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Drank too much at a work event. How do I deal with the anxiety?

I have pretty bad anxiety and could use some outside perspective.

Yesterday, my boss (a physician) invited me to a networking event for attorneys and other professionals. I’m the lead medical assistant at our practice and have worked there for almost four years. I’ve been invited to these types of events before, but I usually skip them because I’m more of a homebody and don’t really enjoy networking events.

On the drive there, I was joking that I’d only have one drink. Well… that definitely didn’t happen. The event started around 1 PM, and over the course of the afternoon I ended up having way too much to drink (probably around 15 drinks). I didn’t black out, and I remember the entire day, but I was definitely very drunk.

My boss, manager, and my boss’s wife all left around 4 PM. When they were leaving, I was laughing and joking that I was going to stay and keep partying with the attorneys. I ended up staying several more hours and didn’t get home until around 8 PM, where I basically passed out.

The thing that’s bothering me is that I became incredibly social. Normally I’m pretty reserved, but I was talking to absolutely everyone. I was laughing a lot, joking around, introducing myself to people, and generally acting much more outgoing than I normally would. I don’t think I said anything offensive or inappropriate, but I was definitely loud and a little messy.

I was also telling some of the attorneys how cool they seemed and saying things like, “We should all go on a double date sometime,” or “I’d love to hang out with you and your spouse sometime.” My fiancé showed up later in the event, and I think I was just in a really friendly, social mood and wanted to be friends with everyone. Some people were not receptive to that, so it makes me think they think I acted weird.

Today, my manager laughed and said something like, “Wow, you really go hard,” which immediately made me feel embarrassed. Now I’m replaying the entire day in my head and worrying that everyone thinks I’m unprofessional, immature, or weird.

The thing is, everyone at the event was drinking, but I definitely took it further than most people. I can’t tell if this is a genuine professional mistake that people will remember, or if this is just anxiety making me catastrophize a situation that everyone else has already forgotten about.

Has anyone else had a work or networking event where they drank way more than intended? How much do people actually remember or care about this stuff afterward?


Jobadvisor

This sounds like a classic case of anxiety doing what anxiety does best: taking a mildly embarrassing moment and inflating it into a catastrophe. Let me give you some honest outside perspective.

The reality check

15 drinks over roughly 7 hours at an open, social networking event is a lot — you're right to acknowledge that. But here's what actually happened: you were friendly, enthusiastic, and social. You didn't say anything offensive, you didn't cause a scene, you didn't embarrass your boss. You were just... louder and more outgoing than usual. At a drinking event. With attorneys.

Your manager's comment ("wow, you really go hard") sounds like gentle teasing, not a formal reprimand. If your behavior had genuinely alarmed people, that conversation would have gone very differently.

What people actually remember from events like this

Most people at that event were also drinking and having a good time. The attorneys you invited on double dates probably thought it was funny and endearing, and have already moved on. The few who seemed unreceptive weren't necessarily judging you — some people are just more reserved about mixing professional and personal life, and that's about them, not you.

The people who know you best — your boss, your manager — have almost four years of context on who you are. One afternoon of being more social than usual doesn't erase that.

What's actually fueling this anxiety

A few things are probably compounding it:

  • The physical hangover itself (alcohol disrupts sleep and spikes anxiety for 24-48 hours after heavy drinking — this is a real, documented physiological effect, not just a moral reckoning)
  • You're already a self-described anxious person, so your brain is primed to scan for threat
  • The shift from your normal reserved self to a very social one probably feels jarring and unfamiliar from the inside, even if it didn't look alarming from the outside

Practical things that help

  • Give it a few days before you judge anything. The hangover anxiety will pass, and you'll have more perspective.
  • Resist the urge to over-apologize or bring it up repeatedly — that actually makes it more memorable and awkward for everyone.
  • If you feel you genuinely owe your boss or manager something, a simple "I probably got a bit too into it yesterday, won't make that a habit" the next time it comes up naturally is more than enough.
  • Next time, have a drink limit plan that accounts for a 7-hour event, not a 2-hour one.

