1. Do you have any income at all? What about health insurance? how do you pay for clothes and food and gas?
2. Do you live with friends? With parents? In a magical treehouse? Where exactly? (Obviously it has Internet.)
3. Do you have any schooling past high school? What were your best subjects while you were in school?
4. Do you have any friends with whom you can network in order to acquire a job?
5. What do you do on a daily basis, with your free time?
6. What country do you live in? (Or state, if in the USA?)
What's up with the anxiety thing? Are you being treated in therapy or on medication for it? If you feel open, can you describe the limitations of the anxiety upon your life?
Do you have a driver's license?
What's up with your parents? Are they still around, or do they live somewhere else? Have you had conflicts with them about the lack of a job?
28 years old. No real skills of any sort that I've found. Unable to find a job anywhere. Not really sure what to do, where to start or anything. Any ideas?
28 years old. No real skills of any sort that I've found. Unable to find a job anywhere. Not really sure what to do, where to start or anything. Any ideas?
How much income do you need every month to sustain yourself?Grandmother pays for stuff currently.
28 years old. No real skills of any sort that I've found. Unable to find a job anywhere. Not really sure what to do, where to start or anything. Any ideas?
If you want to get over the agoraphobia get a job as a sales assistant or some other customer relations role, it'll quickly desensitise you to having to deal with people, also dealing with every moron society can throw at you will make you feel better about yourself.
First, work out that stuff enough so that you can function. In the meantime, lean on anyone willing to feed you.I've been seeing a psych doctor and have been on meds...they temper it, but it is still pretty crippling. I've got generalized anxiety disorder and I'm agoraphobic.
First, work out that stuff enough so that you can function. In the meantime, lean on anyone willing to feed you.
Now's not the time to be looking for a job. (For you, I mean, not in the market.)
First, work out that stuff enough so that you can function. In the meantime, lean on anyone willing to feed you.
Now's not the time to be looking for a job. (For you, I mean, not in the market.)
I agree. The important thing short-term is mental health because it's a prerequisite for holding most jobs or basically operating in society. Get healthy, then acquire a job, maybe a girlfriend and place of your own later.![]()
So when would the time be to start looking for a job, in your opinion?
Suggesting for someone to wait until they get healthier, when health has not improved and is likely to not significantly improve, is basically saying, "do nothing."
I agree. The important thing short-term is mental health because it's a prerequisite for holding most jobs or basically operating in society. Get healthy, then acquire a job, maybe a girlfriend and place of your own later.
Do you still feel I'm saying "do nothing" or something like that?
What part of "get healthy" says "do nothing" to you, Jenny?
Let's break this down further - if you're unhealthy and you get healthy, does that entail some change? Maybe. Is change commensurate with doing nothing, Jenny? Perhaps not.
I also take issue with your use of the word "wait," which is too passive.
Then I think you need to be a little more explicit in your advice, Snaffy.
A few of you were making comments about "getting healthy" without defining exactly what that means, to someone who is asking for specific advice, and in a context that sounds like, "Just keep getting treated until you are well." Which is what he is already seemingly doing, at least by his definition.
Would we like to be helpful, Snaffy, or not? Then let's define more specifically what this advice actually means.
hmm, what is library science and its career opportunities
Learn mathematics, statistics, numerical analysis to the level of 3rd year university. Learn how to computer program in R, C++, Matlab, Java, etc. Study up to high level finance and some basic accounting. Create a dossier of work. In a resume write down what you can do but don't allude to the fact that you have no university level education.
Good luck!
P.S. If you don't like these subjects, the same method can be used in any other field.