Twelve years ago this month, I was offered a 60-day contract position as a content editor for Expedia. My job was to add SEO keywords to hotel descriptions. Not the most exciting gig, but, thanks to my desperation for any kind of work, I was thrilled.
I’d spent the previous year in school, eager for a career change on the heels of nearly 15 years in the travel industry where I did mostly corporate travel operations. I’ve always been a writer at heart, and that year of school led me to complete a technical writing and editing program that ultimately helped land the contract position (ironically, right back in the travel industry).
My days of SEO keywords were limited; I soon transitioned into a different role, still writing and editing hotel descriptions, but in a different context. My contract continued to get extended and somehow I even managed to avoid the mandatory 60-day break required of contractors at the end of 12 months of continual employment. A year and a half in, I was offered a full-time position. And the rest, as they say, is history.
Creating and managing hotel content for the largest online travel company in the world with its host of individual brands has its ups and downs, for sure. From high moments like conceptualizing the design for and leading the creation of a flagship hotel product for a recently acquired brand, to not-so-high moments like making a technical error that caused an obscure policy notice meant for only a handful of hotel properties globally to accidentally start displaying online for every. single. property. worldwide. To painful moments like nauseating days with 8 or 10 meetings on the calendar.
As the years went by, I did less writing in favor of more administrative things like product, data, and process management (hence the insane number of meetings that could insidiously creep onto the calendar). But, all in all, things were good and stable and I was fortunate enough to work with fantastic people.
A little over a week ago, I was sitting at home and a Google notification popped up on my phone for a GeekWire article. Mind you, I hardly ever get notifications for news articles and I usually just swipe them away. This one caught my attention: “Expedia cuts 3,000 jobs.”
“Damn,” I thought, “That’s a lot of jobs.”
On the heels of recent announcements about the company’s performance, we all knew that layoffs were likely, but I don’t think anyone would’ve expected 3,000 of them.
I read the article, still surprised by the number of people impacted, but not giving it much thought. My team was continually managing a fairly large amount of important work and we were already stretched thin, so it seemed unlikely that we’d be hit. Plus, as the most senior member on the team, I’d probably be safe in the unlikely event that the layoffs did reach us.
So, honestly, my feelings mostly revolved around the fact that I was finding this information out from a GeekWire article, and that said article contained the entire text of a “confidential” email announcing the layoffs that had been sent to all employees at 4:30pm that afternoon, 30 minutes after I’d signed off for the day. But, whatever. “Must be a mole inside Expedia,” I mused.
The next morning I signed in from my home office as per usual and promptly saw a new meeting on my calendar. “Important meeting – attendance mandatory.” The only other attendee was my boss’s boss’s boss.
My heart sunk and tension formed in my chest. Within moments, tears started to well up in my eyes.
I took a deep breath and stared at the screen as my brain desperately tried to conjure up every potential reason for this meeting other than it being an announcement that I was losing my job.
A few ideas came to mind, but they were all a stretch. And the reasoning that gave me comfort the previous evening went straight out the window. In my heart, I knew that my Expedia run was over.
For the next 75 minutes, my stomach felt like it was on a roller coaster. Tears came and went, sometimes just a few of them, other times like a geyser and with a force that left me gasping for air.
They were tears of fear, uncertainty, doubt, and grief as I realized that the familiarity and pseudo-security that I’d known for the last 12 years were about to be ripped away.
The meeting came and went rather uneventfully, ending with “Thank you for your professionalism during your time with the company and especially during this difficult meeting.”
I bit at my lower lip and nodded, knowing that if I opened my mouth to speak, the tears that had just started brimming in the corner of my eyes would be unleashed and any attempted words would be unintelligible. So I just gave a “thumbs up” and another nod to the camera before disconnecting.
The subsequent few hours before my network access was shut off were surreal.
I was in a daze, intensified by the isolation of being at home and the fact that I’d been asked not to proactively notify my team members at the risk of sparking a firestorm; tensions were already high. Instead, I waited for the conversations to trickle in from my colleagues as they found out, one by one.
The tears continued to come and go. I didn’t bother trying to hold them back; I’ve learned there’s no benefit in that.
I took comfort in the fact that, in the last several years, life has brought me through a couple of other massive changes where I was forced to let go of things that had provided me with years of familiarity and security.
Grateful as I was to be able to draw on this comfort, it doesn’t make the pain in the moment any less real. It doesn’t take away the fear that starts pulsating in the chest.
But it does provide hope.
Am I angry about being laid off? No. Bitter? No. Sad? Well, I think anytime we lose something that’s been an integral part of our lives, there’s a grieving period.
Am I scared? At times. And I’m sure fear will continue to present itself.
Largely, I’m grateful for the experiences, opportunities, and relationships that the previous 12 years provided (I think I just gave myself some journaling material for the next week).
And, more than anything, I’m hopeful. Because one thing I’ve learned from life is that opportunity presents itself on the heels of going through the very things we may think we’d never make it through.
But we have to surrender to the unknown.