The Jordan Harbinger Show - 322: Mislead an Employer for a Foot in the Door? | Feedback Friday
Episode Date: March 6, 2020You finally landed an interview with a high-end Italian furniture company for a position that falls in line with your career aspirations. You're super qualified except for one thing: the job ...posting listed "fluent in Italian" as a requirement, and you're definitely not. Should you be up front with them and let them know immediately that you don't speak Italian but say you're willing to learn it, or should you accept the interview and tell them you're not fluent when you meet with them in person? We'll try to find answers to this and more here on Feedback Friday! And in case you didn't already know it, Jordan Harbinger (@JordanHarbinger) and Jason DeFillippo (@jpdef) banter and take your comments and questions for Feedback Friday right here every week! If you want us to answer your question, register your feedback, or tell your story on one of our upcoming weekly Feedback Friday episodes, drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com. Now let's dive in! Full show notes and resources can be found here: https://jordanharbinger.com/322. On This Week's Feedback Friday, We Discuss: Is it ever worth it to mislead a potential employer to get a foot in the door with the intention of making things right later? Your parents had an acrimonious divorce and your mother holds it against you that you still talk to your father. How do you draw the line in communicating with your mom? When it comes to taking classes online, you've become an expert at gaming the system in ways that might be considered cheating. But isn't this just being resourceful? You've disappointed a mentor by taking time out from your studies for self-care. How can you salvage the professional relationship while not putting your mental health at risk? What's it like to bust counterfeiters for fun and profit? Here's a perspective you might enjoy if you dug the recent episode with Kris Buckner. Life Pro Tip: Forget to take your vitamins every day? Put a small Post-it style calendar next to them, which will give you an at-a-glance reminder. Recommendation of the Week: Narcos Mexico Season 2 A quick shout out to Tomas Conefrey! Have any questions, comments, or stories you'd like to share with us? Drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com! Connect with Jordan on Twitter at @JordanHarbinger and Instagram at @jordanharbinger. Connect with Jason on Twitter at @jpdef and Instagram at @JPD, join his See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome to Feedback Friday. I'm your host, Jordan Harbinger, and I'm here with producer Jason DeFilippo.
On the Jordan Harbinger show, we decode the stories, secrets, and skills are the world's most brilliant and interesting people, and turn their wisdom into practical advice that you can use to impact your own life and those around you.
If you're new to the show, on Fridays, we give advice to you and answer listener questions.
The rest of the week, we have long-form interviews and conversations with a variety of amazing folks, from spies to CEOs, athletes to authors, to thinkers, and performers.
This week we had Dennis Carroll.
Dennis was the USAID, U.S. Agency for International Development's Pandemic Influenza and Emerging Threats Unit Head.
So he really knows his stuff when it comes to the flu, and we discussed how the flu influenza for sure, almost for sure, will be the next global pandemic.
This isn't fearmongering, it's actually quite science-based.
There's a lot we can do about that.
We also have a deep dive into how to ask for advice and do it the right way, frankly.
A lot of people ask me for advice in the wrong way.
A lot of you do it right.
Most of you do it right, and I appreciate that.
Obviously, you listen to the show.
And I wrote a whole article about this, but I know some of you don't get a chance to read
that stuff, and many of you want to hear a more in-depth discussion on the subject.
So we did a deep dive on how to ask for advice and how to implement it, how to do it in the right
way so that the people you ask, well, they don't resent you for doing it, which happens
all the time.
And we're going to field one of those questions here this week on Feedback Friday as well.
Of course, our primary mission here on the Jordan Harbinger show is to pass along our guests
and our own insights and experience to you.
So we want to have conversations directly with you.
That's what we're going to do today
and every Friday here on Feedback Friday.
I want to place one brick in the structure
that makes up your life.
That's really what the whole show was about.
And you can reach us Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com.
I just got back from the best birthday
that I've ever had in my entire life,
at least that I can remember.
My 40th birthday, that's right,
I'm officially old now.
I woke up that morning and I had to pee really bad
and my back hurt, and I thought,
uh-oh, this is probably how it's going to be forever. Oh, yes, it is. Happy birthday, by the way.
