enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

read part two here.

My transition to college was average, I'd say.

I didn't love it so much from the start. I had really enjoyed high school, so I missed my friends. I missed my house. I missed shopping at Target with my mom. But like most things, it became easier with time and I settled into the new normal.

My first college class ever, on a Monday morning, was a freshman business symposium, taught by the future business school dean. He brought in high-powered business people to tell us their stories. We took notes and asked questions. I don't even remember if there was a test at the end. I think it was pass-fail and we just had to turn in an essay about one of the lectures.

I learned two things from this class that I carried forward.

The first is that everyone makes it up. Not one person who stood up and talked explained said "I followed all the rules and went from A to B to C and then TA-DA! I got here!" Nope. Everyone's story was curvy and long and involved missteps and mistakes. There is not a path that works. There is not one way to success. If you think you don't have the answers it's because no one does. That was incredibly encouraging.

The second is that you have to work. Work often and work everywhere. Get as much experience as possible in as many areas as possible. I took this to heart and over the course of my four years at college worked for at least a few months at seven different companies.

Over the next few years I took my required classes and narrowed things down. I decided that the film program was not for me because I realized if you wanted to work in the entertainment industry you had to be okay working for free or almost nothing for years. I was not okay with that.

I loved my accounting classes. I hated any classes with group projects (I shouldn't admit that). I loved math (still do). I took a public speaking class where I learned how to develop strong power point slides (an under-valued talent that came in handy at WDS last summer). I took GE courses in Astronomy and Gender Studies. I took yoga, web design (hands down the best career decision I made in college) and film photography. I watched SC win a lot of football games (fight on).

Almost by default, I decided my concentration would be in marketing. There were a lot of group projects (the worst) but also a lot of interesting case studies (which for the most part I find interesting). Marketing felt safe because it could go so many different directions and wasn't a really "locked-in" emphasis. In retrospect, I should have taken an entrepreneurship class or two (but not really because it would have overwhelmed me and bummed me out).

Outside of class, college was so fun. That's how I remember it: fun (man, I'm a descriptive writer). I also had a lot of free time. Enough that I decided to start a blog to chronicle my random adventures and thoughts. On Christmas Day, 2005, while home from college on break, I created eliseblaha.typepad.com. I called the blog enJOY it which was play on my middle name but also sort of a guiding mantra.

People always ask how a new blog gets readers and the answer is…I have no idea.

For the first few years, I wasn't too concerned with who was reading as I was concerned with what I was writing. I wanted to write the blog much more than I wanted people to read the blog. But in those early days, my parents were reading. My girlfriends were reading. I remember getting an email from Paul (who was just my friend's older brother at the time) that he had seen it and thought I was "funny." I had a link to the blog on my AIM profile (where Paul found it), on facebook (which was still just for college students) and on twopeasinabucket.com, the scrapbooking website I frequented regularly. Over time, my stats began to uptick (and by uptick, I mean I started getting a few hundred hits a day).

I blogged about five times a week but without real consistancy or photos. It was really like a journal for thoughts (like most blogs were back then) and I adored it. I haven't taken down a single post from the archives (even the ones written at three AM after more than a few drinks) and my only regret from the early days is that I chose the domain "eliseblaha." Unfortunately, when you're 20, you're not thinking about a possible name change down the line. If I did it again, I'd be "elisejoy.typepad.com."

Blogging was for me. It was the first thing (aside from reading) that really clicked. This is my medium. People talk all the time that "blogging is dead" or "blogging is over" or "Instagram killed the blog." And I hear it. I get it. But hey, I still love it. I love to write here. This box has been my home for so much longer than anything else. It was here before Paul. Before any "real" jobs. Before Ellerie. Before this site made any money, it made me happy. As long as I keep writing about what interests me, I don't think I'll ever "burn out."

But in college, the blog was just a hobby that I enjoyed (much like Flipcup and layering my tank tops). It was something to do on the side of my main goal.

I had returned to college my senior year as a woman on a mission. I was a career-fair-going, resume-tweaking nutcase. I was totally insane. Totally overwhelmed. Totally over-reacting. Totally panicked. I had so many interviews that fall. I had built a solid resume (you can see my summer 2007 resume here) and I emailed that damn thing off SO MANY TIMES. At least 100. I became an expert at writing cover letters. I got an decent amount of interviews (and was flown to Chicago, Scottsdale and San Francisco) to meet with great companies. And after each interview I knew before the handshake that I had blown it.

I couldn't land a "career" in the tall building if my life depended on it.

And, like most business majors in their senior year, I thought it did.

to be continued…read part four here.

Dottedline

Today on ELISE GETS CRAFTY I am chatting with blogger, Ali Ebright about running a successful food blog. Click here to subscribe or stream the episode from your computer here.

