Flight Change
How six Mawrters followed their bliss and soared into unexplored territory.
The COVID-19 pandemic changed not only our lives, but also how we thought about our lives. Suddenly it seems, we were all reflecting on our priorities and our lifeâs purpose. And many of us were either quitting our jobs or dramatically changing our work lives.
Of course, doing a career 180 is hardly a new phenomenon. For as long as people have had jobs, they have gotten itchy feet, become curious about a different path, pursued a lifelong dream, or simply realized that life is too short not to give it a go.
Here are a few stories about Mawrters who changed trajectory mid-flight.
Archaeologist to IT Professional
Lanita Collette â84 says she inherited her interest in archaeology from her mother. âShe was a nurse but would have loved to study art, history, or archaeology,â says Collette. âThe Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum in my hometown of Brunswick, Maine, was a favorite place of ours to visit, so perhaps it wasnât surprising that I was caught up in the vortex that was [anthropology professor] Richard Jordan at 91´ŤĂ˝.â
After âan amazing experienceâ working with Jordan at 91´ŤĂ˝, Collette headed off to graduate school at Arizona State University to get a taste of Southwest archaeology. She continued to work with Jordan and crew during summer excavation sessions while also gaining field experience in the Southwest.
When she had finished her masterâs degree, Collette was hired by the Navajo Nation Archaeology Department as a field crew chief and then later as laboratory director for the archaeological training program at Northern Arizona University. âOur mission was to train Navajo students to provide skilled graduates for the Nationâs archaeology and cultural resource management needs,â says Collette.
After many years working as an archaeologist for the Navajo Nation, Collette shifted her focus to technology, serving as the first chief information security officer at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff before moving to Tucson to build a new information security program for the University of Arizona.
To Collette, this change in direction looked more like a natural evolution, leveraging her on-the-job experience, than a dramatic turnaround. âAs laboratory director I was called upon to provide all things technical support for the departmentâlocal area network, database administration, hardware and software support,â she says. âDuring the early to mid-â90s if you had an aptitude for tech, you pretty much were the go-to for everything.â
And the more tech she did, the more she loved it. âI decided two things: I wanted to continue to focus my career on the mission of education, and I wanted to see how far I could go with a career in higher ed tech.â
Clinical Research Coordinator to Fashion Retailer
Lisa Lamprouâs future seemed clear when she graduated from 91´ŤĂ˝ in 2010. The biology major even had a job waiting for her.
A Science Horizons Fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania in the summer prior to her senior year had morphed into a job as a clinical research coordinator running large-scale studies that enrolled pregnant women experiencing psychiatric disorders.
âIt was a means to an end,â says Lamprou. âI wanted to have research under my belt because I was thinking that I was on the MD track.â But while she loved the patient interaction, Lamprou found the competitive environmentâwith researchers all vying for the same fundingâoff-putting, and she also struggled with being in an environment with people in severe distress on a daily basis.
Lamprou, who grew up in a close-knit Greek family, also began to have second thoughts about the lifestyle sacrifices she would have to make as a medical doctor. âIf youâre an MD, that is your life,â says Lamprou.
âThat was a very harsh realization,â she says, âto realize you devoted your college career, your work life for four years, to something that you really didnât want to do.â
With a heavy heart, Lamprou wrapped up her research job and waited tables while she waited for inspiration. Meanwhile, her sister, Laura Anne, had graduated from Boston University and moved down to Philadelphia to work in marketing. The two lived together, and one night when Lisa asked her sister what she would do if she could do anything she wanted, Laura Anne replied, âIâd open a boutique.â
Though both sisters lacked fashion or retail experience, Lamprou felt confident that she had the organizational skills to run the back end of such a business. Starting out small, the pair began to acquire inventory and find their niche.
âWe love European brands, and thereâs not a ton of access for them in the United States,â Lamprou says. âWe knew we couldnât compete with Bloomingdale's or Nordstrom, so we found some brands that we love that we wore when we were in high school in Greece and became their representatives in the United States.â
They began the business as an online endeavor, but after realizing they were being lost in the shuffle, they began experimenting with pop-up shops, first on the Main Line and then in Manayunk. Buoyed by their success, the two signed a two-year lease on a building in Manayunk and LILA Philadelphia was officially born.
