Showing posts with label Ivy League. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ivy League. Show all posts

Aug 24, 2016

5 Things to Know Before Moving to Cambridge

I just moved back to Cambridge, MA and, while I already miss NYC and hope to live there again someday, there are many great things about living in Cambridge!


Cambridge is a very green city and also very close to Boston, in case you want the downtown city sort of feeling! There are many different squares in Cambridge - Harvard, Central, Kendall, and more - and each one has its own character and is complete with its own cute cafes, boutiques, and neighborhood quirks! For someone who doesn't have a car (me) it also has green public transit and lots of bike paths.

If you have decided to move to Cambridge, too, read on for five handy things to know before your move!

Jun 5, 2014

I GRADUATED FROM HARVARD!

This is a bit over-due, but here's a photo dump post (courtesy of my smartphone) of my graduation from Harvard.

Graduating from Harvard #letmetakeaselfie 
I now have an A.B. Degree in Human Evolutionary Biology from Harvard University (in a nice frame and everything) and am officially a real life grown up working a real life full time (and then some) awesome job as Chief City Writer at a tech startup in SoHo!

At lunch with my parents
Our Class Day speaker was Sheryl Sandberg of Facebook and our Commencement Speaker was Michael Bloomberg (and let's be honest - his name is his brand) but the real standouts were our two honorary degree recipients.



President George H W Bush received an honorary doctorate of law!


18-time Grammy winner Aretha Franklin (aka, the Queen of Soul) received a doctorate of arts!



And President Faust of Harvard was her usual cool self.

Congratulations, class of 2014!

Jun 2, 2014

The Emotional Stages of Graduation

Congratulations to all 2014 grads! The 2014 World Cup might be pretty darn exciting, but it has nothing on the fact that ****WE'RE DONE******!

1) Disbelief

Like wait, what? Wasn't freshman initiation yesterday?

funny hippo 500x375

Don't I have some paper that I have to turn in or some exam that I need to take or some something that I have to do? It can't just be over, just like that, can it?

2) Sheer Bliss

It'strueit'strueit'strue NO. MORE. STUDYING.

Semester notes, meet recycling bin. YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!


This is the definition of happiness, dears.

3) Hyperventilation

There's the overwhelming fact that you're about to enter the real world. There's the fact that you're moving away from friends you've loved for four years and starting over somewhere new. There's the fear of failure or missing the bus and being the unsuccessful one. There's the realization you're fully responsible for your rent, need to learn about savings, need to buy your food, need to pay your bills, need to get your own cell phone, need to - DOES ANYONE HAVE A PAPER BAG I CAN BREATHE INTO?



4) Excitement

Eventually the panic passes and you realize that you can do it. You've made it through college, you're intelligent, educated, hard working, and ready to do life!!


There are few better feelings than the excitement of a promising new beginning.

5) Pride

Graduated from Harvard
Just go with it.

Are you celebrating anyone's graduation this year? 

Who are you rooting for in the 2014 World Cup?

May 21, 2014

Ten Things to Do Before Graduation

Since I'm about to ****GRADUATE**** I thought I'd put together a list of pre-graduation to-dos for those with a semester or more left!

1) Take a class for fun. 

Twelve years of education plus four years of higher education can sometimes lead to a little burnout - it's a lot! And getting bogged down with trying to make the grade can be a bummer, too.

High Expectations Asian Father - WHy Harvard Better than Yale?


But when it comes down to it, learning is fun. Take a class purely for fun to remember that you actually do enjoy learning. If you didn't you probably wouldn't have chosen college!

2) Appreciate your meal plan.

In the real world, you generally can't just show up to a big room any day of the week between the hours of x and y to have as much free food, buffet style, as you want.

funny pictures,auto,sign,restaurant,chinese,fail

There's a reason people love buffets and it probably has to do with the fact that food acquisition generally takes more time, money, and effort than that.

4) Go to a professor's office hours.

Building professional relationships now can really help your career in the future. Students tend to take access to top professionals in their fields (aka: the professors) for granted, but that nonstop access dries up as soon as you graduate.


College is a golden opportunity to secure recommendations for jobs, grad school, etc. And some of your professors are bound to be just plain interesting!

5) Go to a college party.

Social relationships are important!

image

And it's just fun! But try not to be the person puking in the rose bushes, because then I have to feel bad for you/worry about your poor, poor liver.

6) Go to the library just to explore the stacks.

