(Going Through A Quarter Life Crisis was posted on www.peyups.com on Thursday, May 15, 2003 @ 12:30:20 PM )
It’s 5 PM and I am going off to work in a couple of hours. To something I promised myself I would leave as soon as possible and now it’s funny I’m still working there after all my declarations that I would rather be unemployed than stay at a job I hated. Other friends have made the move before me. You see, I made a deal with myself the start of the year that I was going to endure this kind of work for until May, at the very least till April 17th, the end of my VL. I guess I should be grateful that I have a job when so many out there are still looking. I try to convince myself that I am blessed I earn a good enough salary considering I just graduated last year. As someone I talked to last time online said, for a first job it isn’t too bad. I suppose one flaw I have is that I can’t get over how salary could possibly compensate for what I have come to realize as true torture: helping ungrateful Americans with whatever programming, billing, technical problem they get with the service we provide.
Considering I graduated with a degree in Broadcast Communication, I wonder why I did end up with this job. Here I am, writing on the same computer I used to make my thesis on whilst listening to anime mp3s, and I wonder how on this past year events have led me up to this… writing an article on how much I miss college and how much I miss dreaming about what I would be when I graduated. Because face it, I have graduated and I have the whole world at my feet. I can be anything I want to be. Problem is, what do I want? How does anyone really know?
I remember that I’ve been going on about my career dilemma even on my past article… it just doesn’t seem right to be whining when so many would love to be in my shoes, is it? I don’t know what I’m complaining about, really. Probably my lack of direction or initiative. I cannot say I am satisfied with my career life. (Hmm, does the lack of a love life have anything to do about it?) Have any of you felt that the future was an empty void? The uncertainty of it all excites me and frightens me at the same time. Will I finally convince myself to settle down with one particular job? There seems to be something wrong with wanting to either be a lawyer, a journalist, a writer, a TV producer/director, an actress and an office clerk every now and then. Can I really have everything? I think I have convinced myself that I could be everything all at once and that is an idea doomed to fail and disappoint me. Compared to my best friend’s seemingly continuous string of problems I suppose I can be considered as being petty, making a mountain out of a molehill... if you think so too, stop reading this article. (Hehe. Joking. Just bear with me, I’m about to wrap up.) I have come to the obvious conclusion that perhaps it isn’t just me. Heck, I hear these kinds of stories all the time. People in their 20’s have this issue with “the real world”, meaning being thrust out into the cold, hard world, earning a living long before they actually want to. We are conditioned we want to by society, that we have to do something for pay until retirement at 60. Anyway, who in their right mind would want to go out of bed like me late at night to work until the early hours of the morning like a vampire/wind-up doll? It all boils down to salary, compensation, the medical and dental benefits… Deep in our hearts, do we really need to do this? Unless we’re the breadwinners in our family, (isn’t it obvious I’m not and I’m just milking my family for support even while I’m earning money) what is the point in all of this? Don’t get me wrong. I like getting my salary, being able to buy stuff without asking my parents for the money. Up to now I feel like it’s Christmas when I get my pay slip two times in a month. I like having officemates I get along fine with. I like not having to sit at home, watching hour after hour of TV while my brain slowly rots… Have I answered my own question? In my thinking, yes, to some extent, but not satisfactorily enough. There has to be a deeper reason why anyone would bother sticking to this job but since you can’t read minds then I guess I still have countless hours of self-reflection to go.
One of life’s greatest questions is: what is the meaning of our existence? At one point in our life we stop to wonder if what you’re doing is in line with what Fate has planned out for you. I always thought it was going to be more grandiose, more interesting… Maybe Fate can’t do anything if we ourselves impose what we don’t want to on ourselves. Funny how when you think about it, you really can’t blame anyone but yourself if you are suffering, because it was your choices that have led you here. As I have told others before, we all have free will. There’s no such thing as a decision you had no choice but to make. No one can force you if you really don’t want to, except, probably at gunpoint. Even more funny is the fact that I can leave whenever I want to really, but I’m just all talk. I won’t leave my job until something good comes along. Well, at least until May or April, that is. At the back of my mind I still feel something big is going to happen, that there must be something more to being 23 and being a UP graduate. So much time, so much opportunity but I can’t channel it to anything I’m really sure of. That’s it. I don’t have a game plan; I don’t know where I want to go to. I’m torn between rejoicing in that realization and tearing my hair out in frustration. I’m happy because I already know the root of my problem and frustrated that I am nowhere near an answer. Chalk it up to quarter life crisis, I guess… if there is such a thing. It’s that First Job Syndrome, where you’re just itching to resign and move on to the next job you may want to grow roots at… Whatever the case, I should stop talking and start doing. That, or I may well get stuck here for the next 10 years and then I won’t have youth to blame on but myself.
