This is a letter to my earlier self, dedicated to all of you - to young, talented, inspired, and motivated, worker organizers in the labor movement. Thank you for listening to my story and I hope it will illuminate your own path and experience.
(The following text was read out loud to a group of young organizers in August 5th 2022.)
My name is Nica. I am a writer, working artist, community & labor organizer, and on Thursday afternoon's teach swimming to children at the local pool. I started out in Manila, in the Philippines where I grew up, and I moved to California in 2008. I graduated from UC Berkeley, and upon graduating landed a super cool internship in the summer of 2013. Because of that internship and my college degree, my job choices moving forward were influenced by my desire to be a person who helps people get out of poverty. I did not know what that would look like but in time I decided I could do that by working for unions in California. My first union job was to be an administrative staff for an electrician union called the IBEW in my county, San Mateo. When I got bored of that job, and I was very bored, I left my job. In the middle of my resignation I applied for another job, a sophisticated sounding union job to be a project coordinator for the one and only California Labor Federation.
Fortunately, I got the gig. I secured an income that was livable and enjoyable at the age of 26. I found out later that through the pile of resumes they saw mine and said "Who is this?! Who is Nicollette?" That is my real full name. I spent my time as a union organizer representing workers in the workforce & economic development system in California which is a space not a lot of unions occupy at the moment. Unlike my job with the electricians, this was not boring, but I still resigned after 4 years of working there because I felt like I was at a dead end. There was no career advancement for me within my department. My relationship with my boss started to degrade. The principles of equity, worker voice, representation, and many more I was starting to question within the organization I was in. Part of my experience at the time felt fraudulent, I must admit, so I sadly left that job last year in 2021.
Today, instead of a job I have projects. I am very proud to be involved with AIWA, which stands for Asian Immigrant Women Advocates, a small nonprofit based in Oakland chinatown. Also, BSP - a worker training organization that provides education and training janitorial and airport service workers. But most importantly, my most favorite project of all time is sharing my creative world, I call Kwento by Nica. Now I will show you it.
-show website-
Kwento is my creative project and I created it all throughout my career working for unions and how did I do it? I will show you how.
1. 617 experience - show blog post
2. People at the workplace were fascinated. They couldn't wrap their head around how I was able to have energy to do it. And this is the part where I tell you and encourage you to listen to your inner voice even in the workplace. If doodling is a bad thing in the workplace, but you are so so amped up to do it while on clock, I encourage you to create. Because the results amount over time, and soon you will have your own portfolio or website like me to showcase it.
3. Some people won't like you for it. I had a coworker who really didn't like me and the positive reception Kwento by Nica had in the workplace. This coworker made it so unbearable for me to work in the same office as her that I quit. And that is how I left my job with the electrician union. Now, this is the part where I tell you, being creative and showing that side of you in the workplace will not always be celebrated. Coming out to say you're an artist in the professional space will come with reactions. So... to be creative is to be brave in the workplace.
4. Now, when I was working for the labor federation, everyone supported me and my ventures outside of worker organizing. My coworkers and directors knew I was creative because I made that as part of my identity. BUT in that role I learned that not all places of work are ready for creativity. There are traditions, patterns, hierarchies, and practices that are so well established that the slightest offering of a creative solution on how to improve or refresh old systems will be perceived as too radical and impossible to pursue.
And this is the reason why I am reading this letter to you. It is to remind you not to forget your inner voice, your creative voice, especially at times when you feel defeated in the workplace. It will happen. And when the time comes, if you need 5, 10 minutes, 1 hour, 3 hour break from work to simply doodle or do your craft while clocked in... I encourage you to do it. That is how you can express yourself, mesh your artistic self in the workplace, and make time to be creative while you show up for a job.
Was this worth sharing to you? Yes. How do you find balance to do that? Well I hope I was able to show you and now we can practice.
This coworker made it so unbearable for me to work in the same office as her that I quit. And that is how I left my job with the electrician union.
I liked this quote because I feel like we make changes in our lives for many different reasons. Sometimes we are in the wrong place but we need something or someone to push us to get out of that situation (like a bad coworker). Right now I also feel like I am in a transitional phase so that spoke to me too.
take a break to make muffins!
some people won’t like you for being creative … it can be radical and threatening to the old systems
“…not to forget your inner voice…”– it is easy to fall into the spiral of self-doubt and feeling lost. A gentle reminder not to forget your true self is vital to maintaining a grip on your sense of self.
“I was very bored, I quit”
I read a post one time about how it’s actually an act of resistance to be able to quit when you don’t feel like something is serving you because it is a way of prioritizing your mental and physical well being and being brave enough to look for other opportunities even though there can be many challenges. I like this phrase because it is a reminder to me to be brave, not settle, and look out for myself and that quitting something that does not serve me does not represent a failure.
People are not always ready for creatives in the workplace.
This resonates with me because of the creatives I’ve shared space with. One of my former coworkers (and just angel friend of mine) is an artist in every way. She impacted the way I think about work, taking up space, and seeing work as an extension of myself. The workplace might not always be ready for creatives, but when we open our lives to them, it has the potentially to change the way we move in the world.
“not all places of work are ready for creativity. There are traditions, patterns, hierarchies, and practices that are so well established that the slightest offering of a creative solution on how to improve or refresh old systems will be perceived as too radical and impossible to pursue.”
I have experience with unions before. These lines are so precise that have gut reaction reading them. New ideas are never a threat to workers they are only a threat to people who fear worker power and sometimes that’s unions themselves. But the labor movement needs new ideas even if the first time their heard are by people who don’t want to accept them.
i’ve spent the past five years organizing in my hometown. i call the folks i met this way my second family because they saw me grow from a boy into a man, they shaped the way i think and operate today, and they’re always in my thoughts whenever i go out anywhere — a research project in copenhagen, an organizing internship in sf, a train ride around chicago, a road trip to claremont
some people grew up with youth groups, churches, sports leagues, dance teams, but i grew up with the activists of every race religious background belief who are trying to make tracy california a better place
but i know i want to walk away, at least for a bit.
gotta get some rest, at least for a bit.
gotta do some thinking, at least for a bit.
gotta do some writing, at least for a bit.
gotta break free from good friends AND bad habits, at least for a bit.
gotta gain perspective – on the problems i wanna help solve, on the communities i wanna help empower, on the person i wanna become
at least for a bit.
tl;dr — wow thanks for unlocking all these reflections bc this letter is definitely a vibe lol
I only wrote down one quote – “I made creativity part of my identity.” Creativity is a choice and requires intentionality. Mostly, I haven’t made this choice. I’ve stayed away from creative pursuits. I don’t have a specific reason why. It might be the perfectionist side of me or the rule-following, need for structure I have.
I can choose to make creativity a part of my identity. I can invest my time in creative activities and hold onto these as a part of me, not just a cute thing I tried once. I love to sing and dance. I like journaling and painting too. Maybe I am creative after all.
“It is to remind you not to forget your inner voice, your creative voice, especially at times when you feel defeated in the workplace. It will happen.”
Organizers are so busy all the time, and I have so many creative side projects I want to do before I die. I find myself worried that organizing will suck up all my time and that by the end of the day, I’ll never have the energy for creative expression, and that as a result of that, I will one day lose touch with my creative voice. To prevent that from happening, I’ll have to purposely make time. It’s good to know blending creativity with organizing isn’t as impossible as it seems.
“Person who helps others get out of poverty” – this spoke to me because it aligns with what I would like to do as well.
“I quit” – I think it is really important to exercise boundaries especially in consuming work.