A lot of schools have super cool libraries (shout to Harvard's Widener library!) but we rarely take the time to appreciate them when we're studying or collecting books for papers.

6030635-Harvard_University_Boston

Do it!

7) Learn about alumni organizations.

Jobs. Friends. Barbecues. 'Nuff said.

8) Knock off somethings on your school's bucket list.

Every school has their traditions, whether it's a particular to-do list or some must attend parties or just a general culture.




I'm not suggesting that you entirely assimilate to your school's stereotype, but do partake in at least a bit of the culture. It's a fun, social activity that allows you to get closer to your peers!

9) Pull an all-nighter.

I'm in no way condoning getting into the habit of no sleep, but I think it's something that's pretty universal to the college student experience and everyone should do it at least once. It will be a strugglebus towards the end, but hang in there!


Bonus if you make it a really productive and/or fun night!

10) Do what YOU want to do.

College is to life what the Enlightenment was to literature - it's a time to learn how to think critically, question what you're told, and determine independently whether or not something sounds advisable/plausible/ethical.

We're bombarded with advice about what we should do, but the ultimate goal of a college education is to be able to figure that out for yourself. As in life, sometimes you'll probably stumble a bit - but as longs as you keep trying, that's the best you can do!

What's on your top ten list?

What advice would you give a younger you?

Do you regret what you do more or what you don't?

Mar 24, 2014

The Second Wave of Midterms

Spring break is over and it's time for the second wave of midterms.

NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO.


I empathize 100% with whatever that poor thing. I'm feeling exactly what he/she/it is.

Do you have exams right after break?

Do you prefer exams and assignments due right before or right after break?

Where did you go/are you going for spring break?

Jan 10, 2014

Recipe Reviews: Little Bites of Comfort Oatmeal Jam Bars

The new semester is starting around now (or soon) and the holiday glow is starting to wear off for a lot of us. As are lives become more stressful and less Christmas happiness-tinted, it's important to take some breaks to enjoy life. It's a long time until Christmas rolls around again, so we need to make the most of the rest of the year, too!

While baking won't cure SAD (seasonal affective disorder), it can cheer us all up a little. It's a stress buster to relax elbow-deep in flour and it's spirit-lifting for those that you share the treats with, too!

Stresscake's Little Bites of Comfort Oatmeal Jam Bars might make you feel like erecting one of these guard snowmen in your yard so that you have more for yourself.


But the batch makes a lot and they're easy to make, so forget about the evil snowman and share!

This is what the bars look like on her blog:



And here's how they turned out for me!

....

Okay, so somehow my camera ate all the photographs of the finished product. Because they looked that delicious? Anyway, my bars looked very much like her picture, so I was pleased.

Pre-baking
 The only changes I made where the size of the pan (not quite sure what the size of mine was, but I doubt it was whatever she asked for) and that I used water instead of rum.

I'm 20, I can't buy alcohol in this country. I also don't like the taste of alcohol and my roommates both don't drink for religious reasons, so we don't keep alcohol in the apartment. No loss, the bars were amazing without rum!


I also didn't use high quality jam because it was the evening and I didn't feel like making a grocery run. I was in a sort of anti-social mood and while taking a break to bake (especially since I needed to for a class get-together) was fine, I didn't feel like extending that break and risking social interaction by going grocery shopping. 

My textbooks would miss me too much and small talk was not high on my priorities list.


So instead of going out and hunting for a vague 'high quality jam' I used Smucker's orange marmalade. Deal with it.


It was delicious and none of my classmates (aka undiscerning college students) are foodie-sophisticated enough to turn up their nose at this fresh-baked dessert.

These were a huge hit at my Thursday evening class party/study group (only at Harvard can that be a thing) and I think my classmates are thoroughly impressed.

Shhhh, don't tell them how easy these are to make.

Or that I used Smucker's jam. So not hipster, ya know.

When were (are) the holidays over for you?

How do you keep balance in your life when you're busy?

How often do you bake?

Dec 29, 2013

3 Good Reasons not to Day-Drink

As a college student, even at an Ivy League (where studying severely limits partying relative to some other places), I'm aware of how much drinking happens.

I'm also aware of how great an excuse  the holidays seem to be to extend that drinking from Saturday to Friday night to Thursday night to Wednesday afternoon...

Courtesy of images from the internet (yay, internet!), here are three good reasons not to day drink.

Your reputation.

The holidays are a really social season for most of us and drinking tends not to make you sound any smarter. You will form impressions, and a reputation, now that will last all year!


