Can't afford it.odanhammer said:And if your not trolling , i suggest getting some serious help.
Can't afford it.odanhammer said:And if your not trolling , i suggest getting some serious help.
Sweet. Good luck, man.Anoni Mus said:Also done, got a skype interview tomorrow, maybe going to UK working minimum wage + room + food
Yo bro, you totally changed my life. I am cancelling ALL plans and will become a professional thief like Nathan Drake!zelda2fanboy said:Don't care. I want my $11,000 back. I don't see why someone else should get scammed just because society says so.
Then what the hell is the alternative? Sit in a thread and complain about how life sucks? You are doing nothing at all to help yourself, by the sounds of it. Stop complaining, and do something to help you get that job you want. Anything is better than sitting on your ass and doing nothing. These people are trying to help you. You hear me? People on the internet are trying to help you. Do you know how frakking amazing that is? Besides, what do you have to loose by following their advice? Your crappy job? Your dignity?zelda2fanboy said:The saddest part of all of this is that I started this thread knowing full well I was wrong. The responses have been shockingly weak. I think I'll have to call it a night. This is getting depressing.
I did not suggest any of those in my initial post, which leads me to think that you haven't been reading all of the posts very thoroughly, or at the very least selectively reading them in a way that embellishes upon your misery. Sleeping on things might be a good thing indeed.zelda2fanboy said:It's just nothing I haven't heard before, most of it being the claptrap I was subjected to while I was still in school. Go back to school. Pay someone to look at your resumé. Have you tried applying to places? You should apply to places. I have a good job. You should have a good job like me.Hap2 said:Yet you don't consider the very positive advice that many are offering? People can only be as helpful as you are willing to act. There's a lot of good advice in this thread, but it's up to you to use it.
The saddest part of all of this is that I started this thread knowing full well I was wrong. The responses have been shockingly weak. I think I'll have to call it a night. This is getting depressing.
This I agree with.Gennadios said:The fact of the matter is that US education is complete and utter crap, it's geared towards graduating anybody with a minimal amount of patience and no clinical retardation.
Sounds like you did absolutely no networking in college..which, when you look at a majority of successful people, is where they formed their business partnerships and/or after college opportunities (Facebook, Google, Myspace, any comedy writing teams, etc). Sounds like YOU wasted your time at college by being socially awkward. Should have done computer science or something.zelda2fanboy said:In America you have to pay back your loan no matter what, even if you go bankrupt. Education loans are tied to you for the rest of your life. If you don't pay them, they'll garnish your wages. I didn't make any friends in college, had no fun, and never even got laid. Don't listen to your parents and don't listen to what TV tells you. It is a pack of lies.
It is, and although this is not the place where I want to be for my entire career(2 more terms till graduation), it has provided me with networking opportunities, bullets for my resume and enough money for my family to get by(if only just). It still took me 10 months to get this job after I got out of the Air Force, but in that time I had 5 interviews and I've had a few offers since then. And that's with what is likely a far more difficult job market than you are in.zelda2fanboy said:Is this the method through which you got your current job? Constantly tweaking and messing with your resumé so they'll pay attention to it? I know a guy who does that and has a masters degree. Has yet to do him any good. I truly doubt any of these employers have even opened the text file or glanced at my application. It's all automated. Apply, delete, apply, delete. If you know someone on the inside who can hassle HR, then they'll look at your application.Scars Unseen said:No. That is possibly the second worst method of job hunting possible(by sitting on ass and complaining about not having a job, you are engaging in the one that tops it). Casting a wide net does nothing for you. Why? Because that means your resume is too generalized, and you are just one of hundreds of people being beaten to the punch by people that actually take the time to show that they have done the research to show not only that they are a good fit for the company, but that the company is a good fit for them.
For every single job you apply for, you should be tweaking your resume to ensure that both content and the order in which it is presented is tailored to the company's requirements. An introduction letter should accompany it. And it goes without saying that if you aren't networking, you aren't really job hunting. Talk to people. Do volunteer work. Sounds like hard work? It is! But if you want to have a career instead of a sob story, you have to put in the hours.
Or you could just complain on the internet.
Not everyone is special. Most people aren't. I didn't go to college because I thought I was special. I went to college because I had no useful skills and nothing noteworthy to offer the world. After completing college, I obviously still don't. I've tried and I've tried and I've tried and after months of trying, I post here because I'm pissed off and frustrated. It's better than the alternatives, I assure you. I almost wanted to walk into that warehouse today, find HR, and just scream at them.
I graduated from college in 2010 with a degree in Communications. I owe $16,000 in loans which isn't bad considering the price of my education after 4 years was between $110,000 and $120,000. The most recent job I've had a part-time job working at a mall food court only because I worked with that owner before and he needed some help during the summers/holidays.zelda2fanboy said:Self entitled? You spend 11 grand on an education and not work for two years and then we'll talk about entitlement.Mortai Gravesend said:Scammed? Lol. It isn't a scam. Picking what was possibly the wrong degree and not being able to get a job doesn't make it a scam. They didn't sell you a job, they sold you education. Don't start some self-entitled whining about how it was a scam because you didn't get a job.
I don't mean to be a snob or a killjoy but are you really referring to business administration as a "practical scientific field"?zelda2fanboy said:Hey, you learned a useful skill. I can't business anybody. If you had done what many on this forum believed was "correct," you could have gone into a more practical scientific field and become the useless shell of a person that I am. No one should waste their time and money on a degree for something that they have no passion for. The people I've heard of who had positive enjoyable collegiate experiences did so because they were doing something they loved anyways. Maybe I should have put that in the OP.
Perhaps this is not the proper venue to vent your frustrations with the disconnect between your level of education and ability to get employment.zelda2fanboy said:I've been making minimum wage for the last three and a half years working in a retail store. I only get about 20 hours a week. I owe $11,000 on my college loan (pretty low by most standards) for my bachelors of science degree in Business Administration. I've applied for dozens and dozens of jobs across two major cities over the last two years.
I recently applied to work at the local Pepsi warehouse which paid $13 an hour. At my workplace, I overheard someone mentioning that their friend got a job there. This friend never graduated high school. So yeah, don't bother going to school. Waste of your time and money. There's no defense of it. The only way I have the shit job I have now is because my dad worked there and complained to my old boss enough to hire me.