this post was submitted on 10 Aug 2025
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chapotraphouse

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this isnt going to be very well written or coherent but:

look, I'm not trying to be the classic reactionary STEM grad who feels entitled to a high-paid tech position because I stumbled through three years of lectures. I'm not that. I've done a couple of years since graduating in hospitality work and that was generally horrible/couldn't get enough hours to pay rent/got misgendered whenever my bosses were having a bad day. Now that sector is in big trouble too so there aren't any jobs going, even if i could stomach going back into it. And apparently chef's work is a black mark on your CV and a lot of employers will write you off based on that anyway?

people say "networking is more important than qualifications". Well, that's great, but as someone who comes from a working class family, I have no idea how to do that, and never knew it was necessary until after the period I was apparently given the greatest opportunity to do it (university). and now it's like, what, am I just supposed to message people on LinkedIn out of the blue begging for work? with no experience? Where do I even begin with that?

I would love to work on the railways or in local government or something but I don't hear anything back from those roles. My best asset is that I spent 2 years setting up a tenant union in a major city, but apparently that's not good enough to even get an interview for support worker role at a charity that literally supports tenants and homeless people. I don't know what I'm supposed to do. Every time I get close to a job, it always ends the same way - interview, feel like I did well, get a call back a couple of days later saying "thanks but somebody else had more experience". My experience was literally on my CV, if it wasn't enough then don't waste my time calling me in to interview!

thanks for reading

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[–] Jabril@hexbear.net 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Yeah it's brutal, and funding has dried up for the doctorate and post doc programs. A friend who was trying in the states had to accept a position in Germany and luckily they were looking before the biggest cuts happened because the EU funds a fraction of the positions that were cut in the US.

Not sure if you are committed to staying in US but you could get a TEFL certificate and teach English in another country. It might not be a long term career but it could be a great way to spend a few years, get some new experiences and perspectivesz and ride out the US crash from afar

[–] revolut1917@hexbear.net 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

oh i live in the UK but TEFL is something I've considered before. Specifically I was looking at doing it in China.

[–] Jabril@hexbear.net 3 points 23 hours ago

oh ok, yeah it might still apply to your situation there