As the business has grown (the sisters purchased a building in 2018) so has Lamprouâs family. Married now with two children under 5, Lamprou appreciates being able to spend time with them and is gratified to be a part of the Manayunk community.
Has it been easy? Absolutely not, says Lamprou. âItâs a competitive industry. Customer service is not easy. Problem solving is not easy. Marketing and advertising a retail store, cutting out a niche for yourself, none of it is easy. But itâs so much fun, and itâs very liberating. And at the end of the day, I come home with my cup full enough to give to my husband, to give to my kids, to give to my parents.â
Middle School Principal to Pharmacy Student
Alice Goldsberry â07 is not a fan of change. Perhaps, she muses, thatâs why her two-year Teach for America placement in the Arkansas Delta turned into an 11-year teaching stint. By that point, she had earned a masterâs in public school education, worked her way up to being a middle school principal, and had her sights on a future school superintendent role.
Something didnât feel right though.
âOne day,â says Goldsberry, âI was outside walking my dog, and it hit me. âI want to do something different.â I felt my career was taking a toll on me physically and mentally.â
Pondering what direction to take, she remembered escorting a group of eighth-grade girls to a STEM conference in Little Rock, Arkansas, seven years earlier. âOne of the panelists was a pharmacist, and just listening to her path, I was more intrigued than all the kids. I was asking question after question.â
Knowing that she had an affinity for math and science and loved helping people and interacting with members of her community, Goldsberry felt this could be her path.
âI called my dad on that walk, and I said, âIf I were to leave my job and go back to school full time to pursue pharmacy, would you support me in that?â And my dad said, âAbsolutely!â That was all I needed to hear.â
Now that she has completed a postbac program at Jefferson University to shore up her science credits, Goldsberry is applying to pharmacy school and working as a pharmacy technician.
âIt was scary in the beginning,â Goldsberry acknowledges, âand I definitely had many conversations with my therapist about it.â She has struggled with the shift from being financially independent and working full time to becoming a student again, and there have been times when she has questioned her decision. âIn the back of my mind also, Iâm thinking, âOh my gosh, when I finish, Iâll be 43.ââ
Her leap of faith has paid off so far, though, she says, in terms of her overall well-being. She is invigorated, too, at the thought of building partnerships with local school districts and continuing to involve high school and middle school girls in STEM fields, âbecause I still have that passion for education and for interacting with young people.â It gives her comfort, she says, knowing she can intertwine her interests.
Global Public Health VP to Seminary
Carolyn Hart â79 began her big life change during the pandemic, but it was politics rather than COVID-19 that led to her decision to move on from a long career in global public health consulting and enter seminary.
âSince about 2015, Iâd been feeling worn down to the nub of my being, mostly by politics,â says Hart. âThat got me thinking about the world and the failure of institutions that had previously served us, including academia, the media, politics, the marketplace, and the church.â
A lifelong churchgoer, Hart had come to feel that the church as an institution was âsignificantly underperformingâ and that perhaps she could play a role in revitalizing it. âI thought I wanted to do it at a wider than congregational level,â says Hart. âAnd I wanted to study religion among people of faith, not purely in an academic way, so I enrolled in a seminary.â
Hart is now in her second year at Virginia Theological Seminary, and already her experience is leading her in unexpected directions. âI went in with my management-slash-advocacy cap on,â she says. âPublic health is all about both of those things, so I thought thatâs what the church needs. Instead, she has found herself considering âmore of a pastoral kind of relationship-based way of taking this to action.â This fall, Hart started an internship in hospital chaplaincy.
Working on a personal level to advance institutional objectives is not new to Hart, and many of the attributes she developed as a manager, such as listening and being attuned to another personâs path, should transfer well to a pastoral counseling role, she feels. âI think Iâm going to be able to apply some of those skills in a new way, probably more quietly and in a more one-on-one rather than front-of-the-room kind of way,â she says.
Studying the Bible has been a treat, she says. While Hart considers herself a ârobust person of faith,â she had never studied religion before and is embracing this aspect of the three-year program.
