- This topic has 13 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 6 years, 2 months ago by Prash.
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August 22, 2018 at 3:35 pm #222615EParticipant
I turned down the opportunity of a lifetime and now I regret it.
After graduating with my masters and moving to a new city, I started working as a full time intern at a small office in a field that’s somewhat related to my studies in order to build my connections in the new city. After 6 months of interning, I decided to apply for full time positions that’s actually in my field. My boss connected me with a hiring manager at my dream company, and they were looking to hire someone asap. Although the hiring manager was very interested in me, I let my anxiety take over me and convinced myself that the position was not the right fit and that I would be miserable doing the job. I then, rather rudely and against my better judgement, declined my interview for that job the night before it was to take place.
It wasn’t until several weeks after that I realized what a mistake I had made. Even though the position wasn’t my dream job, it would have been a great foot in the door. But now I’ve completely burned my bridge with that company.
I am 25, went straight from undergrad to grad school. Although I have tons of internship and research assistant experience under my belt, I have no real full time working experience. My field is notoriously small and difficult to get a full time position – I feel like I’ve already ruined my chances of starting my career before it ever really took off. I’m trying my best to move on and apply to other jobs, but there just aren’t many openings out there and none compare to the offer that I had. I feel like I’ve worked so hard – to get good grades, to get into a good grad school, to get 100% funding for grad school, to get amazing internships and have an amazing resume – and I ruined it all by being stubborn and burning my bridge with the largest company in my field.
I’ve already apologized to the hiring manager (though not forgiven) and to my boss, who had connected me with this company in the first place. But I am so depressed and so anxious. I can’t sleep. I can’t eat. All I can think about is how stupid I was for messing up this amazing opportunity. All I want is to turn back time and change my actions, but I know that’s not possible. It’s already been 2 months since this happened, and I really just want to move on and to know that things will turn out okay in the end.
August 23, 2018 at 10:52 am #222765AnonymousGuestDear E:
I hope you feel better soon. Suffering doesn’t help your situation. I would like to understand better: why did you turn down the opportunity and why did you do it rudely; what went through your mind and heart at the time?
anita
August 23, 2018 at 12:00 pm #222773EParticipantDear anita:
The position was actually really similar to what I currently do at my internship, and I’ve come to realize that I don’t want to do this type of work. I don’t particularly enjoy engaging with this type of clientele, and at the time of applying to the job, I was (and still am) completely burnt out by the dysfunctional and toxic environment at my internship. I was terrified by the idea that I would be stuck in that line of work forever – even the idea of doing the duties for that position for just one year made me very anxious. I was so focused on the negatives of the job that I had completely overlooked the positives – a larger more stable company, with proper systems in place, and a much larger group of colleagues that I can learn from. Even if the position wasn’t ideal, I would have benefited from being in the company overall.
At the time I was going through the interviews for this job, I had multiple breakdowns. My anxiety had completely taken over me. I forced myself to keep going, until it was time for the final interview. I knew the company was on a tight hiring deadline, but I still rescheduled the final interview to a later date to give myself more space and time to calm down. But I just couldn’t do it. The night before the final interview, I emailed the hiring manager and cancelled the interview. The hiring manager was understandably upset – I had asked them to push back the interview, and then I cancelled at the very last minute.
I knew objectively this wasn’t a good idea (I needed a job to start my career! especially with such a prominent company!), but at the time, I felt that if I was already having so many panic attacks during the interview stage, what would happen if I took the actual job?
I should also mention that at the very same time, I was also going through interviews for a different position at the same company. This position was exactly what I had wanted, and although I knew it wasn’t guaranteed that I would get this offer, I wanted to put my heart and soul into this job interview, rather than the one that was giving me panic attacks. Unfortunately, because I had pulled out of the aforementioned job interview so rudely, the company did not feel comfortable giving me this other job opportunity either.
August 23, 2018 at 1:52 pm #222787AnonymousGuestDear E:
I will be able to read your recent post and reply to it when I am back to the computer in about 14 hours.
anita
August 24, 2018 at 7:44 am #222843AnonymousGuestDear E:
First, I will retell your story (it helps me process information when I do that):
You went to undergraduate school, worked very hard to get good grades, worked very hard to get into a good graduate school and fund it, then you graduated, worked hard to get into internships and build an amazing resume.
