Nostalgia

A Time to Every Purpose

When I was in my forties, a civic-minded neighbor nominated me for a seat on the board of a progressive charitable organization committed to economic, educational, and legal advocacy for women and families in urban settings since 1877.

Monthly meetings were scheduled for mid-afternoons in downtown Boston. I took the train in from Salem, leaving my law office for the better part of the day.

I was immediately assigned to a committee, an essential part of board membership. This involved a second monthly meeting in Boston.

The members of the board, connected with the organization for years, were deeply involved in its mission. They were largely residents of Boston and active members of the social scene and its philanthropic endeavors. They utilized their considerable network of contacts to extend invitations to fund-raising events.

I dutifully attempted to learn the ins and outs of board membership and fulfill the tasks assigned me. Yet I felt strangely alienated from the experience. This was an established world of career volunteerism, a significant, in fact indispensable, factor in the social, cultural, and economic fabric of the city. I was a commuter from the suburbs, dropping in but not enough to connect in a meaningful way.

Then, the annual fund-raising campaign began in earnest, the centerpiece of board activity. The chairwoman emphasized the importance of one-hundred percent participation by board members not only to actively solicit donations but to set an example of generosity for other potential contributors. This is normal for charitable boards. But it was not normal for me. 

I understood that the way these organizations operate makes the world go round, supporting museums, orchestras, libraries, hospitals, botanical gardens, safety net resources like Rosie’s Place (for homeless women) or Big Brother/Big Sister agencies. The impressive army of professional volunteers is highly motivated, focused, and well-oiled.

From that point on, I knew I was out of my league. My life was a work in progress, building a law practice and meeting court deadlines, striving mightily to balance the demands of career and family life, trying to save for our children’s college educations and support our temple. Spending two days each month commuting into the city provoked increasing anxiety.

I avoided the decision to drop out because I feared I would embarrass the woman who had convinced the board to take on the hotshot North Shore woman attorney. I felt reluctant to admit lack of distinction in my new role. I stoically endured instead of facing my concerns and cutting my losses. I soldiered on, sensing an imaginary gun to my head.

As an experiment, I drafted a “mock” letter to the board detailing my struggles. Thankfully, I edited it down to omit the apologetic litany. But it was useful to see in black and white what it actually looked like to resign. No one had questioned my loyalty or asked me to leave. Writing empowered me to find my voice and clear my path forward.

I composed my final version of the resignation letter and sent it off, with a separate note of appreciation to my sponsor. I felt a huge sense of relief and freedom. I did not fit in no matter how hard I tried.

I regained my confidence and a few years later moved on to become a founder, along with a group of like-minded families, of a non-profit Montessori School on the north shore of Boston. It started out as a grass-roots movement, originating with a leadership-parent-staff crisis at another, privately owned, Montessori school. We shared a vision that inspired us to give everything we had to open a school that clearly placed the best interests of our children first.

Just before the school was set to open, we were slapped with a lawsuit and preliminary court injunction by the former employer of our teaching staff, claiming that the teachers were violating their contracts.

On the day of the hearing, we filled the courtroom, watching our fate played out in a drama more compelling than an episode of LA Law. The outcome was crucial—a continuation of the injunction would effectively close down the school and force the parents to enroll their children elsewhere.

Several days later, we received the decision that the judge had ruled in our favor, dissolving the restraining order and allowing our school to open. The next morning, we accompanied our daughter to her delayed first day of first grade, dressed in her white blouse and plaid skirt, carrying her brand new insulated lunch bag.

Over the years, we expanded from kindergarten to the eighth grade. We raised funds and designed a new building located on the grounds of a nearby college campus. If you were to ask me to name my proudest public accomplishment, it would be the part I played in the creation of a school in the revered Maria Montessori tradition.

And we did this in the late 1980s, without cellphones, email, or texting, instead meeting at each other’s homes or talking on the telephone late into the evening, careening from crisis to crisis, from lawsuits to bee’s nests in the rafters to the shocking resignation the night before opening of the Head of School we had hired.

I served as a board member and wrote a weekly column for the mimeographed school bulletin. I had no doubt that I was a contributor to the success and longevity of the school, and to my daughter’s development as a confident young student in the Montessori way.

Inconvenient detours may turn out to be the best possible path after all. I had attended enough meetings of the Boston philanthropic organization over the course of that challenging year to learn the basic workings of a non-profit board and to observe a model of effective board leadership.

I drew heavily on that experience when I was elected to serve as Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the newly founded school, approved by the local Board of Education and building inspector all the way up to the Massachusetts Department of Education.

But my heart was in it this time, and I was on fire with passion for my cause.

*** School logo designed by CMS parent Deborah Disston

16 thoughts on “A Time to Every Purpose

  1. You are such a very talented lady Barrie, thank you for sharing yet another glimpse into your very interesting experience in life. You are so versatile and I admire your dedication. Every story, deeper into your beautiful soul.

      1. Pete Seeger must have cited some Biblical passage (Ecclesiastes?) so give credit where it’s due.

        1. I decided to use a Biblical excerpt from Ecclesiastes 3:1-8. Since copyright laws don’t apply, I’m free to do it, as was Pete. I thank you for bringing this to my attention. I hope you will accept credit for inspiring the change. And thank you!

  2. A wonderful example of how an aborted or unpleasant experience can be of future use in the learning cycle of anyone who is capable of applying what has been learned, even if at the time, it seemed the wrong road taken. Following your life, past and present, is, as always, illuminating and interesting!

  3. Wow, what a great article. It reminds me of a podcast I used to listen to from a California spiritual guy–Jacob Glass. He used to rant about women and our need to pacify, and our inability to just say NO. I’ve had to learn that over the years too. It’s not the causes are worthy and dear to us, but we can only handle so much. I too, have my own businesses most of my life, so I missed belonging to many things because you can only split yourself in so many parts.
    I love reading your blog! Thanks Barrie!

  4. So lovely to be reminded….an incredible time, with wonderful memories and life long friendships! Thanks Barrie❤️

  5. Like Robbie, your post brought so many poignant memories to mind. It was both a lovely and a challenging time. I cherish those ‘days of purpose.’

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