After my junior year of college, I was offered a full-time job that was too good to turn down. The daily newspaper where I’d been working part-time for three years had a weekly newspaper in a smaller town about 15 miles away. The publisher of the smaller paper had taken another job and they needed a new managing editor, too.
Company management decided to take a big chance and offer the job to a brash 20-year-old who hadn’t even finished college.
I didn’t think much of my new boss. He had been the advertising director of the newspaper and had been promoted to publisher. After a couple of meetings with him right before I started the job, I was disdainful of him. Frankly, I thought I was too good for him. I was like an arrogant little child.
My new boss was named Jim. He was fat. He didn’t dress well. He didn’t present himself in an impressive way at all. He constantly smelled like a cigarette butt. He was so fat and out of shape that when I talked with him him on the phone, I would hear him wheezing a little, as though it was hard for him to take in enough air to support all of his weight.
I just saw him as a divorced loser who was alone in the world. How dare someone make him my boss?
As I started going out into the community as managing editor of the paper, I felt such a sense of shame about being associated with such a loser that I made it clear — quietly and subtly at first — how I felt about him. I was afraid of people thinking I was like him. I was embarrassed — more like humiliated — at the thought of anyone thinking he was really my superior.

What is your measure of success? For me, meaning keeps changing
I’ll sell you a cookie-cutter home, but I wish you loved good design
Nature’s renewal and growth boost my hope for my own life each year
Friend’s happy family and career remind me how good life can be
Faith is our only assurance that rebirth will come again in spring
Living without human connection? It’s an empty life with no meaning
FRIDAY FUNNIES
Creative process can be very ugly, but I need to share mine with you
I’m slowly learning how to be contented as an ordinary man