Wish I could have been there. Then after that, we went to the maximum security prison with a bunch of
amazing people show fans that just turned out to be the coolest group of people. Like, I,
unfortunately on the bus, you know, I was preoccupied, like making sure that everything was going to
work logistically. And I got a chance to talk to a bunch of folks. But during the prison experience,
after the prison experience at my birthday party at a brewery, we just took over this place. And it's just
amazing how awesome everyone is who came to this event. It really is hopefully a good representation
of the type of person that listens to the show, from people with amazing careers to people that
have gotten out of harrowing and crazy situations, to people just living their lives and being
awesome people. A lot of people brought me great gifts, but the best gift of all was just meeting
people whose lives have been changed by this show. And I try not to be like, we change lives
here at the Jordan Harbinger Show, just because it seems a little self-important to do that,
but hearing people's stories really does prove that we're on the right track with what we do here.
The mission of the show is being accomplished every day by putting out great stuff or stuff
we think is pretty darn good anyway.
And being able to see the results of that in terms of the people that listen and love
the show and that flew from other countries, other continents, other states, just to go to a
prison with us for a day and then have a drink or two after, that was the best gift of
and I just want to thank everyone that came out.
I want to thank everyone that was there
that made the event amazing,
that made my birthday amazing,
and even the people that couldn't make it
but sent their wishes.
I really am thankful for that,
and now I feel like, geez,
I should have some kind of cool event every year
or every other year.
I just don't know how to top this one.
We'll see.
But again, thank you.
We do the show for you,
and it was the best birthday
that I've ever had in my life
because of the people that showed up
and made it amazing.
So if you came to the prison event,
Or even if you just kind of thought about coming to the prison event, I'll count it, I'll count it.
Thank you very much for doing that.
You made the day just absolutely amazing.
Jason, what's the first thing out of the mailbag?
Hey, Jordan.
After spending several years as a retail manager, my wife has finally landed an interview with a high-end Italian furniture company
for a position that falls in line with her career aspirations.
Jobs like that haven't been easy to find.
She's super qualified, except for one thing.
The job posting listed fluent in Italian as a requirement.
being from the northeast and now living in the south, neither of us ever bothered to learn a second language.
But I urged her to apply anyway, as I think it's a low-risk, high-reward move, and she can learn Italian if they chose to hire her.
They contacted her very quickly about two hours later to schedule an interview on Monday.
I don't think Italian speakers are abundant where we live, but she isn't sure how to proceed since we were viewing this job as a long shot.
So my question is, should she be upfront with them and let them know immediately she doesn't speak Italian, but say she's willing to learn it?
Or should she accept the interview and tell them she's not fluent when she meets them in person?
She's a hard worker and I know they will like her once they meet her,
so I don't like the first option because it could eliminate her.
But I'm also worried that if fluency in Italian is crucial to them
and she waits until the interview to tell them,
they might get upset for wasting their time
when not speaking Italian may have eliminated her as a candidate earlier on.
If there's any chance you can give me some advice on this, I'd be eternally grateful.
Love the show!
Signed, What's Italian for full disclosure?
The answer to this one depends on some information that we don't really have yet.
Namely, did she represent in any way even throw a mission or lack of clarity that she might
speak Italian?
Because it sounds like, since the job requires fluent Italian, they just assumed that she
speaks Italian or she wouldn't have applied.
But if she said anything like, oh, this sounds great, I'd love to do it, and did not say,
but I don't speak Italian, you're kind of treading on thin ice here.
So the thing is, yes, she could tell them up front and it could cost her the job.
interview. If she gets there and she doesn't speak Italian and they say, what the heck are you doing here?
And it's a deal breaker. Then fine. She's not in the industry. She can apologize. She should apologize
and say, oh, you guys were really clear on that. I'm really sorry. I thought maybe I could come in and
try it anyway. They can chalk it up to a misunderstanding and just go to lunch earlier,
or take a coffee break, smoke some unfiltered cigarettes or whatever Italians do at work in the
furniture business. I don't know. She's not going to ruin their whole day. She should be aware that if a job
requires fluent Italian, she's not going to learn fluent Italian anytime soon. I speak a few languages
myself. I'm not any kind of gifted and talented person with the languages that I speak, but I would say
having learned five languages, including English, so four, second, or whatever, third, fourth, and fifth
languages, it's going to be really, really hard to speak anything remotely close to fluent Italian.
