Melissa569 Posted January 15, 2010 Report Posted January 15, 2010 (edited) Ok, so my situation is that I am currently unemployed, and I really think I need to get into office work as soon as possible. I was wondering if there was any way the church might be able to help.I have a really fussy gallbladder (but I fall between the cracks on insurance, so can’t get it removed). It causes back pain on the right side when it acts up. But not constantly, usually after standing too long, and/or a while of physical strain. I also have scoliosis (a sort of lop-sided spine), you can’t tell by looking at me, but X-rays show a slightly abnormal lean to the side. Both of these have kept me from being able to work the labor jobs (like food service, and jobs where I’m doing heavy lifting, or not allowed to sit down for several hours). I've done them for a short time, but I would eventually have to quit, because the pain was slowing me down significantly, and my bosses would get angry. Basically, after about 20 minutes of standing, lifting, etc., it REALLY starts to hurt. So bad, I frequently have to sneak off to the bathroom, and lay on the floor, and I often cry when it gets really bad. I’ve tried pain killers, they don’t work.But I’m really good on the computer, so working with one, and running a few errands here and there wouldnt be a problem. So that’s why I really want to get into office work, because I don’t want to stay unemployed, or depend on someone else (I hate that). I also don't want to just stay home and collect dissability (for one, they don't pay enough to live on, and two, its almost impossible to get, especially when you're young). I’m not sure if I can go to the local community college for training, because we don’t really have extra tuition money, and I don’t qualify for the grants. Problem is, most office jobs (especially in this bad economy) require either experience, training, or both. And I don't have any. I was looking on the LDS main website, and I found the following pages: Career Rehab:Individualized Vocational Assessment Process Career Training:Who Does Deseret Industries Help? So I was wondering, has anyone ever gone through these routes to get career training? Can the church help you get training, if you can’t afford it? I’m just looking for a way out of this impossible rut, lol. Edited January 15, 2010 by Melissa569 Quote
pam Posted January 15, 2010 Report Posted January 15, 2010 Talk to your employment rep in your ward. Quote
Melissa569 Posted January 15, 2010 Author Report Posted January 15, 2010 Hmmm, I will have to do that! Having recently returned, I didn't know we had those :) Quote
pam Posted January 15, 2010 Report Posted January 15, 2010 Each ward is supposed to have one. If yours doesn't..ask your Bishop about it. I know the Church has employment helps. Quote
BenRaines Posted January 15, 2010 Report Posted January 15, 2010 Providentliving.org is a great church resource. Lots of employment help there. If ward doesn't have employment specialist stake does. Ben Raines Quote
miztrniceguy Posted January 15, 2010 Report Posted January 15, 2010 If there are any call centers in your area it might be something you could do. Answer phones, and work on a computer. There are probably some in your area. I got hired the day after I went to a resume workshop at the LDS employment center. Quote
bytebear Posted January 15, 2010 Report Posted January 15, 2010 Our Stake has a career night once a month where those looking for jobs can network. See if your stake or ward has something similar. Quote
jadams_4040 Posted January 15, 2010 Report Posted January 15, 2010 Ok, so my situation is that I am currently unemployed, and I really think I need to get into office work as soon as possible. I was wondering if there was any way the church might be able to help.I have a really fussy gallbladder (but I fall between the cracks on insurance, so can’t get it removed). It causes back pain on the right side when it acts up. But not constantly, usually after standing too long, and/or a while of physical strain. I also have scoliosis (a sort of lop-sided spine), you can’t tell by looking at me, but X-rays show a slightly abnormal lean to the side. Both of these have kept me from being able to work the labor jobs (like food service, and jobs where I’m doing heavy lifting, or not allowed to sit down for several hours). I've done them for a short time, but I would eventually have to quit, because the pain was slowing me down significantly, and my bosses would get angry. Basically, after about 20 minutes of standing, lifting, etc., it REALLY starts to hurt. So bad, I frequently have to sneak off to the bathroom, and lay on the floor, and I often cry when it gets really bad. I’ve tried pain killers, they don’t work.But I’m really good on the computer, so working with one, and running a few errands here and there wouldnt be a problem. So that’s why I really want to get into office work, because I don’t want to stay unemployed, or depend on someone else (I hate that). I also don't want to just stay home and collect dissability (for one, they don't pay enough to live on, and two, its almost impossible to get, especially when you're young). I’m not sure if I can go to the local community college for training, because we don’t really have extra tuition money, and I don’t qualify for the grants. Problem is, most office jobs (especially in this bad economy) require either experience, training, or both. And I don't have any. I was looking on the LDS main website, and I found the following pages: Career Rehab:Individualized Vocational Assessment Process Career Training:Who Does Deseret Industries Help? So I was wondering, has anyone ever gone through these routes to get career training? Can the church help you get training, if you can’t afford it? I’m just looking for a way out of this impossible rut, lol. Trust me on this; talk to your stake president.:) Quote
Melissa569 Posted January 15, 2010 Author Report Posted January 15, 2010 (edited) Wow, I didn't even know all this was a possibility. Can't wait until next sunday, so I can ask about it all :) Question: Stake? What's that? Been out of swing for several years, lol Edited January 15, 2010 by Melissa569 Quote
hordak Posted January 15, 2010 Report Posted January 15, 2010 I don't mean to be the "bearer of bad news" but do you have specific office skills? (E.G. Billing and coding, altus, legal research and writing, blue book citation. etc. ) Everyone who graduated from high school since the late 90s has computer skills, if you're referring to word, excel, powerpoint etc. You need something that distinguishes you from the rest. Perhaps it is time to look into an education for an office type job? Quote
FunkyTown Posted January 15, 2010 Report Posted January 15, 2010 There are various 'Call Center' style jobs that you can get that would be fairly well guaranteed. They don't pay very well, but they're a stepping stone in to the jobs you want. Convergys, for instance, is probably somewhere in your town and would probably hire you to start the next day. Quote
miztrniceguy Posted January 16, 2010 Report Posted January 16, 2010 Gosh Funky....I guess I don't make much money then....considering that for 2009 my gross was almost 50k plus med,dental,vision, 401k, hcsa,...etc. I'm sure she wouldn't want to make such a piddling wage. Quote
bytebear Posted January 16, 2010 Report Posted January 16, 2010 Question: Stake? What's that? Been out of swing for several years, lolA Stake is a collection of Wards (and Branches). It is headed by a Stake President, just as a ward is headed by a Bishop. Quote
Melissa569 Posted January 16, 2010 Author Report Posted January 16, 2010 A Stake is a collection of Wards (and Branches). It is headed by a Stake President, just as a ward is headed by a Bishop.Ahh, thank you :) Quote
Melissa569 Posted January 16, 2010 Author Report Posted January 16, 2010 I don't mean to be the "bearer of bad news" but do you have specific office skills? (E.G. Billing and coding, altus, legal research and writing, blue book citation. etc. )Everyone who graduated from high school since the late 90s has computer skills, if you're referring to word, excel, powerpoint etc. You need something that distinguishes you from the rest.Perhaps it is time to look into an education for an office type job?Yeah, that's what I was asking about, the training. It says on one of those pages/links I posted, that they can help you get the training, if its needed. Quote
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