It was a wierd series of Greatest Hits albums. The Jackson 5 one didn't have "I'll Be There" on it.
Spike's Bitches 23: We've mastered the power of positive giving up.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Oh, vw, I'm so sorry. They are missing out on a great person.
Sorry, vw.
It was a wierd series of Greatest Hits albums. The Jackson 5 one didn't have "I'll Be There" on it.
Many times songs don't make "greatest hits" compilations due to a copyright issues stemming from long-ago battles and egos.
I'm glad you got home ok, askye.
And yay for vw's former bosses (and boo to the folks who turned down the chance to be her future ones)!
I know this is completely silly, but I'm feeling like a complete failure. See, interviews are like the one thing that I've always done very well at...and recognized that I do very well at. For some reason, I can go in and sell myself during an interview.
Apparently, I've lost that gift.
It's so weird, 'cause I've done so many positive things today...ordered my iPod, finished my beautiful creative writing portfolio, negotiated with the former employer. Why does one thing going wrong just completely destroy me, when so many things today showed my strengths and positives? My brain can be so damn frustrating.
But, vw, who says you didn't do very well in the interview? The existence of a candidate whose skills are better aligned than yours with the position doesn't negate that.
If all it took was an interview, I could skip all that effort on polishing resumes, much less filling them.
vw, I've gotta agree with ita that this conclusion:
Apparently, I've lost that gift.
Is not the only conclusion you could draw, and probably not apt.
Mostly, I am absolutely boggled that your old employer is trying to help you out. That's way above and beyond what anyone would expect, and it's huge good news. That is a much, much bigger stroke of good fortune than even a job offer.
I didn't feel like the interview went overly well, though. And it was so short, which was just so strange to me.
The existence of a candidate whose skills are better aligned than yours with the position doesn't negate that.
I'm actually worried that I'm going to have a difficult time finding the kind of job that I want, because really? I'm overqualified. That may have been the issue here.
Mostly, I am absolutely boggled that your old employer is trying to help you out. That's way above and beyond what anyone would expect, and it's huge good news. That is a much, much bigger stroke of good fortune than even a job offer.
I'm really boggled by it too. I really expected them to be all, "Sorry. Wish I could do something, but my hands are tied." And, in the short term it's probably better fortune than a job offer, but in the long term, I wish I didn't need the help. It's one thing for the money to be coming from an insurance company, but I actually feel really badly that I might have to take money that I didn't earn from my former company.
Vw, how do you keep finding my fucked-up mental junk mail? The only reason I know I couldn't have posted it is your name is on it. We both need to cut it out. 1. Maybe they already had somebody in mind and you blew them away, but they have an arrangement already. 2.The guy was good about correcting his mistake, and you do too deserve to keep your head above water until you are among the employed.(And I need to take my own hairpats, here.)