Saturday, April 11, 2020
What Ive Learned 7 Months Out Of College - Work It Daily
What Ive Learned 7 Months Out Of College - Work It Daily When you go off to college, youâre given four years. Four years to learn everything there is to learn. âThe best four years of your life.â OK, maybe an extra semester or two if you opted for the five year plan. But still, itâs your time to make mistakes, to grow, to find yourself, but mostly, a time to learn. RELATED: How To Get A Graduate Job After College Fast forward to seven months after college graduation. Seven months seems like no time at all. Barely creeping over that half year mark and only 214 days out of 365. Psh â" Seven months is nothing. That is, of course, until youâre looking at it like this: Seven months out of college and I still have no idea what Iâm supposed to be doing. Sure, Iâve landed my first job. Iâm paying the bills to my very own apartment. Iâm starting my career and Iâm still maintaining somewhat of a social life. Iâm living every college gradâs dream, right? Iâm happy, Iâm getting by, and Iâm learning a lot through working in my first corporate setting at my desk placed in the office of my first official âbig girl job.â Iâve learned a lot over the past seven months that came from outside of my newfound workplace, too. Whether it was that job searching is more than just submitting your resume and copy and pasted cover letter over 100 times before you even land yourself an interview, or that networks are important but donât guarantee anything, even when youâre totally convinced that your best friendâs cousinâs boyfriendâs sister is going to land you that dream job youâre probably (OK, definitely) underqualified for. Or maybe that my limit for margaritas is no longer eight, but instead two, if I can even find the energy to make it out on a Friday after a long 40+ hour work week. Job searching, careers, life; theyâre not easy and theyâre certainly not handed to you. But theyâre exciting, and they undoubtedly have more to teach than you ever got from that three hour lecture twice a week on Aristotle vs. Plato. If you asked me what Iâve learned in the past seven months after leaving my tiny, perfect, sometimes hell-like, home-away-from-home college university that I adored, my answer would look something like this: Donât envy peers who are seemingly doing âbetterâ than you. Itâs easy to see friends and Facebook acquaintances post about their new job, their big move, or their acceptance into grad school and itâs even easier to be jealous and wonder why it didnât come as quickly for you. Hereâs the thing to remember: There is no right or wrong place for you to be at this moment in time, so donât let the terrifying idea that youâre going to be left behind get to your head. You donât have to settle... ...for the first job thatâs offered to you, for the crappy apartment, for friends, or significant others, or for someone elseâs expectations of what you should be doing. Chances are you know what you want out of all of these things, so stick to your guns on the important stuff. Money isnât always important. Youâre young, you see a world full of money and those who have it, and you figure, okay, I did what I was supposed to do. Bring on the fat paychecks. But quite honestly, the only jobs that are attainable for college grads in todayâs economy pay very little. So what? If you made all the money in the world at your first job, you would never be motivated to move forward. There is never a reason to feel unlucky for what you have accomplished â" no matter the pay. You are only as good as the people you surround yourself with... ...professionally and personally. Keep your meaningful relationships and drop the ones that do nothing for you. Realize itâs OK to do this and more importantly, realize that itâs OK to create new friendships. Whether itâs inside your place of work or within your social circle, everyone influences you in one way or another. Choose wisely. Never stop building your resume. Out of college and zero luck thus far in the job department? Find an internship. Take a class. Volunteer. Join a young professionals group. Stop waiting for something to fall into your lap. Make use of the (what may seem like never-ending) spare time in-between graduation and landing that rock star job. And once youâve landed that job? Keep building. Your first job is more than likely not your last, so even when you think youâre working hard, work harder. And most importantly, donât stress and donât panic. Donât spend too much time trying to keep your head above the water just to forget how much youâve always loved to swim. Take every job application and every interview with a grain of salt, a slice of lime, and a shot of tequila (afterwards, of course). You are no where near as lost as you think you are. Your opportunity will come. Visit new places, pick up a new hobby, dream big. Do all the things youâve always wanted to do because now is your chance to do so. Twenty-something is not nearly as old as we like to think it is. You were lucky enough to walk away from four years (OK, maybe five) of college with at least some of your sanity still intact, so donât blow it now â" no matter how many people ask you the terrifying question, âWhat are you going to do, now?â Tell them that you? You are on your way. This post was originally published at an earlier date. Cara Jo was born and raised in South Jersey. After graduating from Kutztown University in May 2014 with a degree in Communication Studies, she officially moved to PA for a full-time Marketing position with a non-profit. Cara loves writing, her puppy dog, coffee, the fabulous friends family sheâs surrounded by, and all of lifeâs possibilities. You can read more from Cara by visiting www.thecollegegradblog.wordpress.com or tweet your thoughts to @CaraSwetsky_PR This is a guest post. Related Posts 9 Ways To Make The Wrong Impression On Your First Day 10 Rules For Starting Your New Job On The Right Foot 5 Tips For Keeping Your New Job Photo Credit: Shutterstock Have you joined our career growth club?Join Us Today!
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