Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
meadandale
ParticipantA $100-200 dishwasher is going to be builder level crap,even from Sears outlet, especially if you want SS. The dishwasher I bought a few years ago was almost $500 for a Whirlpool gold in white. It runs like a top.
meadandale
ParticipantA $100-200 dishwasher is going to be builder level crap,even from Sears outlet, especially if you want SS. The dishwasher I bought a few years ago was almost $500 for a Whirlpool gold in white. It runs like a top.
meadandale
ParticipantA $100-200 dishwasher is going to be builder level crap,even from Sears outlet, especially if you want SS. The dishwasher I bought a few years ago was almost $500 for a Whirlpool gold in white. It runs like a top.
December 7, 2009 at 10:03 AM in reply to: After 60 job applications, honor student back home in Missoula #491141meadandale
ParticipantBTW, the end of the article captures her essence:
With each paycheck, they stockpiled money into education funds for all three of their children, promising each a fully paid tuition for a state university or a heavy contribution toward the bill at a private college. Melissa’s education cost the most – about $100,000, even after scholarships and financial aid – and Jack and Shelly paid every cent. An investment, they called it. The return was implied: good grades, a successful career and income to create college funds for children of her own. The straight line.
Maybe, Melissa thinks now. But maybe there is something else, a more wandering path to fulfillment. She is falling in love with Freihofer and indulging whims like searching for Montana’s best beef jerky, writing letters by hand and hiking each morning. When Freihofer, who works as a rafting guide, asks what she will do next, she mentions not career possibilities but possible adventures she has researched online. “Why waste my time continuing to apply for jobs that don’t want me?” she says. Instead, she imagines a future far away. A yoga ashram in Nepal? Trekking through Argentina? Picking grapes at a vineyard in New Zealand? A road trip across Australia?
All she knows for certain is that she wants to save $4,000 for airfare and depart in early 2010, for somewhere. “I don’t want to look back after 30 years in a cubicle and think, ‘I should have …“’ she says.
She got a full ride from her parents. Now she figures she’ll just travel and have fun. Is it any wonder noone wants to hire her with her obvious lack of ‘hunger’ for work?
BTW, who is going to pay for her international travel?
She reminds me of a young girl I overheard as a TA at UCSD discussing her summer plans: “I can’t get a job paying more than $12/hr so I’m just going to travel around Europe all summer.”
The entitlement generation is in full swing.
December 7, 2009 at 10:03 AM in reply to: After 60 job applications, honor student back home in Missoula #491307meadandale
ParticipantBTW, the end of the article captures her essence:
With each paycheck, they stockpiled money into education funds for all three of their children, promising each a fully paid tuition for a state university or a heavy contribution toward the bill at a private college. Melissa’s education cost the most – about $100,000, even after scholarships and financial aid – and Jack and Shelly paid every cent. An investment, they called it. The return was implied: good grades, a successful career and income to create college funds for children of her own. The straight line.
Maybe, Melissa thinks now. But maybe there is something else, a more wandering path to fulfillment. She is falling in love with Freihofer and indulging whims like searching for Montana’s best beef jerky, writing letters by hand and hiking each morning. When Freihofer, who works as a rafting guide, asks what she will do next, she mentions not career possibilities but possible adventures she has researched online. “Why waste my time continuing to apply for jobs that don’t want me?” she says. Instead, she imagines a future far away. A yoga ashram in Nepal? Trekking through Argentina? Picking grapes at a vineyard in New Zealand? A road trip across Australia?
All she knows for certain is that she wants to save $4,000 for airfare and depart in early 2010, for somewhere. “I don’t want to look back after 30 years in a cubicle and think, ‘I should have …“’ she says.
She got a full ride from her parents. Now she figures she’ll just travel and have fun. Is it any wonder noone wants to hire her with her obvious lack of ‘hunger’ for work?
BTW, who is going to pay for her international travel?
She reminds me of a young girl I overheard as a TA at UCSD discussing her summer plans: “I can’t get a job paying more than $12/hr so I’m just going to travel around Europe all summer.”
The entitlement generation is in full swing.
December 7, 2009 at 10:03 AM in reply to: After 60 job applications, honor student back home in Missoula #491689meadandale
ParticipantBTW, the end of the article captures her essence:
With each paycheck, they stockpiled money into education funds for all three of their children, promising each a fully paid tuition for a state university or a heavy contribution toward the bill at a private college. Melissa’s education cost the most – about $100,000, even after scholarships and financial aid – and Jack and Shelly paid every cent. An investment, they called it. The return was implied: good grades, a successful career and income to create college funds for children of her own. The straight line.
