Friday, 2 November 2012

A Day in the Life of a Job Seeker

You’re not your job
You’re not how much work experience you have
You’re not the career you want
You’re not the contents of your CV
You’re not your fucking qualifications
You’re the all singing, all dancing crap of the world

This is the adapted mantra from Fight Club that I live by while looking for employment. If I didn’t soak up this message every single day, then I would be having a horrible time. These job applications are harassing like Jimmy Saville in a child hospice. They bombard you with questions expecting jargon, buzzwords, and core competencies as a response. They purposefully make you feel under qualified for every single role because frankly, you are. But so is everyone when they start. If you could walk into a job and know how to do it, some clever fella would’ve designed a robot or software to do it already. Yet you battle through this terribly designed application forms full of spelling errors. You try your hardest and write the best answer you can while making your own spelling errors.

You apply for jobs that 200 people have already applied for because, well, they’re the only jobs available. You apply for jobs you don’t have the right experience for because, well, they’re the only jobs available. You fill this cyberspace void with examples of how great a team leader you are, and that time you saved a cat from a burning building. And a little bit of you dies when you press submit. Not that you’ve lied, or exaggerated, or that you don’t want the job. Just that you are forced to pigeonhole the sum of your life into a STAR formatted highlight reel.

You are hoping that someone will read your answers and understand you, see your potential beyond a few neat examples. But first you have to get the past the all knowing, all wise, computer checker that scans your form and dismisses candidates for not having certain buzzwords and including words they don’t want to hear. John Cuntsbery has been unemployed for seven years.

If you survive the T-1000 CV checker, you know the next stage is against a guy who has been reading CVs all day. Or you’re first in line to be read and they dismiss you because he/she hasn’t had their morning coffee yet. This application checker person is looking for something, a certain experience, a certain character trait, or maybe just a decent understanding of English grammar. They are looking for the X Factor basically. An unquantifiable quality that has is based on how the person is feeling at the moment. You’re up against Simon Cowell – why else would unemployment be so high!?

Maybe you’re one of the lucky ones that receives a call back. You answer the phone like the obedient dog you are pouring enthusiasm down the line like some desperate crack-whore looking for a free hit. They ask you more questions, you answer with more buzzwords but at this point, you start to put some of your actual personality into it. They might even like you and ask you for a face to face interview. To see if you have any Omar-like face scars or whether you will fill their ethnic minority quota.

You put on your best suit, an ironed shirt, tie, and you excitedly turn up to the interview clean-shaven like a reared sheep. You tell the same stories, exaggerate a little bit more - now it isn’t written down its 100% okay to lie... You convince them that you aren’t a complete twatmeister and in fact better than any of the other twatmeisters in the waiting room. They listen, smile, and you leave with a sense of hope.

Then you get an email that you didn’t get the job. Or you hear nothing at all. You managed to get past the harassing Jimmy Saville application form, the T-1000 CV checker, John Cuntsbery, and Simon Cowell but the final hurdle was too much. Fear not! You may have sold your rapidly shrinking soul but there are hundreds of other jobs out there and only a few thousands of people clambering after them.

Your friends, family, and government are on your back quicker than you can say "poverty". Your un-salary creating life continues and people point fingers and blame a lack of ambition and laziness. I'm sorry I was honest and didn't bullshit as much as the successful candidate. I'm sorry I didn't bend over, arsecheeks spread, and just take a big fat one in my integrity and character so I could secure a job. I’m sorry I wasn’t cool with doing 20 hours of unpaid overtime a week. Yeah I didn't play the game but you know what, this game is rigged. It's rigged for the smooth talkers, the dishonest, and the great networkers. 

My great problem is my honesty, I like to put a bit of my non-work suitable qualities into an application form. Maybe they aren't well suited for the working world but I like to be open with people giving me bundles of strings-attached cash. People will say I'm a fool to not play the game, but as soon as I start BSing, I lose a part of who I am. A part I happen to like. I like that I make mistakes, such as incorrectly pronouncing misled as "myzooled". I like that I make inappropriate jokes when being introduced to someone. I like my belief in my ideas and ideals.

You’re not your job
You’re not how much work experience you have
You’re not the career you want
You’re not the contents of your CV
You’re not your fucking qualifications
You’re the all singing, all dancing crap of the world

Without this mantra, you are a sad dog, a meloncollie (Ha, dog pun!). But with it, you know that you are more than the job you have, more than the money in your bank, more than the career you could have.

You are not a cliché written on the back of a skill set.

You are a human being with imperfections, a dirty humour, craziness, and a bit of a foot fetish. You are more than those 500 words of spiel and bullshit. They haven’t rejected you. A tired interviewer has rejected a preconception of you. With this in mind, unemployed life is a little less shit, and a lot more realistic. Nobody is perfect. And remember one thing: For every great job, there is someone tired of doing it.

This first world problem has been solved courtesy of Sobweb (and Tyler Durden, peace be upon him.)

Happy hunting!