employment

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Questions

Reverb is back! Back in December, I committed to writing blog posts based on creative, thoughtful prompts as part of Reverb 2010. I was not as diligent as I could have been, but I did have fun writing a few Reverb posts:

5 Minutes

Travel

I was very excited a few days ago to discover an email in my inbox from Reverb with a prompt for February and the promise of one prompt a month going forward. Once a month I can do.

One month into 2011, what question(s) are you living? Are there any prompts/questions that arose during #reverb10 that are still resonating in your life? Are you living new questions?

Wow. Reverb has some good timing. I am definitely living different questions in 2011. The biggest question of 2010 was “Should I quit my job?” The answer was yes.

After some part time work and freelance work and blogging and vacation time and travel, then more freelance work and more part time work and meetings and calls and emails and kicking off a little Marketing Consulting biz, my new question is “What direction am I going in?”.

There have been days where it felt like I would never work for pay again and days when I have felt overwhelmed by opportunities coming from different places and wanting to do everything. I wonder if I will become a permanent freelancer, enjoying the flexible but busy work from home lifestyle, able to take on project after project and to dabble in a little bit of food, wine, travel, and other interests as they come along.

This lifestyle creates another set of questions in itself. Will I make enough money freelancing? Will there be enough work to keep me busy enough consistently? How will I choose which jobs I take on and those I have to pass up?

Or will I find a great office job that I can’t turn down? Will the economy turn for the better, creating more traditional jobs that are right up my alley?

I don’t have any answers! But I can tell you how I have been managing living with constant questions because that’s what life is all about!

  • One minute, one hour, one day at a time. You don’t have to be everything always or to say yes or no right away.
  • Exercise! When I get overwhelmed with questions, a short, sweat-inducing workout does WONDERS. If you can’t work out, wine helps too Winking smile
  • Organize, organize, organize. Then make some lists, weigh pros and cons, and remember that most decisions are not the be all and end all for your whole life. They just might seem that way!

If you were to write a post on the Reverb prompt, what questions would you say you are living? Have they changed recently?

Tags: employment, questions, reverb, work

Ever since I left my publishing job at the end of October, I have gotten ALL sorts of questions from people about what I am doing, why I quit, what my plans are, etc. In addition, I have encountered more than a few assumptions, both direct and implied, mostly that I quit for a permanent vacation with soap operas on the couch or to “become a housewife”.

I have been told I am “living the life”, that I am “lucky that I don’t have anything to do”, that I should “watch what I spend because I am probably going broke” and other interesting things here and there, so for today’s afternoon post, I thought I would share not just a day in my life over the past almost three months but also some other thoughts and reflections on what has been a really unique time in my life.

I have, without a doubt, learned more in the past three months of freelance work/unemployment/sabbatical Winking smile, whatever I am calling it these days than I did in many years of working for someone else.

1) Quitting my job wasn’t something I took lightly or did spontaneously. I actually planned and saved for over a year and carefully networked throughout that year to meet as many people as possible in fields that I am interested in, wine, food, and travel. I went to plenty of events exhausted, cranky, spread too thin over that year to ensure I did as much as humanly possible to create opportunities for myself.

2) I honestly thought I would be working a few part time jobs by December 1. I never thought that the response to all of my inquiries and resume submissions would be silence. I have learned that job hunting is the rudest process where the job hunter is often not given the human courtesy of even an automated response. It makes me realize that there are many companies that I actually don’t want to work for, based on their response or lack thereof.

3) Despite the above, I am happier than I have ever been. I realized the other day that what I am feeling is what it feels like to be without want. When I was working full time, I worked near so many stores and ended up shopping a LOT. Whether I would buy something small or come back from Marshall’s with five summer dresses, I spent a ton of time wanting things, which I think justified being miserable for the rest of the day at my desk. Now? I feel like I have plenty of clothes and shoes and other things. The only place I spend money, besides essentials like mortgage and bills, is for going out with friends. Now what I crave are experiences as opposed to things to keep me occupied.

4) Being a full time blogger, freelancer, and opportunity seeker is interesting. It’s the kind of work that is 98% of the time frustrating and leaves you wanting more time in each day and especially in each work week so you can do just a little more thinking, reaching out, brainstorming, or writing. It’s the kind of work where, when you get a bite, an email from a reader, interest from a potential partner, a potential project, or some other sort of recognition or possibility, that all of that frustration magically melts away, just for that one day and the excitement is ridiculous.