Even if y'all moved to Italy right now and stayed there for a year, she'd have to take lessons
every single day, go out and use it every single day, and that's if you live in Italy.
Look, if you bust out Rosetta Stone or Live Linguar or something, you've got half a decade
unless you are just absolutely crushing the studying every day, and you happen to be good
with languages.
She needs to be aware here.
She's a furniture buyer, so I'm guessing they're going to want her to go to Italy all the
time and be on the phone speaking Italian all day and look up things in papers and on the
internet and find furniture dealers and walk in and negotiate, she can't just know how to order
sangria and read some articles in a newspaper or something. This sounds like they were requiring
fluent business Italian. They want native proficiency or near native proficiency. They don't want
somebody who studied even a few years in college up to casual or conversational fluency.
This person has to know business Italian. So I don't want to be discouraging, but this isn't like
better sign up for the learning annex and get some Italian under my belt. This is a real
commitment to spending as much time as humanly possible learning Italian for months every year.
And even at that point, she may not even qualify for the job unless she can do business in
Italian. When I went to high school in the former East Germany, I spoke German all day.
I went to school in German all day, every day. I looked up a ton of words. And I was doing
okay, right? After 10 months of 24-7 German not speaking English at all, barely ever using English
at all. And that was really, really hard. And I ended up winning an award or getting recognized,
I should say, for having the best German of all the exchange students at the end of that year. And I'm
not saying that to brag. I'm saying that after 10 months, I was able to complete a level of
fluency that there's no chance in hell I would have been able to get a job at a German company
and make phone calls for that company. There's just no way. I would have needed at least another year,
most likely, in that environment to even get close to up to snuff. There are people,
that live here in the United States that come from countries like Taiwan, I'm related to a few of them.
Their English is just not that good. And these people had jobs here in the United States. Now,
they worked for companies where they weren't speaking English all day. They worked with other
people who spoke fluent Mandarin. So that's kind of the issue. It sounds to me like you need to
clarify what level of Italian they need. If they just need you to be able to look at forms that
come in that are written in Italian, you can learn that stuff in a few months. You just need
some very basic vocabulary so you can read words like quantity and total and currency and things like
But if they need you to be making phone calls, it's even harder than talking in person because
you don't have nonverbal communication while you're on the phone. It's really, really difficult.
All you have is voice tonality, vocal tonality, and the actual words, the vocabulary. So it's going to be
really, really tough. I applaud the go-getter attitude, but you've got to be very clear on what your
capabilities are, and they have to be very clear on what they really actually require.
So her best bet, be honest with them, make sure they know what and who they are getting when she takes the job.
I wouldn't hold my breath for this one, but there's no harm in giving it a shot as long as you place all your cards on the table so that the company doesn't feel burned and like you've wasted their time.
All right, what's next?
Hi, Jordan, Jason, and Jen.
After 40 plus years of marriage, my parents unexpectedly divorced.
It was messy to say the least.
My dad initiated the whole process.
My mom found out he'd been spending a lot of time on the phone with a former high school girlfriend
and keeping it from her. And things just got spiraled out of control from there. On top of that,
I found out that my mom had cheated on my dad when they were newly married. I had a wonderful childhood
and always thought their marriage was picturesque. He said he was willing to work on the marriage,
but ended up not giving it a lot of effort. My mom is incredibly overbearing, and I'm realizing,
as an adult, that she's also very controlling, exaggerates a lot, and is pretty much never willing
to be wrong. After stepping back, I can see how their marriage ended the way it did. I wish my dad would
have spoken up about his unhappiness and had not been emotionally unfaithful to my mom, but I also
wish my mom had been more considerate of his feelings. My mom and I used to have an exceptionally
close mother-daughter relationship, but since my parents' divorce, it suffered tremendously.
I used to tell her everything, but now conversations with her seem awkward. She either wants
to bash my dad, even though it's been a year since they've separated, or talk about herself,
or just scroll through her phone when we're together. It hurts because I have two young boys who I
wish she would take a bigger interest in, or at least be inquisitive about a
how my life, career, and happiness are. She's pretty much lost all her motherly characteristics.
She only reaches out to me when she wants to tell me something about my dad, like when she found out
he started dating. But she frequently says things like, he left you and your sister too, or he did
this to you too, or he doesn't care about how you feel. I've maintained a civil and supportive
relationship with my dad, mainly because he doesn't talk much about the divorce or the circumstances
leading up to it. But my mom feels betrayed by the fact that I even still communicate with my father.
