pineapple wrote:
Hai guyz...
I'm unemployed right now; looking for work. Not knowing how to plan or structure my days is almost as frustrating as being unemployed and broke. Without the structure of school/a job, I have no idea what to do with myself, and I get really bored, frustrated, and depressed. I do have hobbies, but they're not enough to fill the time. Just wondering how other people deal with this.
Pineapple,
Right now, finding a job
is your job! So treat each day just as if you were going to work.
First, you have to get out of bed! You're not going to ever be employed otherwise, because the only work you could do in bed is not worth the loss of your health and dignity. Set your alarm for the same time every day, get up when it rings, and don't go back to bed.
Second, prepare yourself for the day. Bathe, eat breakfast, and dress for the kind of job you want to have. If all you are going to wear is sweats and sneakers, then you're not likely to get even an 'office-casual' type of job. Dress for success.
Third, get out the door. No employer goes door-to-door asking if you want a job. You have to get out there, walk up to the HR person, shake hands, look eager, and fill out those applications (take a few black pens with you, too). Leave your place at the same time every day. Don't waste your time with books, games, shopping, television, or the Internet -
get out there and look for work!
Fourth, keep a list of the places you've visited, the positions you've applied for, and the people you've talked to. Follow up each visit with a quick 'Thank You' note (email is okay, but only if the employer says so. Otherwise, use snail mail).
Fifth, do not give up. Persistence pays off. I was once fired (!) from a job, and spent six days a week for the next month visiting from 5 to 13 places a day, and it was on a Thursday of the fourth week that my boss offered me my present job (I started the following Monday). It took over 200 walk-ins before I found this job, and that was nearly 9 years ago!
Of course, all of this presupposes that your resumé is up-to-date; that you have transportation, a permanent address, and a regular phone number with voice mail (cell phone service); and that you have no medical or family issues that limit the amount of time each day that you can devote to finding work.
Best wishes,
-Fnord-
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