Looking for work is a roller-coaster ride: high with elation when you think you've found a great position, low with discouragement when you realize that someone else was offered a job you wanted.
Most of the time, you fall somewhere in between, your mood cycling from cautious optimism to keen disappointment. You try to conceal the inner turmoil, turning a brave face to the world, trying to convince everyone that you are "just fine."
For the sake of your health and your sanity, try these approaches:
1. Identify someone who is willing to be a sounding board for you: your significant other, a fellow job seeker, a career counselor, a good friend. Explain that you need someone to help you express the feelings inside and gain a better understanding of what is happening to you emotionally. Then talk to them, for a few minutes. You don't want to become a burden and your listener is not a paid therapist. Ten minutes of honest revelation and analysis a few times per week can help you avoid ulcers, family fights growing out of your frustration, self-isolation, and will free up the energy it takes to hold everything in. That is energy you need to conserve for job search.
2. Start a journal, if you don't already have one. Chronicle your activities, how you feel while doing them, and how you feel afterwards. Watch the patterns of your emotions so that you can start to predict when something is going to be stressful and uncomfortable. Schedule a fun activity afterwards to help you regain your balance. If certain activities make you feel buoyant and hopeful, concentrate on increasing such activities throughout the week.
3. Approach interviews with the thought that each one is really only practice for the perfect position you will eventually find. Perform as well as you can without investing your sense of worth in one person's decision. If it takes a hundred interviews to secure a job, each "No" you receive brings you one step closer to that final "Yes" you are seeking and therefore every step on the road to unemployment is worthwhile and "rejection" no longer belongs in your vocabulary.
Acknowledging the pressures and emotional swings of unemployment and job search will help you look at the situation more objectively and allow you to continue to function in other important areas of your life, those not connected with work or income.
Virginia Bola operated a rehabilitation company for 20 years, developing innovative job search techniques for disabled workers, while serving as a respected Vocational Expert in Administrative, Civil and Workers' Compensation Courts. Author of an interactive and emotionally supportive workbook, The Wolf at the Door: An Unemployment Survival Manual, and a monthly ezine, The Worker's Edge, she can be reached at http://www.virginiabola.com
Is your resume dead? Don't be so quick to say,... Read More
With today's economy, more and more companies are... Read More
OK. You've posted your resume online. You've sent out a... Read More
Whether you're self-employed or you work for someone else, you're... Read More
As a human resources specialist for many years, I've seen... Read More
The heading of this article could just as well have... Read More
Q. I didn't get a job that I interviewed for.... Read More
It Is Up To YouSo, you want to get promoted.... Read More
Collect them all!Over the course of six months in my... Read More
Use Proposal Marketing and you'll be your own hot spot,... Read More
Working in ChinaWorking in China is very common now. Either... Read More
1. Begin focusing on what you want instead of how... Read More
If I were to ask you the percentage of time... Read More
Are you doing what you really want to do or... Read More
After creating the perfect resume, you then need to distribute... Read More
When we think of technical certification, most of us think... Read More
Everything in nature has been endowed with what it needs... Read More
Your breath catches in your throat - at last, an... Read More
An interesting combination of factors at this time in history... Read More
Have you ever tried to contact a past employer only... Read More
You are just about to leave university You are just... Read More
It takes between seven and seventeen seconds for a person... Read More
Think you have the speed, endurance, and know-how to fix... Read More
Getting a job is not just about your performance in... Read More
When the word "networking" is used, we tend to think... Read More
An epidemic of white-collar financial crime has resulted in the... Read More
It hangs from the ceiling above your bed while you... Read More
You've looked at all the job interview tips and techniques.... Read More
My experience working with thousands of leaders world wide for... Read More
We often use the phrase, "Get Your Feet Wet" when... Read More
You've heard the real estate cliché: the three factors that... Read More
Let me ask you a question: are you tired of... Read More
Career experts say that people will change careers (not jobs)... Read More
I am in my mid-thirties, and, as you can imagine,... Read More
After days, weeks, months or longer of interviewing, you have... Read More
The right certification trainingTrainings vary a lot when it comes... Read More
Are you thinking about getting your online health care degree... Read More
More than four out of ten thirtysomething professionals want to... Read More
Your job is to rise ABOVE the challenge. Do more... Read More
Here's a list of the top 10 tips you can... Read More
The euphoria of getting a new job can sometimes be... Read More
Let's face it. Monitoring employees' e-mail, tracking their Internet use,... Read More
Q. I hate my job as a computer consultant. I... Read More
One of the responsibilities of a human resources professional is... Read More
Most people spend approximately 25% to over 67% of their... Read More
Searching for a job can be a daunting and confusing... Read More
You'll get wet but the reward just might be a... Read More
Searching for employment is one of the most nerve-racking activities... Read More
If you haven't looked for a job recently, there are... Read More
Do you dislike making decisions and avoid the challenge whenever... Read More
Careers, Jobs & Employment Careers, Jobs & Employment |