I have no clue who this other candidate is, but obviously he was the better choice for this position. It was just myself and this other person that made it past the second interviews. As a constellation prize, I was told that another position will open up in June and that they would like to talk to me at that point.
Also, I get to remain employed at the job I've been at for almost 11 years now. Which makes me reflect on my time there:
- I have never once traveled with this company even though we have multiple offices
- It's been just shy of 6 years since my last raise
- My last raise was me quitting in October 2007 and coming back in February 2008
- I am no longer challenged by any of my given responsibilities
- My last 3 bonuses have all been half of what they were the previous time
- I do have a lot of flex time, which is nice when I am asked to do things for other people in my life
- I get 5 weeks of vacation and I use up every single hour that I earn. Each and every year
I was hoping that being dedicated (I've not taken a single unscheduled day off for sickness in over two years), coming in when there is an issue (I live 3 miles away, which is 1 mile closer than one co-worker and 20 miles closer than the other co-worker), always having my phone with me to answer it, staying late when needed would somehow be shown in ways other than the occasional "Attaboy".
Instead, I do my best to appreciate a regular paycheck, which I discovered today, is less take home pay than I made 6 years ago when I returned to the company. And employment that I seem to not be in any imminent danger of jeopardizing.
So in six years, I have not moved forward. I have not stayed stationary. I have regressed in many ways. The loyalty I have given these last six years has all been for naught. Well, it does garner an impressive response to friends, family and job interviews. Which I label as a positive. So long as I use that positive to find much more gainful employment at a company that understands loyalty goes both ways.
Yes, folks. I am making efforts to leave the job I loathe. Today was just a minor setback in my quest to take my loyalty elsewhere.
GAAAAAHHH x'-(
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't conclude that the other person was the better choice. I'd conclude that they made a dumb, costly mistake. But the worse criminal is your current employer, a graceless, blind ingrate who can't be bothered to see the enormous riches they have in such an excellent worker. When you are eventually gone, they will fucking cry. It will hurt them to lose you. Will they make the connection and think, 'wow, perhaps we shouldn't abuse & neglect the great people who make our very existence possible'? Oh, probably not (see: blind), but maybe they'll go belly-up & rot in hell. I'd do a slow clap.
I would be doing the same slow clap. I've learned a lot after now being there 11 years. Not much in the way of encouragement to help me move forward. The obvious is to keep pursuing other job opportunities until one comes along that matches what I am needing from an employer.
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