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Some Funny Things Happened on the Road to Retirement

Listen to this Post

Above Audio Recorded Using:

  • Microphone – Rode Video MicroGo II (USB-C)
  • Hardware – iPad Pro 11″ M4
  • Software – TwistedWave for iOS
  • Additional Software Treatment via MacBook Air M3 13″ – AU HiPass, LoudMax, iZotope RX11 Mouth De-Click

Recorded in my Home Studio

It truly is about time I retired from public education. I’ve actually been planning this for several years now. I came across an old unpublished blog post from January 2021 in which I triumphantly stated that 2021 was “what I intend to be my last year as an educator.” 2021.

The 2020-21 school year was my 27th year in education, when I hit the “magic number” for retirement in Texas: Age + Years of Service = 80. On August 7, 2021, I turned 53 years old, so from that day onward, I was officially eligible to exit my career. But 20-21 was also only Year 1 in my final district, and you might recall that it was also the school year right after the COVID pandemic. What a strange year – our district began the year with 100% distance learning, then later allowed students who wished to pursue in-person instruction, but only with social distancing. Testing procedures were really odd – students could either choose to test or defer until later – but I learned a lot in that unique environment. By August 7 of 2021, I don’t think I was actually ready to retire, after all, so I committed to Year 2 at that campus and in that district. I did truly enjoy the campus where I worked immensely, learn many new skills, had made new friends, and was able to find fulfillment in my work as the Campus Testing Coordinator. So I pressed on…2021-22, 2022-23, then 2023-24.

Each of those next 3 school years grew progressively more difficult, though. The district kept adding tests and testing responsibilities while simultaneously gaslighting everyone with a message of “we’re actually doing less than in years past.” Right. I suppose, as George Costanza said, “it’s not a lie if you believe it.” The State of Texas was also adding new things at least every odd-numbered year. And I was burning out while yearning for more time to do voiceover work, worrying that I might miss a critical chance, if only from the opportunity cost of time spent with education and not VO. So in June 2024, I actually filed the paperwork. Sent a paper copy off via USPS Certified Mail – I still have the receipt. I informed my principal, who was herself moving onto a revised life and career in New Mexico. Also informed the staff. The timing actually seemed perfect – 30 years, weary, new principal, new superintendent – let’s make a break for it.

Into my office walks a former principal of mine from a previous campus, now a district administrator. “I want you to reconsider,” she says. We talk about the bureaucratic issues within the district, as well as my salary, and she pledges to work on a pay raise for me. I figure if she can make something happen with my pay that is worthwhile, I might dig deep and muster up another 3-5 years of effort. So I cancelled my retirement in anticipation of her delivering. She didn’t. Or, to put it more accurately, she couldn’t. With a new superintendent, she found herself professionally pidgeon-holed (districts like to call it “reassigned”) and therefore had very little leverage to influence my pay, at least to the level I hoped. I received a raise beyond the typical x% given to all employees, but it was nowhere near what I had requested or felt like I deserved, given the scope and quality of work I was doing for the campus. “But you’ll like working with [new principal],” I was told in an effort toward consolation.

And I did. Great guy, hard worker, dedicated. Trouble is, he found himself just trying to stay afloat amidst even more district bureaucratic nonsense. Everyone at our campus did. It became comical, and we joked about it openly. I joked freely about these things in e-mails to campus staff. And of course, that got me in a little hot water. “You sound like you’re pitting the campus against the district,” I was told by a central office administrator. No, the district is destroying our morale, and I’m trying to show empathy with our teachers through humor. (But that’s another story for a later post.)

So after year 31, in the spring of 2025, I filed the paperwork again, this time electronically. Then a central admin position came open in another nearby district – “Director of Assessment & Accountability.” Way back in 2018, this was where I was headed in my first district before the rug was yanked out from under me (Another story for still another post.) I apply. I contact this district’s superintendent, also a former principal of mine. (No, I am NOT above leveraging old professional relationships, and neither should you be.) I get an interview. Probably the best performance I ever had in an interview. The committee lead calls and tells me it was a great interview, the committee was very impressed, and he needs to contact my references next.

