Labels: advice , Information , Internship , Job , Work
It has been awhile, hasn't it?
So much has happened since 2010 - there have been plenty of changes.
For one, I graduated San Francisco State University.
For another, I interned and then got a position in a start-up company (so new that the website is still under construction).
In this blog page, let me just go over what has transpired since my last update:
Yes, I had actually saved up money before planning the transition from my job whilst in college to my internship. I had assumed that a savings of $5,000 for a 6-month to a year-long internship would be long enough before I "got hired". Yeah, well... that didn't work out as well as I thought.
My thanks that I have survived as long as I have - even if it is barely - is to the whole "living with your parents" thing. I still have to pay off bills, and a car, and car insurance, and health insurance (once I left my job for the internship, I had to get a personal health insurance), and the list goes on and on. However, parents... they help a great deal. My mom, especially, since she's the one who throws me a bone almost every week on getting me some food to last the week, and sorting out my bills.
My advice for new grads or others similar to my position:
If someone asks me whether I would change my mind if I could do it over again, I would still stand my idea of taking the harder path. Without taking that step, I wouldn't have learned as much as I did. I wouldn't have learned to appreciate family as much as I have. I wouldn't have learned the value of money.
And I certainly wouldn't have known the vast difference between what you learn in school and what you learn in the real world. I knew that what we had learned in class wouldn't be quite as applicable when utilizing it in a job setting.
However, when you actually come across that situation it's very humbling.
Just recently, in my job, my boss had a "pop quiz" for me. He wants me to start learning ERDs (Entity-relationship Diagrams). I had to tell him that I haven't learned much from my class (if you had the teacher that I did... you would certainly know why). In the 30 minute he gave me, I was a wreck. The course I took didn't really apply ERDs in a situation where we could utilize this in the real world - outside of a classroom setting. Everything was by the book.
There I was, in front of a computer, trying to learn how to use the mySQL Workbench's EER. I had gotten as far as making tables... and then got stopped because I couldn't figure out why the many-to-many relationship wasn't working like it should.
So here's another advice: get an internship / entry-level position as early as you can in your college career.
This way, you can really get a leg up on the competition. No matter how minor you think you are learning, at least you're learning something that could be useful to you.
So much has happened since 2010 - there have been plenty of changes.
For one, I graduated San Francisco State University.
For another, I interned and then got a position in a start-up company (so new that the website is still under construction).
In this blog page, let me just go over what has transpired since my last update:
- Graduated with a Bachelor's Degree in Information Systems
- Graduated with a Bachelor's Degree in eCommerce
- Quit a comfortable, decent-paying job to pursue an internship
- Went into an internship at a start-up
- Got hired by start-up
- While I did get a fair pay, I wasn't happy
- I noticed that my past job festered unhappy coworkers - they had decent pay but weren't quite happy with themselves or their coworkers. It was a bit depressing
- I didn't want to live a life filled with "what ifs"
- I desired to have a position where I learned new things almost every day and utilized the skills that I acquired whilst in college
- Need to change and learn how to "live within means"
Yes, I had actually saved up money before planning the transition from my job whilst in college to my internship. I had assumed that a savings of $5,000 for a 6-month to a year-long internship would be long enough before I "got hired". Yeah, well... that didn't work out as well as I thought.
My thanks that I have survived as long as I have - even if it is barely - is to the whole "living with your parents" thing. I still have to pay off bills, and a car, and car insurance, and health insurance (once I left my job for the internship, I had to get a personal health insurance), and the list goes on and on. However, parents... they help a great deal. My mom, especially, since she's the one who throws me a bone almost every week on getting me some food to last the week, and sorting out my bills.
My advice for new grads or others similar to my position:
- Save up a whole lotta money
unless you don't have a lot of debt - Make sure you have supportive people around you that you can rely on
- Learn to live within your means (
and try to avoid using credit cards or else your bills will skyrocket...)
If someone asks me whether I would change my mind if I could do it over again, I would still stand my idea of taking the harder path. Without taking that step, I wouldn't have learned as much as I did. I wouldn't have learned to appreciate family as much as I have. I wouldn't have learned the value of money.
And I certainly wouldn't have known the vast difference between what you learn in school and what you learn in the real world. I knew that what we had learned in class wouldn't be quite as applicable when utilizing it in a job setting.
However, when you actually come across that situation it's very humbling.
Just recently, in my job, my boss had a "pop quiz" for me. He wants me to start learning ERDs (Entity-relationship Diagrams). I had to tell him that I haven't learned much from my class (if you had the teacher that I did... you would certainly know why). In the 30 minute he gave me, I was a wreck. The course I took didn't really apply ERDs in a situation where we could utilize this in the real world - outside of a classroom setting. Everything was by the book.
There I was, in front of a computer, trying to learn how to use the mySQL Workbench's EER. I had gotten as far as making tables... and then got stopped because I couldn't figure out why the many-to-many relationship wasn't working like it should.
So here's another advice: get an internship / entry-level position as early as you can in your college career.
This way, you can really get a leg up on the competition. No matter how minor you think you are learning, at least you're learning something that could be useful to you.