Drinking doesn't bode well for decision-making.



That might be a bit extreme, but you get the idea.

The Hangover.



The whole movie (including the conception of the movie) was just a bad idea.

This one isn't a GIF, but it's almost better - have you heard of the Drinking Mirror App? It shows you what drinking does to your looks. Since the holiday season is also a prime to take photos, you definitely don't want to go down in history looking like the 'after' you on the Drinking Mirror App.

Just don't day-drink! Or, if you do, you've been warned.

Whatever you're drinking this holiday season, drink responsibly.

And DON'T DRINK AND DRIVE. That's a personal pet peeve of mine (I've heard people brag about it - it's not something to brag about, it's shameful and endangers the lives of innocent people).

Okay, lecture hat is off.

What's one your pet peeves?

What's your favorite holiday beverage? Alcoholic or nonalcoholic!


Dec 11, 2013

Why Buy The Cow...?

Why buy the cow dress, when you can have the milk wear it for free less?

Okay, that's not a direct application of the concept. But it asks the same question, why invest more when you can get the benefits for less?

With designer dresses, there are several reasons, ranging from the ability to reuse them to the value of having the garments in your closet and being able to sell them (soon, or to try to hold on to them until they're vintage designer dresses and worth a fortune - but whether that happens is a gamble).

Still, the reality is that most of us just can't afford to fill our closets with stunning Versace gowns and Herve Leger wrap dresses. It just isn't feasible on a student's budget, nor on the budget of most young professionals.

Also, take it from a girl who's big sister owns upwards of fifty party dresses - most girls don't want to rewear their dresses to formals and big parties. Something new tends to be more fun.

cute, dress, funny, gif, green
Sadly, you can't always count on your neighborhood fairytale princess to whip one up.
Rent the Runway is an online designer dud rental shop that allows you to order designer dresses and accessories for a fraction of their retail cost. You pick your dress, they ship it to you, you ship it back, and done!

I've never used Rent the Runway, but I've heard really great things from a lot of my friends. How else can you be the stunner at your House Formal (it's a Harvard thing, but other schools and businesses also tend to have formal dances or parties at this time of year) without using up next semester's book budget?

The dresses still aren't cheap (most rentals seem to be between $50 and $250, with some real stunners costing even more) but being able to rent a $1250 Herve Leger signature bandage dress for $150 is great for those of us who couldn't justify the retail price tag.

Here are some of my favorite looks for winter parties!

Pamela Roland Declaration of Love Gown


This eye-catching red gown retails at $1925 and rents for $260. Customers say "the back sash is as dramatic as the red color" and enjoyed wearing it to a Christmas Day wedding, for one proud mom, and an engagement photo session, for the female half of a happy couple.

Badgley Mischka Glitz Gown

This dress, retailing at $650 and renting for $160, is a personal favorite. It's like a waterfall of sequins! You can peruse a whopping 565 customer photos on the dress's page, so you're almost certain to find someone with a similar figure to you and be able to imagine how it will look on you!

Catherine Deane Patricia Gown


This elegant number, a real trans-generational gown, retails at $1540 and rents for $300. It's elegant, classic, and looks just as good on older women as on spring chickens.

Um, yeah. Is my southern showing?

Nicole Miller Arctic Mist Gown


This slinky number retails for $750 and rents for $145. It's a perfect winter formal or ice ball dress! Customers say that it's "very comfortable," "true to size," and "looked and felt great!" One note is that it's pretty long and shorter girls cautioned that you'll either need to figure something out to handle the length or get a really tall pair of heels to wear with it.

Caroline Herrara Take My Breath Away Gown

This retails for a whopping $3690 and rents for a still staggering $475. Maybe the price tag is what takes your breath away?


All jokes aside, however, this really is a one-of-a-kind gown and if you have a big budget and/or a once-in-a-lifetime occasion, it's hard to top this classic beauty. All eyes will definitely be on you!

Robert Rodriguez Black Label Berry Wild Lace Gown


This breathtaking dress retails for $795, but rents for $125. Customers caution that the slit on the side is higher than expected (so be careful if you're thinking of wearing this to a company party!) but say that it's "magnificent," "gorgeous," and one even said that it made her feel "like a Grecian goddess."

Raoul Ruffle Waisted Peplum Gown

This gown is for the more daring fashion friends. It's retails for $660, but rents for $135. If you lack curves, the fun detail at the middle creates shape. I would say this is best for a tall and straight figure, however, as a short hourglass figure would be cut oddly by the bustle at the waist.


