Abbott
Master Don Juan
I haven't worked a day during my adult life. I'm still taking some classes at a community college so it's not like I'm some 30 y/o who hasn't worked for 12 years.
But ya...I'm almost at my two year anniversary of joblessness. Before you wonder how I pay for my bills, basically my parents give me money every month. We're not rich so it's just enough to pay my bills plus a little bit of extra spending cash. So I'm not starving.
What I'm wondering is...what am I doing wrong?
Recently I had a department store literally reject me. The HR manager called me only because the day before, I visited, asked about the job situation, and refused to leave until he did something that I liked (he refused to give me a straight answer to my question "Are you hiring or not?" so I stuck around, even asking him if that was a store policy.)
He said that he wanted someone with more experience (either because I've never worked in retail, or he made it up) and more maturity (he didn't like the reason I listed for leaving my last job).
The last thing bothered me. During high school, I worked at a fast-food joint. I had to get out of there because I hated it and it made me miserable. I felt 1,000 times better the minute I quit (well I gave two weeks notice, but I felt better after the last day). The reason I gave them, and the reason I listed on that particular job application was that I was tired of working with meat and getting burned (esp. because I'm vegetarian, but I don't tell potential employers that).
So now I'm wondering..."could it be that's what all the other potential employers thought, only they didn't tell me so?"
I haven't gotten a single job that I've applied for since I left high school. I've tried a variety of work. The only thing I absolutely refuse to do is fast-food or cooking. There's other types of work I wouldn't like, but will tolerate.
I wonder what I should do here:
A) Simply don't tell them that I worked at the fast-food joint. It was a mistake for me to work there anyway.
Plus the fact that by working there, people automatically think you're lower class.
B) Come up with a different reason why I left.
C) Do something else.
D) Consider myself "blacklisted" and move to a different town where no one knows me and where I haven't applied to anything, then apply using idea A.
E) Forget jobs. Start a website and sell computers and computer parts, since I know a lot about computers.
This is annoying as hell. I sometimes wonder "What's going to become of me," and "will I still need my parents money when I'm 30? I sure as hell hope not."
There is a couple little tidbits that I should mention: Near the end of my time at the fast-food joint, I was suspended for a week without pay because I said unflattering things about the owners within earshot of customers. This had nothing to do with the fact I quit, as I was going to quit anyway. However, the timeframe might make employers wonder.
Also, the year immediately following high school, I did attend a university with a schedule that didn't really permit me to go to work (full-time, too much homework, and morning, afternoon, AND evening classes). I didn't return the following year.
Now, I'm trying to find myself a job, but I just don't seem to be able to.
What am I doing wrong?
I'd appreciate any real responses, even if they are candid. Just no responses like "Get off your lazy ass and just get a job!" since those don't help.
Ben
But ya...I'm almost at my two year anniversary of joblessness. Before you wonder how I pay for my bills, basically my parents give me money every month. We're not rich so it's just enough to pay my bills plus a little bit of extra spending cash. So I'm not starving.
What I'm wondering is...what am I doing wrong?
Recently I had a department store literally reject me. The HR manager called me only because the day before, I visited, asked about the job situation, and refused to leave until he did something that I liked (he refused to give me a straight answer to my question "Are you hiring or not?" so I stuck around, even asking him if that was a store policy.)
He said that he wanted someone with more experience (either because I've never worked in retail, or he made it up) and more maturity (he didn't like the reason I listed for leaving my last job).
The last thing bothered me. During high school, I worked at a fast-food joint. I had to get out of there because I hated it and it made me miserable. I felt 1,000 times better the minute I quit (well I gave two weeks notice, but I felt better after the last day). The reason I gave them, and the reason I listed on that particular job application was that I was tired of working with meat and getting burned (esp. because I'm vegetarian, but I don't tell potential employers that).
So now I'm wondering..."could it be that's what all the other potential employers thought, only they didn't tell me so?"
I haven't gotten a single job that I've applied for since I left high school. I've tried a variety of work. The only thing I absolutely refuse to do is fast-food or cooking. There's other types of work I wouldn't like, but will tolerate.
I wonder what I should do here:
A) Simply don't tell them that I worked at the fast-food joint. It was a mistake for me to work there anyway.
Plus the fact that by working there, people automatically think you're lower class.
B) Come up with a different reason why I left.
C) Do something else.
D) Consider myself "blacklisted" and move to a different town where no one knows me and where I haven't applied to anything, then apply using idea A.
E) Forget jobs. Start a website and sell computers and computer parts, since I know a lot about computers.
This is annoying as hell. I sometimes wonder "What's going to become of me," and "will I still need my parents money when I'm 30? I sure as hell hope not."
There is a couple little tidbits that I should mention: Near the end of my time at the fast-food joint, I was suspended for a week without pay because I said unflattering things about the owners within earshot of customers. This had nothing to do with the fact I quit, as I was going to quit anyway. However, the timeframe might make employers wonder.
Also, the year immediately following high school, I did attend a university with a schedule that didn't really permit me to go to work (full-time, too much homework, and morning, afternoon, AND evening classes). I didn't return the following year.
Now, I'm trying to find myself a job, but I just don't seem to be able to.
What am I doing wrong?
I'd appreciate any real responses, even if they are candid. Just no responses like "Get off your lazy ass and just get a job!" since those don't help.
Ben