The fact that you're this concerned about it is honestly a sign that you care about your professionalism. People who are genuinely reckless don't lie awake worrying like this. You had one messy afternoon after four solid years — that's a very normal human thing, not a career-defining moment.


Read ???


Hi everyone,

I'm looking for some career guidance and would really appreciate your suggestions.

I graduated in 2024 with a degree in Management, specializing in Finance. Unfortunately, due to health-related issues, I wasn't able to join a job or gain work experience immediately after graduation. My health situation has improved, and now I'm actively looking to start my career.

I'm particularly interested in roles related to consulting, consultancy, business analysis, financial analysis, management trainee programs, or other professional careers that offer good growth and salary prospects.

However, I'm feeling quite confused about where exactly I should be applying and which career path would be the best fit for my background.

I would be grateful if you could help with:

What entry-level roles should I target with a Management + Finance background?

Which companies are currently good options for freshers or recent graduates?

Which websites, job portals, or apps are most effective for finding these opportunities?

How can I explain the gap since graduation due to health reasons?

What certifications, skills, projects, or resume additions would make me more employable?

Are there any consulting, finance, or business-related fields that are hiring actively right now?

Any advice, personal experiences, resume tips, or career suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you in advance! 🙏


Jobadvisor

Here's thorough guidance on each of your questions:

1. Entry-level roles to target

With a Management + Finance degree, strong options include:

  • Financial Analyst / Junior Financial Analyst — budgeting, forecasting, reporting
  • Business Analyst — bridging business needs and solutions, very accessible for fresh grads
  • Management Trainee — rotational programs at large corporates; excellent for learning multiple functions
  • Junior Consultant / Analyst at consulting firms
  • Credit Analyst — banks and NBFCs
  • Equity Research Analyst (if you like markets)
  • Operations Analyst — logistics, fintech, e-commerce companies

2. Good companies for freshers

  • Consulting: Deloitte, EY, KPMG, PwC (Big 4 hire heavily at analyst level), McKinsey/BCG/Bain (harder but worth trying)
  • BFSI: HDFC, ICICI, Axis, Kotak, Bajaj Finserv, IDFC First
  • Corporates with MT programs: Mahindra, Tata Group, Aditya Birla, ITC, HUL
  • Fintech/Startups: Razorpay, Zerodha, Groww, PhonePe, Paytm — often more flexible on gaps

3. Best job portals

  • LinkedIn — most important; optimize your profile seriously
  • Naukri.com — dominant in India for corporate jobs
  • Instahyre / Cutshort — good for startups and tech-adjacent roles
  • Foundit (formerly Monster)
  • Company career pages directly — especially for Big 4 and large corporates
  • Internshala — also lists full-time roles, especially for fresh grads

4. How to explain the health gap

Keep it simple, honest, and forward-focused. You don't owe anyone medical details. A good framing:

"After graduating, I dealt with a health matter that required my full attention. It has since been fully resolved, and I've used the period to [add something — self-study, a certification, freelance work, reading]. I'm now fully ready and eager to start my career."

Gaps are far more accepted post-COVID than before. Most interviewers will respect a composed, brief answer and move on.

5. Certifications and skills to add

High-impact additions for your profile:

  • CFA Level 1 — significant credibility for finance roles
  • Financial Modeling (FMVA by CFI or similar) — practical and recognized
  • Excel / Advanced Excel + Power BI — almost mandatory for analyst roles
  • SQL basics — very helpful for business/data analyst roles
  • Google Data Analytics Certificate (Coursera) — free/affordable, well-regarded
  • Python basics (optional but increasingly valued)

Even a short personal project — a financial model of a public company, a business case study, a market analysis — goes a long way on a resume when you have no work experience.

