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ekaynuh's avatar

Omfg I have never felt so seen by a post ever. I have been suffering through this finding a job shit for the past 2 years and EYE AM TIRED. Currently I have settled for working as a barista at a coffee shop in New York where I made somewhere between $23-$27 after tips. I make just enough money to live, and that’s it. Very much the definition of living paycheck to paycheck. I have a ton of social media and branding work but the thought of applying to jobs has become laughable at this point seeing that I am competing with people 5 years my senior who just got laid off and have a ton of experience competing for the same “entry level” job. People like to frame this as “oh well, your still able to afford your bills and at least your life is more flexible since you don’t have a traditional 9-5” and yes, this is true, BUT I WOULD LIKE TO SAVE FOR A FUTURE OMFG. And it seems like unless I am talking to other people in similar positions, no one gets it. And to see job reports saying that hiring is “on fire” is beyond infuriating because I don’t know who that is a reality for or where they are hiring. On top of that, about half of the jobs I see pay as much or less than MY FUCKING JOB AS S BARISTA which is behind asinine. You want me to be in office 5 days a week making less than 50K bring bored out of my mind doing nothing of impact for ehaf??? The only person I know who got a job that wasn’t through nepotism of luck was a friend who had gotten laid off from a well known corp company and had a ton of experience and it took him 6 months and he was applying to jobs every.single.hour. of every single day and went through a job search process that could only be described as degrading. My parents are talking to me about moving out of New York, but as you mentioned, the cost of living has went up everywhere. I pay less than $1000 for my apartment with one roommate and no car. No matter where I move to, that rent price will go up, as well as the expense of owning a car, and my salary will not be high…so we are back in the same boat. My mom also suggested going back to school and getting my masters. So sorry, but I tried the pay to play scam twice. Once for undergrad and the other for a coding bootcamp. I will not be fooled again.

Like you, I have come to the conclusion that the answer to my employment woes will be by creating a job myself, whether it be a brand or my own production company or doing some freelance consulting work. All things I am considering, but I am tired and this is degrading and I feel like I am not asking too much by wanting a stable job that will allow me to save for the future.

I’ve been lucky enough to travel and understand that this experience is pretty normal for most people our age in other parts of the world. People go to college later and get “real jobs” in their 30s. No shade to that, it’s just not the reality that I was presented growing up in this country and it’s a a shame that the people won’t acknowledge this reality and things have changed to the detriment of future generations. It’s like I am being gaslit by everyone around me. The economy and job market is shit, idk what the economist say. Ask them to try and get me a damn job if it’s so good then

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Rustbelt Andy's avatar

I am very sorry to hear about your struggles - I am sure it seems incredibly unfair. The problem you raise is multifaceted, but I have to ask:

- you chose to major in English in 2019 or so, a decade plus into deep and well publicized oversupply of English majors and associated struggles with employment

- you would like to remain in LA

- you do not seem to want to work in corporate (I didn’t get a good sense for why but that may be my misread)

- you would like to pursue a career in a field (it seems again I may be missing something) that has a ton of people interested in and declining job openings as competition and technology reshapes the industry

A mentor of mine used to say you can have anything you want just not everything you want. We chose to move from a huge coastal city to a mid sized midwestern city with amazing cultural amenities, terrible winter weather, 1/2 of the cost of living LA or less, decent food scene, and abundance of corporate jobs (we have a talent problem not a jobs problem), and poor travel connections. That’s a mix of trade offs that worked for us. I am not saying it should for you. But maybe there is a mix of trade offs that’s right for you.

No one has to work for large oil companies. But boy do they pay well, and have locations in lower cost of living cities. I don’t work for one and certainly am not suggesting you should. But this is my attempt at saying there is a big difference between “there are no jobs” and the “the market does not value my combination of skills and interests as highly as I think it should”.

I hope this helps. I’d be happy to help however I can should you consider a corporate career.

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