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  #1  
Old Aug 12, 2007, 10:53 AM
skittles's Avatar
skittles skittles is offline
Poohbah
 
Member Since: Jan 2006
Location: ohio
Posts: 1,200
i qiut my job again....... again
__________________
again

lots of love,
Skittles


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  #2  
Old Aug 12, 2007, 01:47 PM
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oh boy...as an employer i can talk a lot about jobs, employees and of course, as a pc member, disorders.
quitting is never a good thing....i tell my people they don't have a job they have a career.
once they treat it as such, they tend to turn around a little...depression or not.
i have worked through three employees with clinical depression (2 successfully, 1 not) and give them what they need for support but also try to let them know their career can be the one grounding force in their lives and they would do very well to do whatever it takes to preserve it.
maybe you need a career change?
  #3  
Old Aug 12, 2007, 04:46 PM
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stefano stefano is offline
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Member Since: Dec 2006
Location: Roma, Italy
Posts: 519
Too bad.
But it could be the good chance to choose the next job carefully. You should be doing something that makes some sense to you. If you just take what is available, you just procrastinate the failure.
  #4  
Old Aug 12, 2007, 04:49 PM
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Posts: n/a
sorry, skittles. get out there and line something else up......choose carefully and you'll see a big difference....take the advice that's above. it's good......xoxoxo pat
  #5  
Old Aug 12, 2007, 11:49 PM
Jacquard Jacquard is offline
Junior Member
 
Member Since: Aug 2007
Posts: 15
</font><blockquote><div id="quote"><font class="small">Quote:</font>
stefano said:
Too bad.
But it could be the good chance to choose the next job carefully. You should be doing something that makes some sense to you. If you just take what is available, you just procrastinate the failure.

</div></font></blockquote><font class="post">

I can relate to what stefano says. I've had employment disruptions when my depression gets really bad. One way to mimimize it is to be realistic about your "action capacity" when depression hits hardest. It sucks, but you may need to take a job below your education/skill level if your focus is shot like mine is when I have a bad day. I found that having a job I could do on autopilot meant fewer problems.
  #6  
Old Aug 13, 2007, 07:54 AM
Divaluscious Divaluscious is offline
Account Suspended
 
Member Since: Jul 2007
Posts: 84
</font><blockquote><div id="quote"><font class="small">Quote:</font>
gtrplayer said:
oh boy...as an employer i can talk a lot about jobs, employees and of course, as a pc member, disorders.
quitting is never a good thing....i tell my people they don't have a job they have a career.
once they treat it as such, they tend to turn around a little...depression or not.
i have worked through three employees with clinical depression (2 successfully, 1 not) and give them what they need for support but also try to let them know their career can be the one grounding force in their lives and they would do very well to do whatever it takes to preserve it.
maybe you need a career change?

</div></font></blockquote><font class="post">

I agree with this post 150%.
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