Now you might be thinking, “What about voiceover? What about THE DREAM?!? Weren’t you ready to commit full-time?” Yes, but this central office job would’ve been a substantial pay increase and set me up for an even more lucrative retirement situation in just a few years. I owe it to myself to try, at least. And if this job is meant to be, I can cancel my retirement again and stick it out a little longer. And a week after the interview, it’s looking like that shall be the plan. They seem to want to hire me. Then another week goes by. And another. And finally, I get the e-mail saying “we have decided to move forward with another candidate for this role.” I figure it’s probably the guy with an Ed.D.; districts love doctorates among central administrators. (Yet another future post.)

“Oh, no! I’m so sorry.” Please don’t feel sorry for me – no condolences, no regrets. I applied, I put in appropriate effort and performed well, but that other district went a different direction. I like to think they’ll regret not hiring me, but it doesn’t matter. In the end, I know from experience that central office work is just a little soul-crushing (wow, that’s FOUR future posts), so that potential additional pay would’ve likely come with…suffering. And now, I simply have to hustle as a freelance VO talent, keep building my skills, market and find clients, and do the work. If I do it right, I may be able to cover the potential difference in salary from that job, and then some. And because I enjoy VO, there won’t be any soul-crushing or suffering. It truly is about time I retired from public education.

First Trip Around the Blog

Listen to this Post

Above Audio Recorded Using:

  • Microphone – Sennheiser 416
  • Interface – cEntrance PASportVO
  • Hardware – MacBook Air M3 13”
  • Software – TwistedWave
  • Additional Software Treatment – AU HiPass, LoudMax, iZotope RX11 Mouth De-Click

Recorded in my Home Studio

This is not a voiceover blog.

Yes, I am a voiceover talent (I prefer the term “talent” over “artist.”). And that’s Mr. FULL-Time VO Talent to you, thanks to my recent retirement from K-12 education. But this is not a voiceover blog, because frankly it’s been done, and it’s being done, by people with a whole lot more experience doing VO and writing VO blogs than me. I’m not sure I have much to add to that conversation right now.

“So what kind of blog is it, then, ‘Mr. Full-Time VO Talent?’ Is it an education blog?”

Sort of, although education blogs have also been done and are also being done, with better research than I have time or inclination for. Not interested in doing a bunch deep dives into the facts on a particular issue of education. Maybe once in a while. But what I do have is 31 years of experience in K-12 education. And an opinion. And some things to say, I suppose.

“So you’re going to gripe about the education profession in a blog? Lovely. Hasn’t that also been done?”

Absolutely. But I’m not really here to gripe. Sure, 31 years is plenty long enough to give me several axes to grind online. I’ve worked in 3 different districts, in 3 different campuses along with central administration in 2 of those districts, for 9 different direct supervisors, under 8 different superintendents. With a myriad colleagues of all backgrounds and abilities. I’ve experienced and seen some inspiring and fantastic things in education. I’ve also seen some sh** that would make you shake your head or possibly even curse.

What will this blog address among all of that experience and all of those people? T.B.D. I won’t be calling out the worst people I’ve encountered by name. I will most certainly recognize some of the best people by name, because they deserve celebration. But what I will spend most of this blog doing is highlighting systematic issues I’ve observed over 31 years – from the absurd to the sublime.

“Aren’t you at least going to talk about your voiceover career?”

Here and there. Now that I’ve escaped the trap of having my VO career crowded out by commitments to “the day job,” I hope to experience significant growth in my VO business, and I hope to share things I experience – good and bad, but hopefully good. But again, anyone expecting to read “My VO Journey” will be disappointed, because A) already been done, and B) I consider it a little self-indulgent for my own career. If I want to indulge myself, I’d much rather share tales from the trenches of education. Because 31 years, don’t you know…

“Anything else going to be in this blog?”

That really depends on what crosses my mind during a given week. It is called “On the Brink of Instruction,” after all, so it’ll mostly be tied to my experiences in and thoughts on education. If another topic comes up – culture, movies, you name it – and I feel like I can actually add to the conversation, I may write about it. Plus, you know, the parent site is peterponcevoice, so maybe a little about voiceover. But…this is not a voiceover blog.