Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Laid off six months ago. I feel out of control and scared. My severance ran out. I am paying for my own health care. I have savings and a spouse who has a healthy income, but this is a severe hit financially, emotionally, psychologically. I worked so hard for what I have and I now have nothing. I just apply to places, wait, and hope. I am not even in an industry that is consulting-friendly (sales). I feel nauseated all the time. Depressed. Nervous. I never expected to be here. I am ashamed and hopeless.
Welcome to my world! Will be 15 months without full time work in mid July. I didn't get a severance because my previous employer stabbed me in the back and pushed me out the door. Thankfully I only have myself to feed and I've always been a saver. But this sucks. A nightmare that just won't end.
Anonymous wrote:Laid off six months ago. I feel out of control and scared. My severance ran out. I am paying for my own health care. I have savings and a spouse who has a healthy income, but this is a severe hit financially, emotionally, psychologically. I worked so hard for what I have and I now have nothing. I just apply to places, wait, and hope. I am not even in an industry that is consulting-friendly (sales). I feel nauseated all the time. Depressed. Nervous. I never expected to be here. I am ashamed and hopeless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Okay, well all my relatives were laid off by 53 and never worked again as professionals.
I think one of the factors when you get into your 50s is a perceived (by potential employers) gap in understanding technology. I am 56 and routinely help my millennial colleagues figure out advanced functions on their iPhones. But if I was laid off, how would I eliminate the perceived risk of not keeping up with technology? I am picking up a few cloud computing / SaaS certifications just as a backup / demo that I am still capable of keeping up.
Anonymous wrote:Okay, well all my relatives were laid off by 53 and never worked again as professionals.