Wednesday, April 6, 2022

Sorry Charlie Day

Today (April 6, 2022) is National Sorry Charlie Day. It is a day to think about the times we have been rejected. The day also gives us an opportunity to reflect on how we survived those rejections and to think about what we have learned from them.

For decades, rejection and I have been in an intimate, tumultuous relationship.

Personally, I have been rejected more than one thousand (1,000) times throughout my slightly more than sixty-one (61) years on Earth. When you put yourself out there to be considered for anything, rejections should definitely be expected. Actually, I proudly wear all of my rejections (from women and from potential employers) as badges of honor.

Romance: I have been rejected by hundreds and hundreds of women, including four hundred fourteen (414) rejections by women in eighteen (18) months, yes months, with a video dating service in the mid-1990s, when I was in my mid-30s. While I have been able to go on several dates during almost all of my unmarried decades, I was truly without female companionship between age twenty (20) and age forty (40), and not by choice. I am proud to say that I was able to survive during those two long, lonely decades. It was one heck of a "dry spell."

I have experienced success romantically only once: with my wife. I was finally able to get married for the first and only time on February 4, 2006, which was twenty-two (22) days before my forty-fifth (45th) birthday. I dated my wife for five (5) years. Why so long? I was awaiting a rejection from her that never arrived. We recently celebrated our sixteenth (16th) wedding anniversary.

Employment: I have been rejected hundreds of times by hundreds of potential employers. In fact, I used to save all of my rejection letters. I had stacks and stacks of them. I would often read them for inspiration during my many job searches.

Throughout the years, I have mailed/emailed my résumé/CV hundreds of times to companies all over the United States in search of jobs in my profession (journalism), even to companies where I knew I would never, ever have a chance of being hired. My dad had told me to always aim high. He told me to apply for jobs anywhere and everywhere because somebody somewhere may see some small, specific aspect in my résumé/CV that could possibly generate a job offer.

While I have been on many job interviews at many amazing and diverse companies with almost all of them culminating in rejections, I have had a fair amount of professional success. I have had many interesting jobs at a diverse variety of companies.

Conclusion: My point is that you can ultimately experience success beyond all of your rejections. Achieving success just takes longer for some of us. Continue your quest for success.

If you have already achieved success, be diligent. Enjoy it while you got it because it could all be gone in a split second.

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