Momofboys
Member
I’ll apologize in advance for the long and winded rant.
So for the past ten years or so I’ve wanted to become a jeweler ever since I took a metalsmith class in college. But It wasn’t until after Covid hit that I was able to actually get into the field. Got an "essentials" certificate from Gemological Institute of America, got a job at a local Kay Jewelers in October 2020. I knew going in that Kay wasn't going to be forever because it's in a mall and there's no on site jeweler to teach me anything. But I worked there for over 2 years to learn as much as I could about the industry. Got a couple more certificates showing I know my stuff.
Back in June a position opened up at a local jewelry store and I jumped on it. During the interview process and the first few weeks my boss (the owner) gave me the impression that I was going to be "taking over" the repairs from the woman currently handling everything. But the problem is that this particular business doesn't actually do their own repairs. She has a contract jeweler take everything once a week back to his shop, fix it, bring it back. Apparently, despite being a goldsmith for over 3 decades and owning her own business for 2, it's "not her job to sit at the bench all day." Okay, I get it. You have a business to run and you don't have time. But hire a bench jeweler to actually work in the store rather than contracting a completely separate business to do it off premises.
So anyway, the first month or so was an adjustment going from a massive corporation to small business, so my sales numbers were very low. I gave myself the benefit of the doubt. But after coming to the realization that I wasn't going to be getting anywhere close to what I wanted (actually doing the repairs myself), my stupid brain pretty much said "Nah, I'm done. Peace out." and shut down. I was making more and bigger mistakes, not passing information along, certainly not selling anything.
I haven't actually been fired from a job in close to a decade (always left because I either found something better/different or moved). I could try going back to Kay, but I really didn't like my manager and there's no career growth with them.
Yesterday I got my ASD "diagnos-ish" from my psych (here's my intro link with the story), today I got fired, and for the past 2 months I've also been dealing with a cancer-riddled dog who as of the end of August only had 2 months to live. I know I'll get through all this nonsense, but for the rest of today and possibly the week I'm going to wallow in self-pity until I figure things out.
So for the past ten years or so I’ve wanted to become a jeweler ever since I took a metalsmith class in college. But It wasn’t until after Covid hit that I was able to actually get into the field. Got an "essentials" certificate from Gemological Institute of America, got a job at a local Kay Jewelers in October 2020. I knew going in that Kay wasn't going to be forever because it's in a mall and there's no on site jeweler to teach me anything. But I worked there for over 2 years to learn as much as I could about the industry. Got a couple more certificates showing I know my stuff.
Back in June a position opened up at a local jewelry store and I jumped on it. During the interview process and the first few weeks my boss (the owner) gave me the impression that I was going to be "taking over" the repairs from the woman currently handling everything. But the problem is that this particular business doesn't actually do their own repairs. She has a contract jeweler take everything once a week back to his shop, fix it, bring it back. Apparently, despite being a goldsmith for over 3 decades and owning her own business for 2, it's "not her job to sit at the bench all day." Okay, I get it. You have a business to run and you don't have time. But hire a bench jeweler to actually work in the store rather than contracting a completely separate business to do it off premises.
So anyway, the first month or so was an adjustment going from a massive corporation to small business, so my sales numbers were very low. I gave myself the benefit of the doubt. But after coming to the realization that I wasn't going to be getting anywhere close to what I wanted (actually doing the repairs myself), my stupid brain pretty much said "Nah, I'm done. Peace out." and shut down. I was making more and bigger mistakes, not passing information along, certainly not selling anything.
I haven't actually been fired from a job in close to a decade (always left because I either found something better/different or moved). I could try going back to Kay, but I really didn't like my manager and there's no career growth with them.
Yesterday I got my ASD "diagnos-ish" from my psych (here's my intro link with the story), today I got fired, and for the past 2 months I've also been dealing with a cancer-riddled dog who as of the end of August only had 2 months to live. I know I'll get through all this nonsense, but for the rest of today and possibly the week I'm going to wallow in self-pity until I figure things out.