As you can tell, I LOVE long dresses. So glitz, so glam!

One touch that I really like from Rent the Runway are that the dress pages include customer reviews and photographs of how real people wore the dresses! The photos come with the size of the dress and height, weight, age, and bust size of the woman wearing it, so it's really helpful in trying to figure out how a particular dress will look on you rather than on a 6'0" blond Amazon.

Have you used Rent the Runway?

Do you re-wear party dresses?

Do you prefer long, short, or midi dresses for formals?

Dec 5, 2013

How Not to Find an Apartment Sublease in NYC

January is coming up and, with it, Harvard's J-Term.

Either because the deans are feeling particularly giving at this time of year (no Scrooges in the lot!) or because they know they work us to the bone the rest of the year or just because they don't feel like coming to work until after MLK day (even deans gotta sleep off that New Year's Eve buzz, ya know), we don't have class again until around the last week of January.

There are a lot of options for what to do during that month off from school, post-holidays, and lots of people do lots of different things. I'm doing my different thing (auditioning like nobody's business, I hope) in NYC and am thus on the search for a two to three week sublease in one of the most expensive cities in the US.

Wow, I'm moving to New York. The Big Apple. The city that never sleeps. How exciting!

Yes, I am already crying tears of financial pain at the thought of paying rent for a Boston apartment and a NYC apartment at the same time. So much waste.

Anyway, I need to find out an apartment. And, believe it or not (believe it, I told you to), it's harder than it sounds to find a tiny apartment for 2 grand or so for 2.5 weeks.



After all, you don't want to be the poor fool who gets stuck with the teeny tiny apartment for 3 grand for 2.5 weeks.

11 Going To Your Room
That looks just about right
There's probably some impish mogul with a heaping helping of schadenfreude somewhere, sitting over his iPad mini and cackling as he randomly moves decimal points around on NYC real estate pricing, adding a zero or three here and there.

12 Kiss Your Savings

There are probably many ways to go about finding an apartment (and the more money you have at your disposal, the more enjoyable the hunt will be). But there are also a number of ways not to go about your hunt and I'll list a few here.

DON'T post a 'housing wanted' ad on Craigslist with a full-length photo of you at the beach.

Believe it or not, I've seen it. Obviously putting up a photo of yourself in a bikini (=about as conservative as lingerie, beach setting or not) is only going to attract a bunch of creepy old skeevs trying to lure you into their would-be dens of immorality.

Do The Creep
You'd have better luck trying to live in the underground, the perv factor probably couldn't be much higher.

DON'T contact a real estate agency.

Unless Trump is your daddy (and if so, can we be friends?) a real estate agency probably isn't the way to go. They're generally trying to lease apartments for longer term so that they can collect that hefty commission. Likelihood of them being impressed by you showing up with your piggy bank and hick-town dream budget?

21 Everybody's Looking At You

Approximately equal to the likelihood of a 60 degree day in February in Boston.

DON'T try corporate housing.

See above, re: bathing in champagne lifestyle. For those among us who are a little more normal...


What It's Like Apartment Hunting In NYC


Moving on.

DON'T expect to get an immediate answer from the dream property that you finally find after hours of scouring Craigslist.

Not to be a total pessimist, but the place that you think is perfect and a total bargain (by NYC standards, that is) probably looks the same to everyone else and someone is likely bidding to go higher than the posted price, depending on desperation levels and the size of the windows.

Large windows = lots for sunlight = keeps you from wanting to fling yourself out of a window. Small windows = super dark and depressing lair = makes you want fling yourself out of said window -> window isn't big enough to fling yourself out of, you'd get stuck with your butt in and your head out (pretty awkward position to call for help from, so you likely decide to skip it and take a nap, instead) = YAY but brings you back to the beginning of the cycle (a vicious circle to continue until the end of your stay).

Anyway, this is one of the few times where quantity might beat quality. Especially if you're in a rush to find a place, you probably don't want to just reach out to one place at a time.

DON'T try to barter.

'Your Hell's Kitchen (sounds awful, is actually a very desirable location) studio for my services as a breakdance instructor/pancake maker/chicken wrangler' isn't likely going to get you far in a city where the same studio can easily go for the aforementioned $2,000+ per month.

