Graduating from one of Mzansi's to Universities
"If you're not happy just quit, and keep hunting for your happiness."
Many a times we
are told to follow our dreams, to do what feels right to us, to do what we
love. But, how many people have told you the honest truth that the road to
passion is full of hurdles, frustration, poverty and aging. Your parents always
ask you when are they gonna see the fruits of their money.
I've spent
twelve years in school, plus four years as an undergraduate, mommy funding my
education. The day finally came, Black gown, going up on stage, the best day of
my life. I left the school ground (the haven) and spent another three years
"hustling" jumping from one space to another. The more I shifted, the
more I lost financially. Let's face it the hustling game is full of tears and
disappointments. It is full of hard labour; you have to spend in order to make
your name, to get the so-called experience- glorified in every workplace you. I
have jumped from internships where I was making enough to get to
"work" just in the name of experience. At some point I settled for
less (nothing), because sitting at home watching TV the whole day is quite
depressing, I went for an unpaid internship because I needed a job and having a
done a degree that they do not believe in at home was not helping.
No one told me the industry I love so much, the job I want ain't so glamorous if you don't know people. I have gone from pillar to post hoping that they will eventually take me in. I have done so many odd jobs just in the name of passion. However, as years go by I have realised that passion ain't enough if it's not gonna put bread on the table. Age started to work against me, still being under mama's care, running to the bread tin as my lil sister, being financially dependent on my mom is not the glamour I envisioned.
If I knew then what I know now
No one ever
told me that I am doing a degree that has an 80/20 percent chance of ever
getting a stable job. An 80/20 percent chance of doing what I truly love.
Eighty percent settle for what comes their way to a point of changing their
career paths and some within the 80 percent continue the hustling. They do not
truly understand the frustration of the 80% out there. The 20% that is
fortunate, continue saying do not lose hope, not knowing that it is a tough
industry. You rejoice if the first place you intern in give you a permanent post
or a fixed contract.
Moving from one
space to another got to me. It got me thinking if passion is the way to go.
Should I just settle for any crappy job offered to me because I cannot keep on
rely on mom to support me. To fund my lifestyle (which is non-existent at this
point).
Disappearing from the public space
You become
anti-social as the masses would say, they do not understand that socialising is
financially daunting. You become content with the indoor life because that is
all you can afford. Passion starts to haunt you, as you continue doing none
paying jobs, because everywhere you go they shove experience to your face.
I believe I
might have been too impatience, to a point of landing in four different
environments in a year, two looked promising but the space wasn't conducive
enough for my creative flow. Perfection landed on my doorstep but there was
something missing. If only I was told that when you get what you want, high
chances you will hate the space and all you gotta do is suck it in. On the
other hand, you might get the perfect space but the job ain't what you want.
The school you choose does not always guarantee a brighter tomorrow
Life as a
graduate from one of the top Universities in South Africa has made me question
the reality I was told; "Go to university X & Y and you'll be in a
better space of being hired after graduation. You won't even spend a year at
home before you get the perfect ideal job, and you shall see the fruits of your
labour.”
Four years at
the edge: sweat, tears, suicidal thoughts, what kept me going was the idea of a
perfect tomorrow. If I knew then what I have experienced I would have chosen
another degree, and passion would have followed. Life ain't fun when you have
no control of your situation, knocking at every door, and having all of them
shut in your face.
I lost hope,
even though the spark in my eyes is still there, I ended up going back to my
childhood dream- as a dreamer, there are billion things I have to study.
"Passion took me out of my comfort zone, I was no longer floating through life, but I experienced a struggle that was set for me."
By: T. Sibiya
T-Angelz Creations
1 comment:
Passion can either shut you down or make you. Perfect or district you. Brighten or leave a shadow over you. The idea of struggles experienced after varsity will humble your soul, pierce into heart, taunt your emotions, derail your dreams, reduce friendship, kill your social life and leave you feeling like a cracked drum. Thinking of the pain stiffens my heart. I can feel the pain in my chest, can you feel it? Yes, it's a terrible feeling. The sun does shine after Dineo. Nomakanjani
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