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I've been traveling for over a month now... make it stop

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Except he's a self described skinny little rag doll who's never seen the inside of a gym, or touched a barbell.
Details like that don't matter. When you are pulling down the bank that T is pulling down the women can just smell the money and flock to him.

What was that word I am supposed to put in here, Bazinga?
 
I have a strong feeling you will hate SF and NYC as much as you hate the desert. Maybe even more.
I'm pretty doubtful. I liked being in SF during most of the times I was there. It helped that I was hanging out with a friend most of the time or doing other things. It is a bit dry at times.

...

...

Bay area kind of sucks... Could just be Man Jose that's getting to me though. (And the driving here is fucking miserable. I like that I can drive 77 in a 65 without being pulled over but fuck having to drive 100 miles anytime I want to do anything!)
I am Jack's complete lack of surprise.
 
We have now determined that every major city in which TridenT lives sucks.

I hypothesize that it may not be the cities that are causing the suckage, but the attitude and mindset of the common denominator.
 
I've heard he actually isn't banned, but that may be incorrect. Regardless, we need alky back -- forum is too slow these days.

Yeah alky would tear up TridenT on here, or maybe the forum would just melt down in self destruction from all the flaming that would be going on.

*chants* Bring back alky..! Bring back alky!!
 
Yeah alky would tear up TridenT on here, or maybe the forum would just melt down in self destruction from all the flaming that would be going on.

*chants* Bring back alky..! Bring back alky!!
Bro, I actually miss alky. 🙁

Bro
 
Bro, I actually miss alky. 🙁

Bro

t7r4kb.jpg
 
In terms of honest advice being new is alot more draining than being established. Give yourself like 3 months to learn the ropes before you apply to anymore jobs. You are going to be tired as the FNG because learning the ropes makes you tired. Its just how the brain works. You need R&R to learn, and changing any job is alot to learn. You'll start having more spare energy 3-6 months in if you aren't working much OT. If you are working OT forget it.

It isn't learning the ropes that is tiring. There are many reasons for me to leave and I'm probably going to do it at the end of the month. I don't have interest in living in this city or staying at this job. :/ Neither is really good for me.
 
It isn't learning the ropes that is tiring. There are many reasons for me to leave and I'm probably going to do it at the end of the month. I don't have interest in living in this city or staying at this job. :/ Neither is really good for me.

HAHAHAHA. Back to your parent's basement like I called it. :biggrin:

And if you ever did apply for another job, you couldn't even list this fake one on that weakass resume of yours.
 
It isn't learning the ropes that is tiring. There are many reasons for me to leave and I'm probably going to do it at the end of the month. I don't have interest in living in this city or staying at this job. :/ Neither is really good for me.

The only common element of all of your failures is you.
 
It isn't learning the ropes that is tiring. There are many reasons for me to leave and I'm probably going to do it at the end of the month. I don't have interest in living in this city or staying at this job. :/ Neither is really good for me.

Assuming you aren't trolling (and I really hope you are, for your sake), you have one very good reason to stay in that job - to get actual experience. You are effectively a new grad with no worthwhile experience and until you get 2-3 years of experience, you need to quit being a baby, buck up, and stick it out like the rest of us did after we graduated.

But, you're incredibly clueless and won't listen to anyone even though everyone predicted this would happen and you didn't listen.
 
So how long has TridenT been working in CA?

Based on the timeline of this thread, a month? two at best?

Two to three months, tops. Certainly not enough time to adequately judge a position since he's still learning the ropes.

The only way he's justified in leaving so soon if this job actually exists is if he's literally working in a sweatshop.
 
Two to three months, tops. Certainly not enough time to adequately judge a position since he's still learning the ropes.

The only way he's justified in leaving so soon if this job actually exists is if he's literally working in a sweatshop.

Waiting for "They keep the AC at 77 and I like it at 72." :awe:
 
Assuming you aren't trolling (and I really hope you are, for your sake), you have one very good reason to stay in that job - to get actual experience. You are effectively a new grad with no worthwhile experience and until you get 2-3 years of experience, you need to quit being a baby, buck up, and stick it out like the rest of us did after we graduated.

But, you're incredibly clueless and won't listen to anyone even though everyone predicted this would happen and you didn't listen.

This.

My first job was help desk. Did I want to answer the phones all day? Not really, but it gave me work experience and got me in the company. From there I moved up to server tech then eventually NOC (which is kinda downgrade but better pay, better hours, less stress, so it was upgrade imo). Also, stop expecting to get a good job at a company coming off the street. The good jobs go to internal applicants, their jobs then go outside. Sometimes it's a pretty big chain reaction before a job even has to go outside. You want one of those jobs to get you in the company so you can later on apply internally to a better job. Don't expect this to be instantanious, it could be years before an internal job opens up. Companies today are laying off more than they are hiring. Consider yourself very lucky if you even get in to a company that is in your field.
 
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