I’m sorry I didn’t save all the rejection letters. They would have made interesting wall paper with a repetitive motif. Most of them went something like this:

After you receive five hundred or more letters that tell you how outstanding your qualities are, but that there is someone whose qualifications are more closely suited to the position advertised, you begin to think you may not get a post commensurate with your abilities. You contact all kinds of people and organizations who tell you your qualities are so outstanding you should be a “big-C” consultant. You apply for jobs that do not demand the abilities you possess.

I went to the first of the several reputable community vocational services that I had contacted.
“We don’t have managerial posts,” the rather drab lady in charge said. “If you need money desperately, I can place you as a waitress or in a warehouse.”
“I’m not that desperate yet,” I replied.

But when I applied for a job that was just that, a job (okay, not a warehouse yet), the prospective employer shook his head, “You’ll never stay.”
“I need the money,” I replied. “My financial planner says I’m not ready to retire yet.”
Not his problem.
When I visited my octogenarian Aunt Sarah, she also shook her head sagely when I complained that I couldn’t even get a job as a dishwasher.
“They’re all machines now dear, anyway,” she said consolingly.

“It only pays ten dollars an hour,” I said. “But I’m also working for myself on evenings and weekends.”
“For yourself?”
“I’m self-employed,” I said proudly. “My own business. I’m an employment consultant.”
“An employment consultant?” she gasped.
“Yes, Aunt Sarah. I’m teaching people how to apply for five hundred jobs and still smile.”
“Oh,” said Aunt Sarah, relieved. “You must be very good at it. You have lots of experience.”
(*Excerpted from HOW TO LIVE ALONE UNTIL YOU LIKE IT…AND THEN YOU ARE READY FOR SOMEBODY ELSE by Corinne Copnick, © Toronto, 1994. All rights reserved.)
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