How?
The only exception is if you're looking for a room in exchanging for your child wrangling services. People seem to value that more than chicken wrangling in the city (seriously, the offers you find on Craigslist) but it's still highly improbable for a short lease. Live-in nannies tend to get hired for minimum stays of several months and, more often, years. Further, you'll have very little time to yourself to do whatever it is that you wanted to do in NYC. Unlike chickens, you can't just feed children and put them in their coop for the rest of the day.

This dad who just wants his kid to appreciate the great outdoors.
Though you could always put the kid in a pair of overalls and take it with, like this guy
That's probably breaking all sorts of general child-rearing expectations and it's a pretty sure-fire way to get fired in less time than it takes for a certain children's television channel star to flip the switch from wholesome to traphouse outcast.

But it's worth it. Because when you finally find a place?

20 Getting In Subway Calm

You feel like that.

Do you have any advice for how to actually go about the business of finding an apartment?

When was the last time you moved?

What's the craziest thing you've ever seen on Craigslist (or any other sort of wanted ad)?

Oct 27, 2013

So You Want to Get a Job: Dressing the part

In this installment of So You Want to Get a Job, I'm suggesting a pretty standard job interview outfit that will keep the attention where it belongs (on your brilliant resume) and off of less relevant topics (the birthmark on your thigh).


interview Outfit


Dolce Gabbana shirt top
€580 - farfetch.com


L K Bennett pleated skirt
€70 - lkbennett.com


Patent leather pumps
€25 - maurices.com


Lauren Ralph Lauren leather satchel purse
€225 - piperlime.gap.com


Cluster earrings
€22 - swellcaroline.com




If I can say only thing, it's this: JOB INTERVIEW TIME IS NOT THE TIME TO SHOW WHAT YOUR MAMA GAVE YOU. That (a) won't get you a job, (b) may keep you from getting a job you otherwise would have, and (c) will get you a bad reputation.

DON'T DO IT. Save your dignity and keep those skirts knee-length and longer, even if that's not at all what you normally wear. I have nothing against your legs, but they probably shouldn't be on display when you're trying to be taken seriously as a young professional.

Also, don't go for your crazy high heels, enormous costume jewelry, or bright eyeshadow. Remember that you're outfit should be more or less neutral and you should be the one standing out!

What do you normally wear to interviews?

Do you have a go-to interview outfit?

Oct 20, 2013

Putting the Pressure On, Harvard Style

DISCLAIMER: This is written by a stressed upperclassman college student. Take with a generous dose of humor and as many grains of salt as necessary to make it palatable.

Hopefully it doesn't require quite that much, but feel free.
College seniors all over the US (and possibly the world, though I'm not as sure of the higher education culture abroad) are starting to feel the pressure. Whether or not the fall semester has already begun,  one thing is for certain: junior summer is over and, with it, childhood.

More or less.

Starting now, seniors get to vary between stressing about getting all their requirements done, paperwork filled in and submitted, potential thesis kinks worked out, and job applications in until well into the spring semester, around early April, when most folks get a few days (or weeks, depending on final exam schedules) to breathe before a whole new craziness (that of real life) takes over.

Just in case the usual questions from relatives (including from the distant family members you haven't seen or heard from since you were in diapers, but are suddenly cropping up to add to your pressure cooker of nerves) aren't enough to stress you out, Harvard puts the pressure on.

For better, for worse, for everything in between.
In no particular way, but just by virtue of being Harvard.

It's a sad fact that most Americans go to college. A whopping 70% of Americans matriculate at a 4 year college! Less than 2/3 of those graduate and the rate drops to 53% if you add community college students into the mix.

While graduation rates may be slipping across the country, with more and more students requiring 4.5 or 5 years to graduate from 4 year programs (or failing to graduate at all), only 3% of Harvard undergraduates don't graduate.

That said, wouldn't it suck to be part of the 3%?

Assume you did everything you needed to and graduated. Congratulations, whoop-de-doo for you. But don't celebrate yet - just because you graduated doesn't mean you're out of the danger zone yet. You have a degree, that's fabulous for you. But if you're one of the unlucky ones, which make up about half of all recent graduates, you either won't have any sort of job or you'll have a job that doesn't require a degree.

Read: you could have saved your money and time, saved yourself from debt, taken a little vacation, and gotten the exact same job straight out of college. Ouch.

Of Harvard graduates, however, the rate of un- or under-employed still is way too high when you consider the average student debt and time/money/opportunity investment to pursue a degree (uh-oh for the dungeons and dragons concentrators...). However, instead of having only about 50% go on to do what they want, 61% of Harvard graduates get a job. Another 18% go to graduate school, leaving only 21% among the un- and under-employed.

