'Being Unemployed For So Long, I Was Kind Of Going Crazy'

'Being Unemployed For So Long I Was Kind Of Going Crazy'
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Betsy Andrews, 54, is a newly hired substitute teacher at the Seattle Public Schools district.

I got laid off from my high school teaching job in June 2012. I've been between jobs before and I started looking for other teaching jobs even before I was laid off but I was surprised I could not find a job.

I got some interviews but didn't get the job. I have a lot of experience and education which puts me relatively high up on the salary schedule. I'm also 54, which I mention that because I'm reading about all of these people like me who are fairly well educated, especially in their 50s, who can’t find a job.

I was getting unemployment, and as it got later in the fall I started going outside education to look for jobs in other fields. I felt like I have generally good connections. I've lived in Seattle a long time and know a lot of people. And still I could not find a job. I got job coaching. I did LinkedIn. I went down to the unemployment office. I applied for jobs I was clearly qualified for, jobs I was overqualified for and getting nothing.

I was doing big-time networking. This is not all just sending resumes out in space. If you don't have a job, employers are going to suspect why. My job loss was definitely due to budget cuts. But sometimes it raises suspicions. It's just that the job market is crummy.

I talked to a friend who works for the Seattle Public Schools district. She was telling me the year I was looking for jobs initially -- so that's fall of 2012 -- she was saying that their school hired three new teachers but they were directly out of college. I think some of that happens because connections are made. There's that and plus you can work new teachers 16 hours a day. Experienced teachers won't do that.

When I did job coaching with a company here in the Seattle area they said they get 100 to 200 resumes for every listing they post. They talk about how great Seattle is, like our employment is better. And I'd say that's a little bit true now, but I think it's worse for people who are older who have experience and are highly educated. I know several people, highly educated, in their 40s, late 40s, early 50s, maybe, and I definitely think there's age discrimination and I think people can figure that out by your resume.

Being unemployed for so long I was kind of going crazy. Then I heard of a program through a community college and Vigor Shipyards where they pay for people to go to school to learn shipyard welding because there's a shortage of shipyard welders. I was like, you know what, I'm not getting any place. I really want to work and it's a unique program. I can't not work. So I signed up for that and started that in January.

For me it would've been a step back at first in pay and everything but I also could see career potential. Then the Seattle Public Schools district called me for a job I probably applied for in October. I'm now on a full-teacher contract as a building designated substitute. I've been so lucky.

I am fortunate because I have amazingly supportive family and wonderfully supportive friends and those are the people who I care about and who know me and who know I'm not lazy or all of those stereotypes about people who are out of work. As a result, I feel like it's my job to stand up and describe how difficult it really is out there because there are so many people who can't out of fear of being criticized or shamed.

As told to Eugene Mulero.

Betsy's story is part of a Huffington Post series profiling Americans who work hard and yet still struggle to make ends meet. Learn more about other individuals' experiences here.

Have a similar story you'd like to share? Email us at workingpoor@huffingtonpost.com or give us a call at (408) 508-4833, and you can record your story in your own words. Please be sure to include your name and phone number.

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Before You Go

SAY WHAT?! The Strangest Bills Of 2013
Fed Up (01 of11)
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January 2013: Mississippi state Reps. Jeff Smith (R), pictured, and Gary Chism (R) proposed legislation that would create a committee whose sole purpose is to nullify federal laws the state does not want to follow. The bill fell in committee in early February. (credit:Mississippi House of Representatives )
Bye Bye, Health Care (02 of11)
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January 2013: Nebraska State Sen. Jeremy Nordquist (D) proposed a bill that would end all state health care benefits for elected officials -- including the governor. (credit:AP)
Senator Shrugged (03 of11)
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February 2013: Idaho state Sen. John Goedde (R) introduced legislation that would require every high school student in Idaho to read Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged -- a novel associated with conservatism and the tea party movement. (credit:Getty Images)
Ban This Ban (04 of11)
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Making Bank (05 of11)
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February 2013: The Virginia House of Delegates advanced legislation that could potentially lead to state-issued currency -- meaning Virginians would have their own special money. Two weeks after the House passed it, the bill fell in the state Senate. (credit:Getty Images)
Human-Animal What?!(06 of11)
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February 2013: Mississippi state Rep. William Tracy Arnold (R) proposed a ban on human-animal hybrids. The ban was included to restrict the research done on embryos, Arnold said, and is part of a larger measure that would restrict abortion, human cloning and assisted suicide. According to Open States, the bill fell on Feb. 5 in committee. (credit:Getty Images)
Stripped Down (07 of11)
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March 2013: Kansas state legislators discussed a bill that would have effectively banned strip clubs and lap dances in the state. The original bill went into graphic detail about what would and would not be allowed in gentleman's clubs and would outlaw lap dances, but was eventually struck down by a legislative committee. (credit:Getty Images)
Concealed Carry In The Capitol?(08 of11)
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March 2013: The Kansas State House of Representatives voted in March to allow concealed carry of guns in the state Capitol building. The bill was proposed by Rep. John Wilson (D), who said that though he doesn't support the legislation he sees it as an "inconsistancy" with other laws allowing concealed carry in schools, hospitals and other public buildings. The state's House and Senate passed the measure in March, and Gov. Sam Brownback (R) signed it in mid-April. (credit:Getty Images)
One Religion, Under God(09 of11)
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April 2013: North Carolina state Republicans proposed a bill that would allow the state to declare an official religion. The bill claimed that the First Amendment, separating church and state, only applies to the federal government. The bill was ultimately struck down by North Carolina House Speaker Thom Tillis (R), pictured. (credit:AP)
Unsustainable (10 of11)
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April 2013: Agenda 21, the United Nations' strategic action plan for sustainable development, sounds like a good thing, right? According to Missouri state lawmakers, far from it. The Missouri House of Representatives voted in April to ban Agenda 21, with opponent Rep. Scott Fitzpatrick (R) viewing it as a "conspiracy theory" that could affect zoning laws, seize private property and dictate the future of agriculture. (credit:Getty Images)
Wow(11 of11)
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April 2013: Washington state Sen. Sharon Brown (R) proposed a bill that would allow businesses in her state to deny service to gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered customers on the grounds of religious differences.