The hierarchy of the student-professor relationship at her seminary has been a bit more of an adjustment for Hart, who spent her career with a company that prided itself on its flat and non-hierarchical culture.
Most people who enroll in a seminary program plan to be ordained, but that is not necessarily Hartâs goal. âIf you want to be legitimate in an ecclesiastical setting, thatâs the credential that people expect you to have,â she says, âSo I donât rule it out, but Iâm not pursuing it right now.â
Construction Manager to Software Engineer
After working for nearly a decade in construction project management for a major fashion retailer, Shakila Muhammad â01 knew she had to quit.
âWhen you hit that 10-year mark, you go up a pay grade,â she says. âSo, I knew if I didnât leave then, I probably never would.â
For a while, she says, the job had been fun. It paid well, and Muhammad had found it exciting to work on store openings and remodels, interacting with construction contractors and in-house designers throughout the U.S. and Canada. As she rose in the company, though, her enthusiasm waned as her expertise grew. It got to the point, she says, where âit only took me a day and a half to finish my work for the week, and then I was just waiting for something to happen at a store and for there to be an emergency construction project.â
In what she calls her âcome to Shakila moment,â she realized that her biggest nightmare âwas for my legacy to be that Iâd worked for this company
for nine years.â
When she asked herself, âWhat would I be really upset with myself if I hadnât tried?â she landed on teaching and tech. A fine arts and art history major at 91´ŤĂ˝, Muhammad had taught art briefly in a public middle school, and she wanted to try teaching again as a more mature person.
Since living abroad was also on her list, she spent two years teaching English in China and Saudi Arabia. âIt was a great adventure, and I learned that I could kind of vibe wherever I landed,â says Muhammad. The itch to try technology, however, had only grown stronger, so she signed up for a tech bootcamp.
That experience, says Muhammad, was brutal, but she came out of it knowing she could work as a âfull stackâ developer. As she explains it: âIn development, there are two big areasâthe backend that deals with the database, and then the front end, which is what you see when you log into a website or an app. Most developers specialize in either the back or front end. Some consider themselves full stack, which means they can do both.â
Muhammad now works as a software engineer for a renewable energy company in Philadelphia, happily using, as she puts it, âboth my right and left brain.â Technology as a field appeals to Muhammad because there is always something new to learn.
âEvery month, there are new products, new languages, upgrades, updates, but there are also all of these historical languages that programs and applications are written in,â she says. âSo, if I ever know all the new things, I still can go back and look at those historical languages and learn something there.â
Scientist to Lunch Cook
After majoring in philosophy at 91´ŤĂ˝, science took center stage for Kathi Atkinson â72, who headed up to the Bronx for a Ph.D. program in genetics followed by a postdoc position at University of California Berkeley. Twenty years on the science faculty at University of California Riverside was followed by a similar stretch as a high school science teacher in California and then in Iowa.
Atkinson had made the switch from academia to secondary education because she recognized that her love of teaching outweighed her love of research.
When it was time to leave her high-energy high school teaching job, Atkinson, who was solo by then, decided to move back across the country from Iowa to Flagstaff, Arizona, to be near one of her sons. She worked for two months at what she calls âa very high-stress grill kitchenâ and then got picked up by a Catholic school in town as their new lunch cook.
âItâs just over half-time, involves a generous measure of creativity, and I love the kids,â says Atkinson. âThe switch was not surprising to those who knew me as a teacher. For my science lessons, I brought lesson-related food to class from time to time. During my last year, my students said they knew what was developing because I brought food nearly every week!â
Changing careers at the age of 69 may seem odd, she says, but she is thrilled with her new life. âOne of the cool things about being a school lunch lady is that I am living on the academic calendar, like I have for most of my life, with generous vacation time,â says Atkinson. âIâve resumed interesting travel with a vengeance since getting out of COVID restrictions.â
She has even become a role model for career- switching to her children. âMy younger son says he has watched my example and is just this month beginning a really big career shift, with gusto, knowing he would always regret it if he did not try! Thatâs what a mom really wants to hear!â
Published on: 10/21/2022