Friday, August 21, 2020
We Need to Talk About Post-Graduation Depression
We Need to Talk About Post-Graduation Depression We Need to Talk About Post-Graduation Depression Sitting in a doctorâs office on a cold, grim day in January 2015, I remember trying to keep it together as I explained how completely miserable and lost I felt. It had been months since I graduated, and, despite having several job interviews, I was getting nowhere. Again and again, Iâd been told I didnât have enough experience or that I was too shy. âI feel like a failure,â I told the doctor â" a common symptom of depression. It didnât help that I felt like a burden on my Dad for continuing to live at home â" I helped around the house to earn my keep but other than that couldnât afford to pay rent. I was never formally diagnosed with depression, but some of the symptoms were definitely affecting me, especially in the long winter months I spent jobless, lonely and skint. It didnât help that my boyfriend was abroad at the time, traveling for several months in Canada and the US. I missed him and would have loved to have joined him but simply couldnât afford to. Instead, I was stuck, needing a job and struggling to get one, despite the fact I graduated from a good UK university with an impressive degree. The difficulties of life after graduation Adjusting to life after university can be tough. In my case, I was very sad to leave Aberystwyth, my home for three years, and when September came around, I had to accept I wasnât going back to uni. While this is more manageable if you already have a graduate job lined up, there will be plenty of people reading this who werenât able to secure a job for immediately after graduation. In this position, itâs easy to feel daunted, like youâre back to square one. For the first 20 years or so of your life, everythingâs been mapped out, from school to university, but what now? This uncertainty can be one of the biggest causes of post-graduation depression. You start beating yourself up for not visiting your university careers office sooner (if at all) while you were at university. You feel lost and confused, and wake up every day feeling like thereâs no purpose to your life and that youâll never get anywhere. Maybe you have an idea of what you enjoy doing and what you want from a career, but canât understand how to translate this into a graduate job. You start job searching, and realize that you apparently need five yearsâ experience for an entry-level job in the field youâre interested in. So, you apply for seemingly hundreds of jobs, knowing full well that these roles are competitive, and you take the hit every time you get a rejection. Youâre increasingly frustrated by how you seem to need experience to get experience. As the setbacks mount, you distract yourself by watching TV instead of job searching, but then you beat yourself up for not making enough effort or getting up early enough to crack on with job applications. It doesnât help that youâve moved back in with your parents, and feel as though youâre regressing after spending three or four years living independently away from home. If this is how youâre feeling, I know exactly how you feel. But itâs important to remember that this wonât last forever⦠Beating post-graduate blues How, then, do you pick yourself up and get yourself out of the post-graduation slump? In my experience, I had to push away thoughts like âthereâs no point applying for this, I have no chanceâ, and âtheyâll probably just reject meâ as this defeatist attitude wasnât going to get me anywhere. I realized that having a large gap between university and a graduate job wasnât going to look great on my CV so I took part in some work experience at a local newspaper and wrote articles for free for different websites. Also, while it was always frustrating traveling all the way to London for a job interview only to be rejected (I still cringe when thinking about the time I got a rejection email literally the second I came out of an interviewâ¦yep, that wasnât a good one) it did at least make me a veteran in job interviews. Iâm shy and get very nervous before them, so it was good to have this experience. It meant that in July 2015 when I interviewed for my current job and a few others, I was a bit surer of myself, more skilled at answering the usual job interview questions, and a little less nervous. I ended up getting two offers, one for a full-time internship, the other for a full-time job here at TopUniversities.com. The rest, they say, is history⦠So, if youâre feeling like youâre stuck in a slump, here are some tips to help you overcome post-graduation depression: Remember youâre not alone. Loads of graduates are in the same boat, probably including some of your friends. Donât compare yourself to others, and consider avoiding social media. If you start feeling like everyone you know has got a graduate job except you, youâll only feel worse. Besides, everyoneâs lives have different timelines, and just because you havenât yet found your graduate job, it doesnât make you a failure. Accept that life doesnât always go to plan â" you might have a graduate career path in mind, but things may not work out how you expected them to. Remember itâs okay to not have an exact idea of what you want to do with your life â" youâll get there. Recognize improvements you need to make in your job applications and job interview answers, but donât agonize over them. Try and stay positive â" when you get rejected, recognize what you could have done differently, use that information for next time, and pick yourself up. Seek help from your universityâs careers service â" itâs in their best interests to ensure that graduates are getting jobs. If you got a disappointing result compared to what you were hoping for, try not to be disheartened â" highlight your strengths to employers to show that you have the skills theyâre looking for. Talk to someone about how youâre feeling, whether itâs a counselor, family member or a close friend. Know that this wonât last forever: if my shy, inexperienced graduate self from 2015 can get a job, so can you! Donât give up.
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