Hang in there, do what everyone else said. And I "ditto" what everyone else said.
The financial aid debacle is THEIR fault, so be sure you follow up on that.
Hang in there, do what everyone else said. And I "ditto" what everyone else said.
The financial aid debacle is THEIR fault, so be sure you follow up on that.
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
Hip, keep your chin up. I can't say anything different than what's been said, but just know I'm thinking of you. You're not alone- you have us to come to when you need an ear to listen or a shoulder to cry on! {{{big hugs}}}
Hang in there, things are bound to get better!
Check out my running blog: www.turtlepacing.blogspot.com
Cervelo P2C (tri bike)
Bianchi Eros (commuter/touring road bike)
1983 Motobecane mixte (commuter/errand bike)
Cannondale F5 mountain bike
I haven't got much to add, but want to express my support. Lisa S. H. and the others gave excellent advice, esp. about dancing on somebody's head at your Financial Aid office. Does your school have a Student Affairs office? You might check in there, too. I wouldn't shut up until I'd gotten satisfaction, if I were you.
I know it's hard to motivate yourself to be so emphatic when you're just feeling sad and miserable, but sometimes if you can get angry enough, that will help to motivate you. And this financial aid situation sure seems like just the ticket to cause some serious anger.
And all this will pass--you know that, right? We're all in your corner, girlfriend.
Bad JuJu: Team TE Bianchista
"The road to hell is paved with works-in-progress." -Roth
Read my blog: Works in Progress
It'll stop getting worse when it starts getting better and the trick is to look for the small bright lights rather than wait for the full solution. You managed to get a short term temp job. That's a start. When I've been in similar situations (and I've been desperate for jobs a few times), even a short temp stint has been a step in the right direction. And even before this contract ends, keep looking for extentions or new jobs. I've generally been lucky by tracking down every temp agency in the vicinity and stopping in at least once a week to remind them that I'm still looking for work. My first job assignment here in the UK was just by luck. I went in to the temp agency to pester them again for the fourth week on the run and by random chance they had just had a job come in 10 minutes ago. They put me through a typing test and I got started the following week. If I hadn't been there insisting, I'm fairly certain they wouldn't have given me a chance. It helps not being too picky too. The "highlight" of my working life was my summer working at the public toilets in town in the little booth charging each person the equivalent of $1 to enter.
The same pestering goes for beaurocrats in the financial aid office. In my experience beaurocrats do not think until somebody pesters them enough to do so. They follow the daily routine and need a bit of shaking up and pestering to use common sense. So march down there whenever you can and keep calling when you can't go to the office and keep pestering until they help you find a solution.
And in general, never give up. No matter how bleak it seems it will get better again. And remember that there are a whole bunch of people over here rooting for you!
There's an old saying: "It's always darkest before dawn".
We've had more than our share of downs, especially with serious illness in our family - son's a renal dialysis patient, has been for almost 5 years since he was 15 and my husband had a major heart-attack just over 2 1/2 years ago which meant he had to give up his job so money's been very tight ever since. He's got a new job now with the prospect of making good money.
I'd do what others have advised - jump your own height to make them take notice if necessary.
Just hang in there. Things will get better.
There are a lot of unwanted, unloved bikes out there - go on give a bike a good home
HipGnosis6,
Sounds like you are going through quite a rough patch. I hope you get the financial aid issues resolved, and that things start to look up for you. It doesn't seem like it now, but you will be all the stronger when you get through these times.
It stops getting worse once you hit rock bottom--when one huge bad thing that you couldn't have conceived puts all the other problems in perspective. It will get better after you realize, "it honestly can't get worse. Well, F**; I'll just stick along for the ride then." It won't be a swift recovery; in fact, it may be so incremental that you don't notice it.
Write everything down. Don't look at it for a few months. Come back to it and think, "wow, well, it's not great but it's better than it was." Some things, like your boyfriend leaving you or the trouble with your pets, won't be so sharp and painful in your memory.
The financial stuff: talk to everyone you can. Counsellors, banks, your family--SOMEONE will have a solution, or a set of solutions. The biggest part is wanting it bad enough. It sounds like you do.
It's true that usually bad things aren't happening to us -right this second,- unless, of course, your mental state of being clouds everything over with panic and paranoia. Your life could be perfect on paper but miserable on the inside. It's not what happens to you, it's how it affects you.
Everything has basically been stated by others. I just wanted you to know I was thinking of you and we are here for you. (((((Hugs)))))
Jennifer
“Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.”
-Mahatma Gandhi
"We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore, is not an act but a habit."
-Aristotle