I’ve been thinking a lot lately about blessings in disguise.
I experienced a very difficult life change when I was 24 years old that I am
now very grateful for. Here’s my story:
The year was 2001, and my husband and I were newly married.
I had a job in media planning for an advertising agency and my husband worked
as an account executive at another agency across town. While the job didn’t
have anything to do with what I studied in college (it involved a lot of math
and number crunching!), I had a steady salary and good benefits. We made the
decision to purchase a small starter house in a beautiful neighborhood. It
wasn’t huge, and it needed some TLC, but we were thrilled when we were approved
for the loan and moved in.
Two months later, I lost my job, along with more than 100
other people. I walked out of work with my belongings in a box and a heavy
heart. I had no idea how we would make ends meet and keep our bills paid. I
felt like a failure.
I spent the first few months sending out countless cover
letters and resumes and did a little freelance copywriting with some other
agency folks who had also been laid off. I collected unemployment. Then the
work dried up and interview after interview failed to result in a job.
Desperate one afternoon, I wandered into a local restaurant and told them I had
experience waiting tables and needed a job. Luckily, they hired me on the spot.
The first time I saw the movie “Office Space” I laughed my head off because
Jennifer Anniston’s character could very well have been me at that point in my
life, flair and all.
It was a hard time for me. I was very humbled. My husband
and I worked different schedules and rarely saw each other. I wrote a lot of
really bad poetry and fiddled around with a few short stories as a way to pass
the time, but never did any serious writing. I was too depressed. One night my
husband came to see me at work, with an e-mail printout in his hand. I had a
nibble for a job. A local public relations agency five minutes from our house
had a position to fill and wanted me to come in for an interview. I almost
jumped for joy right then and there. Actually, I probably did. I was tired of
spending my nights cleaning out sweet tea urns and rolling silverware for very
little tips.
Almost a year after getting laid off from work, I landed a
job at that public relations firm. Not only did it pay me better than my ad
agency job, but it got me back to writing. I wrote every day—press releases,
magazine and brochure copy and product taglines and descriptions. I will
forever be grateful for that opportunity, because I might still be running competitive reports for a tobacco account and dreaming of being a writer one day if I hadn’t accepted it. Even though that time period was a very hard time for me, I now consider it
a blessing in disguise. I was meant to write for a living, and that experience
helped get me back on track.
What blessings in disguise have you experienced in your
life?
Renee Roberson is an award-winning writer and editor who
blogs at Renee’s Pages.
9 comments:
Renee, thanks for this piece. It's exactly what I needed to read today! You are an inspiration for those of us who struggle, to hang in there. I truly believe everything is part of a larger plan and that each of us will have our day! Thank you for sharing your story!
I have so many blessings in disguise, and I am humbled by each one. Life events always bring us to where we're supposed to be...if we pay attention.
Great article and reminder to keep our hearts on our life intentions and trust that there is a greater plan!
Renee--Yes, when one door closes, another door (or a window) opens.
A few summers ago I was very depressed. S**t with a sibling (drug addiction to pain killers) was tearing me up. I sat on the couch for part of the summer and the next part of the summer, I started a blog. I made lots of friends around the country (and the world) through blogging. My depression was definitely a blessing...
Thanks for the post, Renee.
Wonderful story, Renee! So many times we go through tough times in life and wonder "why"? I've been through my share, but always came out of them a stronger person. I'm so happy your difficult year turned out to be "a blessing" as they say!
Renee:
This is a great story. Thanks for sharing it with us. I will have to think about my blessings in disguise. . .and will get back to you. :)
Renee,
Thank you for sharing your inspirational story.
Hugs,
~Crystal
Thanks so much for all your kind words, everyone! I was having a discouraging week with my writing when I happened to think, "Well, you probably wouldn't even be writing for a living if it hadn't been for..." Too bad it's taken me almost 12 years to realize it:)
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