ABOUT JILL
Jill grew
up outside New Haven, Connecticut and dreamed of being a philanthropist
until she realized she was at least $5 million short. She settled for
studying Chinese at Georgetown University's School of Language and
Linguistics. Her direction changed yet again when she witnessed her
sociology professor, who was a Dominican priest, throw his collar on
the ground like a gauntlet before G-d, stomp on it and then
cigarette-squish it into the linoleum. This demonstration of how a
symbol can be significant and insignificant at the same time convinced
Jill that sociology was for her. After Georgetown's College of Arts and
Sciences admitted her as a transfer student, Jill pushed on and earned
a double major in government and sociology.
Being
a Jew at a Catholic institution created the opportunities for many
epiphanies, including one which persuaded Jill to forego a post-college
job in favor of a year in Israel. Her survival on a moshav, also known
as a farming community, in a development town and on a kibbutz required
that she endure comments both cruel and incomprehensible, like when a
young boy asked her why she spoke Hebrew like a retarded person. Jill
likes to point out that the speaker was one of several naked trilingual
three-year-olds whom she had to bathe daily as part of her work in the
nursery.
Jill's
subsequent travels alone through Europe weakened her back but toughened
her belief that the world is an ever-shrinking community. Still, she
returned to New Haven and found work at the Yale University Office of
Development. She moved quickly from the union ranks to management and
became the first development office staffperson to spend departmental
money on and actually use a Macintosh computer.
Although
Jill loved burying herself in graphic displays of the top ten
foundations' programming priorities, she eventually decided to move to
Cleveland, Ohio to pursue a joint degree in law and social work at Case
Western Reserve University. She squandered much of her four years
trying to convince her colleagues that a dual degree in law and social
work had merit, which to her seemed obvious.
As
Jill grew into her identity as a legal eagle and compassionate
clinician, a law school student named Jeff Zimon found her blend of
intelligence and empathy to be irresistible. Being the EMT he liked to
tell everyone he was, Jeff rescued Jill from the not-so-loving arms of
another man and married her post haste.
Jill
managed to get a nice dinner from the one law firm that interested her,
but traditional legal employers usually proclaimed that they didn't
know what to do with her. Luckily, Bellefaire JCB, a private nonprofit
mental health agency for families and children, created the position of
Ombudsman just as Jill completed her studies. As the only graduating
lawyer/social worker within hiring distance of Bellefaire, Case's
career office knew exactly who to call when the job opportunity arose.
Jill began her eight-year affiliation with Bellefaire shortly after she
took, and later passed both the Ohio bar and Ohio's exam for a social
worker license.
Jill's
figure expanded and contracted with three children before she decided
to leave Bellefaire, but not before she became their first Director of
Risk Management and later a telecommuting independent consultant. The
third child proved to be the kid that broke the mother's will to keep
going to an office outside the house and Jill felt compelled to cease
her extra-domestic work.
For
a year.
Then
Jill met the woman who would email her the words, "If you ever want to
try freelancing, let me know and we'll go for coffee." Now, less than
two years after her first two submissions were accepted and published,
Jill finds herself building a website, writing a nonfiction book
proposal and contributing regularly to a regional parenting magazine.
Jill's
family shows support in a variety of ways, but mostly by looking
through unfolded clothes in baskets of clean laundry, eating off of
paper plates even when they're not having a cookout and letting her
take the time to write when she's near a deadline.
If
you want to see a more formal version of Jill's experience and
education, please check her portfolio.
She loves to receive and send mail, so if you still have questions or
comments, let
her know. Email might not provide the tactile experience of
airmail stationery, but it delivers the sentiments just as well.