How do I draw the line with communicating with my mom? I don't want to talk badly about my dad. I want to support her since she's alone, but I feel emotionally exhausted by this all. I also struggle with how much time I should devote to her sadness and anger at the expense of my own family. I suffer from anxiety, and it's taken me a lot to get over the turmoil that this has caused my family, but she frequently wants to take me back to that place. I know she's hurting and suffering, but I feel it's unfair for her to constantly try to dredge everything back up. Am I being selfish? Sincerely, cause you.
in the middle. It's really unfair of your mother to take sides here. That's my initial opinion. I understand
why she's doing it. She feels wronged. She feels abandoned. She was abandoned. But wanting you to gang up on
your father is really not good. It does nothing for her and it only serves to harm your relationship
with her. She's actually trying to harm your relationship with your dad, which by the way is also
selfish. But she's going to end up, well, she is already harming your relationship with her
and she's probably pushing almost everyone away.
If you were little kids and she did this, it wouldn't be fair at all.
And it's not fair to do this as adults either.
You are adults, so your father did not leave or abandon you.
If he's still talking with you, he didn't leave or abandon you.
You're not seven years old.
He's not out of your life.
If you were small kids and he left the family to be with some younger woman, it would
be a little different.
Again, I understand how she's rationalizing this, but she's way off.
As for where you draw the line, I think you've got a great idea here.
You said it yourself.
I don't want to talk badly about my dad.
I want to support her since she's alone,
but I feel emotionally exhausted by all of this.
This is not your job to deal with.
If she wants to vent about this,
she should get a therapist,
she should talk to her friends,
she should not add to your pain
and your discomfort by placing you in the position
of shoulder to cry on her therapist.
You are her kids, you are not her therapist.
You've also got your own family,
and you are by no means required
to donate more emotional resources
to somebody who isn't using them properly.
Do you need to be there for your mom?
Sure.
But being there doesn't require you to be someone's emotional punching bag
or their sewer system.
So no, you're not being selfish.
You're taking care of yourself.
You're taking care of your family.
And I do get why you might feel like you're letting your mother down.
But we don't get mad at the cat
because she didn't take out the recycling bin.
That job is better suited for somebody else in the house, right?
We don't get mad at our pets for not doing certain things.
I'm not saying you're a pet,
but look, I'm saying that we need to each have our role in the family
and yours is not the other person that your mom gets to dump on about your dad.
It's just not a good position to be in.
It does nothing for the family.
It actually harms your relationship with her, so it's counterproductive,
even if she thinks that she's getting somewhere with it.
So thanks for listening to the show and definitely set a boundary and stick to it.
That's what's best for your family.
It's what's best for your mom, frankly, and it's also what's best for yourself.
Jason, what do you think?
I have a little bit of experience with crazy mothers like this.
She's only been through one divorce.
my mom has been through five and I saw the same exact behavior. It plays out over and over again,
and that happens in her general life too. And I think that this is her mom's, you know, her basic
characteristics. So what she needs to do, in my opinion, is just pull back and take care of yourself.
And when her mom realizes that, you know, there's nobody there for her to talk to, she'll mellow out
a bit and maybe come around, but it's not your job in any way, shape, or form, especially if you're
an adult with children, you know, ain't nobody got time for that.
make sense to me. This is Feedback Friday. We'll be right back after this.
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All right, what's next?
Jordan and Jason.
I'm a sophomore in college working towards a degree in HR management.
I've taken probably 70% of my classes online thus far.
This is the first year in which my school started using online proctoring to monitor exams
to prevent cheating.
It goes without saying that in the past, I used everything possible to ace every test.
But now things are more difficult.
Regardless, I still have sneaky ways of fooling the proctoring system
and saving lots of time not studying for science classes
that will have nothing to do with my professional future.
I don't feel bad about being resourceful here, but please ridicule me as you see fit.
I found that I'm very swift and resourceful at what would be considered cheating.
I am very tempted to cheat in my in-class classes as well,
as I'm continually seeing opportunities for myself to take advantage of the system.
I'm very torn whether I should reject what is right in front of me or not.
What do you guys think?