6. Fields actively hiring right now

  • GCC (Global Capability Centers) — multinational companies setting up India offices are hiring analysts aggressively
  • Fintech — still growing, lots of business/ops analyst roles
  • Consulting (Big 4 Advisory) — steady hiring at analyst level
  • Banking (retail and corporate) — relationship manager and credit analyst pipelines are always open
  • E-commerce & logistics — operations and finance analyst roles

One practical action plan to start:

  1. Update LinkedIn fully — headline, summary, skills, education
  2. Pick one certification to start immediately (FMVA or Excel/Power BI)
  3. Build one small project (model a company's financials or write a 1-page market analysis)
  4. Apply to 5–10 roles daily on Naukri + LinkedIn
  5. Reach out to 2–3 alumni from your college on LinkedIn weekly — referrals matter enormously

You're not as behind as you feel. A 2024 grad with a Finance degree, a clean explanation for the gap, and even one solid certification is a competitive candidate. Good luck!


People who didn’t get into med/dental school — what are you doing now, and are you happy?

I recently just applied to dental school and got rejected. I do not have the finances to reapply again with not so good stats and looking into pivoting career paths. I have always wanted to be a doctor but I also can’t just wait around another year and throw away thousands of dollars.

I would appreciate any success stories of anyone who pivoted away from dentistry or medicine and is happy with their choice and what they chose to do instead


Jobadvisor

That rejection stings, especially after investing so much — emotionally and financially. You're not alone in this, and the pivot stories are more common (and more positive) than pre-dent/pre-med culture tends to let on.

Here are some paths people commonly take, along with why they often report being happier than they expected:


Healthcare-adjacent (still clinical, less debt/time)

  • Physician Assistant (PA) — Very similar day-to-day to a physician, 2-year master's program, high salary, growing demand
  • Dental Hygienist — Still in dentistry, 2-year program, genuinely good work-life balance and pay
  • Nurse Practitioner — Independent practice in many states, prescribing authority, respected role
  • Optometrist (OD) — 4 years but far less competitive than MD/DMD, great lifestyle
  • Pharmacist — If you have a science background, PharmD transitions well

Completely different but often surprising fits

  • Healthcare administration / hospital management — Uses the biology/systems knowledge without patient care
  • Medical/dental sales — High earning potential, uses your clinical knowledge, often very flexible
  • Public health (MPH) — Broader impact, policy-focused, pairs well with a bio undergrad
  • Biotech / pharma industry — Lab roles, clinical research, regulatory affairs
  • Healthcare tech / digital health — Booming field, especially with any coding or data skills

A few honest things people say looking back:

  • Many report that the identity of "I want to be a doctor" was partly the goal, more than the actual day-to-day work — and they found that fulfillment elsewhere
  • Dental school in particular carries $300–500k+ in debt at many programs; PAs and NPs often feel they got a comparable quality of life for a fraction of the cost and time
  • Rejection forced a self-reflection that led them to something that suited their actual personality better than a 10-year training pipeline would have

You're not abandoning medicine — you're redirecting the same drive and intelligence that got you this far. What aspect of dentistry drew you most: the hands-on work, the patient relationships, the science, the income? That might help narrow down which pivot would feel most meaningful to you.


18F with zero money, connections, or guidance. Ready to work myself to the bone. What career path will get my family out of poverty for good?


Hi everyone,
I am an 18 year old girl currently living in an incredibly tough financial situation. I come from a tiny, rundown town of less than 1,000 people. I have zero family wealth, absolutely no professional connections, and no adults in my life who can offer career guidance.

To be completely honest, I am exhausted from living day by day wondering if my family will survive the next month. I am posting here because I desperately need someone experienced to look at my situation and tell me exactly what to do.

I will do ANYTHING to make it out of this place and secure my family’s future. I do not care how hard the work is. I am willing to work until my bones collapse and my eyes stop working. If you give me a path, I promise you I will outwork everyone else and become the absolute best at it. I just want a life where my family can finally relax, breathe, and not have to constantly worry about money.

My goal is High income potential as fast as possible. (Maybe a 5 year timeline) I need a path that leads to financial stability, not just a minimum-wage job.

I left high school early, so I am starting from the absolute bottom. However, I am fully prepared to get my GED or do whatever entry-level schooling/training is required if it guarantees a real paycheck on the other side.

I have a strong interest in technology and computer science/coding fields because I know that's where the money is, but I am entirely open to other high-paying industries if there is a faster or more realistic route for someone in my position.

