Over the years, I've told colleagues and friends about things I have seen or experienced. Many times, people have said that I should write them down so that they won't be lost and forgotten, since some of them might be useful parts of our history. I've been writing them down, without being sure what I would do with them. I decided to gradually post them on this website, and see what reactions I get. I suggest reading from the bottom up (starting with the August 2017 post "The Meritocracy"). Thoughtful and kind feedback would be useful for me, and would help me to revise the exposition to make it as useful as possible. I hope that while you read my stories you will ask yourself "What can I learn from this?" I'm particularly interested in knowing what you see as the point of the story, or what you take away from it. Please send feedback to asilverb@gmail.com. Thanks for taking the time to read and hopefully reflect on them!

I often run the stories past the people I mention, even when they are anonymized, to get their feedback and give them a chance to correct the record or ask for changes. When they tell me they're happy to be named, I sometimes do so. When I give letters as pseudonyms, there is no correlation between those letters and the names of the real people.

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

"We assumed you weren't interested" (or: How not to make a job offer)

I've been holding back on telling any of the stories that will explain why I think of my Adventures in Numberland memoirs as having the subtitle "Why I don't discuss my personal life in professional settings." It's hard to tell those stories without discussing my personal life. And once I do that, it's hard to turn back. Well, here goes.

In my last year of grad school, my significant other, whom I'll call K, applied for a tenure-track job at Euphoria University, and I applied for a postdoc position there. We did not in any way link our applications. I even went to the trouble of using a different typesetting program from K's for my job applications, with a different font, and gave only my office address and phone number, not my home phone number. (This was back in the day of landlines.)

While K and I were traveling over the winter break, our friend and colleague Catsitter dropped by our apartment to feed the cat.

One day, while Catsitter was feeding the cat, the phone rang and Catsitter answered. The call was from Well Meaning, a young Euphoria professor, asking to speak to K. Catsitter explained that K was out of town, and he asked if K should return Well's call. Well replied, "No, I'll call again."

After we returned from our travels, I tried to get K to return Well's call, but K refused. "He said I shouldn't phone him. He'll phone me."

But Well never phoned back. Every so often I'd say to K, "Please phone him. Maybe it's about a job," but K wouldn't do it.

K and I eventually got rejection letters from Euphoria University.

A year or two later, I ran into Well in the Harvard math department Common Room. He said, "It's too bad you didn't come to Euphoria. The number theory group would have loved to have you." 

Perplexed, I told him I didn't know what he meant. "I got a rejection letter from Euphoria. In what capacity should I have come?"

Well said that the number theorists were very interested in making me a postdoc offer. Well had phoned K to see if he was interested in a tenure track offer. "When K didn't phone back, we assumed you weren't interested," Well said.

No one thought to contact me.