I got offered a great job....

in life •  6 years ago 

Last night I had an interview with a small English school for children in the suburbs. The CEO is a fantastic guy who really respects others and is happy to hear them out. He said he is willing to give frequent raises based on performance and that the role itself is flexible. There are five weeks of vacation every year and a half day on mondays. They offer a house, not an apartment, with 4 bedrooms. It is 10 minutes from the beach. The pay is average but the living expenses are half of that in the city. It’s 10 minutes from the beach!

It looks like a pretty comfortable position. I imagined what I’d do with a house. I’ve been living on couches and in box sized apartments since I graduated high school 15 years ago. A house! And I could walk to the beach whenever I want.

But I’m thinking of telling him I can’t take the job...

It’s so hard to turn down, the living situation is perfect! But there are not two day weekends, the days off are random, and because it’s so far from the city, that means I would only be able to go to the city on longer vacations. It’s also a position teaching kids, and as much as I love kids, I don’t like teaching them. I don’t like trying to help them fit into a world which is still so full of so much unbalance.

I feel it’s my more urgent responsibility to help the world find balance and become a more healthy environment for these kids to grow up in. I want a chance to interact with the cold hearted CEOs and drone workers of the city. I want a chance to tell that woman who had studied for 10 years and didn’t learn a thing that she’s not stupid, that school just wasn’t made for her, and that there are other ways of learning.

I wonder though, if everything is truly perfect as I know that it is, why should I put myself in a less than ideal environment in order to try and “fix” something as if it were “broken”.

I believe that on a cosmic level, while everything is truly perfect, that it is our role as humans is to define good and bad for ourselves. This is what we came here to do. We are artists and this is our art. I feel that life in the suburbs without a kind of creative community around you is, in a sense putting down the pen. It’s not the same as the countryside where we can connect with nature in a more intimate way every day, where we can create new things from the ground up. It’s not the same as moving out somewhere with a bunch of friends and trying to build a suburban community based on your ideals.

I don’t know anyone there, and I do not see how it will be a healthy environment for me without the means to come back into the city more often and keep painting that picture or without like-minded friends who understand my perspective closely. As perfect as it is out there, the fact that I cannot visit my canvas in the city frequently will make it feel like a jail.

And so I may be kicking myself in a month or two but I feel I need to turn down this job. I can only hope that it will be a few days or weeks before I find something else, and I’m trying to push myself to believe that there will be a boss I like as much as this guy and a living situations even close to as comfortable as this one near the city and teaching adults.

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

Hurray for not taking that job!
It probably would have made you feel unhappy most of the time.

People like you need to say no to offers like these in order for good things to come, crypto markets to soar and so on and so forth.

You made the right decision buddy :>)

It would have been a challenge, but would that challenge help me grow and continue to be the person I want to be. I know how comfortable life can be here and I how you end up in a position you think you are gonna leave but then you just stay an extra few years cause the pay is ok and the living conditions are so good and you don't want to risk loosing them. I've already been through all that, it just would have been a level up from that. My gf said it too, she is worried that we will like it enough to stay and give up what we like more. So yes, right choice I think, but I want that house by the beach one day for all to come use!

Take it, save up some money, and if you find a new job, quit. Who knows, you might like it and want to stay. Plus, this CEO sound like he could be a valuable asset in your life.

Posted using Partiko iOS

I think he'd end up being a valuable asset if I was willing to put years into this work, which I am not. If it felt ok to go do it for a year and then quit, I would already be on my way over there, but he was so honest and sincere that I felt guilty taking the job knowing I would be quitting when he was searching for someone for the long term.

You've got to be up for jobs like that..They're all consuming.

If you're having doubts already maybe you should turn it down!

Unless you think you can stomach it for an academic year... it's only 10 monthz is another way to look at it.

Depends how much you need the money/ change of lifestyle.

Posted using Partiko Android

Well since the guy seems really intent on finding someone long term and he seems like such an awesome guy, I don't have the heart to take a 3 year contract knowing I'll only be filling it for a year, plus its will require me to go back home and get my license which I don't know if I have energy to do right now in the middle of changing everything else in my life.

I think most people would be panicking about money now but I don't panic when I have enough for 2 months and lots of supportive friends around me. I just want to stop relying on others kindness. It's nice to be able to but it's not nice to HAVE to. I just want a place for friends to stay as long as they want but I guess I should make sure I'm happy doing what I'm doing first.

At least that long term requirement made it an easy decision.

Mind you if you turn down too many opps that support might dry up!

Posted using Partiko Android

Do you know how many of the students are homeless?

Because I just found (and wrote) about the unbelievable number of homeless students in New York.

https://steemit.com/news/@lennstar/an-unbelievable-number-new-york-worse-than-a-3rd-world-country

I still can't absorb that. NEW YORK! Not some poor 3rd world country or a Chinese boom town growing by several hundred thousand people each year.

That's insane! Did you fact check this....I'm not doubting you, that's just totally nuts if it's true, I can hardly process it.

As far as you can with a quick google search.
Either it is true or several newspaper fell for a well made, extensive website that still nobody found out as fake.

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

Reading the work conditions...i was thinking its a great offer. I know a lot of people that would kill to have a job like that in my country. However, i have to agree with your perspective on the downside of the job. If you feel you won't be happy working there then its better you turn it down. Job satisfaction is really important.Good luck finding something better soon!

That's what made it so hard to turn down, the living conditions and the company culture were so easy to say yes to, but then the work itself is really not what I enjoy. I would have been counting the hours until I finished every day. I know that's how it is for some people but there is similar work that I would actually really enjoy.

Namaste @whatamidoing san, I hope you are doing fine. While you may not agree with my comment, I going to put it anyway ;-)

I think you should take the Job. The location doesn't matter. What I believe in is the experience. Here you have a chance to create an impact on the young ones. I can't promise that it will be a great experience for you, But I can promise you this after this you will change.

You are an artist, and the fire within you will always be burning. Sure, Managing time will be a challenge you have to take up along with the Job. But doable, If you are not satisfied you can always quit.

It's like this: if you love animals and helping animals, you can still help the world by taking care of children, but the whole time you are going to be thinking about taking care of animals. That's the position I'm in. There are people much more capable of taking care of children than me, and having a positive impact on them. I've done it before so I know. I know that I will quit that job, it's just a matter of how long before I do and the boss was such a great guy, I couldn't tell him I was eager to teach kids when I am not.

Hi @whatamidoing!

Your post was upvoted by @steem-ua, new Steem dApp, using UserAuthority for algorithmic post curation!
Your UA account score is currently 4.972 which ranks you at #1095 across all Steem accounts.
Your rank has dropped 2 places in the last three days (old rank 1093).

In our last Algorithmic Curation Round, consisting of 516 contributions, your post is ranked at #101.

Evaluation of your UA score:
  • Some people are already following you, keep going!
  • The readers like your work!
  • Good user engagement!

Feel free to join our @steem-ua Discord server

I really respect the fact that you turned it down. It speaks highly of your character. It would be frowned upon by society and family :), and it takes a lot of strength, courage, and conviction to say no and say yes to what you want. Good for you, man.