All’s well – albeit being on the slow side.
I quit my job last week. It was liberating and stressful at the same time. It’s awesome to not have the commute anymore and to be able to set my own schedule (very important if you’re slightly ADD like me), but the change of pace feels very very weird. Granted that I never worked the full 8 hours at work anyway, it’s weird to be able to do your work in bed and blast the room with my fave work music.
Last week I also found out my grad sch status. I got rejected from the em-bee-ay program (expected), which made me feel depressed for two full days. We were expecting that result because 1)I don’t have enough work experience and 2) I applied for financial aid. In light of the recession and crashing endowment, the school has decided to prioritize full-paying students. Also, they’re not particularly interested in a B.A. with one year of irrelevant work experience. For noobs like me, they have a special program that accepts application from college seniors. So pretty much I’m in that purgatory zone where I’m too old for the special program and too young for the normal program. Oh well… Disappointed but also glad I don’t have to figure out how to find $140K to pay for school.
Two days after the rejection letter, I decided to call the admissions office for the public health program I applied to. I was told that there’s no decision on my file – which was very strange. After a couple of nerve-wrecking hours, the director of admissions called and told me I’m waitlisted. I nearly cried. She told me that I’m a very strong candidate with good scores, good academic records, excellent recommendation, and she’s convinced I’ll do well in the program, BUT… she can’t justify straight acceptance because I lack the experience in the field. That’s why she’s putting off making a decision on my file, because it’s "very tricky".
Very tricky my ass. WTF! I read all these grad sch forums and see people with much lower scores than mine and less than 1 yr experience getting into all the top programs (my program included). WTFH?
Anyway, i don’t have the energy to be angry anymore. I’m just disappointed because I expect these smart people to know that even though i don’t have a direct experience in the field, my work ethics and my recommendations speak volumes to my ability to do well in any fucking fields. I’ve chosen to switch to this field because I want to make a difference and I’ve extensively spoken about my motivation in my essays. But, fuck my heartfelt 1000-words essay. Experience is the currency in this game of admissions and I have none.
Of course, the fact that I only applied to one school doesn’t help either. Ngeh… whatever… Right now I’m just keeping my fingers crossed and hope for the best.
But yeah, last week was extremely trying. Scratch that… the past eight months after graduation have been very very trying. And I’m speaking not just for myself, but for my fellow ‘08. After being sheltered in the ivory tower for four years, we’re set free in the real world only to discover the crushing truth that our $160K B.A. worth shit. I know I haven’t been the model student, but I did respectably. In fact, very well in some aspects. Yet, I’m reduced to a brainless monkey who does shitwork.
We watched Adventureland last night and empathized fully with the main character who couldn’t get a decent job out of college and had to work a menial, mindless one in an amusement park. There was one scene when he was on the phone telling his prospective employer that he had "never driven an ashphalt mixer per se. But did once drive my friend’s van to Wisconsin on a pretty lengthy road trip." The person on the other line hung up on him. I’m not sure which parts of the sentence offended the prospective employer more: "per se" or "road trip". When James (the main character) bemoaned : "What am I supposed to do. I’m not even qualified to do manual labor," I want to get up from my chair and scream: "I feel you, man!!"
I don’t think that my life right now is as good as it gets. I think there’s still a lot ahead of me and as much as I’d like to give up and be happy with mediocrity (manage expectation thus prevent future disappointment), I’m just not wired that way. So yeah, I’m still climbing to the top but I do expect to fall plenty of times.