this post was submitted on 02 May 2025
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theres a reason this is colloquially referred to as toilet paper
do you have any real world skills? i know many people in professional careers that do not match their degrees, but they had to start at the literal bottom (cleaning,answering phones, etc) making minimum wage until they proved they were more competent than the people who generally take those jobs.
I have over five years of writing and editing experience and three years of customer service experience. I have taken several AI courses, and I am currently taking some coding courses, mainly because I'm interested in coding, but it also looks good on a resume.
Just want to say that your degree is not toilet paper nor do you lack real world skills.
You have real skills and your degree reflects that. What is the issue is the system under which we exist not valuing certain skills and certain people. As this system, especially in the US, crumbles further everyone will struggle more and more to find work that pays decently, including those with the currently 'valuable' degrees.
I don't have much advice for you other than what you've already done, except maybe lean on your family if you have one or can, but I hope you find a job soon, Comrade.
Thank you!! I have a degree in English and yeah, even though it's a hard degree to market in this job environment (especially this one that is collapsing), I am proud of it. It improved my writing and editing, research, and critical thinking skills. It's sad how these are skills that employers say they are looking for yet have zero respect for the liberal arts.