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My name is Vania Awuah. I attend Regent University and I’m majoring in Industrial Organizational Psychology. I have my bachelors in Psychology. I am currently looking for jobs in my field such as consultant or human capital jobs. I have about 1-2 years in Human Resources but it is hard for jobs to accept me with my field. I let Regent University career service help me with my resume but I haven’t been able to find a job or get any job offers. Is there’s any advice or anything I can do? Regent University @
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I have often wondered how people are able to successfully pull that off. I can see if you are working two full time jobs but different hours at each, but how you do two at the same time is beyond me. I guess I have always had really busy jobs that wouldn't have allowed me the time to work a second job.
Overemployment isn't for everyone. It's a complex strategy with potential risks. If you're curious about it, check out r/overemployed. It might give you a better idea of what it entails.
If you can adjust your schedule for ample opportunity to allow yourself time to run, stretch, eat, sleep, have fun, etc, without feeling overwhelmed when you're starting a career, or building an income, or quality of life standard, then keeping two or more jobs is possible. However, if you're feeling overwhelmed, it might just lead to exhaustion, possible health problems, & basically expending all your energy, then feeling too overwhelmed to meet the standard of the quality of life you are looking to build. However, Looking for higher paying work opportunities, that might allow you a lifestyle as well as work that covers living expenses, that doesn't overextend your health capacity or your energy level, and that doesn't hinder your self-management preferences, might be more applicable to the career & lifestyle you are trying to build. Looking for those kinds of opportunities might be more to your advantage then taking on too much at one time.
Sometimes, If double dutching is a necessity, employers will sometimes allow you to customize your work schedule to be able to keep both forms of employment. So your workload doesn't seem as overwhelming.
How badly to you want get fired from both and to die of exhaustion while homeless?
I’ve seen someone get caught and fired.
What is the point of doing it? If it’s purely for a money - that find one challenging job, for example at AWS or at other big tech in a critical project that pays at least double the regular jobs.
Yes, you will be expected to put 50-60 hours per week to maintain high pace and you will learn a ton while legally receiving your $400k plus for the first 4 years if you can make it. Instead of simulating, faking, juggling 🤹and requesting meetings to be moved at both jobs just to make it possible.
From tax standpoint and benefits standpoint you will be better off taking a single legal high paying job rather than doing that fraud, that I can guarantee wouldn’t last.
You keep saying legal. There’s nothing illegal about having 2 jobs. Thousands of people do it. I certainly started my working life with more than 1 job.