Trading the tundra for an ocean view
Violet P. Woodhouse is a successful Newport Beach-based trial
attorney, negotiator and one of the nation’s top financial advisors
on complex divorce issues.
Woodhouse is also a successful author of “Divorce & Money: How to
Make the Best Financial Decisions During Divorce,” now in its sixth
edition. Woodhouse grew up in remote areas of Alaska, made her way to
California in the late ‘60s and has been here ever since.
The Pilot’s Luis Pena recently sat down with the 55-year-old
attorney.
Where did you grow up?
I was born in a little fishing village in the Bering Sea. The name
of the little town is Naknek, Alaska, and I lived there for five
years. And then I moved to, also in Alaska, a place called Palmer on
just a tiny farm until I was 16. That’s where I grew up: the tundra.
It was a very safe place, it seemed to me, at least I felt safe
there. Very safe, very small community, everybody knows everybody --
it was a wonderful five years. On the farm, that was a lot of work. I
learned how to work there. I also learned the importance of work.
What kind of childhood did you have?
I had a very complicated childhood. Life in Alaska is not like
life here, it just isn’t. It’s very different, it’s very tough. Life
in Alaska, when I grew up, there was nothing easy about it. In
Alaska, when I was on the farm, there was this big dairy farm across
the road where we were ... In a dairy farm, they kill almost all of
the male calves. They only have meat for female cows, because cows
have calves, and also because they give milk, so they kill the male
calves. They used to kill them in the driveway going up to their
house across the street, but right across from where we lived, so we
would see the calves being killed. And one time I went over there
because there was this beautiful little Holstein calf that they were
going to kill, and I asked them if I could have the calf, and they
gave it to me about a year later. Palmer, Alaska, which is where I
lived, is the center for the state fair in Alaska and I had trained
that calf to walk behind me by having feed in a can and having it
smell the feed so he’d walk behind me. Anyway, I took him to the
state fair and won first prize. His name was Sam.
How did you end up in Newport-Mesa?
I actually had a stop in Portland, [Ore.], for a year or so and
then I moved from Portland in 1969 to San Francisco in a little
Volkswagen with all my belongings in it. That’s where I stayed and
got a job. I went to Portland because my mother and father had
divorced and my mother lived in Portland, and I really disliked
Portland because it was six months of brutal cold, windy, cold
freezing rain and it was gray. It was dank and dark for six months
and I just didn’t want to live there. I loved the sun and there just
wasn’t enough of it there. I got in my car and drove to San Francisco
and got a job. I got married in 1975, and my husband was going to a
pharmacy school up in San Francisco, which is where I was at the
time. And then he did a residency at UCI here in Irvine and that’s
how we ended up in Southern California. California is perfect. Coming
from Alaska, I migrated south. This is where I’m roosting, this is my
home. I felt at home here.
What are your greatest accomplishments?
My two children both of whom are in the service. They’ve
successfully have become adults. Anybody who has ever had children
knows how really terribly difficult it is to raise children. My
children have never been in trouble with the law. They’re both
self-supporting, self-sufficient, responsible, work hard and know the
value of work.
If you could re-do one moment or incident in your life what would
it be?
I don’t think there are any. I tend not to look at life that way I
guess. I value even mistakes that I make because it’s only through
those mistakes that I learn from those mistakes. In other words,
making a mistake is not a problem, it’s only if you never learn from
your mistakes that it becomes a problem. Not that it doesn’t cost you
grief or that it doesn’t cause you pain, but simply that the only way
that we can get better is to learn from our mistakes. People tend not
to learn by what other people say or by necessarily even observing
other people. They tend to learn by the mistakes that they make.
What profession other than yours would you like to have tried?
I guess I don’t think of things like that either because I think
that’s negative. It’s like having regrets. I think that if I wanted
to do anything, I could do it. I guess that’s the way I feel. And
what I wanted to do is what I did. I’ve done what I wanted to do. If
I had more time, I would like to write more books. As to a
profession, I can’t think of another profession that I would want to
do.
What are some differences between a typical day in your life now
versus a day in your life 20 years ago?
I had young children, that makes a lot of difference. Twenty years
ago I would have had a 1-year-old son and a 4 1/2-year-old daughter.
That would mean that I would have been concerned about day care,
concerned about my obligations as an employee, conflicted about my
duties as an employee and my duties to my children. Not that I would
ever make the wrong decision, but still, when your child is sick,
you’re primarily responsible for taking care of the child. Well I
was, anyway. I have conflicts about that. I don’t have that anymore.
My children are all adults and they’re all grown and they’re both in
the service, so they don’t live close here, they don’t live in Orange
County. My son is in Okinawa and my daughter is on Travis Air Force
Base. When I get up in the morning, I’m focused on going to work ...
I’m focused on going to work and making sure that whatever I have
scheduled that day has been done. Twenty years ago, I was bathing and
feeding children.
What is the greatest lesson you’ve learned in your life?
There are three of them: communication, negotiation and
compromise, because those are the key elements to a successful
marriage or any kind of successful relationship -- not just a
marriage, any successful relationship. Both parties have to be able
to communicate, negotiate, and compromise. And I don’t mean that in
the sense that you’re compromising your dreams away, that’s not what
I’m talking about. I’m talking about the ability to have a successful
marriage or relationship with anyone that you choose.
What do you treasure most?
You know what I really treasure most: peace and quiet. Listening
to the birds, warm sunny days -- that’s what I treasure most, because
it grounds me. I love to look at the ocean because it grounds me.
Those things tend to put my life and thoughts and feelings in check.
They tend to take any ideas of self-importance away. It tends to have
you put into perspective your own life. All that stuff humbles me.
The ocean humbles me. All you have to do is look at the enormity of
it or feel the power of a wave and it basically tells you how
important you are in the major scheme of things.
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