Hmmm… I guess I’m not really sure what this means. I do know that I have a strong tendency to be picky about the type of job I want or the kind of work I’m doing. I am usually the first to pick up the phone when my friend calls (or any friend for that matter) and tell them to have a cup of tea.
This is the one that I always seem to pick up on, and it applies to almost any kind of job. The difference is that I’m pretty much always looking for a new gig.
This is where I have to agree with the person who said hospitality consulting is the hardest job to find. A lot of the jobs are just the opposite of hospitality consulting. Some of the jobs that I have found are pretty good, and they are exactly what I am looking for. But I have found that the ones that do not seem to quite fit my personality and type of work, tend to be the ones that I am the least interested in.
I know that it is hard to find a job that you love and that you are willing to do, and that you can actually sustain it. But that’s not what I am looking for. I am looking for a job that I can do for a long time. One that will give me the time to learn and grow. I have a few positions that I would love to be doing, but I simply can’t find the right fit.
I am not a fan of hospitality consulting jobs, and I know that I will probably be burned out after a few weeks. I know that I want to stay more in the corporate world of consulting, but I think that I would have to be a little less corporate in my work, and that is not something I am necessarily willing to compromise. I want a job that will give my skills time to grow.
You’ve probably noticed that I don’t really like the term “hospice consultant” because it implies that it is a job that is solely for the use of those seeking to make money off the death of a loved one, or the care of a terminally ill loved one. I don’t think this is really the case.
No, it’s not. I work in the hospitality industry, which is a very difficult industry to be in because its so stressful and full of death and dying. Most people that I know are actually quite skilled in their work and make a decent living, but they are in the hospitality industry because they were born and raised in it.
Its not hard working, its harder work. Every time you go into a job you are facing a number of decisions that you have to make that can either make or break your life. Whether you choose to be a chef, a babysitter, a waitress, a barback, or a bartender, hospitality consulting is a decision that you have to make everyday and every single day. To make that decision you have to live in a world that is very different than the one you grew up in.
So hospitality consulting jobs are about the same as a job at a grocery store as far as the decision making part. You make sure you buy the food you need to make sure you don’t run out. You make sure you don’t have to go and buy the food you are going to eat. You make sure you don’t overstock and you pay for what you think you need to make sure you don’t run out.
This is the most difficult part. When I worked at an airport, they used to have a job that was more like a job at a grocery store. They would do everything. You would go in and choose the food you wanted to eat. You would go in and choose the type of food you wanted to eat. You would go in and choose whether you wanted to pick the drink you wanted to drink.