Okay guys, let me tell you how I completely overhauled my career mess back in 2018. Full disclosure? Total disaster zone beforehand.
First step was dumping everything onto paper. Seriously grabbed a notebook one rainy Tuesday. Wrote down every job I’d ever had – even that awful summer selling hot dogs. Jotted what I loved (organizing stuff) and what made me want to scream (last-minute chaos). Forced myself to list skills too, felt like bragging but did it anyway.
Then came the infamous Virgo over-analysis phase. Spent like three days color-coding that notebook. Highlighted transferable skills in yellow, toxic work patterns in angry red. Made spreadsheets comparing potential industries against my core needs: stability? Creativity? Predictable hours? My roommate caught me muttering to highlighters at 2 AM.
Created the “no-bullshit test”:
- Tried volunteering for accounting tasks at my coffee shop job – instantly wanted to stab calculators with forks
- Shadowed a friend’s graphic design work for a day – brain felt weirdly happy arranging pixels
- Took one of those free online coding courses – actually finished it but hated every solitary minute
Epiphany hit at my cousin’s wedding ironically. Saw her event planner making a seating chart – meticulous color coordination, clipboard perfection. Realized I was salivating over someone else’s clipboard. That’s when it clicked: my Virgo need for precision should work with me not against me. Switched job hunt focus cold turkey next morning.
Changed LinkedIn headline to “Organization Ninja Seeking Chaos to Tame”. Started only applying for roles needing systems building – project coordinator gigs, operations assistants, anything involving checklists. Three soul-crushing interviews later landed a junior role managing schedules for a catering company. Not glamorous but matched my actual skills. Five years later? Running operations for three food trucks in Portland.
Biggest lesson? Didn’t find a “passion”. Found what made my Virgo brain stop screaming. Career fits you when your weirdest traits become useful.