It’s the kind of work that never ends. At Christmas, even though I was only doing some part-time social media work, it’s the type of work that you have to do consistently, daily, to get results. And it’s the type of work that you can never give up on, ever, even late at night or early in the morning, because you are afraid you just might miss something and not be in the right place at the right time. In this type of position, I will never take a vacation without a laptop glued to my side. When I finally get the amount of work I want, it will be a 365 days a year venture, but I hope fully that it is something I love so much, I won’t mind.

All of that said, I have had some interest in what I do at home all day. In addition to lots of loads of laundry and dishes, and other household stuff here is what a day in the life looks like:

My schedule

Between 6:45-7:00 wake up & have tea

Pack husband’s lunch, general kitchen cleaning and prep for meals that take time, like marinades or slow cooker recipes

Blog post publishes

Read and respond to emails

Read and comment on blogs

Conduct various sorts of outreach and communications/Work on projects, brainstorming, outlining, depending on the day

On long run days, run at 10:30, otherwise continue the morning activities through 12:00

Eat lunch while applying to jobs (I check various sites about 100 times a day and set aside afternoon and evening for applying.)

Cook and/or bake items for blog posts

Write and publish a second blog post

On non-long run days, go to the gym or do an at home workout

Cook and eat dinner

Read a few more blogs, spend some time on blog analytics, promoting blog through social media etc.

11:30 ish– Bed

Glamorous, huh? I say it every day, I KNOW I am incredibly lucky to be able to spend my days the way I do, but they are far from shopping and sleeping in!

If you are 100% convinced you would be happier and more productive doing something else in your life, I say plan it, then plan it again, think about it, then go for it. It will surprise you how much you are capable of!

 

 

If you have a blog, do a lot of your friends/family/co-workers read it? If not, do you ever get frustrated at the amount of traffic you COULD get if they did?

Tags: blogging, employment, freelance, job hunting

Last month I posted about the hunt for my very first job out of college, one of those horror stories that you actually do laugh about one day. Many years later.

I mentioned in that post that I had another horror story, and with it being the New Year and with many people looking for new jobs, I thought it would be a perfect time to share.

Plus, I actually thought of the incident while lifting weights this morning, and I couldn’t stop laughing. It gives a great perspective to moments, how we can view them years later.

The best job I ever had, besides being a freelance blogger/writer/social media/marketing gal as I am now, was at a non-profit organization in Waltham. I worked there for almost four years and did all sorts of things but eventually found my calling in Marketing-Communications. I had the best boss and colleagues ever; really, I was completely spoiled with such a perfect setup early on in my career. On one hand, it will be difficult for anything to ever live up to this job where my all female colleagues and I would work super hard. . . and laugh even harder.

The bliss lasted for years before some changes were made to the organization turning it from a great place to work into a place that was unbearable, all due to one person. Maybe I will tell that story another day. . .

I followed that gig with another non-profit, a great organization that ended up being not busy enough for me, and thus my search began again.

Too good to be true. Too good to be true.

I was called for a phone interview for a job in the suburbs north of Boston. The job paid REALLY well including major bonuses, had some awesome benefits, and provided me with a free vacation every year. Like an actual trip somewhere in addition to salary and bonus and a cool work environment.

I started the in-person interview process on a freezing cold winter day. My first task? A personality test and a meeting with a few key people in Marketing.

Apparently this went well, because I was invited back four times to interview again and again, with Vice Presidents, prospective colleagues, and again with the HR person who interviewed me initially.

All along, I was warned about the very long hours of the job, which would be planning and marketing conferences, but it seemed like the pay was well worth it, and I was longing to be busy.

The final step was to meet the company President.

I took another afternoon off of work for this final meeting. It was my sixth or seventh interview. I had to get the job, right?

I felt like I was on Punk’d.

The President was wearing a hooded sweatshirt, eating a giant cookie, and drinking a big gulp of soda, with her foot up on a chair. No judgments, just strange for an interview, right?

When the door was closed and we began talking, she started to tell me the weaknesses she saw in me and that I reminded her of certain other employees, who she named, along with their weaknesses, perceived by her.

I think my eyes were like saucers by the time I left. It was the most bizarre “professional” encounter I have ever had. The HR woman told me should would be in touch by the following Wednesday.

And I NEVER HEARD FROM THEM AGAIN.

I followed up with thank-you’s and a summary of why I would be great for the job. In hindsight, I should have followed up until I got some sort of answer after spending that much time interviewing, but even though it was just a few years ago, I felt so young. At the time, I thought I was scarred for life.

Some of you shared job hunting stories with me on my last post, if you have one and haven’t shared it, I would love to hear it now!

Tags: employment, interviews, job hunting

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