Post-Graduation from College What was it like in your transition? What is your story?
#1
Posted 01 November 2009 - 03:44 PM
For me, I am still looking for a job and have decided to take some temp retail jobs in the mean time. It has been a difficult process, especially having a far less fulfilled social life now. I have friends that are still taking classes, some that went to graduate school, some that went abroad to teach in Korea, and some that are working. My boyfriend is still taking classes too, sometimes I come back to visit, but it's not very frequent. It's a bit frightening sometimes not knowing what my future is.
Everyone has a different story of their next step and I want to see other people's experiences.
Having less contact with friends? Long distance relationship? Finding their real first job and how? The wait until finding the next big thing? Getting Married?
And if you are in the transition now or it was years ago and seeing where you are now.
Please share your story~
#2
Posted 01 November 2009 - 05:47 PM
everyone assumes they are going to get a job once you get out of college, no that's not the case for the most part.
it's pretty depressing adjusting to the (real world)
adaptation is not an easy thing. especially if you went to school more than 20 years old your life. That's why most people go back to school. because most people don't know this thing called "work"
i have a small social life, but that's me.. that's how i like it, I'm an introvert.
for the most part i'm happy. whats the next big thing for me? I don't worry about that stuff too much.. I just want good health, fair education, and above minimum wage job to take care of myself and my family.
edit -
something to really keep in mind is.. don't get discouraged or have low-self esteem from the real world.
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#3
Posted 01 November 2009 - 06:42 PM
My work schedule kinda left me disconnected with my core group of friends (who have already drifted away from one another, somewhat), so I've been spending weekends with others, or going out to meet new people. Trying to date more frequently, too, lol
Having money is nice, but honestly, I'd rather have the time I used to have. I get by on the bare essentials. Thinking of saving up and getting the necessary work experience for now, so I can go study at Yonsei or Sogang in a few years, then come back to work again. I figure the further I get into my career, the less time I'll have to do something like that.
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#4
Posted 01 November 2009 - 08:54 PM
Grad school has been a good experience for the most part, but I'm about ready to finish up and take my crack at the real world. I'm (supposedly) supposed to finish up next year and I really need to figure out what to do.
#5
Posted 01 November 2009 - 11:59 PM
Right now, it's hard to adjust and apply for a job because of the economic depression (unless in Medical Field). That's why it is recommended that during your Internship, to make friends, get business cards and tell them you would want to apply once you graduated.
#6
Posted 02 November 2009 - 07:54 AM
So I did, it was miserable and I hated it.
I got used to waking up everyday at 7:30 to suit up and go to my desk job. I worked at a Korean trading company for little over a year trading steel. Then quit. You thought living with Koreans was bad.... try working for them!
I moved onto manufacturing (yeah I actually worked in a factory lol).
I used to make stationary products for a company that helped schools fund raise.
It was grueling, and eventually I got laid off (the owner really wanted a PT, but hired me as FT, realized she doesn't need a FT, and then let me go). I learned what dedication is, how use the maximum amount of hours in your day, and my boss re-defined what hard work is in my dictionary. She showed me things that I thought were impossible. She changed my life and my view about careers and work.
Even though I had to cancel my lease, lose my apt, lifestyle, freedom, I wouldn't have traded this experience for anything. It was a remarkable experience. Of course I didn't make much money. But what I learned... it was priceless. After I got laid off, I was out hunting for another job.. My mom actually sympathized with me while my dad was asking me what I did wrong. Its just the boss didn't need a FT. Stationary products is a seasonal business.
I'm back in a Korean trading company again, but this time I'm trading textiles. Ha! steel to textiles lol.
My parents always egged me after college "hey, you graduate from such an expensive school and you can't even find a job, what a failure. Why did you go to college in the first place? Why not just work at McDonalds?"
I told them "I only went to XYZ University because you told me to go. I had a full rides to multiple colleges but YOU told me to take out the loan and go there. Wonderful, no job and heaps of debt, great huh? Look at where I am from listening to you guys. You're right, your son is a bum. No wait, at least bum's don't have debt."
Argument went really south afterwords. I ended up having to pay all of my college loans back and I currently am. Lesson: don't fight people you love over money.
I decided not to take my parents advice all the time. Over the period of 2-3 years of graduating, I realized I'm a grown up and I can/must make decisions for myself. If my parents are going to cut me off, I better take command of my life and do what I need to do. I don't want to rely on them and shouldn't have to. *Sigh its just when they talk to me, they are such traditional Korean's. They always talk to me as if I owe them something.
How fair is life?
