Bruce Stern
New Member
I am supposed to start a job in 3 months, well, I thought I was until last week. When I went to the interview the goal was to take three months off between jobs and start in January. January is also when my partner is moving to another city to start her nursing school. Everything I thought was smooth. We bought plane tickets for a vacation Nov- early December. Last week got word they want me up there by November 15th, start work Dec 1st. I talked to the recruiter and he said we could work around this but the email I got today is pretty much full steam ahead for this date. It throws all our plans into a tailspin.
I wrote, re-wrote then saved the e-mail to the recruiter. Not sure at all what to say to the VP who wrote me about these dates. I don't know how to communicate these things without creating a bad impression. I'm frustrated because I discussed that in the interview, lunch and with multiple times the recruiter throughout the interview process.
Now I'm wondering if I communicated correctly. From my perspective I felt I was very up-front from the start. I'd rather cancel the trip and move up early than lose this job but it's going to be difficult financially and we really wanted the trip. I've been kind of beat-up emotionally after this last resignation. My main goal is not to say something I'll regret particularly since I haven't even started the job yet.
The best outcome would be to come at the originally discussed date, do the orientation early so I'm ready to go and still be able to have our trip and move at the same time. But in situations like this two things happen (a) I give in and resent it (b) get the outcome I want but make a bad impression in the process.
I feel so doomed. I constantly have these type of miscommunications when I think I'm really clear.
I wrote, re-wrote then saved the e-mail to the recruiter. Not sure at all what to say to the VP who wrote me about these dates. I don't know how to communicate these things without creating a bad impression. I'm frustrated because I discussed that in the interview, lunch and with multiple times the recruiter throughout the interview process.
Now I'm wondering if I communicated correctly. From my perspective I felt I was very up-front from the start. I'd rather cancel the trip and move up early than lose this job but it's going to be difficult financially and we really wanted the trip. I've been kind of beat-up emotionally after this last resignation. My main goal is not to say something I'll regret particularly since I haven't even started the job yet.
The best outcome would be to come at the originally discussed date, do the orientation early so I'm ready to go and still be able to have our trip and move at the same time. But in situations like this two things happen (a) I give in and resent it (b) get the outcome I want but make a bad impression in the process.
I feel so doomed. I constantly have these type of miscommunications when I think I'm really clear.
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