It’s 5 PM and I am going off to work in a couple of hours. To something I promised myself I would leave as soon as possible and now it’s funny I’m still working there after all my declarations that I would rather be unemployed than stay at a job I hated. Other friends have made the move before me. You see, I made a deal with myself the start of the year that I was going to endure this kind of work for until May, at the very least till April 17th, the end of my VL. I guess I should be grateful that I have a job when so many out there are still looking. I try to convince myself that I am blessed I earn a good enough salary considering I just graduated last year. As someone I talked to last time online said, for a first job it isn’t too bad. I suppose one flaw I have is that I can’t get over how salary could possibly compensate for what I have come to realize as true torture: helping ungrateful Americans with whatever programming, billing, technical problem they get with the service we provide.
Considering I graduated with a degree in Broadcast Communication, I wonder why I did end up with this job. Here I am, writing on the same computer I used to make my thesis on whilst listening to anime mp3s, and I wonder how on this past year events have led me up to this… writing an article on how much I miss college and how much I miss dreaming about what I would be when I graduated. Because face it, I have graduated and I have the whole world at my feet. I can be anything I want to be. Problem is, what do I want? How does anyone really know?
I remember that I’ve been going on about my career dilemma even on my past article… it just doesn’t seem right to be whining when so many would love to be in my shoes, is it? I don’t know what I’m complaining about, really. Probably my lack of direction or initiative. I cannot say I am satisfied with my career life. (Hmm, does the lack of a love life have anything to do about it?) Have any of you felt that the future was an empty void? The uncertainty of it all excites me and frightens me at the same time. Will I finally convince myself to settle down with one particular job? There seems to be something wrong with wanting to either be a lawyer, a journalist, a writer, a TV producer/director, an actress and an office clerk every now and then. Can I really have everything? I think I have convinced myself that I could be everything all at once and that is an idea doomed to fail and disappoint me. Compared to my best friend’s seemingly continuous string of problems I suppose I can be considered as being petty, making a mountain out of a molehill... if you think so too, stop reading this article. (Hehe. Joking. Just bear with me, I’m about to wrap up.) I have come to the obvious conclusion that perhaps it isn’t just me. Heck, I hear these kinds of stories all the time. People in their 20’s have this issue with “the real world”, meaning being thrust out into the cold, hard world, earning a living long before they actually want to. We are conditioned we want to by society, that we have to do something for pay until retirement at 60. Anyway, who in their right mind would want to go out of bed like me late at night to work until the early hours of the morning like a vampire/wind-up doll? It all boils down to salary, compensation, the medical and dental benefits… Deep in our hearts, do we really need to do this? Unless we’re the breadwinners in our family, (isn’t it obvious I’m not and I’m just milking my family for support even while I’m earning money) what is the point in all of this? Don’t get me wrong. I like getting my salary, being able to buy stuff without asking my parents for the money. Up to now I feel like it’s Christmas when I get my pay slip two times in a month. I like having officemates I get along fine with. I like not having to sit at home, watching hour after hour of TV while my brain slowly rots… Have I answered my own question? In my thinking, yes, to some extent, but not satisfactorily enough. There has to be a deeper reason why anyone would bother sticking to this job but since you can’t read minds then I guess I still have countless hours of self-reflection to go.
One of life’s greatest questions is: what is the meaning of our existence? At one point in our life we stop to wonder if what you’re doing is in line with what Fate has planned out for you. I always thought it was going to be more grandiose, more interesting… Maybe Fate can’t do anything if we ourselves impose what we don’t want to on ourselves. Funny how when you think about it, you really can’t blame anyone but yourself if you are suffering, because it was your choices that have led you here. As I have told others before, we all have free will. There’s no such thing as a decision you had no choice but to make. No one can force you if you really don’t want to, except, probably at gunpoint. Even more funny is the fact that I can leave whenever I want to really, but I’m just all talk. I won’t leave my job until something good comes along. Well, at least until May or April, that is. At the back of my mind I still feel something big is going to happen, that there must be something more to being 23 and being a UP graduate. So much time, so much opportunity but I can’t channel it to anything I’m really sure of. That’s it. I don’t have a game plan; I don’t know where I want to go to. I’m torn between rejoicing in that realization and tearing my hair out in frustration. I’m happy because I already know the root of my problem and frustrated that I am nowhere near an answer. Chalk it up to quarter life crisis, I guess… if there is such a thing. It’s that First Job Syndrome, where you’re just itching to resign and move on to the next job you may want to grow roots at… Whatever the case, I should stop talking and start doing. That, or I may well get stuck here for the next 10 years and then I won’t have youth to blame on but myself.