Maybe, Melissa thinks now. But maybe there is something else, a more wandering path to fulfillment. She is falling in love with Freihofer and indulging whims like searching for Montana’s best beef jerky, writing letters by hand and hiking each morning. When Freihofer, who works as a rafting guide, asks what she will do next, she mentions not career possibilities but possible adventures she has researched online. “Why waste my time continuing to apply for jobs that don’t want me?” she says. Instead, she imagines a future far away. A yoga ashram in Nepal? Trekking through Argentina? Picking grapes at a vineyard in New Zealand? A road trip across Australia?
All she knows for certain is that she wants to save $4,000 for airfare and depart in early 2010, for somewhere. “I don’t want to look back after 30 years in a cubicle and think, ‘I should have …“’ she says.
She got a full ride from her parents. Now she figures she’ll just travel and have fun. Is it any wonder noone wants to hire her with her obvious lack of ‘hunger’ for work?
BTW, who is going to pay for her international travel?
She reminds me of a young girl I overheard as a TA at UCSD discussing her summer plans: “I can’t get a job paying more than $12/hr so I’m just going to travel around Europe all summer.”
The entitlement generation is in full swing.
December 7, 2009 at 10:03 AM in reply to: After 60 job applications, honor student back home in Missoula #491778meadandale
ParticipantBTW, the end of the article captures her essence:
With each paycheck, they stockpiled money into education funds for all three of their children, promising each a fully paid tuition for a state university or a heavy contribution toward the bill at a private college. Melissa’s education cost the most – about $100,000, even after scholarships and financial aid – and Jack and Shelly paid every cent. An investment, they called it. The return was implied: good grades, a successful career and income to create college funds for children of her own. The straight line.
Maybe, Melissa thinks now. But maybe there is something else, a more wandering path to fulfillment. She is falling in love with Freihofer and indulging whims like searching for Montana’s best beef jerky, writing letters by hand and hiking each morning. When Freihofer, who works as a rafting guide, asks what she will do next, she mentions not career possibilities but possible adventures she has researched online. “Why waste my time continuing to apply for jobs that don’t want me?” she says. Instead, she imagines a future far away. A yoga ashram in Nepal? Trekking through Argentina? Picking grapes at a vineyard in New Zealand? A road trip across Australia?
All she knows for certain is that she wants to save $4,000 for airfare and depart in early 2010, for somewhere. “I don’t want to look back after 30 years in a cubicle and think, ‘I should have …“’ she says.
She got a full ride from her parents. Now she figures she’ll just travel and have fun. Is it any wonder noone wants to hire her with her obvious lack of ‘hunger’ for work?
BTW, who is going to pay for her international travel?
She reminds me of a young girl I overheard as a TA at UCSD discussing her summer plans: “I can’t get a job paying more than $12/hr so I’m just going to travel around Europe all summer.”
The entitlement generation is in full swing.
December 7, 2009 at 10:03 AM in reply to: After 60 job applications, honor student back home in Missoula #492011meadandale
ParticipantBTW, the end of the article captures her essence:
With each paycheck, they stockpiled money into education funds for all three of their children, promising each a fully paid tuition for a state university or a heavy contribution toward the bill at a private college. Melissa’s education cost the most – about $100,000, even after scholarships and financial aid – and Jack and Shelly paid every cent. An investment, they called it. The return was implied: good grades, a successful career and income to create college funds for children of her own. The straight line.
Maybe, Melissa thinks now. But maybe there is something else, a more wandering path to fulfillment. She is falling in love with Freihofer and indulging whims like searching for Montana’s best beef jerky, writing letters by hand and hiking each morning. When Freihofer, who works as a rafting guide, asks what she will do next, she mentions not career possibilities but possible adventures she has researched online. “Why waste my time continuing to apply for jobs that don’t want me?” she says. Instead, she imagines a future far away. A yoga ashram in Nepal? Trekking through Argentina? Picking grapes at a vineyard in New Zealand? A road trip across Australia?
All she knows for certain is that she wants to save $4,000 for airfare and depart in early 2010, for somewhere. “I don’t want to look back after 30 years in a cubicle and think, ‘I should have …“’ she says.
