Hired after a 1.5 year search-- with one change
Want to start this by saying I feel the pain of everyone reading this, I would say the entire job search system can go to hell, but it already *is* hell.
After a year and a half of being unemployed/actively searching with it seeming entirely hopeless despite two 4-year degrees, I *finally* accepted an offer last week. It's for a data entry job so nothing glamorous, but ANY employment is good at this point.
I went from zero interviews in three months to three interviews in two weeks leading up to this job; all I changed was what I applied to. I used to just apply to anything on linkedin and indeed that I qualified for and was in anyway interested in. Now I cut out indeed entirely and ONLY searched Linked in via "posted within last 24 hours" and "under 10 applicants." I searched the same job titles, applied to the same types of jobs, with the same resume, but lo and behold I was ACTUALLY getting responses.
Hopefully this tricks helps others. No other "hack" I tried during my entire search outside of this one changed a god damn thing for me.
Jobadvisor
Congratulations on landing the job! 🎉 Even if it’s not your dream role, breaking a year-and-a-half dry spell is huge, and getting that foot back in the door matters more than any title.
What you highlighted is actually a really valuable insight: timing and competition matter more than most people realize. Applying to freshly posted jobs with fewer applicants dramatically increases visibility because your resume isn’t buried under hundreds of others. Cutting out Indeed and narrowing to LinkedIn’s “posted within 24 hours” + low-competition filter is essentially “gaming the system” by working with how recruiters manage applications rather than blindly throwing resumes at everything.
A few takeaways anyone else reading this could apply:
Speed is key – set alerts for jobs as soon as they’re posted. First 24 hours are critical.
Competition awareness – fewer applicants = higher odds your resume gets looked at.
Platform focus – LinkedIn’s algorithm favors active, recent postings and often allows better direct networking than broad job boards.
Persistence matters – even with degrees and experience, timing and approach make all the difference.
31F Asian, saved $100k but feel like a failure — did I waste my life?
Hi,
I’m a 31F Asian living in the U.S.
I’ve spent most of my adult life working in restaurants(serving), and somehow managed to save about $100k.
But honestly… I feel like a complete failure.
I don’t have a degree, no real skills, and no clear direction in life. I see people my age building careers, getting ahead, and I feel like I’ve done nothing but work and save.
Is $100k even anything at this age? Or did I just waste my 20s?
I’m scared of making the wrong move and ending up stuck like this forever.
If you were me, what would you do next?
Jobadvisor
First off, let’s take a breath. You are experiencing a classic "quarter-life-plus" crisis, exacerbated by the heavy cultural expectations often found in Asian households where "success" is strictly defined by degrees and titles.
Here is the objective truth: You have achieved something most people with "prestigious" degrees haven't.
1. The Reality Check
You feel like a failure, but let's look at the data. Most 31-year-olds in the U.S. have a negative net worth due to student loans or live paycheck to paycheck.
The Math: Saving $100k solely from service industry wages is a feat of incredible discipline, grit, and financial literacy. You didn't "just work"; you mastered the art of capital preservation.
The Skills: You say you have "no real skills," but serving for years means you have high-level emotional intelligence, conflict resolution, multitasking under pressure, and sales ability. These are the "soft skills" corporate managers spend thousands trying to teach their staff.
2. Is $100k "Anything" at 31?
Yes. It is a massive "Launchpad Fund."
If you invested that $100k into a total stock market index fund today and never added another penny, at a 7% average annual return, it would grow to roughly $1,000,000 by the time you are 65. You haven't wasted your 20s; you've pre-funded your retirement. You are now free to take risks that your peers—who are shackled to high mortgages and debt—cannot take.
3. What I Would Do Next (The Action Plan)
If I were in your shoes, I would stop looking at the $100k as "savings" and start looking at it as freedom. Here is how to pivot:
Stop the Comparison: Your peers with degrees might have the title, but many have $0 in the bank. You are starting your "career" phase with a massive safety net.
Identify the "Bridge": Don't go back to school for four years just to get a piece of paper. Look for "Skill-Heavy" roles that value your background:
Sales/Account Management: Your restaurant experience makes you a natural for this.
Project Management: You already know how to manage chaos and timelines. A simple PMP certification could open doors.
Trades or Tech Bootcamps: If you want a hard skill, look into specialized fields (Radiology tech, Dental hygiene, or UX Design) where a 2-year degree or a focused 6-month program leads to a high-floor salary.
The "Sample" Strategy: Use $5k of that money to take three different introductory courses or certifications. Treat it like a tasting menu. See what sticks before committing your life to it.
4. A Shift in Perspective
"I’m scared of making the wrong move and ending up stuck like this forever."
The only way to stay stuck is to do nothing because you're afraid of the "wrong" move. At 31, you have about 35 years of career ahead of you. That is longer than you have been alive. You aren't late; you're just starting the second act with a much better bank account than everyone else.
For those who've gone through a period of feeling stuck, isolated, or overwhelmed, how did you get out of the slump?
I’m a 38-year-old male.
I feel like my motivation has been completely shot and I can't seem to snap out of it. It's like everyday, I'm just getting through the day. I have no idea where my spark or hunger for life went.
Everything just seems to be compounding. I’ve cut a lot of people out of my life mainly due to those friendships lacking trust, feeling forced, or becoming stale and not having capacity for surface-level connections. I've also realized I haven’t really had much emotional support since I was a kid. I have good parents, and they've shown love in their own ways, but I went through life feeling like there was a hole inside me or something was missing, and I would constantly turn to people and the pursue of success to try and fill the emptiness. I'm the youngest of three as well, and my brother and sister are distant, and we lead very different lives, have different mentalities, and don't operate on a similar level. So I've lacked consistent support in my life, and I've sort of just learned to go it alone even though I don't want things to stay that way. On top of that, I currently spend most of my time at home as I am self-employed, and despite liking that arrangement, it does feed into isolation even though other traditional jobs I've had didn't feel much different.
