Day 45 & I’m Still Single*

*Job single that is.

Once my PR mentor, Dana, said, “You know, finding a job is like finding boyfriend. It’s all about timing and chemistry.” And I was like okay, yea Dana, cute metaphor, now mentor me on how to get a job. (Full disclosure: I love Dana, and she has helped me immensely through the job search, even with her cheesy metaphors).

But it turns out Dana was right. Although there seems to be some discrepancy between my actual love life and my professional endeavors,  finding a job is kind of like finding a boyfriend. Here’s how.

You agonize over your first impression & fall hard. 

Maybe you met online via LinkedIn (connecting is the new right swipe). Or maybe you crossed paths at a career fair (that you changed outfits for six times). Regardless, you replay that first meeting over and over again until you’ve thoroughly analyzed what they meant by “we’re always looking for new people” and criticized yourself for not shaking their hand for the third time. You get butterflies every time their company pops up on Facebook, and you’ve stalked their Twitter account more than you’d like to admit. You spend your days reading over their website and daydreaming what it would be like to work there. Now it’s time to build up the nerve to actually talk to them.

Updating your resume/cover letter essentially is drafting a text to a crush. 

Comma or period? I don’t want to sound too excited but also not unenthused about their company either. Does Arial make me seem basic? I don’t want to be basic basic, but I don’t want to be over the top either. Just basic enough so they don’t think I’m trying too hard. Maybe I should stick to Times New Roman. Serious. Sophisticated. And then the italics in my experience section will make me seem ~fun and carefree. And who the hell do I address the cover letter to? How do I start? Hi? To whom it may concern? No, they hate that sh*t, I know they hate it. Ugh, this is too hard. Really, I just need a way to say “PLEASE JUST HIRE ME, I WANT YOU SO BAD” without sounding desperate.

Sometimes experience is important for work (relationships).

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There are some employers in this world that are looking for serious employees. And with a serious employee, they want them to have experience. Experience with different jobs. Experience with different people and bosses. They want to enter into a contract with someone who knows what they’re doing with this kind of thing.

On the other hand, other people are looking for a casual fling that has the potential to turn into something serious. We’re all having fun here right? So little to no experience needed. Who cares if you’ve never had a real job before? Let’s just see where it goes, and we can define it later.

Maybe they’re just not that into you. 

You’re playing that job field like a boss, but sometimes you just meet people who just aren’t that into you. You’ve pulled out all the stops to impress them: multiple emails, hand-written thank you notes, an endorsement on LinkedIn. But they never call you back. You would rather them just tell you “It’s not me, it’s you,” but instead you’re sitting by the phone just hoping they call. Do yourself a favor and quit while you’re ahead.

Employers play hard-to-get too. 

All’s fair in love and war…and employment. And boy, do employers know how to play the game. They start off coy with “we’re considering a lot of applicants” or get your hopes up with the promise of calling next week. And then suddenly it’s three weeks later, they’re no longer hiring until one day they email you and say you might have the job… if you just complete an edit test/phone interview/re-design their comprehensive multimedia plan. And then it’s another two weeks until you hear from them, and you reach out again and they give you a nonchalant, “we’re still considering a lot of applicants, but we’ll be in touch.” You know what they’re doing, and you hate that it’s working, but you keep going back for more. As the saying goes, “Don’t hate the player, hate the game” but really we just end up hating all the players and the game of unemployment.

Rejection & heartbreak feel the same. 

“Unfortunately, we cannot offer a position to you at this time, but we really do appreciate your application and wish you all the best in your future endeavors.” Maybe you’ve invested weeks (or months), regardless, a job rejection stings all the same. It doesn’t matter if it was a mutual parting of ways (maybe you realized they weren’t what you wanted after all) or how nicely they let you down (I don’t appreciate how you appreciate my application, thank you very much), it still sucks. Just remember, time (and another sexy job description) heals all wounds.

There are a lot of fish in the sea (or jobs in the city), but you only need one to say yes. 

You only need to impress one employer. You only need one person to see how great you are. You only need one person to say, “Yes, we want you back.” And when that happens, all the chasing opportunities and LinkedIn late nights and resume revampings will all be worth it. Because you’ve finally found what dreams are made of: stable, full-time employment.

Good luck out there, y’all. I hope you find your soulmates soon.

DIY: Office Space

I’ve wanted to do this post for a while, but considering its nature as a DIY post meant that I actually needed to do the DIY projects… which just took a little longer than I expected. But I did it! So here it is. Ampersand’s first DIY post. {I would say there would be more, but I’m not the most DIY savvy, despite my obsession with Pinterest. I guess we’ll see.}

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Etc: K & D Talk Post Grad Life

K: Woo! Ampersand has its first collab! Please welcome my dear friend, Deanna (or “D“) aka the reason I’m staying relatively sane these past couple weeks.

One night while we were FB messaging, we started to discuss how completely bizarre post-grad life is, yet no one wants to talk about it. I don’t care if you have a job or not, being thrown out of college into the semi-real world is ridiculously weird. (D: Especially for those of us that are moving back home for some extended period of time.) So that’s what we’re talking about. Because no one else seems to want to talk about it.

