The numbness hit first, followed by a frantic cycle of cleaning a Brooklyn apartment and restless nights. The experience was uncomfortably public; a farewell note posted on the magazine's homepage turned a private crisis into a social spectacle. Friends offered well-meaning platitudes, but the reality of the job hunt proved more bruising than the initial firing. Automated rejection emails from hiring platforms became a daily occurrence, often arriving faster than a polite dating app dismissal.
Loneliness replaced the rhythm of daily Slack messages and office camaraderie. The author struggled with the encroaching isolation of remote job hunting while witnessing peers suffer similar fates, creating a sense that the instability was contagious. Yet, the recovery arrived through freelancing and a shift in perspective. By detaching personal value from a single employer, the author moved past the mourning phase. This period of professional instability ultimately dismantled the myth of corporate security, leading to a new reality defined by self-reliance rather than the whims of an organization.

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