trinityofone: (Default)
[personal profile] trinityofone
PRO quitting job on Monday:

+Hate job. Job drives me batty. Have become very dull person who does nothing else but talk about how much she hates job.
+Would get to go to Peg2, see wonderful friends, see London again, do something for self for once as should have done right after college, instead of going straight into job.
+Would have time to regroup, work on novel, find new job.
+Honestly do not think I would have too much trouble finding new job (if not necessarily comparable job). ETA: I've been looking at what else is out there for about two months. There's stuff, freelance work at the very least.
+Have enough saved to last six months or so, so money not an immediate issue.
+Am 22 years old. Perfect time to take risks.

CON quitting job on Monday:

-Job = money coming in. No job = no money coming in.
-Have been at job six months. Too soon to quit?
-Two weeks post-giving notice will be intensely unpleasant.
-Have to have more dental work (starting tomorrow, ugh). Insurance ends when job ends.
-May not be able to find as good job. (In terms of pay, position; environment would almost certainly have to be better.)
-No more swag, or opportunities to mail stuff for free. (WHAT?)
-Am 22 years old. Oh, what a perfect time to fuck things up for yourself!

I keep completely convincing myself of one choice, then turning around and convincing myself of the other. I feel like I'm standing at a precipice. Do I take that leap of faith? What do I do?

Y'all can pretend this is like a 'Choose Your Own Adventure' or something. "If you think Trin should quit, go to page 42. If you think Trin should stick it out, go to page 13." *weak laughter*

Seriously, I almost made a poll for this, but then I realized that if I actually made a life decision based on an LJ poll, I would have to have my limited adult credentials revoked.

Re: Voice of experience

Date: 2007-01-10 07:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trinityofone.livejournal.com
Oh, your icon. It's funny 'cause it's true!

But there are all kinds of answers you can give that clearly tell your prospective employer, "I *not* a flakey diva who arbitrarily flounced away from a good thing."

Like...it was sucking my soul? Or probably, more diplomatically, "I want to write about things that matter, and not about Paris Hilton."

I appreciate your advice. I hope I'm brave/foolhardy enough to take it.

Re: Voice of experience

Date: 2007-01-10 08:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] roaringmice.livejournal.com
Be careful. Diplomacy is called for. You don't know if the person you're interviewing with used to be a fluff writer. You can use the "things that matter" line if you feel the situation was right, but otherwise... You found that entertainment writing wasn't for you, and you wanted to move your career in a different direction.

Re: Voice of experience

Date: 2007-01-10 08:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trinityofone.livejournal.com
I promise I'm less flip in actual interview situations. I usually wash my hair before hand, too! ;-)

Sorry. Nervousness making me snarky...

Re: Voice of experience

Date: 2007-01-10 09:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] roaringmice.livejournal.com
Snarky can sometimes be good. But in interviews? Hold the snark.

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