marcus73x
Redshirt
I'll preface this with my own disclaimer. Yes, I"m dark, and yes, I'm depressed. I'm 38, I am a loner, and generally pretty liberal.
In HS I was a good student mostly because I didn't have to try hard. All the subjects were dumbed down so much that I was almost straight As without lifting a finger. At college, I majored in math, but I didn't have the longevity (and was already severely depressed from a life-altering injury), so my grades weren't really good.
After college I was in the Navy, but the injuries from before were so exacerbated that I couldn't stay in even if I wanted to, and my physical activity abilities came to a stop. I haven't been able to get into a program or routine again, as the pain comes back, and gives that excuse to stop.
Got a tech job that lasted a few years. Was very good at it too. Felt I earned way more than I was being paid (with cause, but I won't debate that here), and slipped further into depression. My attitude suffered, and I was laid off in '05.
During that time I started a MS in Stats, in '03. I started this program strong, but the layoff stopped all momentum, and I still haven't recovered since.
Got another job that started very rocky, but found a niche that I could do something. That lasted until a company-wide layoff of 15% of the workforce in '09.
I still picked at that degree. the whole time. I failed classes many times by not attending either because of professional commitment, or disinterest in driving then fighting for parking, then sitting, then driving...
I got another job after 10 months of looking, but it was such a bad fit, it only lasted 4 months.
Regarding grad school... I stopped going figuring I would never be able to use it professionally. I'm was a few classes and exams from completion.
My confidence in being able to complete anything has taken a severe beating over this time. So the idea of learning seems so nice, but committing to anything for fear of failure, or ineptitude frequently quashes the idea.
I used to rebound from failures until I got up once from a particularly bad one and asked myself why. Then the depression got worse.
I'm still deeply depressed. Yes, I've sought help repeatedly. The meds shut down my thinking, so I wind up getting off the meds just to think straight. Repeat cycle.
I've been unemployed a while, and my benefits just ran out. I'm going through the associated rough patch financially. I've been on the job hunt for a very long time though.
I'm trying to get jobs in tech or math or analysis, since I am not only educated in the field, I simply think that way. I've been declined several positions because of not being technical enough, or deep enough in their field. Interviews are tough to come by too, so these are very disheartening.
So this kind of feedback has pointed me back to consideration of further education. This presents many challenges, not only in admittance, but in performance as well. I don't have any idea what to look for. I lean toward math, but my washout from grad school once already makes me feel inadequate to the task. I think a phd is something for the way I think, but the commitment is something I have trouble with.
So I search, and go broke in the meantime, depending on the generosity of others to simply get by.
I am so lost that I'm frozen in indecision. The best I have right now is to try to get employed so I can jump back up to misery level (from the misery and despair plateau).
Any suggestions on anything?
In HS I was a good student mostly because I didn't have to try hard. All the subjects were dumbed down so much that I was almost straight As without lifting a finger. At college, I majored in math, but I didn't have the longevity (and was already severely depressed from a life-altering injury), so my grades weren't really good.
After college I was in the Navy, but the injuries from before were so exacerbated that I couldn't stay in even if I wanted to, and my physical activity abilities came to a stop. I haven't been able to get into a program or routine again, as the pain comes back, and gives that excuse to stop.
Got a tech job that lasted a few years. Was very good at it too. Felt I earned way more than I was being paid (with cause, but I won't debate that here), and slipped further into depression. My attitude suffered, and I was laid off in '05.
During that time I started a MS in Stats, in '03. I started this program strong, but the layoff stopped all momentum, and I still haven't recovered since.
Got another job that started very rocky, but found a niche that I could do something. That lasted until a company-wide layoff of 15% of the workforce in '09.
I still picked at that degree. the whole time. I failed classes many times by not attending either because of professional commitment, or disinterest in driving then fighting for parking, then sitting, then driving...
I got another job after 10 months of looking, but it was such a bad fit, it only lasted 4 months.
Regarding grad school... I stopped going figuring I would never be able to use it professionally. I'm was a few classes and exams from completion.
My confidence in being able to complete anything has taken a severe beating over this time. So the idea of learning seems so nice, but committing to anything for fear of failure, or ineptitude frequently quashes the idea.
I used to rebound from failures until I got up once from a particularly bad one and asked myself why. Then the depression got worse.
I'm still deeply depressed. Yes, I've sought help repeatedly. The meds shut down my thinking, so I wind up getting off the meds just to think straight. Repeat cycle.
I've been unemployed a while, and my benefits just ran out. I'm going through the associated rough patch financially. I've been on the job hunt for a very long time though.
I'm trying to get jobs in tech or math or analysis, since I am not only educated in the field, I simply think that way. I've been declined several positions because of not being technical enough, or deep enough in their field. Interviews are tough to come by too, so these are very disheartening.
So this kind of feedback has pointed me back to consideration of further education. This presents many challenges, not only in admittance, but in performance as well. I don't have any idea what to look for. I lean toward math, but my washout from grad school once already makes me feel inadequate to the task. I think a phd is something for the way I think, but the commitment is something I have trouble with.
So I search, and go broke in the meantime, depending on the generosity of others to simply get by.
I am so lost that I'm frozen in indecision. The best I have right now is to try to get employed so I can jump back up to misery level (from the misery and despair plateau).
Any suggestions on anything?