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    Tuesday, September 1, 2009

    Ringing In Your Ears

    One thing the Unemployment experience teaches you is to be humble.

    After a harrowing, near-death experience (from nerves, not actual real danger) buying clothes and getting, *ahem*, groomed for The Big Interview last week, I entered the period known as "Waiting For The Call" where all of your senses are heightened and any sound, from a bird chirping to a cat throwing up to the mailman pulling up to the mailbox all the way at the end of the driveway -- sound like your phone ringing.

    But it's never really ringing until you go to take the dog outside.

    During this stage of your Unemployment, you will occasionally think it's ringing when it's not (which is key to the whole experience) you will, if you are in any way high-strung, have what we call anxiety. Some of us who are little more high-strung than others have what can only be referred to as panic attacks. For those of you that aren't as perceptive of everything going wrong in your world, or just lucky enough not to be ridden with anxiety, I can best describe this with a quote from Chris Hardwick, who broke it down to it's brutal explanatory truth.

    "A panic attack is like getting fucked in the HEART. "

    You can beat these attacks.

    The key to getting around this is to tell yourself you don't want a job.

    It's not the end of the world if they don't call. (Yes, it is.)

    To breathe (which will happen anyway, I assure you) and to focus on your breathing. (Oh God, I'm breathing...)

    To keep your heart rate down and to avoid caffeine, if you can. I can't. (I won't.)

    Or you can just be a real functioning human who doesn't think that not getting a call from someone who might give you a job will make your head explode like you're an extra in Scanners. Do whatever you think works best.

    So I'm in "Waiting For The Call" mode and what do I get? My old friend Insomnia! You might remember Insomnia from earlier in the Unemployed Files, where he visited for several weeks. I quickly went from DayWalker to Bill from True Blood, burrowing into the ground at Sun Up and only peaking out once that damned fire orb goes back behind the trees and wherever it goes when I am amongst the living.

    Of course, insomnia is no good when you're "Waiting For The Call." Mostly, because those that could potentially be making the call are awake, and outside, and wearing pants and are at an office and ostensibly, on the phone...

    ..and they're calling you while you're sleeping.

    Of course, sleeping really doesn't happen either, since you're in "Waiting For The Call" hypersensitive senses mode where your reflexes are augmented by 315% and your needs for sustenance and rest are negated by the needs or wants of, well, what you think you need or want.

    So every noise wakes you up. REM sleep is a thing of the past. Dreams are gone. Nightmares prevail. They adapt quickly, like a virus, learning to strike quickly in the short times you make an appearance in the Land of Nod. Tense muscles give way to body aches, and the sleeping positions that work for you also make you snore, and therefore, don't work for the wife, so you're forced into an uncomfortable position that makes you snore less and Oh, Why Not: Stop Breathing.

    All this fun multipled by a few days of it plus the general uneasiness of being Unemployed in general leave you with a Unshaven, Grumpy, Surly, Un-rested, Jumpy, Skiddish, Ill-Mannered, Over-Tense, Heart-Fucked, Soulless, Panic-Ridden, Anxiety monkey waiting for a call from a potential employer.

    I got one. I had the phone in my hand when it happened.

    Remember the interview from my last dispatch that I killed at?

    It was those guys.

    Remember how I thought I killed at that interview?

    I did.

    They love me.

    They think I'm incredible.

    They're so impressed by my abilities and how I came across and were so happy to meet me.

    And, that they offered someone else the job.

    Well, there you go.

    I was told they liked me a lot, and want to work with me in the future, and that they'll keep me in mind.

    I said thanks for the opportunity and hung up the phone, and looked out the window. I saw a bird on a tree and the mail truck pulling up to the mailbox.

    Suddenly they just didn't sound like the phone anymore.

    Nothing does. Because the phone's not ringing.

    It's hard not to take it personally, because every call that doesn't happen, and every call that does but includes a "I'm sorry to inform you..." is just another in a long line of the thing that most humans are allergic to called rejection.

    It's become a theme this year, and the worst part is that I'm getting used to it.

    I'm an Invisible Man walking through a society that's drudging on around me, pushing my way up and down the aisles of stores in slow motion while the manic hysteria of the working world goes on around me. I hear about The Unemployed on the news and in the papers and on the internet, but I never see any of them because I suspect they're all on odd-time schedules and have become recluses like I have.

    It's hard not to feel like the only one living this reality.

    It's even worse when you realize that you're not the only one.

    The production world that I used to be a part of has been described many times as "A Lot of Hurry-Up-And-Wait" and I'm finding that's more true now, and appropriate for more situations than just that tiny block of the entertainment business.

    Jobs come and go and opportunity comes knocking when you least expect it to. If you're wanting it too much, you might as well just kiss it goodbye.

    You have to remind yourself that work doesn't define you and life is what you make it.

    Sometimes you need some rejection to put that back in frame of focus for you.

    2 comments:

    Unknown said...

    Duuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuude those phone calls are the worst, you'd almost rather have the letter.

    BUT. If they take the time out of their day to call you, it IS because you genuinely impressed them. As someone who has had to make that kind of choice myself, there were on both occasions candidates who really were outstanding and with whom I felt a real connection. Unfortunately there was also in both cases another candidate who was just SO qualified for the job, I couldn't pass them over.

    But for those jobs, I received 50-80 applications, and only retained 4 or 5 each time... and there was always one GREAT candidate, and one MADE FOR THE JOB candidate. And I felt the need to tell that great candidate how impressed I was with them. It doesn't give them a job... but I hope it gives them a little encouragement?

    Alicia said...

    I know exactly how you feel... But I have a much greater respect for people who actually DO let you know. I've been in situations where they seemed super-interested and made me feel like I was getting the job, but all I got in return was silence, or worse, ignored follow-up calls.

    I actually got a long-ass e-mail earlier this week from someone I applied with, addressed in bulk to the other applicants. They went on and on about how they chose someone else, they were really excited about working together and how they hoped it was a good fit, etc.. Who seriously wants to hear THAT shit?