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The Rejection That Changed My Life

25+ Powerful Women on Being Let Down, Turning It Around, and Burning It Up at Work

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the groundbreaking author of Mistakes I Made at Work, comes the perfect book for anyone who needs inspiration after dealing with rejection, failure, or is searching for a new beginning in the workplace. Featuring fascinating interviews with more than twenty-five women, including Keri Smith, Angela Duckworth, and Roz Chast, The Rejection That Changed My Life provides an exciting new way to think about career challenges, changes, and triumphs. 
Rejections don't go on your résumé, but they are part of every successful person's career. All of us will apply for jobs that we don't get and have ambitions that aren't fulfilled, because that is part of being a working person, part of pushing oneself to the next step professionally. While everyone deserves feel-better stories, women are more likely to ruminate, more likely to overthink rejection until it becomes even more painful—a situation that the women in this collection are determined to change, and in so doing, normalize rejection and encourage others to talk about it.
Empowering and full of heart, the stories in this collection are diverse in every sense, by top women from many cultural backgrounds and in a wide variety of fields; many of their hard-earned lessons are universal. There are stories from engineers, entrepreneurs, activists, comedians, professors, lawyers, chefs, and more on how they coped with rejection and even experienced it as a catalyst for their own personal professional growth. Powerful, motivating, and endlessly quotable and shareable, The Rejection That Changed My Life will become the go-to book for women at any stage of their career learning to navigate the workforce.
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    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2021
      A collection of interviews with distinguished career women about how they managed rejection on the way to success. In this follow-up to Mistakes I Made at Work (2014), Bacal, director of reflective and integrative practices at Smith College, argues that professional rejection often conceals gender inequities and stereotypes that have long dogged career-minded women. "Rejection," she writes, "can reinforce a message that many of us are receiving all the time in small ways: You don't belong." This book offers stories and tips about rejection from female academics, lawyers, entrepreneurs, journalists, and artists who have succeeded in professions dominated by men. In the first of four sections, Bacal shows how women like psychologist Angela Duckworth and Harvard Business School professor Laura Huang transformed their many rejections into opportunities to transcend disappointment and synthesize what they learned in order to overcome systemic barriers. The second section includes stories about women such as queer writer and performance artist Michelle Tea, who used rejection to find creative ways to bring her work into the public arena. In the third section, comedy writer Emily Winter sagely advises that "being told you need to strive" is far better preparation than being told on a routine basis, as many male professionals are, that "everything you do is great." The fourth section includes contributions from Los Angeles Times staff reporter Carolina Miranda and chef Unmi Abkin, both of whom show how rejection can actually help someone "pivot" from an ill-suited job to one that is a better fit. Bacal supplements the essays with exercises designed to help readers "generate a new story about yourself." This affirming book is sure to provide career women with the courage to not only move forward from rejection, but also mount necessary challenges to the masculine bias in the professional world. Other contributors include Roz Chast, Tara Schuster, and Loretta Ross. Illuminating, encouraging reading for anyone who has felt stymied by rejection.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2021
      Research has shown that women are less likely than men to reapply after rejection, and Black women even less likely than their white counterparts. Bacal (Mistakes I Made at Work, 2014) persuaded 26 women from widely different races, backgrounds, and skill levels to share their stories of career-related rejection, intending for readers to find these stories encouraging, uplifting, and helpful in surmounting their own rejections. After each woman tells her story, there is a useful section of ""Lessons I've Learned."" The women in this book are anything but ordinary, and the success that each eventually achieves is far from the run-of the-mill placement that most job seekers want. Still, readers will be able to translate the steps taken into something relatable. Better still are the two or three tips that end each section, and that can be applied to any situation. The last chapter is a workbook to help put all this information into practice. This is quite readable and interesting, and well worth including in any library from public to graduate school level.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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