In a new city, you worked as a full time intern in a small office in a field related to your studies for six months. During these six months you strongly dislike the clientele and the “dysfunction and toxic environment” of the job. You suffered and you were burnt out. You then applied for a full time position in a your field in your dream company, for a position very similar to the one you disliked so much and suffered doing.
You didn’t want to keep doing the job you were doing where you were doing it or anywhere else. It was logical that you will (it being a larger, more stable company, proper systems in place, larger group of colleagues) , but you just didn’t want to suffer anymore. The idea of being “stuck in that line of work forever”, that is, suffering forever, even a one year of this forever-feeling, terrified you.
You kept going with the application through the fear but cancelled the final interview, then asked to reschedule, and then cancelled again at the last minute.
You wrote: “I knew objectively this wasn’t a good idea”. My input: according to logic it was a good idea, but we are human animals, not logical robots. We are very much emotional beings. To function well in life we have to incorporate both: the logic and the emotional. Here is an equation I came buy a few years ago: Wise Mind= Logical Mind + Emotional Mind.
For a long time you functioned like a robot, that is, according to logic but you didn’t attend to your emotional well being. As you found out, it doesn’t work, to plan and execute a life according to logic alone. Our emotions provide us with information that is essential to our well being and effective functioning in life.
Maybe you need a break, you’ve been running on logic alone for too long. I think you need some time away from what-makes-sense. Because what really makes sense is that you attend to how you feel, what you need right now. The human/ animal part of you (which preceded, evolution wise, your logical part) doesn’t want to suffer. All animals withdraw from pain.
What do you think/ feel?
anita
August 24, 2018 at 3:24 pm #222919EParticipantDear anita,
I am not sure if my response will answer what you said, but firstly, I just want to say thank you for the summary and reflection. I appreciate your thoughtful analysis – It’s good to be able to look at this from an outside perspective.
Ever since graduate school, my emotions have always been in constant battle with my logic. I know what I should do, and often follow through with those actions, but never without a major sense of anxiety and dread. I always always push through my anxiety, and the results have turned out well for the most part. This time, however, my anxiety was so extreme that it was simply uncontrollable. I still very much wish I hadn’t let my emotions take over my logic.
As much as I want to take a break, I feel like that would just be giving up. I feel like I just need to push through my current situation (still working at the internship, still suffering) and perhaps something good will come of it. I am not only upset that I missed out on the job opportunity, but even more upset that I’ve severed my relationship with that hiring manager/company. I still interact with her and the company frequently as a part of my internship, and it’s also just such a small field that I feel like my reputation is ruined (I know it seems dramatic, but how others see me has always been very important to me)
I keep telling myself that my suffering will end soon, as soon as I find another job, but I just don’t see this coming to an end anytime soon.
I am scared if I attend to my emotional needs, rather than what’s logical, it’ll just back fire again. By declining that interview and burning that bridge, I’ve become miserable and am stuck at my current internship. But if I had taken the interview and subsequently the job, would I have been happy? I don’t know. All I know is that right now, my anxiety and self-esteem is at its lowest.
August 25, 2018 at 7:23 am #222987AnonymousGuestDear E:
You are welcome.
“By declining that interview and burning that bridge, I’ve become miserable… All I know is that right now, my anxiety .. is at its lowest.”
This is the logic of your emotions, and it is the logic of everyone’s emotions: better be miserable than anxious. And so, your emotions led you away from anxiety and into the preferable experience of misery.
Fear really is the worst, most distressing emotion there is. It is because the number concern of all animals is to survive, to not die. It takes a very distressing emotion to motivate an animal to do something drastic and to do it immediately, to run as fast as it can run from a predator, to fight as hard as it can, do whatever it takes and fast!
I have no doubt that psychotherapy with a capable therapist would benefit you a whole lot in gaining the emotional understanding you need and reduce that anxiety, so that you don’t get overwhelmed at critical times.
You wrote: “Ever since graduate school, my emotions have always been in constant battle with my logic. I know what I should do, and often follow through with those actions, but never without a major sense of anxiety and dread”- do you remember how it was for you, the anxiety, the battle, before graduate school, as far back as you remember?
anita
August 26, 2018 at 7:27 am #223103AnonymousGuestDear E:
You wrote, “I always always push through my anxiety, and the results have turned out well for the most part. This time, however, my anxiety was so extreme that it was simply uncontrollable. I still very much wish I hadn’t let my emotions take over my logic”-
pushing through anxiety is like driving a car with one leg on the gas pedal and the other on the brake pedal. You keep moving forward but in jerky motions and you get so exhausted. Sometimes the brakes stop you altogether, and you get hit by the car from behind.
