Hit the Bricks

Being disabled and collecting a tiny-but-steady income means that I no longer need to do a few things:

1. Voluntarily send my résumé to some publication that I either admire or have never ever heard of in order to pursue a job that I almost certainly do not understand.

2. Spend the next few days hoping to be invited to be interviewed.

3. If invited to be interviewed, dress up or dress down (and almost always over-dress) for an encounter in which if nothing else, “first impressions are everything,” but when I am looking for a job, I do not make a good first (or second or third) impression.

4. At the interview, spend some time engaged in what tiny little bit I remember one ought to do to “positively visualize success”; thus, I “positively envision” (air quotes included) myself working with this staff for years and years to come, even imagine holiday parties at which I announce my impending nuptials to (I silently look around the office and at the faces I will most likely never see again except in my memories of another failed job interview experience) … her.

5. But, and this is a medium-sized “but,” at the same time, strive to keep my expectations in check and understand that I will probably never lay eyes on any of these people again, so I allow myself to imply out loud with my outdoors voice that I am considering and even being considered by other companies whose offices I have not yet seen from inside the front door. Was I keeping their expectations in check?

Needless to say, it’s a delicate dance, the attempt to land work, as intricate a social dance as any one might hear explained in nature documentaries. And I can’t dance.

Those interviews, many of them, are burned in my memory. Many are not. They became good anecdotes, some of them; I interviewed for a copy editor job at a porn magazine on Lexington Avenue once.

What? (Needle scratches across the record. And I didn’t even hear music playing.)

My memory tells me that I lied to my girlfriend at the time about this particular interview, and I told her that the publication had contacted me out of the blue (I shrugged my shoulders like the top-hatted Monopoly man indicating his empty pockets) rather than what had happened: I was in the process of mailing my résumé in response to every single advertised publishing job in each day’s New York Times classified section, porn and non. (This was 1997, before we began to live our current online lives, in which I can now be turned down for a job within the next hour if I want my ego to be insulted for free and speedily.)

I sent my résumé to dozens of jobs each day, hundreds each month that summer. I received responses in the middle-to-high single digits each month, a terrible return on investment, especially since a job with a publisher did not wind up as the result. I placed the same wager with my résumé and postage with this (porn) publisher that I placed with every other publisher, both those legitimate ones and those that might infuriate my girlfriend that year.

I was interviewed in person by someone who was using a pseudonym. So that happened. I was not offered the job, because I failed the copy editing exam: I am by nature a prude, and the prude naturally emerged at the right-wrong moment.

There is no “X” in “success.”

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The WordPress Daily Prompt for May 20 asks us to reflect on the word, “Brick.”

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9 comments

  1. loisajay · May 20, 2016

    When my husband was downsized from his 37-year career, he applied for many jobs and was called back for interviews by several and was never notified one way or the other by all. I asked about this practice and was told, no one has the time to notify you if you did not get the job. If you are not notified, you can figure it out for yourself that you will not be working for whatever company. With all the tech stuff out there, no one can text or email a “Sorry, but good luck!’ message? Sad.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. tnkerr · May 20, 2016

    “…no “X” in “success.””
    I’m gonna laugh about that one for a long time. I may even repeat your story, if I can secure your permission to do so.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. nonsmokingladybug · May 20, 2016

    Thanks for the laugh. Did you girlfriend read this?

    Liked by 1 person

    • Mark Aldrich · May 20, 2016

      I don’t know, but I do know she has heard the anecdote. I have not yet shared anything in my writing that she hasn’t heard (or experienced with me) first.

      Like

  4. nonsmokingladybug · May 20, 2016

    With your permission, I would like to take part of this post -one or two paragraphs- and put it on my blog with a big link to your blog, because I think this post his hysterical.

    I don’t like reblogs. Awaiting the verdict 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Pingback: The Sidewalks of No Job | The Gad About Town

Please comment here. Thank you, Mark.

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