Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:unemployed for more than a month is unacceptable
I'm the above poster and it's not always easy getting a new job, especially one that pays well. My DH would not take under 220k, so it took awhile.
Anonymous wrote:OP with an update, if anyone is interested. DH got a job!! Whew.
Also, we've gotten better about communicating. Thanks for the helpful posts with perspective, guys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Job search is also difficult..I have a friend that has been searching for a year. She keeps getting to the final round and then they offer it to another candidate. I have another friend who has a job but is job hunting..its been a year.
Feel sorry for those husbands with unsupportive wives
Yes I'm so unsupportive I've actually started putting in applications to get a 2nd job. Go to hell.
Yeah so supportive that you're applying for a 2nd job but hate your husband secretly. You sound angry, take a chill pill.
Yes I am bucking up and doing what I have to do to support my family - my DH included. How dare you label the women in this thread unsupportive.
Anonymous wrote:If you are spending 4-6 hours "crafting" your cover letter for each job, you are wasting a ridiculous amount of time. Cut it down to less than an hour, likely no one is going to read your cover letter, anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Losing a job is a traumatic event. I'm kind of aghast at how unsupportive you all are of your husbands.
I agree it is a traumatic event. But you should be over the shock within a day or two. Then you put your focus on finding a new job. Spend a few hours each morning searching, applying etc. Then you spend the rest of your day doing things you've wanted to get done while working, working out, enjoying the free time, etc.
But if someone is moping around for weeks and weeks and months about not having a job, they need to grow up and face reality.
I have been laid off a few times. It sucks....but being depressed won't help get you a job. Have some savings, keep your resume updated, and have a plan for when it happens.
I have known dozens of people who have been laid off or between jobs or couldn't get a job right out of school. Nobody is upbeat all the time or even half of the time. Nobody sets a goal of applying to at least five jobs per day and sticks to it. It is well and good to say people should do that. Nobody does it in reality so expecting them to is ridiculous.
(And if your response is "well I did!" please include your address so I can mail you a medal).
Well I did. I am a very positive person. I just took the task of finding a new job as my morning thing to do.
Get up, go to starbucks with my laptop, search and apply for a few hours, and then go about my day. There was plenty to do to keep my mind off the fact I wasn't working and that my severance/savings would eventually run out. It sucks, but it isn't the end of the world.
I have to wonder what kind of jobs you were applying for. When I was applying for jobs, I routinely spent 4-6 hours crafting the cover letter for each, and another hour or two customizing my CV or resume for the particular job opening. It wasn't a "click apply and upload generic resume" kind of thing. A few hours at Starbucks in the morning wouldn't have cut it. Applying for jobs WAS a full-time job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Losing a job is a traumatic event. I'm kind of aghast at how unsupportive you all are of your husbands.
I agree it is a traumatic event. But you should be over the shock within a day or two. Then you put your focus on finding a new job. Spend a few hours each morning searching, applying etc. Then you spend the rest of your day doing things you've wanted to get done while working, working out, enjoying the free time, etc.
But if someone is moping around for weeks and weeks and months about not having a job, they need to grow up and face reality.
I have been laid off a few times. It sucks....but being depressed won't help get you a job. Have some savings, keep your resume updated, and have a plan for when it happens.
I have known dozens of people who have been laid off or between jobs or couldn't get a job right out of school. Nobody is upbeat all the time or even half of the time. Nobody sets a goal of applying to at least five jobs per day and sticks to it. It is well and good to say people should do that. Nobody does it in reality so expecting them to is ridiculous.
(And if your response is "well I did!" please include your address so I can mail you a medal).
Well I did. I am a very positive person. I just took the task of finding a new job as my morning thing to do.
Get up, go to starbucks with my laptop, search and apply for a few hours, and then go about my day. There was plenty to do to keep my mind off the fact I wasn't working and that my severance/savings would eventually run out. It sucks, but it isn't the end of the world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many judgmental harpies on here -- tell me, why does it matter to you if you got your job search going within 48 hrs of losing a job and someone else got theirs going within 8 months or a yr or 2 yrs? Did it occur to you that there are people out there with high incomes and high savings rates and thus can coast for a yr or more, even with kids?
Awesome for those of you who have the luxury to coast for months/years with no income - just don't criticize those of us who are forced to light a fire under our asses.