Adventure abounds in career telling stories
Claire Vande Polder 鈥85 took a career possibilities test in her final year at Calvin, and it told her she should look for a job with adventure.
And it was absolutely right. As a nonfiction television producer, Vande Polder has explored the world, from the waters of Australia鈥檚 Great Barrier Reef to inside the pyramids in Egypt and to the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro. For her latest project, she embarked on a quest of a different sort鈥攖o understand happy marriages.
Her Calvin experience was formative to who she became. 鈥淐alvin was where lightbulbs started to turn on,鈥 said Vande Polder. She majored in English and discovered a lifelong passion for journalism and storytelling.
鈥淲orking on Chimes changed the trajectory of my life. I found people with similar interests. It gave me experience and a sense of community I hadn鈥檛 had before,鈥 she said.
After a master鈥檚 in literature at King鈥檚 College, University of London, Vande Polder and a friend from Calvin moved to Washington, D.C. She found an administrative job at National Geographic Television and worked her way into producing, directing, and writing.
鈥淭he work was hard. I missed holidays and important events because I was on the road. But I loved what I was doing. I was constantly learning, and that was the great motivator,鈥 she said.
After 12 years with National Geographic Television, she worked for the Discovery Networks and is now an independent writer, executive producer, and development executive working with clients like Smithsonian Channel, Investigation Discovery, and Oprah Winfrey鈥檚 Harpo Studios.
Most recently, Vande Polder鈥檚 natural curiosity led to writing about another kind of adventure: marriage. In her new book, Making Marriage Happy: Hard-Won Wisdom from Real Couples, she interviewed 26 happy couples who had been married for a collective 1,000 years. 鈥淭he book offers a collection of wisdom, advice, stories, and confessions from happy couples, told in their own words,鈥 she said.
鈥淚 know from my own marriage that every relationship is unique. I wanted to discover what happily married couples do in day-to-day life, and what these couples had in common.鈥 The book goes in depth on how couples fight, handle money, have conversations, navigate hard times, and more.
鈥淭here are a lot of funny stories in the book, and some are poignant and heartbreaking鈥攋ust like marriage,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 learned a lot, but it鈥檚 most gratifying to hear from readers who鈥檝e learned something from the book, too.鈥
Meanwhile, Vande Polder continues her work in television and is currently finishing a three-hour series called 鈥淎ge of Humans鈥 for Smithsonian Channel. The series focuses on the environmental impact humanity has had on earth, sea, and sky. She鈥檚 also in development on both a reality/competition series and a true crime series, and she鈥檚 consulting and writing for a podcast as well.
鈥淚n my work, it鈥檚 good to keep a lot of irons in the fire,鈥 she said. 鈥淣o project is ever a sure thing, so you learn to multitask, pivot if an idea doesn鈥檛 fly, and then move on. Once you learn that rejection is a natural part of the process, the variety is definitely part of the fun.鈥