So what is happiness? Lately I
have been very down and out – unemployment tends to do that to a person. I tend
to have a bad habit of comparing myself with others: those I went to school
with who now have great jobs, those who I grew up with who are now engaged,
married, or have children….and it constantly leaves me feeling directionless
and that I haven’t achieved anything. I know this is absurd because I have
achieved things, a lot of things, so why do I feel this way?
I think it is basic human nature,
as bad a habit as it is, to feel unhappy when things don’t look the way that we
think they should or would look. Of course I knew that it was ridiculously
naïve to believe that I would land my dream job as soon as I graduated, but I
don’t think I was fully prepared for how crushing it would feel to be so
stagnant and directionless.
We are spoon fed the North
American dream: if you go to school and get a good education, you will get a
good job that will pay you enough to have a comfortable and happy life. Well,
unfortunately the education system tends to fail us when we do get into the
real world and are completely unprepared for it. Come September I will have
been finished school for a year now: a year without solid work and the ability
to begin paying back my student loan and a year that has made me feel so
utterly unqualified for everything and to know my rightful place (Master’s
degree and all) at the bottom of the employment pool. Unless I am willing to
enslave myself if multiple unpaid internships and spend another year with no
income, but building my work experience and connections, I can never expect to
begin to swim out of the bottom of the pool and I will drown. So, that’s what I’m
doing. Drowning in debt and despair, I take on one unpaid internship after the
other with the optimism that SOMETHING will change soon, that my shot is coming
up. And what if it doesn’t? My main question is how do we find happiness in a
life that we never wanted or didn’t plan? How do we be happy with the retail
job while we keep getting ourselves out there? And what if we never do get
there and have to take a completely different road….how do we fend off disappointment?
To be realistic, it’s a harsh
economic climate to be a new grad, any new grad, but especially a new grad in
the arts. There are still opportunities out there for business and
technological grads to get paid internships, while anything in media,
publishing, and the arts tends to be highly competitive and always unpaid. “It’s
the nature of the business” everyone keeps saying, but why? Partially because
the arts has always been underfunded and underappreciated in our society, but
also because too many people are accept instead of question that this is just
the way it is. Because there are about 100 more just as motivated new grads
behind you ready and willing to take that unpaid internship, if you stand on
principle and say “no I refuse to be exploited and work for free” then any of
these others will. If there is such a high demand for work with such a low
supply, the industry can do anything it wants to: including exploiting students
and new grads simply because they can. Don’t get me wrong, I believe internships
are very important and that they help you learn a lot, but I also believe that
if you are doing any work that benefits the company….you should be getting paid
for it. Also, it is unbelievably unrealistic to assume that new grads can
dedicate all of the time and energy into unpaid internships when doing so
ensures that they can’t pay rent, pay back their loans; indeed meet any of
their day to day needs. So, you end up
in three unpaid internships which take up all of your spare time, you also work
nights at a dead end job – usually retail or customer service – and I would say
wake up and do it all over again, but who are we kidding, you never really get
to sleep. So you are over worked, not paid, not healthy, and you are expected
to do this all with an incredibly positive attitude and glow with pride and say
“thank you for the opportunity”
And yet, here I am doing it. I
have no wise advice to share; I am kind of in need of some myself right now. I
just try and take it one day at a time and do the best I can (although
sometimes I’d rather stay in bed and cry….just being honest). So, when
everything in life is negative, even your bank account, remember that trying to
see the positive is a choice. Indeed a very difficult choice, but it is a
choice that I am trying to make every day. Even if it is dragging myself away
from my computer and the job search to walk around outside in the sunshine, I
am desperately trying to not give in to the crippling anxiety and disappointment.
But, on days when you are told in an interview (one that was an incredibly long
process and that you were really looking forward to and starting to feel like
things were finally turning around) and they tell you that you are better
suited for a writing position than editing and project management, and direct
you to hr to apply for yet another unpaid internship, it’s hard to not just cry
all day and wonder when things will finally start to turn around.
Again I have no words of wisdom. Everyone else does and they offer them constantly and they don’t really help, so I’m not going to offer any here. I’m sorry new grads that this economic climate sucks and that we are all applying for the same jobs – hundreds of us at a time for one spot to fill. I wish you good luck and days of glimmering hope to encourage you to keep going. And on days when that hope and dreaming that things will finally work out seems utterly pointless, let yourself cry and then take a break from the drudgery and try and do one thing that makes it feel better. For me that tends to be eating ice cream....or looking at pictures of pugs. Even if life isn’t the way we want it to be, and even if it may never be, life is still a gift and you should try to find the things in it that you enjoy. Maybe something else will come up, it won’t be what you planned, but it will be ok. Or, maybe…just maybe….you will get everything you’ve been dreaming of and working so hard to make happen.
How I feel most days.
Again I have no words of wisdom. Everyone else does and they offer them constantly and they don’t really help, so I’m not going to offer any here. I’m sorry new grads that this economic climate sucks and that we are all applying for the same jobs – hundreds of us at a time for one spot to fill. I wish you good luck and days of glimmering hope to encourage you to keep going. And on days when that hope and dreaming that things will finally work out seems utterly pointless, let yourself cry and then take a break from the drudgery and try and do one thing that makes it feel better. For me that tends to be eating ice cream....or looking at pictures of pugs. Even if life isn’t the way we want it to be, and even if it may never be, life is still a gift and you should try to find the things in it that you enjoy. Maybe something else will come up, it won’t be what you planned, but it will be ok. Or, maybe…just maybe….you will get everything you’ve been dreaming of and working so hard to make happen.
How I feel most days.
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