vigil617
US Veteran
If, like me, you're over 50 and looking for work, you know how brutal it is out there.
I'm 58, and after being laid off last year, I've yet to find another job despite many applications and almost a dozen interviews.
I read an interesting, if discouraging statistic this morning: for those over 55, the average length of a job search is 54.8 weeks. That's more than a year, folks. For me, that milestone comes up next week.
I'm going to resist the urge to rant about this, as I don't need to contribute any more negativity to the situation -- mine or others' -- than is already out there.
We're of a generation that expected to work for what we had, like our parents and grandparents did, and not being able to do so is something that I take very personally.
Just know, though, that if you're an older person who still feels perfectly capable of working, contributing, and earning an honest living the way you have been all your life, and you're unemployed in this job market, you have my empathy, sympathy, and prayers that you'll find something soon.
I'm 58, and after being laid off last year, I've yet to find another job despite many applications and almost a dozen interviews.
I read an interesting, if discouraging statistic this morning: for those over 55, the average length of a job search is 54.8 weeks. That's more than a year, folks. For me, that milestone comes up next week.
I'm going to resist the urge to rant about this, as I don't need to contribute any more negativity to the situation -- mine or others' -- than is already out there.
We're of a generation that expected to work for what we had, like our parents and grandparents did, and not being able to do so is something that I take very personally.
Just know, though, that if you're an older person who still feels perfectly capable of working, contributing, and earning an honest living the way you have been all your life, and you're unemployed in this job market, you have my empathy, sympathy, and prayers that you'll find something soon.