Tactical Tuesday

🕵️‍♀️ Tracking the Clues: What My Work History Reveals

SuperMell stands in a detective-style office wearing her Nightwing-inspired black suit with a stylized purple “M” and purple glasses. Behind her, a corkboard displays pinned notes, string maps, and folders symbolizing patterns in her work history. Diana, a short-haired black cat with a white tuft on her chest, sits beside a stack of files, calmly observing the scene. The atmosphere is focused and thoughtful, evoking introspection and strategic analysis.

🧩 Career as a Mystery Map

Looking back at my work history sometimes feels like flipping through an unfinished comic book. The theme shifts, the art style changes, and the heroine keeps popping into new situations with a skillset that’s still unfolding.

But as I review my resume more carefully—especially while preparing for upcoming informational interviews—I’m starting to notice patterns. Clues. Foreshadowing.

It’s not just a jumble of unrelated jobs. It’s a map of what matters to me, and what I bring to the table.


🔍 The Skills That Keep Showing Up

No matter the job title or setting, certain through-lines keep emerging:

  • Clear communication (writing, explaining, simplifying)
  • Creative thinking (solving weird problems with weirder ideas)
  • Process awareness (understanding how systems flow—and where they break)
  • People-centered focus (empathy, patience, emotional insight)

Even in roles that felt like survival work, I brought my full self—and that self has always cared about making things clearer, kinder, and more effective.


🧠 Shifting the Narrative

It’s easy to look at a scattered job history and think, “This doesn’t make sense.” But that’s only true if the only story you’re telling is a linear climb.

If the story is about growth, resilience, and creative adaptability—then everything fits. Every twist, pause, and pivot added something. I just didn’t see it until now.


🗂️ Where This Insight Is Taking Me

This process of mapping out my history is helping me prepare for more intentional conversations about where I want to go next. And more than that—it’s reminding me that I have more strengths than I tend to give myself credit for.

So instead of treating my past like a puzzle I have to solve, I’m choosing to view it as a guide. And I’m following the clues forward.


🐾 Diana Knows Where She’s Been

If Diana had a work history, it would include professional lounging, sunbeam sampling, and expert supervision of creative humans. But one thing she doesn’t do? Question her worth.

She knows she belongs wherever she lands—whether that’s on my keyboard, in the laundry basket, or beside me during a blog-writing session.

Maybe we all deserve to feel that kind of certainty about where we’ve been.


💬 Final Thought

Your work history isn’t just a list—it’s a legacy of learning. When you read between the lines, the plot might reveal more direction than you thought.

What clues have been quietly waiting in your own story?