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I reckon Michael Jordaan's scared of flyingMaybe, at 46, he's just read Erica Jong's "Fear of Flying" and decided that what she says is true: So he's changing his life, quitting First National Bank (FNB) and exploring new, more exciting and more rewarding challenges. Earlier this week, Jordaan announced on Twitter that he was stepping down, prompting a flood of responses from the gossips that follow him on this platform. From Twitter the gossip quickly spread to the media prompting the immediate question: "Did he go or was he pushed?" Like others I listened to some of this and wondered about it too: It took me back to memories of Bob Aldworth - the egotistic implementer of the first BOB automated teller machines in South Africa reportedly named after him. Aldworth's retirement (firing) from Barclays Bank, as it was then, also caused a flurry of speculation and talk of a 'cover-up' from the bank's cagey board of directors. It also prompted a flurry of Lionel Attwell gossip exposes about his relationship with Sandra van der Merwe. "Fear of Flying" couldn't be blamed then. It hadn't been written. Pub-chat was the limitIn Aldworth's days, Twitter didn't exist and the Internet was a pipedream so the gossipmongers were confined to the pubs of downtown Johannesburg or the Café Royale in Cape Town. When I heard about Jordaan's resignation I too wondered about South Africa's current whipping boy of affirmative action: was Jordaan giving up at FNB because the glass ceiling was reached years back and a unworthy successor with government connections had to be appointed so that lucrative government contracts could be secured. I thought about all these things until I started looking at the facts. Here they are: The rest of the speculation about Jordaan's resignation is rubbish. He did the right thing... what he said he would doHe's done what any decent employee should do: made his plans known long ago and implemented them. Part of that plan was to step down at the end of 2013. Of course there will be a stack of people saying that there is something ominous, strange or odd about his 'sudden resignation' because at the beginning of this year Jordaan publicly denied that he had any intention of going. So at this stage I doubt: I suspect, though, that there is some truth in my 'speculation' that Jordaan is sick or scared of flying. After at least 1,000 hours on board Mango, Kulula or SAA I'd be damned sick of it too. And at 46, Jordaan's age, there's just so much more to keep you alive than sitting in a stuffy cabin in cigar-shaped box at 600km/h. Where will Jordaan venture next? Well my guess is that it won't be much more than 10km away from his family home in Cape Town - or wherever he chooses to live now. So let's just wait and see. About Paddy HartdegenPaddy Hartdegen has been working as a journalist and writer for the past 40 years since his first article was published in the Sunday Tribune when he was just 16-years-old. He has written 13 books, edited a plethora of business-to-business publications and written for most of the major newspapers in South Africa. View my profile and articles... |