
As I write this, the end-of-year holiday vacation of 2008-2009 is drawing to an end. Because New Years was on a Thursday, those of us in NIBR Cambridge (and many other parts of Novartis) had almost two weeks off around the holidays. Work starts again on Monday morning.
My family and I didn’t go anywhere. Somehow, we didn’t have any relatives visit. We didn’t host any parties. It has been fantastic.
We celebrated Christmas with stockings by the fireplace, presents under the tree, a Christmas dinner, too many sweets, and endless hours of games. I spent a lot of time in kid mode, appreciating my kids for who they are at these particular ages. (The girls are 7, while Andre just turned 10. They’re still a lot of fun, and I’m all too aware that we will reach a point where they aren’t.) I tackled dozens of home projects that had been queueing up over the year. I’m going to be ending this vacation (again) with a sense of regret that I didn’t get even more done - I think I may NEVER get around to putting up more family pictures on the walls…. I read half a dozen books. I wrote some code (for GPS file management) and got reacquainted with the current buzz on the net. I spent a lot of time planning next year’s adventures - possibly backpacking in Alaska, Heli-boarding in Utah, taking the kids to Switzerland, and kayaking in Guyana. We’ll see how those work out. I made a lot of notes for work planning. I did a lot of thinking and reflecting, and a little bit of nothing.
So it’s been a great time of renewal… a gift of time away from the crazy, driven, fast, go-go-go, no-time-to-think, focus-on-priorities, world of NIBR in 2008. I must say that I’d love to be able to just shift from this vacation into permanent retirement, never heading back to work. I bet I’d enjoy that for about two more weeks, and then I’d start to go crazy. Because, after about 10 days of being at home, I’m really looking forward to heading back to work.
Here are my top 5 reasons why:
- Contribution. Like most folks, I like to have a sense of purpose about what I’m doing, and work has always provided that for me. Moreover, given the state of the world, I’d rather be doing something that I think is contributing to the economy and to global improvement rather than otherwise.
- Seeing everyone. I’m looking forward to catching up with friends and colleagues that I haven’t seen in 2, 3, 4 weeks. It’ll be good to hear holiday stories, catch up on the latest plans, and begin to get that larger sense of activity and stimuli that pushes and contextualizes.
- The challenge. This year, as I described in the NIBR town hall, the context for NITAS as an organization is a challenge. Can we continue to move up the improvement curve? Can we overcome the barriers to progress and continue to improve the digital environment for NIBR? Can we strike the right balance between stable processes and flexibility? What impact will changes in technology, in NIBR, in Novartis, and in the world have on us? I have some personal goals - being more effective, improving communication, and not overworking to the max - can I meet these? It’s going to be a challenging year. This is good. Otherwise, it would be dull.
- Results from the initiatives. Last year, we moved ahead in many areas, we delivered important systems, and we built a lot of groundwork. We have initiatives and major projects in four key areas: data, the web, computing environment, and scientific software. This year, we’re going to make major progress in all of these areas, and it will make a difference for NIBR. It won’t be easy, but it will be worthwhile.
Making a difference. My family and I went to a Christmas party last weekend, where several families with children of common ages were gathering to share a meal and let the kids play. These are friends of my wife and my kids. Thanks to work and travel schedules, I hadn’t had a chance to meet most of them yet, but I’d heard many stories. I knew that one of the mothers we would be meeting is a cancer patient. A couple of years ago, she was diagnosed with a skin melanoma, and had gone through intensive treatments. By early 2008, her doctors thought the melanoma was in remission, but by fall, it had come back with a vengeance. She’s not expected to live more than a year. My wife had mentioned this before, and I understood it intellectually… but meeting her kids and seeing them play with ours … that made it really hit home. It tears your heart out. I couldn’t watch for long without going outside.
This woman came up to me during the party. She had heard I work for Novartis. It turns out that she’s just recently been accepted for a Phase 1 trial of a Novartis drug that may make a difference for her. She just joined the trial in a Boston hospital in the last month, so it’s too soon to tell how things are working. But there’s some small reason to hope now, when before, there really wasn’t. We chatted about the drug, and the hospital, and her chances. She’s realistic. I was glad that I was, in some very small way, associated with something that was giving her hope. I watched the kids run by, and wished that I could do something more.
I have friends who write software for Microsoft. They get to see the product they helped create on the shelves at Best Buy and on-line at Amazon. This is really motivating to them. For us in NIBR, the product that consumers buy is so far detached from what we do - both in time and in decisions that happen in Development - that it’s difficult to draw associations between what the consumers see and what we do. For those of us in support functions, such as in NITAS, it’s even farther away. We rarely contribute to specific therapy projects, but, rather, we contribute to the information systems that help all drugs. Motivationally, that gets pretty abstract.
And yet, it’s also true that because of things we will do this year, there will be kids running around in some holiday party five years from now that won’t have the potential of their mother’s death to disease in the next year looming over them. They’ll just be playing. And if we do the best job we can, that time will be sooner than five years, and the number of kids will be larger.
That’s why I’m looking forward to making my way through the Boston commute on Monday morning.