But you were in IT--admittedly I was in Canada, but I got the first job I applied for and they were desperate for more people.
I was stuck in San Antonio right after college for life-reasons. There isn't a big tech industry there and the IT jobs all had tons of applicants. I finally got a low paying job doing support, but only because choices one and two didn't work out. I got a rejection letter before I was hired.
It's sixteen years later, and I'm still doing what I was going to do until I got on my feet and started doing what I wanted to do.
Oops.
Oops, I forgot. Right after college, I also drove out to LA, and bummed around taking temp jobs and volunteering for AFI movie projects as a PA.
Moved back when the funds ran out.
Maidengurl might appreciate:
Yes, indeedy. And I will be there in JUST OVER A MONTH.
Ahem, sorry. I can't answer the college question, cause I'm still in school, and working full time, and parenting...I'm so not a good example.
I took my last exam, delayed working a week because of a sprained thumb, and dived right into the workplace in the same city in which I'd gone to school. I don't regret it at all.
MG, you're an awesome and incredible example.
My first job was nice in that I could pay the bills and eat while searching for a better job.
I wish I could have done something before diving right into the job market. But I graduated deep in debt, and for quite a while there it only got deeper. At 38 I'm still not quite finished digging my way out.
I, too, wish I had gone out and done things! That is when you have freedom.
I stayed local and worked at a grocery store while looking for a job. Through a friend I got an office job a a local theatre, where I worked for a craxy person and learned a lot.
3 year later I got fired, quit theatre, had a nervous breakdown and moved in with my mom, and I haven't been the same since (although I am quite happy now).
Anyway, I would suggest NOT getting too bogged down by having a job/place to live. This is the time to travel, and to sleep on the floor of various friends houses and to generally not be safe. As an older person, I am much more set in my ways and unwilling to take risks, so I would say-- take risks now
This of course, is just my experience, so YBMV.
Skimming the thread very quickly, after my last post, made me think that a bunch of y'all graduated into the dominatrix job market.
Quite a number of us seem to have graduated into the stripper job market, so you're not that far off.