I Quit My Dream Job In The Middle Of A Global Pandemic

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3 years ago

Once again, I was laid off in my fashion career. The fourth time, to be exact. Then a miracle happened: The universe presented me with the gift of choice.

Thirty hours later, due to unprecedented circumstances, I was given the option to return to my job or remain laid off. For the first time in my career, fate was in my hands. I only ever experienced exiting companies on their terms, even when I wanted to be the one to leave.

My experience as a handbag designer at Tommy Hilfiger was the healthiest in this cutthroat industry. The rare work culture, founded on autonomy and work-life balance, was a dream combination.

It is here where authenticity is encouraged. It is here where I was able to pursue hobbies other than fashion. It is here where I was able to continue dreaming outside of this dream job and eventually discovered a passion for writing.

After years of therapy and prioritizing my mental health, I was able to navigate this fourth layoff as it happened. I understood the logistics of restructuring within the team not to take it personally while simultaneously feeling the grief that comes with rejection. To grieve rejection is part of the human experience I used to reward myself for avoiding.

Honoring my feelings allowed for me to break the fourth wall with the executive vice president. Having nothing to lose, I shared my departure from the industry to follow the next chapter of my life as a mental health and wellness writer, a path I was secretly exploring the past year. He congratulated me on my next journey and sent me warm wishes.

To my surprise, within 30 hours later, the executive vice president called to offer my job back due to unforeseen events. I now stood at a crossroad in my life: Return to a position providing comfort, security, and opportunity for growth or walk towards a path of uncertainty as described a few days prior.

Over the past year, I felt my passion for writing overpower my love for designing. It was a strange feeling I never thought I’d encounter. To return to safety amid a global pandemic was tempting, and I was grateful to be welcomed back, but I could no longer ignore my burning desire to leap into the wild unknown.

The beauty of the wild unknown is that I have been here before. I was here at 22 years old, a recent college graduate who just moved to New York City with a powerful determination to break into the fashion industry.

My tenacity carried me through the doors of Michael Kors, Coach, Marc Jacobs, Tory Burch, and finally my dream job designing men’s accessories at Tommy Hilfiger. Had I not embraced the wild unknown, I would never tap into my full potential as a designer. At 22 years old, I silenced the noise of those who did not believe in me and followed my intuition.

As I made my way through the industry, I became addicted to external validation. I inhaled the glamour of fashion week and extravagant holiday parties. I roleplayed the obedient assistant designer to appease executives to level up in the game of politics. I silenced myself in the face of dehumanizing treatment from female leaders twice my age. I began to please everyone but myself and soon sank into a paralyzing pool of depression at the age of 27. By the time I reached Tommy Hilfiger, I was severely suicidal and a master at disguising it. I believe the universe led me there so I could heal and return to myself.

My first week at Tommy was mind-blowing in the way every person was treated like a human being. At previous companies, I was conditioned to believe my worth was attached to my title. This belief did not exist here. I was seen, heard, and valued in the same way as someone in a higher position.

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Comments

Very interesting and inspiring article... There is no one can start... Just be focused

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3 years ago

That's a very nice article anyways. Passion can develop at any po it in time when there is need for it to.

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3 years ago