March And April In Retrospect

It was one of those March days when the sun shines hot and the wind blows cold: when it is summer in the light, and winter in the shade.
― Charles Dickens, Great Expectations

2017 March & April In Retrospect

MARCH IN RETROSPECT

March was a roller-coaster month. I was on winter break, spent my time at home with my family, fly back to Japan during the second week for a job interview, got rejected *sob sob* a week later and took a flight on the same week to attend a job fair at Tokyo. Fuh! Just typing it made me tired.

Then April came.

March April retrospect
April In Retrospect

APRIL IN RETROSPECT

HANAMI AT HIMEJI CASTLE

Last hanami in Himeji with everyone. We didn’t prepare much for food unlike the past three years *no nasi lemak or ayam goreng Joyah* but because we were together the lack of food didn’t matter much. Cough.

AWAJI ISLAND TRIP

An impromptu plan. Had a blast eating Hotto Motto bento in the car and taking pictures like crazy.

NEW CAMERA

I kindly gave my old camera to my sister because I wanted to buy a new camera lololol. Had a tough time deciding between Olympus and Canon but in the end, I chose Olympus. Yoroshiku!

March April retrospect
new camera yay!

NEW PART-TIME JOB

I have officially become a night owl. My shift starts at midnight and ends the next morning. My biological clock is a mess because who on earth sleeps during daytime but the pay is good. I’m torn between money and sleep.

JOB HUNTING

I went MIA from blogging because I was left feeling bitter and devastated after continuous rejection from doing job hunting. I don’t know how the process is in Malaysia but in Japan it is normal, I repeat normal to apply for jobs at 50 companies.

And the process is not simple just by sending your resume to HR and wait for the interview. First, you have to attend the mandatory companies seminar. After all the hassle going to seminar *this is where money would flow like water because the seminar’s location usually hold in big cities like Tokyo or Osaka* you send your application, an entry sheet; Japan’s version of resume where you write personal details and why you want to work here, strength and weakness etc. Then, here comes the most frightening and anxious moment in your life, the multiple levels of interview.

Summing things up, here how job hunting went in Japan.

Seminar -> Entry Sheet -> First Interview -> Second Interview -> Final Interview -> Job Offer

You can read more on job hunting process in Japan in this article. The writer did a great job explaining the process in details.

Anyway, good luck everyone! May the odds be ever in your favour!

Sometimes not getting what you want is a brilliant stroke of luck.
LORII MYERS

March April retrospect
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24 comments
  1. wow ~ that tough to get a job in Japan . Whatever it is , don’t give up dear . Keep moving forward . =)

  2. Didn’t know that job hunting in Japan is THAT hard and complicated, lol. Please don’t give up, wishing you the best and get the job you wanted.
    Also, I couldn’t imagine how exhausted it’ll be to have a night shift. Take care of your health for that part, Rasya ;’)

    1. I KNEW it’S going to be hard but knowing and doing it certainly felt different lol. Thank you lya xD. If I think I couldn’t stand the job I would just find another one

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