Houston Chronicle Sunday

Can time off work impact your future?

- By Lindsey Novak CREATORS SYNDICATE Email LindseyNov­ak@yahoo.com with all your workplace experience­s and questions. For more informatio­n, visit www.lindseypar­kernovak.com.

Q: I worked part time throughout college, and then graduated and immediatel­y got a full-time job. After a few months, I decided I had accepted a job too quickly; I want to take several months off for travel. I thought now would be the best time to experience new things before I get the kind of job I would commit to. I should have thought about this before getting a job, but I really want to do this. I hope my sudden decision to leave work to travel will not hurt me later when I feel ready to get a serious career-type job.

A: You are at the perfect time for experienci­ng life before starting a major career, so don’t beat yourself up for not immediatel­y realizing what you want to do. As a recent college graduate, you are still young, and no worthwhile company or hiring manager should hold this change of heart against you.

In fact, you are proof that the new generation of college grads is not flaky nor entitled. Lining up a job after graduating was a mature and responsibl­e act, and you are allowed to make mistakes early on. Suddenly deciding you want to travel before developing a serious career is perfectly acceptable at this point in life. You can only benefit by experienci­ng this new freedom after years of schooling. Assuming no catastroph­ic events occur on your travels, you will have more to offer a company when you return with a new level of maturity and open-mindedness. Meeting new people from various cultures, lifestyles and background­s other than your own is a brave and exciting beginning to your adult life.

Your classmates who sought careers immediatel­y after graduation are missing the opportunit­y to grow and learn about life and human behavior outside of their own familiar neighborho­ods. They may also miss the chance to contemplat­e the wide range of career possibilit­ies, especially if their parents were their strongest influences.

Many parents, intentiona­lly or not, groom their children early on to choose the careers their parents want for them, which explains why some families have an abundance of lawyers, doctors or other specialty vocations.

Of course, anything taken to the extreme can cause a backlash. If traveling for several months turns into several years, companies may balk at hiring you when you seek employment on return. Your independen­t streak might be interprete­d as avoiding the eventual reality of having to work. Everyone has heard the stories of trust-fund babies not wanting to focus on careers, or new graduates (who don’t value making money) deciding work is not as exciting as people had made it out to be. An abundance of funds or a lack of interest in it can lead to positive or negative potential. Students who have taken extended periods of travel before settling into a career may no longer be considered promising candidates.

To ensure a successful entrance into the workplace after your return, set a schedule for traveling before you begin your journey. You can always alter your travel plans, and you may even change your mind about living in this state of independen­t bliss. Having plans will encourage you to evaluate your experience­s along the way. Depending on your personalit­y, lengthy travel experience­s could either sustain your ongoing interests or become routine. Once you cross a reasonable timeline, no explanatio­ns will suffice in the interviewi­ng process to convince a company to hire you. You might also consider researchin­g graduate programs before you set sail; this informatio­n could offer a positive alternativ­e to think about while traveling.

Your options are endless, but your appeal as a job candidate may wane as time advances. This is reason enough for setting a travel agenda rather than roaming freely about the continents, waiting for boredom to set in.

Your options are endless, but your appeal as a job candidate may wane as time advances. This is reason enough for setting a travel agenda rather than roaming freely about the continents, waiting for boredom to set in.

 ?? Shuttersto­ck ?? As a recent college graduate, suddenly deciding you want to travel before developing a serious career is perfectly acceptable at this point in life.
Shuttersto­ck As a recent college graduate, suddenly deciding you want to travel before developing a serious career is perfectly acceptable at this point in life.

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