I need a mentor from a patient person who has their shit together.
I made poor choices in college and graduated this summer with a meager GPA in an unprofitable major. I am now working a $9/hr job in food service. In the five months since I graduated I’ve added a significant achievement to my resume, but I’ve also wasted a lot of time on frivolous pleasures. I fear the comfort of living with my parents is inhibiting my drive to get a real job.
I would appreciate a mentor who could guide me through the process of finding a “real” job. (Defined as paying $30k per year, with benefits and advancement opportunity). In return, I can donate a token amount to the charity of your choice.
I’m not sure I know enough to be a good mentor, but I was in your shoes four years ago. I wanted to work for a nonprofit, so I went to a temp agency. After a few three-day temp jobs, they found me a two-month job with a charity. The charity liked me and hired me at $33K a year with benefits, though I’m not sure how much . I enjoyed my time there, and I saved enough to go to grad school in something useful without taking out loans.
So, in short: tell a temp agency you want jobs in (area of your choice). Living with your parents isn’t a bad idea if it lets you save money to take risks (like moving, grad school, or quitting your current job to temp at other ones.)
I need a mentor from a patient person who has their shit together.
I made poor choices in college and graduated this summer with a meager GPA in an unprofitable major. I am now working a $9/hr job in food service. In the five months since I graduated I’ve added a significant achievement to my resume, but I’ve also wasted a lot of time on frivolous pleasures. I fear the comfort of living with my parents is inhibiting my drive to get a real job.
I would appreciate a mentor who could guide me through the process of finding a “real” job. (Defined as paying $30k per year, with benefits and advancement opportunity). In return, I can donate a token amount to the charity of your choice.
I’m not sure I know enough to be a good mentor, but I was in your shoes four years ago. I wanted to work for a nonprofit, so I went to a temp agency. After a few three-day temp jobs, they found me a two-month job with a charity. The charity liked me and hired me at $33K a year with benefits, though I’m not sure how much . I enjoyed my time there, and I saved enough to go to grad school in something useful without taking out loans.
So, in short: tell a temp agency you want jobs in (area of your choice). Living with your parents isn’t a bad idea if it lets you save money to take risks (like moving, grad school, or quitting your current job to temp at other ones.)
Thank you for your comment Julia. If anyone wants to leave some drive-by advice without committing to mentorship, I’d appreciate that too.