One summer, I worked as a strap cutter at a golf-bag manufacturing factory. I learned something valuable: that I never wanted to work as a strap cutter in a golf-bag manufacturing factory again.
Yes, the $4 an hour I earned was above the minimum wage at the time. The people I worked with were nice. And, the shirtless young men working at the roofing supply company next door made for an appealing view.
But I didn't particularly care about golf bags, and I had to deal with scorched hands and hair that smelled like burned rubber. On the whole, it wasn't worth it.
The next summer, I vowed, I would find something better. But the school year flew by, and only a few days before summer would officially begin, I'd done nothing whatsoever to change that.
It's easy for this to happen when you're focusing all your energy on school and the surrounding activities, such as sports, music, and hair. (I went to high school in the '80s, where good hair came in one size: extra large. This took time to achieve.)
When you're spending time on all these things, you figure you'll wait until your real life starts before you worry about landing that perfect job. Like the prom, its time will just come, right?
Nope.
The really cool jobs in life do not fall into your lap. They are rarely advertised in the newspaper. And, unless you've already got a similar job, you don't have the experience they're looking for. This is the young job hunter's Catch-22: You can't get a job without experience, but how can you get experience without a job?
How do you work around this? Let me count the ways. There are three:
- Ask and you shall receive
- Research and you shall find
- Do it all yourself (and with friends)