Ponderings

What to Do in the Face of Rejection

My best friend and I both got rejected from some pretty stellar jobs this week. It’s objectively sucky. I, for one, have been rejected by myriad jobs in the last three months, so this was nothing new. I did almost cry, but felt like I lacked the energy to do so. Overall, I think the bummer mostly resided not in the job itself, perhaps, but in the certainty of the job. This was a job I knew I could do really, really well. I would have been able to walk right into it without the blink of an eyelash. I would know exactly what I’d be doing for the next two years, starting in August, and I also would have been able to start arranging plans for where I’d live. My life would finally lack the ambiguity that has been torturing me for months.

My best friend, on the other hand, had poured her absolute heart and soul into this job. She was applying to be an international bike tour guide, and in preparation, had spent hours working on and fixing her friends’ bikes, perfected her Italian, practiced her Spanish and French, talked with current employees, and trolled the company’s website. She went to a “hiring event,” the final stage, all the way in Toronto this past weekend, for crying out loud. There, she said she absolutely nailed the interview, speaking beautifully in all four of her fluent languages and even remembering that her interviewer was recently married and congratulating her. If her being rejected is not an injustice, I don’t know what is.

So what do we do, exactly, in the face of these rejections? Well, today I happened to be going to a talk literally entitled “What am I doing with my life?” hosted by my college’s Career Center. I invited my friend, and together, we listened to an animated alumnus as he coached us through various activities. One was a “personal gravestone”: on a large paper gravestone, we wrote, essentially, what we’d want our gravestone to say when we died. Some of the prompts were, “You become famous. What did people like about the famous you?” “Someone passes your gravestone and says, ‘Damn.’ Why?” “You set a record. What for?” “What did you do for the good of the world and its people?” And so on. The exercise got us thinking about things that excite us, that motivate us.

Then, we selected either the most lofty goal or the most exciting prospect on our gravestones and wrote down three concrete steps we could take to get us closer to them. It left us feeling hopeful, like we had promise.

We chatted with the alumnus, Michael White, who is an inventor and trains large corporations how to unlock creativity and innovation at What If! in New York City. We explained to him our recent rejections, and he gave us some words of encouragement and tips for staying motivated. We thanked him for his time.

Stepping outside on this sunny, breezy day, it felt like things couldn’t be all that bad. We met a couple friends right off campus, one working on homework, another painting the side of a building as part of his latest artistic scheme. My best friend climbed on top of a dumpster beside the building and proceeded to sob uncontrollably.

I felt like I was in some 80s coming-of-age movie. There was construction noises around us, the wind blew her fair into her face, I looked up at her through squinted, sun-glared eyes. She ranted while one friend looked up from her laptop and the other ceased rolling paint. And we listened.

I’m a firm believer that you deserve to feel what you feel. I’m terrible about bottling up my emotions, but I know that I always feel better when I let it out. But I also believe that it’s how you act on these emotions that counts. What do you do with them?

In her rant, my friend exclaimed, “And now I’ll just be working another sh*tty job for 6 months and I’ve already worked so many sh*tty jobs before!”

“Wrong!” I replied. “You by no means have to work a sh*tty job.”

“I need to make money! My parents are relying on me to make my own income!”

“And you can make money doing a job you actually enjoy and care about. You don’t have to settle for a sh*tty job.”

She got quiet.

See what I mean by this scene feeling a little movie-esque?

Neither of us has any certainty about what we’re doing, or where we’re living, still. It’s not like we’re going to figure it out in this one afternoon and magically turn it around. But for now, we’re pulling ourselves up by our bootstraps, taking a deep breath, and going to Ben and Jerry’s for Free Cone Day. That’s what we’re doing in the face of rejection.

Comments

Mom
April 9, 2019 at 11:43 pm

You both are outstanding people and potential employees who will be huge assets wherever you work. Know your worth, keep the faith and don’t settle! Xoxo



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