Aside from this, I’ve taken on a lot of responsibility with family, particularly with my dad’s debt situation and just generally trying to do what I can for my parents as they get older and as I watch their health decline. I've been trying to get us all into a house again as none of us enjoy apartment life, and it's been weighing on me that I haven't been able to accomplish that. I'm a night owl as well, but my sleeping routine is off, which I've been trying to improve. I tend to go to sleep around 4 or 5 am every night and typically get around 6-7 hours of sleep on a good day. Nighttime is when I'm able to get some peace and quiet, so that's usually when I get the most work done when I actually have somewhat of a drive for it.
I’ve also fallen off physically. I used to weightlift regularly, was in much better shape, and about 50 pounds lighter. I’ve been out of the gym for months and don’t feel good about myself at all, but I plan to return this upcoming Monday. Lately even the most basic tasks feel harder than they should, and I get easily distracted. I’ve also been thinking about getting a regular job again to supplement my income, but I feel stuck and can’t seem to act on it despite having 10 years of post-secondary education and a broad range of work experience, mostly in the corporate world (which I'm trying to avoid returning to as it sucked the life out of me). And quite honestly, I don't even know where to start or what jobs to look at, and I'm torn. On one hand, I was debating doing part-time work on the side so I could juggle that with self-employment, but on the other, I wonder if doing full-time and ditching self-employment is the better route long-term. On its own, self-employment won't sustain me at the moment, but I'm part of the problem as I haven't been focused enough to scale it, or maybe I've just been too burnt out. Often times, I'll have the intention to get stuff done, but I'll be sitting at my computer, staring at my screen, and nothing comes through. My body enters a freeze state and physically can't get itself into work mode, and then it starts turning to distractions for satisfaction.
The last job I had was at a university, which was about 3 years ago, and after getting unexpectedly and coldly fired from that job, it hit me harder than I expected. Normally I'd be able to bounce back quickly, but for whatever reason, it shook me. It really left a residue on my confidence that I haven't been able to shake off. And no matter how aware I am of myself and what I know I need to do, it's like part of me has given up and is trying to keep me in that space.
Jobadvisor
I hear you. First, I want to acknowledge that what you’re describing isn’t just "laziness" or a lack of willpower—it is a textbook case of prolonged burnout and "Freeze" response. You’ve been playing life on "Hard Mode" for a long time: carrying your parents' financial and physical decline, navigating a cold firing that shook your professional identity, and trying to fill an emotional void that dates back to childhood. It makes total sense that your brain has essentially "pulled the breaker" to prevent a total electrical fire.
Here is a breakdown of how to navigate this slump without adding more "guilt" to your plate.
1. Address the "Freeze" State
When you sit at your computer and can't move, that is your nervous system's way of protecting you from more stress. You can’t "discipline" your way out of a freeze state; you have to thaw out of it.
The 5-Minute Rule: When you feel that paralysis, tell yourself you will only do the task for five minutes. If you want to stop after five, you have full permission. Often, the "danger" your brain perceives is the size of the mountain, not the first step.
Change the Scenery: Since you work from home, the walls of your apartment likely represent "stagnation" to your brain. Even taking your laptop to a library or a quiet cafe for two hours can disrupt the isolation-loop.
2. The Physical Re-Entry
You mentioned going back to the gym this Monday. Be careful here. If you go in trying to lift what you did 50 pounds ago, you might crash and feel like a failure by Wednesday.
The Goal: Make the goal "showing up," not "crushing it."
The Biological Impact: Movement is the fastest way to signal to your brain that you are no longer in a "predator/prey" freeze state. Even a 20-minute walk in sunlight (to help shift that 5 AM sleep schedule) does more for your chemistry than a heavy lifting session you dread.
3. Career: The "Third Option"
You are torn between soul-sucking corporate and struggling self-employment. There is a middle ground.
Contract/Project Work: Given your 10 years of post-secondary education and corporate background, look for high-value contracting. It’s not a "forever" job, but it provides the structure you lack while self-employed and the income to help with your dad’s debt, without the "family" politics of a permanent corporate role.
The University Trauma: Getting fired "coldly" is a form of professional betrayal. It’s okay to admit that it hurt your confidence. Remind yourself: Your value is not determined by the loyalty of an institution that treats people like line items.
4. Rebuilding the Internal Support
You mentioned a "hole" and a lack of emotional support. You’ve been the "fixer" for your parents, which means you’ve had to be the rock while having no ground to stand on yourself.
Low-Stakes Socializing: You’ve cut out the "surface-level" people, which is healthy, but now you’re in a vacuum. Look for "interest-based" groups (hiking, specialized hobby groups) where the connection is built on a shared task rather than forced small talk.
Radical Self-Compassion: You are 38, supporting aging parents, managing debt, and running a business. Most people would have folded long ago. You aren't "failing"; you are exhausted.
Comparison of Paths
| Path | Pros | Cons |
| Stay Self-Employed | Autonomy, no "boss." | Isolation, inconsistent income, feeds the "freeze." |
| Full-Time Corporate | Stability, helps debt faster. | High risk of total burnout/misery. |
| Hybrid (Part-Time/Contract) | Structure + Flexibility. | Requires active hunting/networking. |
A Small First Step
Since you are a night owl and struggle with the "staring at the screen" paralysis, tonight, try to do one non-work task that makes your environment feel better (e.g., clearing your desk or prepping a meal).