Keep pushing through anxiety, but don’t let it be the only thing you do. Confront that anxiety instead, look for its origin, learn skills to manage it, build trust in yourself to be able to regulate it, to weaken it, there are ways. Do these things with the attitude of gentleness toward yourself and great patience with the process.
Forgive yourself for being human and not a logical machine. Don’t ignore this failure in pushing through anxiety as the way. Learn from it.
anita
August 26, 2018 at 6:10 pm #223153EParticipantDear anita:
I definitely agree that I need to find an outlet for my anxiety. Anxiety has always been with me, but I used it in productive ways in the past – to avoid procrastination, but clearly this is no longer the case. If there’s one good thing that came out of this incident, it’s that ive realized I can no longer ignore my anxiety issues and should find ways to address it head on.
I am still having a hard time forgiving myself. I know I need to move on – refine my skills, look for and apply to new jobs – but I simply can’t forgive myself for burning this opportunity. It’s an awful feeling to know that I’ve chosen misery rather than fight through anxiety.
August 27, 2018 at 5:35 am #223201AnonymousGuestDear E:
You wrote: “I’ve chosen misery rather than fight through anxiety”. It is not you who chose misery rather than fight through anxiety. Nature chose it for you. You had nothing to do with it.
Fear is the most distressing emotion there is. Nature sees to it that you don’t spend much time experiencing it. It is not you who chose that. There are so many depressed people, many millions of people taking antidepressants, not because they chose depression, but because the brain and body cannot stay in fear. It escapes into depression/ misery automatically.
If you see yourself as an entity separate from nature, as the alpha and omega, a god of sorts, then you think that you choose everything. But if you see yourself as you truly are, a human, an animal with an evolved thinking capacity, but an animal nonetheless, then you understand what you can successfully work on and what is futile.
anita
August 27, 2018 at 6:45 am #223219PrashParticipantDear E,
Hope you are able to forgive yourself soon. Guilt and regret are useful only to the extent that they teach you about the mistake that you made. Once that is learnt, continuing to not forgive yourself only serves to divert the energy that you need to move on. Change and growth that you need are more likely to occur when you cover yourself with an attitude of self compassion.
What needs to be done is measures to overcome the anxiety itself that led on to the situation.
Take care.
August 29, 2018 at 11:05 am #223611EParticipantDear anita and Prash,
Thank you again for your advice. I’ve been fluctuating between feeling at peace (with the knowledge that it was my anxiety at work and understanding what exactly it is that I need to work on) and feeling a sense of loss for a potentially great job offer and great professional relationship. Whenever I catch myself thinking that I was so close to getting the job (“oh, if only I did not cancel the interview the night before”), I think to myself that this wouldn’t have mattered. It wasn’t at all about whether I made it to the interview. This was about conquering my anxiety, which I wouldn’t have been able to do overnight.
I’m making small steps to alleviate my anxiety issues but I’m still in distress at work since 1) I’m still very burnt out by the internship/work environment and 2) I still have to interact with the hiring manager (who I burned the bridge with) frequently as a part of my internship duties. It’s also stressful to know that my reputation in the field is possibly known as unprofessional and unreliable, hindering my opportunities going forward.
I know progress doesnt happen happen over night. But I’m trying my best.
August 29, 2018 at 11:19 am #223615AnonymousGuestDear E:
Yes, progress doesn’t happen over night and you are trying your best as you have for many years, working hard, trying your best, muscling your way through anxiety.
It is quite clear that you suffered a loss, an opportunity lost already, possible loss to recur because of that burned bridge and reputation. Got to accept that it happened and mourn those loses.
There is still hope though, but for it to be a reasonable hope, you have to learn to better deal with the anxiety. I write about anxiety every day here, if you click my names you can read what I wrote today about putting together a tool kit to use so to manage/ heal from anxiety.
You are welcome, and please do post again anytime.
anita
August 29, 2018 at 5:57 pm #223647PrashParticipantDear E,
Keep doing your best. Focus on the events that you can control. Others’ thoughts and perceptions can never be made out.
Take care
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