Man working at a crappy restaurant wearing a dinky cowboy hat? Man working at a crappy restaurant wearing a dinky cowboy hat. |
I don’t know how I
know
But I’m gonna find
my purpose
I don’t know where I’m
gonna look
But I’m gonna find
my purpose
Gotta find out, don’t
wanna wait
Got to make sure
that my life will be great
Gotta find my
purpose before it’s too late
-Bob Dylan
...okay fine, Princeton from "Avenue Q." Bite me
Yesterday, I interviewed for a new position at my current
company, Big Super Colossal Conglomo Corp, for a job in letter writing and
design. It’s a far cry from my current role of Phone Customer Service
Representative/Analyst/Whipping Boy, and something that, at the outset, seemed much
more in line with my education and skill set (aka my ability write in 300 words
what could actually be said in about 15, as the lion’s share of this blog’s
posts serve to prove)
The interview went something like this:
THEM: So, what do you know about this position?
ME: Well, my understanding is, we write and review letters
we send out to make sure they comply with the law and…
THEM: Actually, our compliance team does all that for us.
They make sure the letter wouldn’t break any laws and tells us to make the
changes.
ME: Okay. Anyway, we would still take their suggestions,
compose the letter in our own voice…
THEM: No, all the wording pretty much comes verbatim from
legal. We basically take what they want us to read and make sure all the
margins are aligned and the text is formatted properly.
ME: So basically, you want me to be Clippy.
THEM: Could you spot us some ones? We ordered pizza for the
department but we’re kind of short on the tip.
The interview team said they would let me know within a week
whether I’d been offered the job, but I doubt they will considering I managed
to answer every question with something they didn’t want to hear (“You’re an
independent worker? We want people who ask a lot of questions.” “You used to be
a sports editor? Keep all your creative ideas to yourself.” “You’re a human
being with a heartbeat and ten working fingers? We’re looking to hire a ham
sandwich.”)
Even if they did offer it to me, though, would I even
accept? Unless “Spell Checker Clicker Guy” is a six-figure job these days, why
move from a mind numbing job talking to customers to a mind numbing job talking
to myself all day as I lapse further into madness?
Needless to say, this isn’t the spot I imagined myself in when I walked across the podium at Duquesne two and a half years ago, proudly touting my
The job market has had other ideas so far, as has my wallet.
We all know the average college student changes their major
anywhere between two and eleventy kajillion times before they graduate, but
more surprising is the majority of college graduates who can’t find a job in their preferred field. A poor economy (empirical evidence) mixed with more
college students choosing fields of study many businesses deem unmarketable
(observational evidence) forms a cocktail I like to call the Drink of
Disillusionment…a drink that goes down rough. *self-important sniff*
It’s even worse when half of your friends from high school
or college are already doing something they love right off the bat. I’m
perfectly okay with sending most of them to their own island where they can
revel in satisfaction away from the rest of us losers. (At this point, I’m
mostly talking to my fellow liberal arts majors – I haven’t run into many
neuroscientists reciting the list of house dressings at DiGiorgio’s to
make ends meet lately)
For the “millennials” like myself who feel like they’ve lost
their way, is there a time to cut bait on your dreams and go for the moderate
payday? Where’s the cutoff point? If you’re not ready to buy a house by 30,
have you already blown it? If you’re not making more than $40K a year by 25,
are you doing something wrong?
Setting an arbitrary time to make a career change seems ridiculous. After all, for every five philosophy majors working in tech support to pay their student loans or aspiring musicians who work more paid lessons than paid gigs, there’s a Mike Mayock, who made a living in real estate for 18 years before trying to break into broadcasting again - and succeeding.
Setting an arbitrary time to make a career change seems ridiculous. After all, for every five philosophy majors working in tech support to pay their student loans or aspiring musicians who work more paid lessons than paid gigs, there’s a Mike Mayock, who made a living in real estate for 18 years before trying to break into broadcasting again - and succeeding.
You could always return to school to get a Masters or
another degree, if you want to ensure the sun will burn out before you escape
the tangled web of student loans you’ve woven yourself (thanks Obama). Or you
could take some time off to backpack across Europe if you’re a huge asshole.
I wish I could come to some satisfying conclusion, tie
everything together in a pretty little bow and leave you with words of wisdom
from someone years my elder, but if the preceding dozen graphs didn’t paint a
vivid enough picture for you, I barely know what I’m doing here myself. Hell, I
just spent 45 minutes trying to cook dinner tonight and I’m still biting into uncooked white beans
in a half-baked attempt to reintroduce a foreign substance known as “potassium”
into my life. Do you think I have a clue what the secret to finding a job you’re
passionate about is?
Here’s what I do know: you’re never going to get there by
standing pat. “Patience” is not a synonym for “complacency.” (Trust me, I looked) Do what you love in some other capacity. Use whatever spare time you
have to practice your craft, and don’t convince yourself you don’t have any.
For Christ’s sake, right now you're burning time reading a blog written by someone who’s watched this video 80 times in the past week and laughed just as hard each time. If you
can’t put your “passion” high enough on your list of priorities to grant it 15
minutes a day, it’s probably not your passion.
Apply to a million jobs. Send your resume anywhere with a mailbox, an e-mail address, or an under-appreciated intern tasked with sorting through them all. It’s like the New Deal: even if it doesn’t ultimately do anything, it will at least make you feel like something’s happening until you catch a break (or a world war).
Apply to a million jobs. Send your resume anywhere with a mailbox, an e-mail address, or an under-appreciated intern tasked with sorting through them all. It’s like the New Deal: even if it doesn’t ultimately do anything, it will at least make you feel like something’s happening until you catch a break (or a world war).
Most of all, if you’re in a relatively stable situation despite working a job you can’t stand, don’t get too comfortable.
Comfort will sap you of ambition. I’ve gone weeks, months without applying to
new jobs at times because, all things considered, my living situation is pretty decent. When I’m not at work, things are great. The temptation is to relax and
enjoy the out-of-office perks of a job like mine because the actual work is so
grating. In reality, your work begins once you clock out for the day.
Sharpen the saw with a relaxing night every so often, but don’t make it the norm.
With that, I must go. Now that I’ve gotten my writing done for the day, it’s time to learn to dole out word processing advice like an anthropomorphic paper clip. It's so I can find my dream job, you see.
With that, I must go. Now that I’ve gotten my writing done for the day, it’s time to learn to dole out word processing advice like an anthropomorphic paper clip. It's so I can find my dream job, you see.
tl:dr - Beans take forever to boil and should not be made by anyone unless you derive pleasure from periodically stirring a pot for 13 hours
You are such a good writer - I love reading your stuff.
ReplyDeleteBTW - My bean solution - canned beans - they are cheap and convenient. Also, if using dried beans, soak them overnight before cooking. Kudos for trying beans at all :)