Posted in

32 responses to “this is my business story : part three.”

  1. alyssa Avatar
    alyssa

    I’m really enjoying this series, cause I am 20ish, about tho finish college and have no idea what I want to do!

    Like

  2. Leah Avatar

    Super entertaining, Elise. 🙂 I’m really curious — how did you know before the handshake at the end of the interviews, that you had blown it? Was it just a feeling?

    Like

  3. TrishMD Avatar

    Am loving YOUR story!

    Like

  4. Elise Avatar

    I always know. Never been surprised, I guess it’s a gut feeling. Mostly it comes from knowing if I would or wouldn’t hire this person (me).

    Like

  5. Lauren Linster Avatar

    Elise I love this story! I’m slowly coming to grasp with the whole “there is no path” thing. I thought it was simple: go to school, go to college, do well and get a good job. It’s so refreshing to see that there are other people out there who took alternate, less ‘traditional’ routes and are where they want to be. It makes me feel less like I missed something along the way. Can’t wait for the rest of the series!

    Like

  6. Sandi Keene Avatar

    Loving reading your journey. It is so well written!!

    Like

  7. Brianna Avatar
    Brianna

    This is so great. I love that you have a such a well-written story to tell.

    Like

  8. amber Avatar
    amber

    I am seriously enjoying this series. We’re the same age and yet our lives are so different. It’s interesting to see the story unfold.

    Like

  9. Rachelle Avatar

    Love this! I wish more people opened up about how they got to where they are now. I went from an advertising/PR degree to a non-profit to grad school for accounting to working at a CPA firm to quitting after just 1 year to pursue photography full time. There were SO many times that I felt lost and like a failure, but now I can see (yay hindsight) that every single part of my journey fits perfectly into making the business I have and the person I am now. Your story reminds me of both the Steve Jobs commencement address (http://news.stanford.edu/news/2005/june15/jobs-061505.html) and the Neil Gaiman one (http://www.uarts.edu/neil-gaiman-keynote-address-2012).

    Like

  10. Emily Avatar
    Emily

    Loving this journey, Elise. That lesson that there is not one path to success, no a to b, is priceless!

    Like

  11. lisa valinsky Avatar

    Elise! I love these posts and you’ve totally inspired me to start sharing my local food + farming path on my blog. Posts like this are super helpful for readers.
    Did you write all of these posts in advance or are you writing them as you go? Similarly, do you know where you’re headed with this series?

    Like

  12. Lauren Avatar

    I took the “traditional” path. College, grad school, job. But I still find your story so inspiring and also feel like I can take a lot from it even though we have totally different careers. It’s nice to have reminders every now and then that there is no “easy road” or one way to get somewhere. You’ve got to figure it out along the way.

    Like

  13. Kassandra Avatar
    Kassandra

    I’ve only been following you for about 6 months but this new series is really inspirational. Even though I’m 22, just got an interview for a Starbucks barista, and have no idea what I am gonna do with my future, I can see that sometimes, that’s the road you have to take. I have to take a leap and maybe start a blog even if I have no idea how to code or anything fancier then uploading photos. Thank you for making me realize you can survive even if your future is just as dark and long as the basement staircase! haha 🙂

    Like

  14. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    I’m still writing, but I’m about six posts ahead of today’s post. I know where I’m headed because it will end with me today and my goals for the next few years. 🙂

    Like

  15. Mel Avatar

    I love reading this story. Thanks for sharing.

    Like

  16. jenn Avatar
    jenn

    “Utilized conflict management skills daily” made me LOL!

    Like

  17. kristina Avatar

    I know I keep saying it, but I am so excited for you to write a book someday!!!
    I remember your posts from college (most of which seemed to involve “jack & diet coke”) and I sincerely hope you never delete your oldest archives (because they were – and still are – hilarious!). It must feel really amazing to look back and see (read) how far you’ve come. 🙂 xo

    Like

  18. Lori Avatar

    What is so fascinating to me about this story (and it truly is a great read) is that the LAST thing in the world I wanted when I was in college was to wear a suit and work in a tall building! 🙂 I wanted to do a thousand different things (speech path, nursing career, psychology, etc.), but wearing a suit and working in a building was not on that list. I love reading your winding path that has led you to where you are now!

    Like

  19. Collette Avatar

    Can I just say that I so enjoy your writing and sharing. Please don’t stop. I also like all the neat crafty things you share and of course your photos. Guess that means I like the blog as a whole. I digress.
    I fully relate to your experience with landing ‘the job’ and thinking life depended on it and I’m way older than you but I felt those pressures, ideals about the whole corporate thing, and well just landing a great job.
    I’m inspired with what you took away from all of it.