If you were in my shoes 18 years old, starting with $0, but possessed an unlimited work ethic, what exact steps, certifications, or career paths would you take right now to make the most money possible without losing your job to automation or AI down the line?
Please give me a blueprint. I am ready to start now.


Jobadvisor

Your drive is real and your instincts about tech are good. Here's an honest, practical blueprint built for your exact situation.

First: The Foundation (Months 1-3)

Get your GED first. It's fast, often free through your state's adult education program, and unlocks everything else. Search "[your state] free GED prep" — most states fund this entirely.

Get internet access. If you don't have reliable internet, your local library is your office for now. Some states also offer low-income broadband programs (look up ACP or Lifeline).


The Path I'd Recommend: IT/Cybersecurity → Cloud

This is the fastest realistic route from $0 to $60-80k+ in roughly 2-3 years, with $100k+ achievable by year 5. Here's why it beats other options for you specifically:

  • No degree required — certifications are what employers actually check
  • Massive labor shortage, so employers are desperate
  • Remote-friendly, meaning your small town is no longer a cage
  • Hard to automate — security especially requires human judgment
  • Free or very cheap to train for

The Step-by-Step Blueprint

Step 1 — GED (Month 1-2) Use GED.com's free prep materials. Take the test as soon as you're ready. Cost: ~$120 total, sometimes covered by your state.

Step 2 — CompTIA IT Fundamentals / A+ (Month 2-4) This is your first certification and your foot in the door for any IT helpdesk job.

  • Study free on Professor Messer's website (professormesser.com) — completely free, excellent
  • Get the exam voucher through a local workforce development program if possible (they often pay for it)
  • Cost if you pay yourself: ~$250 per exam

Step 3 — Get a helpdesk job (Month 4-6) With an A+, you can apply for IT helpdesk roles. These pay $35-45k to start and, critically, many are fully remote. Search on Indeed for "remote IT helpdesk entry level." This is your income bridge while you keep building.

Step 4 — CompTIA Network+ then Security+ (Month 6-18) These two certs are the gateway to cybersecurity. Security+ in particular is required by the US Department of Defense, meaning government contractors actively hunt for people who have it. Salary jumps to $55-75k territory.

  • Still use Professor Messer, plus free TryHackMe.com labs for hands-on practice

Step 5 — Specialize (Year 2-3) Pick one of these tracks based on what you enjoy:

Track Next Cert Realistic Salary Y3
Cloud (most jobs) AWS Cloud Practitioner → AWS Solutions Architect $80-110k
Cybersecurity (highest ceiling) CompTIA CySA+ → CEH $85-120k
Networking CCNA (Cisco) $70-90k

Free Resources That Are Actually Good

  • professormesser.com — best free cert study on the internet
  • tryhackme.com — hands-on cybersecurity labs, free tier
  • freecodecamp.org — if you want to add coding skills
  • coursera.org — many Google/IBM certificates are free if you apply for financial aid (just click "financial aid" on any course)
  • your local workforce development office — they often have grants to pay for certifications and job placement help. Google "[your county] workforce development" today.

What to Avoid

  • For-profit "coding bootcamps" that charge $15k+ with income share agreements — they prey on people in exactly your situation
  • Getting a 4-year degree first — you don't need it for this path and it will cost you 4 years and debt
  • Spreading yourself across too many skills — pick the IT/security track and go deep, don't dabble in 10 things

The honest truth about timeline

You said 5 years. Here's what's realistic if you execute hard:

  • Year 1: GED + A+ cert + first helpdesk job ($35-45k)
  • Year 2: Security+ + promotion or new job ($50-65k)
  • Year 3: Cloud or security specialization ($70-90k)
  • Year 4-5: Senior role or specialization ($90-120k+)

That's a real path from $0 to a six-figure income in 5 years without a degree, without connections, and starting from a small town. People do it regularly in this field.


The single most important thing you can do today: go to your county's workforce development office or call 211 (a free social services hotline in the US) and ask about free GED programs and career training grants. That one phone call can unlock funding that pays for everything else on this list.

You have the most important thing already — you know exactly how badly you want it. Now just run the steps.