Suddenly it had gone from a hot summer's day in Prague to a cold
dark winter's night in Cardiff. Cars ploughed though the driving rain, their
headlights glistening in the gloom like fairy lights. Those caught unawares
were sent scurrying for cover as rivers ran in what once were roads. Summer
dresses clung to bodies, sandals proved inadequate protection while soaked
shirts revealed hairy and not so hairy chests.
I was sheltering under a bus stop watching my counterparts on the other side of the road being splashed by careless drivers cruising too fast down the river. The poor things had thought they were safe under the shelter, they hadn’t figured on the cars drenching them.
I was sheltering under a bus stop watching my counterparts on the other side of the road being splashed by careless drivers cruising too fast down the river. The poor things had thought they were safe under the shelter, they hadn’t figured on the cars drenching them.
I had a decision to make, and finally I knew how The Clash felt;
should I stay or should I go? If I stayed, I would be late and that would not
make a good impression but if I go, I'd get soaked to the skin also not the
best look for a job interview. I looked at the sky for a clue to the weather,
the majority was dark grey slate but one corner was a glimpse of light; enough
to take a risk? Maybe. But then again the wind was whipping in from the west
and the brightness was away to the east and moving further away from me; escape
was impossible.
Why hadn't I brought my brolly I mused, not that those with
umbrellas were faring much better; the combination of wind and rain was making
resistance futile.
Time was ticking, I had to make a decision. It was now or never. I
decided to go for it. I hopped across the puddles on the road and already I was
regretting my decision. I could feel my shirt sticking to my skin as it was
immediately drenched in water, my hair clung to my face and my socks were
already sopping wet in my waterlogged shoes. But it was too late now, no
turning back, I was wet I may as well get wetter. It was only a five-minute
walk but it felt like 5 hours. I tried to avoid the puddles but it became clear
that there were no puddles, just one expanse of water. This was a foolish escapade
but I had to get to that interview.
I squelched into the posh building looking like a failed contestant
on Total Wipeout. Rain was running down my face, running down my legs, there
wasn’t one part of me that was dry. The receptionist looked at me askance when
I told him why I was there. What did he expect? Had he never seen anyone wet
before? Could he not see it was Armageddon outside? I was shown to a waiting
room and managed to nip into the toilet and dry my face on a paper towel before being called into the interview room. I apologised for my look and they
said they quite understood but I could tell by the tone of their voices they
didn’t.
The interview was awful, the aircon was on full blast and I sat
shivering in my wet clothes trying to answer questions while trying to control
my breathing. Eventually it was over and I wrote it off as a soggy waste of
time. And so it proved to be, by the time I’d walked home, drying off in the now
beautiful sunshine, they’d already managed to send me a rejection message, I’d
half expected to get it in a bottle.
Sometimes there are situations in life when no matter what you do it is always wrong:( If I was going to a job interview today, in this scorching hotness, I would end up sweaty, smelly, with my make up smeared all over the face, wet dress clung to the body....
ReplyDeleteFuck them all... he should go on holiday
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hr0bGKB0ZEc
Nicely described :-)
ReplyDeleteHow many times can you get rejected? Sometimes you just have to swallow the fact they don't want you and that's it. Just turn And go away. You have tried enough, or even too many times.
ReplyDelete