So the big Day has finally arrived. Well, not big really; the lead-up has been rather more significant - slow and painstaking. Not that the day was an anti-climax, more the opportunity to effect decisions long-since made.
Arriving at the office early, I set about tranferring mails & files I needed to my e-mail address, followed by the cleansing ritual of deleting every other e-mail and file I'd taken so much care over the past year to neatly categorise and organise . By the time I'd finished, there was virtually no trace on my computer that I'd ever used it. What a freeing experience - purging my link with the Company in the course of half an hour at the computer.
Next was sending the "transfer" e-mail. As a consequence of the rapidly diminishing workload and similarly deflated level of care, the handover of responsibility had been non-existent. "I guess I should read over the meeting minutes you've been sending out", noted my rather unconcerned colleague. So the process was initiated and finalised with a e-mail to the usual distribution, briefly excusing myself and nominating my hapless colleague as recipient for future communication.
This was followed the "final good-bye" note. Brief, to the point, and devoid of dreary sentiment, I provided my contact details and wished all a merry Christmas. That done, I headed downstairs for a round of final farewells. Conveniently my visit coincided with the departmental year-end cake feast, so goodbyes were tempered with generous slices of double-chocolate cake.
Upstairs next for a brief demob session with HR, followed by a round of farwells with our rather diminished department. Then, finally, escorted to the exit and swiped out, a brief farewell from HR, then out into the carpark and on my way home.
The first sensation was a sense of relief that it was finally All Over. I was no longer part of the troubled organisation, no longer employed, did not have to return in January. My overwheming feeling was a sense of freedom and release.


