Tool Time Tuesday

šŸ› ļø My Job Search Command Centre — Spreadsheets, Strategy & Self-Belief

A digital illustration in a clean, modern comic book style shows a woman in a black superhero costume with a purple ā€œMā€ emblem seated in a high-tech command center inspired by the Justice League Watchtower. She’s surrounded by sleek monitors and glowing purple interface panels, one of which displays a job search spreadsheet. A black cat with golden eyes and a white heart-shaped chest patch lounges on the console nearby, calmly observing. The atmosphere is futuristic, focused, and empowering.

šŸ“‹ I Needed More Than a Resume

When I first started thinking seriously about job searching again, I didn’t just want a to-do list. I needed a command center ā€” a space to organize not just tasks, but my mindset. A place where spreadsheets and self-doubt could coexist… and where I could slowly turn that doubt into strategy.

I didn’t need perfection. I needed clarity.

So I built it. Here’s how it’s helping.


🧩 The Spreadsheet That Keeps Me Grounded

My job application spreadsheet is deceptively simple — but incredibly powerful. It includes:

  • Company name + job title
  • Date applied
  • StatusĀ (in progress, interview, ghosted, etc.)
  • LinksĀ to the listing and uploaded docs
  • NotesĀ for follow-ups, deadlines, or gut feelings

I also added a column for ā€œHow I feel about this oneā€ ā€” because emotional data matters too.

This isn’t just about tracking applications. It’s about tracking my effort. It reminds me that I am doing the work, even if results take time.


🧠 Building Strategy (Not Just Busywork)

Having a clear structure frees up my energy for what matters:

  • Customizing resumes and cover lettersĀ without losing track
  • Remembering what I’ve already applied for
  • Noticing patterns — the kinds of roles I’m actually drawn to
  • Balancing effort — I can see when I’ve been pushing hard and when I need to rest

It’s a way of telling myself: ā€œYou’re not flailing. You’re moving.ā€


šŸ›”ļø And the Self-Belief? That’s in the Design

Everything about this system reflects a choice to take myself seriously:

  • I gave the spreadsheet a color scheme I like (yes, there’s purple)
  • I wrote affirmations into the notes column when I needed a boost
  • I even named the tab ā€œMission: Find the Right Fitā€ — because this isn’t desperation. It’sĀ discernment.

🐾 Diana Approves This Setup

Diana often watches me update the spreadsheet. She seems to know it’s important — or maybe she just likes the sound of typing.

Either way, her calm presence reminds me that while I’m building this command center, I’m also allowed to pause, stretch, and nap. Strategy doesn’t cancel softness.


šŸ’¬ Final Thought

You don’t need to have everything figured out to get started — but building a system that supports your clarity, your energy, and your belief in yourself? That’s powerful.

And in this job hunt, I’ve decided:Ā I’m the strategist, not the sidekick.

Mission Monday

šŸ›”ļø Reclaiming My Origin Story — Taking My Professional Self Seriously

A digital illustration in comic book style shows a woman in a black superhero costume with a purple ā€œMā€ emblem standing confidently on a rooftop at sunrise. She holds a folder under one arm, symbolizing a resume or mission file. Behind her, a faint silhouette of a smaller, shadowed version of herself suggests her past. A black cat with golden eyes and a white heart-shaped patch on its chest sits calmly at her feet. The city skyline glows in soft purple and gold tones, evoking a sense of hope and determination.

🧬 Every Hero Has an Origin Story

Superheroes don’t justĀ appearĀ in full costume, ready to save the day. They start with something raw: a challenge, a turning point, a realization that life can’t keep going the same way.

For me, that moment wasn’t one single event — it was a slow build. A combination of burnout, curiosity, creative hunger, and the need to prove to myself that I stillĀ have something to offer.

And I do. I always did. I just needed to start treating my own story like it matters. That means:Ā taking my professional self seriously again.


šŸŽÆ What That Means for Me Now

  • I’m not ā€œjust someone with a mixed background.ā€ I’m someone who can bridge creativity, coordination, and continuous improvement.
  • I’m not ā€œbehind.ā€ I’m building a career path that reflects who I really am.
  • I’m not apologizing for past roles. I’m highlighting the strengths I developed in them.

Reclaiming my origin story means seeing the throughline — and realizingĀ I’ve always been more capable than I gave myself credit for.


šŸ”„ Rewriting My Professional Narrative

It’s easy to downplay your experience when the job titles don’t line up perfectly. But here’s what I’m choosing instead:

  • 🧩 SeeingĀ transferable skillsĀ as tools, not gaps
  • āœļø Writing resumes and cover letters with voice and intention
  • šŸŽ™ļø Showing up to interviews with self-respect — not perfection
  • šŸ—ŗļø Treating my career like an evolving world, not a linear path

This shift has changed how I blog, how I study, and how I show up — even while recovering from surgery. It’s made everything feel more rooted.


🐾 Diana Believed in Me First

Let’s be real: Diana hasĀ alwaysĀ taken me seriously. She watches me work like I’m doing something important (even if it’s just writing a blog about cat hair and project management).

And maybe she’s right.

Taking myself seriously isn’t about ego — it’s about showing up for the person I’m becoming.


šŸ’¬ Final Thought

Reclaiming your origin story means honoring where you’ve beenĀ withoutĀ downplaying what you’re capable of next.

So this week, I’m setting the mission:Ā show up like the job is already mine. Not with arrogance — but with intention, respect, and belief in the path I’m building.