That is, if you assume that everyone who goes to graduate school actually wants to and isn't just prolonging the inevitable Ican'tgetajobohmygoshwhatamIgoingtodowithmyselfandallmydebtdoIreallyhavetomovebackinwithmyparents freakout.

Funny Graduation Ecard: 'I can't wait to move back home with my parents,' said no college graduate, ever.

Okay, so you got a job offer. So you thought that salary didn't look half-bad? Hey, it has five digits. But NO, don't be happy yet - let's take a look at how your classmates stack up. Since passion isn't important beyond the application, 16% of your classmates will go into consulting and 15% will work in finance.



The dollar chasing pays off, when you compare average starting salaries to the national college graduate average starting salary of $44,928. Harvard grads average roughly $60,000 as a starting salary, but that varies a lot by field and is probably too rosy a picture, considering that 72% of the 16% that go into consulting can expect between $70,000 and $90,000 as a starting salary. Finance folks do even better, with 21% bringing in $110,000 in their first year - and some more.


Random aside - if you decide to go into education, your starting salary as a Harvard grad drops to around $30,000. You know, since we appreciate our teachers so much.

So you have a high paying job? So all your state school friends are envious? In the tradition of never settling, here's something to chew over: Harvard has produced 2,964 alumni worth $200 million or more, including 52 billionaires, putting it at the top of the academic 'rich list' in the world. Still think your job prospects measure up?



Then again, only 8% of Harvard's wealthy alumni are women. So no pressure, I guess.

Unless you're a feminist.

Some other interesting stats: at least 40% of Harvard students have had some mental health concern during their time at Harvard. And, on a more light-hearted note, almost a third of us will graduate as virgins.



What, is the library not a good pick-up spot anymore? Teehee.

What are your post-graduation goals?

When did you start your job search?

What was your first post-graduation job?

Sources:
1) Dropping Out of College and Paying the Price - Eduardo Porter, NYTimes.com
2) Harvard College Admissions Website
3) Harvard tops graduate 'rich list' of colleges that will make you a millionaire but University of Virginia has highest number of self-made men - Sara Smyth, Mail Online
4) Average Harvard Graduate Will Make $60,000 In Their First Job, And Other Crimson Trivia - Tyler Durden, ZeroHedge
5) Class Of 2013's Starting Salary Tracking Higher On Average Than Last Year's Grads' - Huffington Post Business'
6) The Class of 2013 Student Survey - Harvard Crimson

Sep 27, 2013

So You Want A Job: Resume Bloopers

Taking life too seriously is no fun. Even when you're thinking about something as important as your entry into the job market, you can still have a little fun and stay light-hearted about the whole thing.

For everyone who's currently working on polishing up a resume to apply for jobs, here are some funny resume don'ts. Don't let any of these be you!

Spell, much?

People blog professionally? WHAT.
Accurate spelling isn't enough. Make sure you're also clear in your resume, because misunderstandings can be unfortunate.

DDD_10FunnyPunctuationProblems_CookingDogs

Don't use colloquialisms (or profanity!) in your cover letter. Please.

Job Application Fail

Remember to target your resume distribution, guys, don't just send it to any and every company out there.

While it's great to leverage your networks when you're looking for a job, make sure you do so in an appropriate, tasteful way.

unemployed santa cartoon

That wouldn't be an appropriate way.

Sometimes things don't go in your favor and someone else gets the job. While you shouldn't let that make you feel bad about yourself, don't assume you didn't get the job because you're just too awesome. Or do assume it, if that's what your ego needs, but don't tell everyone that - whenever I hear that, my immediate reaction is to internally roll my eyes.

Right. And I'm not the Queen of England because I'm too royal.

04.02JOBSEARCH%20copy

If you do get the job, don't be lazy.

lazy worker fail

But don't worry, workers aren't the only ones making mistakes.

Maybe we could all benefit from some more spelling bees. 

Application Fail

As well as more realistic expectations.

Want Ad Fail

More realistic expectations, coupled with a better understanding of how math works, certainly wouldn't hurt.

Neither would a new recruitment manager at Pizza Hut.

Probably Bad News Extra

Something tells me the applications aren't pouring in. 

Hiring Fail

At least the competitor's recruitment efforts aren't going much better.

One can only hope, right?

What is the most exciting thing on your agenda week?

How often do you update your resume?

What's your ultimate career goal?

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