I have it bad. I've long since been diagnosed with Asperger's. On top of that, I have ADHD, dyslexia, OCD, depression, bad memory, poor posture, clumsiness, extreme anxiety, poor social skills, impulsivity, etc.
I've been in and out of therapy all my life (I'm 39, now). I've always struggled with school, only recently graduating from college with with an Associate's degree in IT Networking- thanks to Metadate.
It took me two years outside of college to find a job in IT. Since school, I have more or less gotten by on Social Security benefits. Nonetheless, I somehow managed to make it through a job interview to the point that it got me a job. In fact, a really good paying job, at one of the desired workplaces in the community. Albeit, it wasn't a direct hire, but through a staffing agency. Nonetheless, it was to be long lasting job, perhaps even becoming something permanent.
I started December 10th of 2012. My office position was ' Service Desk Technician' (with an emphasis on password support). Training was fast paced. So much was thrown at me in the first 2 weeks. I took notes. I brought my notes home to study. My job was answering the phone at an insurance agency. Financial representatives would call in with Active Directory issues, and the sort. I knew the technology, that wasn't the problem. But when I put my skills to the test, I'd clam up and my mind would go blank.
I had 3 or 4 people training me. For the most part, all of them treated me as an idiot. One trainer I had, albeit for 2 days, was an uppity young woman that would was always snippy to me. She was the type that liked to gossip. I was afraid to speak up because I was afraid I'd be making a name for myself. My last trainer, while initially, was a nice guy, quickly became impatient with me. He'd belittle me and talk down to me because I wasn't 'getting it'.
I expressed my concerns to my recruiter from the staffing agency, but she rather sweep it under the rug. She down played my concerns over I felt about those who were training me. She told me not to worry about it. I told her it that it was taking my longer to learn this but she said to take it easy and the job would come to me eventually.
Well, lo and behold, at the end of my shift this last Friday, she met me at my desk and wanted to talk to me privately. She told me that insurance agency felt I wasn't catching on, and after four weeks, they wanted to terminate my contract early. They said the learning curve for the position was 3 weeks and I was on my 4th week and they couldn't justify spending any more time, money, and resources on training me. The official statement was that I was 'underperforming'.
Here's the catch, I told, even begged, the staffing agency to tell the business that I have several disabilities that make it harder for me to learn. But the staffing agency didn't seem receptive to my suggestion that they'd help be my advocate. In fact, their attitude is that could care less. I'm accused of doing a 'bad job' when it was my disabilities that were acting as a barrier to me being successful with my job.
I want to cry. I'm fully capable of the job. I showed up to work. I wasn't there long enough to get my counselor from Independence First (an agency for people with disabilities) involved, nor my counselor from the Department of Vocational Rehabilitation to intervene on my behalf. Everything really didn't unravel until this last week.
I just feel chewed up and spat out. I'm completely drained. Disheartened. Disappointed. How am I going to retain ANY job? Am I going to be reduced to working part-time stocking groceries? I don't want to live rest of my life on Social Security (which barely supports me). I want a honest job making a livable wage.