She got a full ride from her parents. Now she figures she’ll just travel and have fun. Is it any wonder noone wants to hire her with her obvious lack of ‘hunger’ for work?
BTW, who is going to pay for her international travel?
She reminds me of a young girl I overheard as a TA at UCSD discussing her summer plans: “I can’t get a job paying more than $12/hr so I’m just going to travel around Europe all summer.”
The entitlement generation is in full swing.
December 7, 2009 at 9:30 AM in reply to: After 60 job applications, honor student back home in Missoula #491116meadandale
ParticipantSo, she has basically no practical experience in her chosen field; having worked in minimum wage jobs that high school students could do throughout college (hostess, sales associate, etc) and she finds that she is having trouble finding work?
Who are you gonna hire first: someone with 2-10+ years in the working world with relevant experience or someone with 0 years of experience in her major and the high salary expectations of an advanced degree? Not to mention that the work ethic of this current generation of college graduates is less than stellar.
Clearly she wasn’t carrying her $200k degree on the back of here hostess position. Perhaps she should have been doing an internship or volunteer work in her field rather than spinning her wheels in a minimum wage throwaway job?
Just saying…
December 7, 2009 at 9:30 AM in reply to: After 60 job applications, honor student back home in Missoula #491282meadandale
ParticipantSo, she has basically no practical experience in her chosen field; having worked in minimum wage jobs that high school students could do throughout college (hostess, sales associate, etc) and she finds that she is having trouble finding work?
Who are you gonna hire first: someone with 2-10+ years in the working world with relevant experience or someone with 0 years of experience in her major and the high salary expectations of an advanced degree? Not to mention that the work ethic of this current generation of college graduates is less than stellar.
Clearly she wasn’t carrying her $200k degree on the back of here hostess position. Perhaps she should have been doing an internship or volunteer work in her field rather than spinning her wheels in a minimum wage throwaway job?
Just saying…
December 7, 2009 at 9:30 AM in reply to: After 60 job applications, honor student back home in Missoula #491664meadandale
ParticipantSo, she has basically no practical experience in her chosen field; having worked in minimum wage jobs that high school students could do throughout college (hostess, sales associate, etc) and she finds that she is having trouble finding work?
Who are you gonna hire first: someone with 2-10+ years in the working world with relevant experience or someone with 0 years of experience in her major and the high salary expectations of an advanced degree? Not to mention that the work ethic of this current generation of college graduates is less than stellar.
Clearly she wasn’t carrying her $200k degree on the back of here hostess position. Perhaps she should have been doing an internship or volunteer work in her field rather than spinning her wheels in a minimum wage throwaway job?
Just saying…
December 7, 2009 at 9:30 AM in reply to: After 60 job applications, honor student back home in Missoula #491753meadandale
ParticipantSo, she has basically no practical experience in her chosen field; having worked in minimum wage jobs that high school students could do throughout college (hostess, sales associate, etc) and she finds that she is having trouble finding work?
Who are you gonna hire first: someone with 2-10+ years in the working world with relevant experience or someone with 0 years of experience in her major and the high salary expectations of an advanced degree? Not to mention that the work ethic of this current generation of college graduates is less than stellar.
Clearly she wasn’t carrying her $200k degree on the back of here hostess position. Perhaps she should have been doing an internship or volunteer work in her field rather than spinning her wheels in a minimum wage throwaway job?
Just saying…
December 7, 2009 at 9:30 AM in reply to: After 60 job applications, honor student back home in Missoula #491986meadandale
ParticipantSo, she has basically no practical experience in her chosen field; having worked in minimum wage jobs that high school students could do throughout college (hostess, sales associate, etc) and she finds that she is having trouble finding work?
Who are you gonna hire first: someone with 2-10+ years in the working world with relevant experience or someone with 0 years of experience in her major and the high salary expectations of an advanced degree? Not to mention that the work ethic of this current generation of college graduates is less than stellar.
Clearly she wasn’t carrying her $200k degree on the back of here hostess position. Perhaps she should have been doing an internship or volunteer work in her field rather than spinning her wheels in a minimum wage throwaway job?
Just saying…
meadandale
ParticipantThat’s great. I think we should do the same thing in Sacramento.
I don’t have kids in school or college, don’t get public assistance (healthcare or welfare), don’t work for the state and don’t know anyone in prison. That means that I’m being disenfranchised as a tax paying resident; the bulk of state taxes pay for the above things which I derive no direct benefit from.
-
AuthorPosts