It really comes down how you look at it. If you're going to be all depressed and think there is no hope and no way back, you're right. If you sit and sulk and don't do anything about it, you're life WILL be miserable.
After college it's like you were just shot out of a cannon. *BOOM*, GO!.
But where? You're parents aren't telling you, you're friends already have jobs and kicking a**, you are sitting at home, stagnant, wondering what to do.
My advice is... No one knows you, better than yourself. Not your parents, not your cousins, not your best friends, not your professors. You are the one to decide, and you must, it's your life. Since you don't know, I don't know, your parents don't know, your friends don't know....... ... ... .. why not go and find out?
What's there to lose? Go out and make mistakes, learn from them, change, dream, go after newer, bigger, better things, it's human nature.
Sitting and wondering gets you no where. The bordem and anxiety is what got me. Curiosity made me get off the couch and look for things to do.
It's your life, you must exercise your freedom.
Make your own decisions
#7
Posted 02 November 2009 - 07:59 AM
I'm still not there yet... Just at my last year of college and will be graduating in June. I still haven't decided what I want to do but it's most likely a year working and volunteering while preparing for more school...
#8
Posted 02 November 2009 - 08:52 AM
I always used to tell them... I could be JUST like Mike, John, or Daniel... but.........
They all get yong-ddon, they don't have piano, golf, singing and art lessons after class. They don't have to go to Hakwon, they don't get beatings, their parents buy them what they want, and also they don't have any sisters to take care of! They don't have to pick up/drop off their sisters from piano, art, school.
When they used to compare me to other kids, I started to ask... what about you mom? How come you're not home to cook me snacks or dinner like Mike's mom? Mike's mom is so nice, she always asks me if I need anything or if I ate... how come you're not like that? My mom stopped comparing me to other children pretty fast.
#9
Posted 02 November 2009 - 09:12 AM
That is awesome.
My parents were actually pretty good about not comparing me to other kids, maybe because it was obvious that I just didn't care.
#10
Posted 02 November 2009 - 10:53 AM
#11
Posted 02 November 2009 - 01:10 PM
That was a couple years ago. I learned a lot working there but sometime in the middle I found myself wanting to go back to school to learn more and hopefully get paid more so when the time was right I simply left. Right now I'm trying to earn some professional certificates and am also considering going for a Master's.
#12
Posted 02 November 2009 - 01:38 PM
When you meet them, don't straight out ask them "can I get a job?" Don't be pushy. Ask them how they like their jobs, tell them you're trying to learn what types of jobs are out there for you and trying to figure which ones appeal to you. Does your school hold job fairs? That's probably best place to network.
I found an internship at my school's job fair and did it during my last quarter in college then after graduating I went straight to working full time at that company without being interviewed.
i don't know where you live. but from where i'm from.. you better scream out "i want a job" and keep being pushy.
that shows you're really interested and motivated.
http://loyale.bandcamp.com/
http://loyale.bandcamp.com/
MAKE HIM FAMOUS. LISTEN TO HIS SONG!
#13
Posted 02 November 2009 - 02:17 PM
that shows you're really interested and motivated.
i edited my post since then but basically i was saying there are different ways of saying "i want a job" and the way you say it is what makes you stand out among your competition. one way is to articulate and prove to them you have genuine interest. i do agree with you in being persistent, but do not be rude.
#14
Posted 02 November 2009 - 03:33 PM
i went on to grad school because its necessary for my field
even though i'm in school, i do feel like im somewhere in between a transition period and the real world.
since i'm actually working as an intern (but do everything an employee would) and going to school.
in a matter of two months, i became completely financially independent.
i also moved from one coast to another, where i knew no one at all.
leaving behind my bf, family and friends.
needless to say there is a lot less contact with my friends and being in a LDR sucks.
my friends & i do keep in contact however.
i'm naturally an independent person so this transition hasn't been too difficult for me.
it still hasn't really hit me that i'm "on my own" now.
#15
Posted 02 November 2009 - 10:30 PM
I majored in Finance and planned on going to law school, but now I am not really sure about doing that for the rest of my life so I giving myself time to figure it all out. I just graduated this past May and planned to go to Seoul in August, the day before I was supposed to leave I ended up in the hospital with internal bleeding and other stuff (Craziest and most unpredictable moment of my life so far). That whole situation taught me that you have to do what you want with your life because everything changes in an instant and you could be gone the next one.
I'm recovering and planning to go to Seoul in March to teach, travel, and explore my options. I mean I think it is really hard to decide what you are going to do for the rest of your life when there are so many opportunities out there. You have no clue what life will be like 2,5, or even 10 years from now so trying to plan every little detail is going to be stressful. I say try different things out and see what happens. I used to have it all figured out and now at 22 I realize how little I really know so I'm going to give myself the time to explore and discover while making a decent income.
