Keeping Your Spirits Up in a Tough Job Search Environment
By Heather EagarNo matter how you’ve become unemployed over the past
year or more – whether through choice or force – if
you’re looking to regain employment, this is a tough time to
make your dream a reality. With millions of jobs lost in the past
few months, acquiring a new gig is not a simple task.
In fact, the process can be downright discouraging, which is
why it’s good to keep with you a few ways that you can keep
your spirits up during your job search. Let’s look at what
they are …
Maintain Your Sense of Control
One reason that job searches can be so discouraging is because
they seemingly force you to relinquish your control. Once you type
up your resumes and cover letters and hand them out, you’re
left to bite your nails as you wait for interviews to flood in. But
even if you secure one interview, you’re still left with the
task of biting your nails some more as you wait to see if
you’ve actually landed the position you want.
These aspects of the process make you feel that you’re
leaving your destiny completely in someone else’s hands. In a
sense, you are. But in a greater sense, you’re not. If you
think about it, you’re leaving your destiny with that company
in someone else’s hands, but there are plenty of other
opportunities out that that you can grab. So as you hand out your
resumes and cover letters, it’s good to maintain a sense of
control by creating new connections and educating yourself further
in your industry. This way, you can feel confident that one battle
lost will by no means cost you the war.
Learn to Appreciate the Journey
Probably one of the most challenging aspects of a difficult
job search is appreciating the steps taken along the way.
It’s pretty easy to slip into an attitude of dismay as you
watch yourself being turned down for more positions than you could
have imagined possible. However, believe it or not, it’s just
as easy in this circumstance to see the glass half full as it is to
see it half empty. In other words, you can just as easily see the
positives of being in this predicament.
What are they, you ask? Well, for one, you have more freedom
now than you’ve probably had in a long time; freedom that you
probably begged for when you were leading your busy life as a
professional. Now you have it, so it’s good not to waste it.
During this time, you can look at other opportunities that you may
have considered engaging but were too busy to do so when working.
Also, you can make time for your family and leisurely activities.
Don’t let this time get you down. Instead, let it help you
grow even more profoundly into the person you want to be.


