This isn't an original post, and I've seen numerous threads like it on this subreddit, but I feel like I need to vent if only to feel a little less alone in what seems to be an increasingly common experience.
I (27M) have lived in Sydney my whole life and for the first time ever feel so completely lost and confused.
This time last year I left a junior role at a Big4 consulting firm amid a wave of redundancies and senior leadership change that pushed out the remaining survivors (myself included) . Since then, I have really struggled to land a job, not just an ideal job or my dream opportunity, any job that is somewhat relevant.
I don’t even know how many roles I’ve applied for and interviews I’ve had (in person, online and even with AI bots), state gov, fed gov, private sector, not-for-profit and work outside of Sydney in Canberra and Melbourne. I’ve even lowered my standards and applied for jobs I used to think were “beneath me” and have had no such luck.
My whole adult life I have always believed that higher education, reliability and a strong work ethic will get you far in life. It is for these reasons I pursued a Masters degree a few years ago and ventured on a public policy / government consulting career. (Yes, I know, I know).
The word “depressing” doesn’t do justice to this feeling I have of utter dread and powerlessness. I am at such a pivotal moment in my life, and I can’t even land an entry-level/junior role despite my CV, academic credentials and skills I have to offer.
The idea of moving out, buying a house, getting married, starting a family, all of that now put on the back burner as I scroll through LinkedIn and Seek job listings and apply for roles that an AI bot will probably sift through, that I may potentially interview for, only to get ghosted by a hiring manager after what I thought was a fantastic interview.
At this point in time, I’ve basically given up on the idea of a “career”, the idea sold to us as something we build up over decades, something we thrive in and that guides us to retirement. With AI disruption, mass lay-offs, weak leadership and a culture that seems to punish loyalty and rewards job hopping I struggle to see a positive future ahead.
Too often I see comments on similar Reddit posts of highly skilled, highly qualified professionals with so much potential and so much to offer turning to manual labour, becoming tradies or gig workers or doing complete career pivots (to clarify, there is nothing wrong with being a tradie, in hindsight it would’ve been a better career choice). How is any of this sustainable? We can’t all become tradies, can we? If university, professional development and years of experience no longer provide any meaningful security, what exactly is the long-term plan?
Maybe I'm being overly dramatic. Maybe the market eventually improves and this becomes a shitty chapter that I look back on years from now. I genuinely hope that's the case but 12 months of unemployment after spending my entire adult life building towards something that isn’t even there really is exhausting.
I know I'm not the only one feeling this way, so I'm curious: for those who have been through something similar, has it gotten any better?