Ruptga
Lifer
- Aug 3, 2006
- 10,246
- 207
- 106
but becoming a ridiculously over-educated-ivory-tower-intellectual-ninny has worked out very well for me.![]()

I was diagnosed as depressed for about a year, my situation was similar to OP's wrt the hopeless job search and the crushing poverty. I already had a BA, but I went back to school to get something more marketable that also fit me better. Long story short, I got good grades at a "good" school in a "good" major right up until I left because it was clear they had zero interest in teaching marketable skills. I was there to buy job training, not a bunch of math and tangential bullshit that I could pick up from Wikipedia. I moved to a major city where I also have a bunch of family, and I worked part time at a couple temporary jobs that they'd alerted me to while I took a couple online classes. I was trying to use those to segue into a related but explicitly profession-oriented program, but when the opportunity to go full-time at a place I'd temped at came up, I took it. The online classes were seriously half-assed, and if I'd stuck with it I'd have gotten a degree but not the confidence to make it through an interview because I wouldn't have known what I was talking about. I was tired of taking out debt for things did not deliver.
I could have stayed at that full-time job forever, but that was too depressing to consider so around December I seriously started looking for anything IT related at all, help desk, assistant to the head cable bitch, whatever. I got nothing whatsoever, the market is flooded with BS holders to the point that you need one to pick up a phone and ask them to turn it off then on again. I ended up giving up on that too and looking at any local company related to computers. I fairly quickly found one that does electronics recycling, they wanted someone that could drive a box truck and knows a monitor from a hard drive. I'd finally found something at least vaguely interesting for which I was not merely qualified, but overqualified, so I applied. I've been working there for around two months now, and I'm making about 40% more than I did at the other place (mostly because of over-the-road time, but I don't mind that).
My takeaways are:
- Fuck college, its ROI is terrible unless it's a real hands-on work-oriented program, which is rare. Even then, it requires a lot of dedication and commitment.
- Move wherever you have an advantage. For me it was a city where a good 15 adult relatives live, their word-of-mouth job leads made getting a start attainable.
- Look at types of work that you've written off as not having a future or being too unrewarding. I don't anticipate a lot of upward mobility as a driver, but I like the work and it pays. Anything that could possibly be good enough to do for a year or two is good enough to try.
- Be overqualified, everyone else is. It's stupid, but it's the economy we live in.
- Skim Indeed, etc., and do apply to anything interesting, but the odds of any one person sticking out from the crowd on those sites are really bad. Look for companies that aren't massive and do let you apply on their site, you're more likely to be noticed.
- Driving is very easy to get into, unless of course you're a shitty driver. A chauffeur's license is easy to get and (probably depending on the state) is all you need to get going with anything up to a mid-size box truck, being able to handle a stick is not necessary. It's not for everyone by any stretch, but if you're not afraid of getting your hands dirty or lifting things then you've got a leg up on a significant fraction of drivers. That goes double for being willing to go over the road for up to a week, but in-town courier isn't a bad gig either.
Of course, the disclaimer about survivorship bias applies to me too.