Life after college isn't easy, and it's hard when all your core friends and everything you know suddenly changes upon graduation but you just have to give yourself time to figure it out, meet new people, and find your place in this world.
Looking Forward To:
♥♥Loving ♥♥: Nell,Epik High,Loveholic,Clazziquai,Jay Chou,Utada Hikaru,Se7en,Bi Rain,Shin Dong Wook, Lee Seung Gi ^_^

#16
Posted 03 November 2009 - 08:38 AM
I was focused on school for 16 years of my life (I'm not very smart, but am a hard worker), putting it first without honing any life skills, which made me very dependent on my parents. I'm still learning now...
So I graduated, it was still part of the "boom" period where I live... it was starting to get affected by the recession, but not as bad as in the States. There were so many job postings popping out everyday, yet I couldn't get many interviews because I did not have that much relevant work experience. I was worn out from school, so for the first month or so I didn't worry too much. Then came the daily job searches. It sucked that no one wanted to hire me.... I got a few bites. Got a job offer, but had to turn it down because it was in another city, and like I said, I lack the skills to be dependent.
Finally landed the job where I live (for a tiny firm). It wasn't quite what I studied, but it was relevant to my degree. it was great for the first 3-4 months. Then the big crash happened. At least they didn't lay me off... I'm working part time hours even though i'm FT. (I'm writing this on my "day off" without pay). This is a lot better than some of my friends who still hasn't gotten a job. I need to job hunt, but who's hiring?
#17
Posted 03 November 2009 - 10:11 AM
Now I'm in Bakersfield because my husband is a petroleum engineer and I'm a housewife. I honestly wouldn't have it any other way because it works out so well for both me and my husband. When I was in grad school and he was a senior, it was like we were more roommates than married. We didn't have much time to spend together because of homework, exams, studying and it was not that fun. We would wake up at different hours and not be able to eat together because we would come home at different times too. I love having this time to myself and spending time doing what I enjoy and being able to take care of the husband. If I want to work again, I could get a job because it is in demand (speech language pathology). I have no plans of going back to get my masters (which is required) although the adults are all saying I should. We'll see...
#18
Posted 03 November 2009 - 11:14 AM
As for the friends back home, we're really close and hang out a fair bit. In uni we shared an office so we hung out day in day out. After we graduated it was more like once every 1-2 months.
As for life in general, it's been a good ride. Sure things could have been different if I'd studied harder, I was a really bad bookworm, but then I'd still be back home in Australia instead of in England staring at all the travel opportunities in Europe for the next 3 years at least.
#19
Posted 03 November 2009 - 12:59 PM
#20
Posted 04 November 2009 - 07:50 PM
I've been in the "real world" for a little over a year now. I think I was pretty lucky. During the fall of my senior year, I applied to a bunch of companies looking for job. Before Spring semester even started, I landed a job already. Due to that, I didn't have to stress my final semester & just focused on a great final semester.
I took a month off after graduation before starting work. During that time, I continued to live out the lease of my college apartment & just enjoy the summer days. Oh yea, I also used that time to find a new apartment in the new city I would be living in & bought a car. Yea...the salary + bonus on the offer letter really made me splurge. NOT a good idea.
Finally when I started working, I realized I had to pay for an entire apartment's rent on my own, including all utilities & internet. Before, I always shared the expense so it didn't seem like a lot. But everything adds up when you're on your own. Money management was probably the biggest thing I had to deal with.
I also found myself getting bored a lot in the evenings with nothing to do. No homework, no friends to have dinner with, etc. So I picked up a few new hobbies (piano, dramas, pet, etc.). Then on weekends, thanks to social networking sites, I was able to keep in touch with my friends & went back to visit the college several times.
About 9 months later, I purchased a home. By then, I was doing much better with money management & had saved enough for down payment + more.
Now, living in a house...things have gotten much better. I purchased it alone...but for some reason, utilities have all gotten cheaper. I think it's because some of the appliances are gas, whereas at my first post-grad apt, everything was electric. The house is not as fancy but it feels more like home. So far, things have been pretty good for me & I feel very lucky. Even better, this past year...my bf finally graduated & got a job in the same city as me.
If I didn't have a job right after college though, I think I would go into panic-mode. I'm really grateful for everything I've gotten. Now if only my parents would stop calling me for money all the time....that is my next goal to resolve.
