But first, let me introduce you to Deanna. She’s pretty fab.

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One word that describes your post-grad life: Balanced?

How much do you miss college (scale of 1-10):  6

What are you most looking forward to in the real world: Not spending Sundays in the library ever again for the rest of my life, thus being able to have a real Sunday dinner (Yes I am in fact Italian)

Biggest fear for the real world: Having to navigate the T in Boston/adjust to city life in general

And I guess here’s a little more about me.

k new

One word that describes your post-grad life: ummmm, yea. (sorry that’s two)

How much do you miss college (scale of 1-10): it fluctuates between 7 and 58.

What are you most looking forward to in the real world: Decorating my own apartment

Biggest fear for the real world: Not making enough money as a journalist to decorate my own apartment

K: We thought the easiest way to chat about post-grad life would be a list of random thoughts.

D: We promise to make you laugh, not cry. 

Enjoy.

10 Random Thoughts about Post-Grad

D:

1) I have so many useless things in my childhood bedroom (ie. Password journal, Walkman, and Hilary duff CDs) that I definitely need to get rid of.

2) And then I need to find someplace to store my American girl doll and because I will one day gift it to my daughter. If I don’t have a daughter in hoping it will be worth big bucks to pay for grad school/a mortgage.

3) I should study for the GMAT every day like I promised myself. Yet, my biggest accomplishment since graduation has been finishing Friends seasons 7-10 on Netflix.

4) While I originally figured I might as well get in shape for the summer/before I start work, I forgot that the student gym membership included in tuition doesn’t exist in the post grad world. And real people gyms are mad expensive.

5) I’m wondering how long I can go around my hometown wearing only athletic clothing. I foresee this as lasting for a significant period of time.

6) I’ve been curious to see how long it takes my middle school sister to remove her bathing suit from the bathtub in our shared bathroom. It’s been 1.5 weeks so far.

7) I’ll need to make some sort of schedule/color-coded excel sheet so I know when all of my friends start working and thus leave me to crappy daytime TV/Pinterest.

8 ) It’s still a mystery as to the furthest I can drive on a road trip without stopping at a rest stop as I have an irrational fear of rest stops. My record is 4 hours.

9) I’ve started doing my laundry twice a week just so I have something productive I can do when my parents are home. It creates the illusion that I’m a semi-functioning adult.

10) Trying to explain what quinoa was to my father at a family BBQ was harder than any of my second semester senior year final exams.

K:

1) I absolutely dread the “what are you doing” question, so I’ve been avoiding my town’s Starbucks at all costs (I know right. I’m also shocked) However, I started getting withdrawal symptoms (#basicbitchproblems), so I went at 8am when I knew that only middle-aged women in book clubs would be there.

2) I purged my room of all the middle school crap (didn’t find my Hilary Duff CD though, damnit) but I did stumble upon my 5th grade diary. I was more awkward than I remembered. Cringing.

3) Currently, I hold a part-time position as a barista in a Barnes & Noble cafe. I can’t decide if this is a dream come true or a horrible, horrible decision.

4) My social life consists of watching the Bachelorette on Mondays with my mom and making small talk with cashiers at the grocery store. What I wouldn’t give for a crowded Kelly’s on a Thursday night.

5) Part of me wants to run away to Europe and avoid this awkward post-grad mess. I looked up plane tickets yesterday.

6) Good thing about post grad: I have time to DIY super fun Pinterest-y things! Bad thing about post grad: I’m TERRIBLE at DIY Pinterest-y things.

7) For my remote internship, I decided to actually get dressed every morning even though I’m literally in my house all day. That lasted for approximately 3 days until it dissolved into me wearing leggings and ratty t-shirts instead.

8) My parents seem more concerned about my life now  when they can literally see me every day, living & breathing vs. when I called them about once a week and they didn’t really know if I was alive or not day to day.

9) The job search goes like this: One day I’ll spend 5 hours on LinkedIn, crazily sending out resumes and the rest of the time, I convince myself that it’s okay to marry for money instead of love. I’ve yet to find a happy medium.

10) The amount of doctor/dentist/dermatologist appointments I have scheduled is absurd. It’s like being a postgrad means you actually have to start taking care of yourself.

D: While we can’t help but think about what’s coming next, where we’ll be working, how to decorate our apartments, etc., there are some good things about post grad. If we don’t have a job yet or have some time before starting work, we should be enjoying the last summer break we’ll have for the foreseeable future. Visit friends. Go to concerts. Anything at all-just embrace this responsibility-free time. If we’re home with our families, we get to enjoy Mom’s cooking and Dad’s corny jokes for a few more months before leaving our childhood homes. Bottom line, is college may have been a great four years but the it was by no means the best of our lives, that chapter is still unwritten.

K: ^Deanna is way more inspirational than I am haha She’ll probably be back to give some more random thoughts & wise words.

And on that note…thus concludes Ampersand’s first collab! Hope you laughed a little bit and enjoyed another voice besides my own. If you want to be featured on Ampersand (and basically become ~*famous*~), let me know! Writing is always more fun when I get to share it with someone else.