    Like

  20. B Avatar

    pageturner

    Like

  21. Sarah Milligan Avatar

    “Before this site made any money, it made me happy.” Love that – that right there is why it has been so successful!!
    Interesting that none of those interviews worked out. You were probably extremely hireable but life had other plans for you. 🙂

    Like

  22. Emily Avatar

    I remember someone once told me “nothing is ever wasted.” I appreciate that more and more. No matter how many twists and turns and detours I have taken (and will continue to take), I think my work and interaction with the world are better because of them.

    Like

  23. Michele H. Avatar
    Michele H.

    This.is.so.good Elise!
    I have to say that I see my 12 year old daughter in parts of your story. She is such a creative writer, just like you, so much so that she’ll ask me for story prompts and in 10-15 minutes, she’ll have a short story written that is so intriguing that it has me asking for more.
    She too loves math and is learning that she does not like working in groups:)
    Looking forward to reading more and hearing about your goals for the next few years.

    Like

  24. Sarah Avatar

    I love that you love blogging just because it’s fun. I started my blog in college too — in 1997, eek, hand-coded and all — and gave been doing it for 17 years not because it earns me money (it doesn’t earn me a cent) but just because I love it and love that outlet. I sometimes miss the days when blogs were just journals and not businesses.

    Like

  25. Katherine Avatar
    Katherine

    I’m really enjoying this. I’m a college senior. Though I’m headed to graduate school rather than “the real world,” these posts have been nice to read. Non-traditional success stories always keep my hopes up; even if things don’t go as planned, things can still work out!

    Like

  26. alli Avatar
    alli

    this series is so great…i am waiting patiently for the news about your first book. is that maybe your make 29 for october??;) if so, i hope you bumped it up to 2900 for the month!

    Like

  27. Simplyhonestsimplyreal Avatar

    I truly love reading these posts from you!! I started “blogging” when Xanga was popular back in the early 2000s! I keep kicking myself in the butt for not sticking with it! So many memories and life lessons that I would’ve loved to go back and read. Blogging will never die if there are still people like you and me who do it for themselves. Doing it for the very same reason that made us write our first blog post all those years ago! I can’t wait to see what happened next in your journey!

    Like

  28. Ashlee Avatar

    Currently a senior in college who is going through the dread crisis of what am I going to do? Plus, emailing out my resume might as well be put on my resume as something I excel at. I have loved so much reading your story thus far and can’t wait for the next installment!

    Like

  29. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    I’m jealous of your college experience. My 1st semester freshman year was one of the hardest experiences ever. 3 of my 4 classes were designated “writing intensive” so instead of 1 research paper, they each required 6. One of the research papers was 8 weeks of ethnographic research (Anthro 101, I was an anthro major). The 4th class was Geology of the National Parks and Monuments and was harder than the other 3 classes together. We only had 6 weeks of lecture and the other 6 weeks we developed our own research study in the lab and executed it. It was so so hard. I went Greek too and the semester I pledged (spring of freshman year) I almost flunked out bc on top of my classes the requirements for pledging were so time consuming. Did you have to do a kidnapping of an active as an entire pledge class? Between that, the required DTP History tours, Pledge School, and Pledge Project (not to mention Initiation, which at least we only had to show up for, not create) I don’t think I slept a full night for 3 months that term.
    I did have fun in college, and I loved my friends and traditions, but no one at my school had free time. On Friday night of mid term breaks the library was full of students, all doing research, trying to catch up on behind readings.
    During the last few weeks of each semester the whole campus was like a Walking Dead episode – everyone stumbling around glassy eyed from no sleep, smelling bad from no showers, searching for food in the vending machines, growling at anyone who walked by too close, and usually the whole campus got sick too. We called it The Plague or The Black Death. At DTP we put all the communal dishes in storage and used disposables only to keep from spreading it further once one person living in the house caught it.
    Our running joke every single finals month was the same: “Tell me again. WE are paying THEM thousands of dollars to do this to us?!? WHY??”
    This was way before Red Bull or energy drinks of any kind. Our cocktail of choice was 2 No-Doze with a Jolt chaser. Oh, college. I sure got my money’s worth but it was the toughest marathon ever.
    When I went to grad school I was surprised how easy it was. I think I only had to pull an all nighter twice the whole time I went. Pass/fail for a freshman intro class? Damn.
    The only class I failed in college was the one required math class. I had to take another one that was even easier bc I am so math-challenged, and I had to have a math course to graduate.

    Like

  30. Olga Avila Avatar
    Olga Avila

    Love the cliffhanger!

    Like

  31. carlos Avatar

    I think a lot of avid readers are self aware. Maybe I’m wrong. I always knew too. I’ve blown many interviews. Love this series.

    Like

  32. carlos Avatar

    Alyssa, wondering what path you’re on now? Please share with us if you can.

    Like

Leave a comment