Shoot me down if this mode of thinking will destroy me or help me to see how my crafty,
resourceful mind can be of use.
Thanks. Cheater, cheater, Cheater, pumpkin eater.
Well, whenever we consider cheating, and I'll withhold a little bit of my judgment here for now,
but whenever you consider cheating, you have to consider what you're cheating and who.
So right now, if you're trying to do something for your major, doesn't really behoove you to cheat.
You're not going to learn the stuff as well.
You're going to rely on cheating.
So it's kind of a mindset thing, right?
If you think, well, screw it, I can just cheat.
You'll learn things less well than you could if you didn't have that option.
Right.
So it does affect your studying, and I know you think you can mitigate that or control for that, but you really can't.
If you think you're going to cheat, you're going to work on that instead of working on making sure you have quick recall to the things you need.
Also, if you are cheating in the class is curved, you're actually really screwing over other classmates who are not cheating.
That's one of the problems with grading on a curve, is cheating is disproportionately advantageous.
So if you cheat and the grading's not on a curve, meaning the teacher just gives whatever points you get and you get an A, B, then you're only cheating yourself.
But if you cheat in the classes on a curve
and there's, let's say, 1A, 5Bs,
and everybody else gets a C
or whatever it is in the class.
And there are plenty of professors that do this,
then if you cheat and you get one of the Bs
because you cheated,
then somebody who studied really hard
but has a tenth of a percent less than you,
they're going to end up with a lower grade,
which really sucks for them.
So it actually encourages cheating,
but in the end, if you're the only one doing it,
it's kind of a prisoner's dilemma.
You get ahead, but then if everyone does it,
that everyone's just cheating and it screws over everyone.
It does nothing for you,
but then it also screws over.
or somebody else who's being honest.
Now, if you're cheating in a class
that's for your major,
and then you're not learning anything while you're cheating,
I kind of mentioned that before.
You're cheating yourself,
but you're really setting yourself up
for some failure down the line as well.
And if you get caught,
your department head's going to find out about it,
which is going to screw over your entire path of study.
So you've got to be really careful there.
Classes that don't matter as much,
but you can still get into serious trouble.
Like, look, if you're studying skull shapes of prehumans
and you're going into human resources,
or something like that, then I get it, I understand it.
It's still annoying to deal with because it's either on a curve or you're sort of risking
getting caught, frankly, that's a real problem.
If you cheat on the most meaningless college exam and you get caught, you can end up,
one, you can get expelled, but you can end up on academic probation, or you can just fail
the class, which really screws up your GPA, much worse than getting a C-plus in Anthropology
102 or whatever it is.
I wonder how online proctoring works.
I'm not sure what that even is, Jason, have you heard of that?
Are we just too old?
I think we're too old and, yeah, way after my time.
Yeah, I mean, I remember some online proctoring for law school, but it was basically just
a really crappy word processor that doesn't allow cutting and pasting.
And so you couldn't just pre-format an answer and then paste it in.
When I was in college, online teaching was me playing around with gopher because that was
the state of the art.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I hear you there.
Yeah, it kind of snuck up fast.
It was like one year, everybody took notes in notebooks, and the next year, literally everyone
in the class, say for five people, had a laptop. And then the year after that, it was like the only
people that didn't have laptops, couldn't afford laptops. And then the year after that, there was
financial aid for everyone to get a laptop. It became required. And everybody who had to write on paper
was disadvantaged, which is actually true. Although at the end of the day, they were super
advantaged because they were the only ones that weren't playing like online BS or using
instant messenger the entire time. So they were the only ones paying attention. Yeah, they weren't
on Minesweeper, aim. So many people in law school got really damn good at Minesweeper. I mean,
There were people that were playing the huge board
that were just crushing it, and I thought,
that's unbelievable.
That's really, really unbelievable.
I never got good at that.
I didn't have the patience.
But you got to balance cheating with the consequences.
At the end of the day, I'm not a fan of cheating,
but I will admit that I've done it before in classes
I just needed to get through.
You know, this is 20 years ago.
I feel like I'd be such a BSer if I just said,
I never did it.
I've done it in classes I needed to get through,
things I didn't understand that was way above my head,
that I was having a hard time doing,
and I just thought I need to get through this.
This is a paper that I don't really understand.
I'm just going to grab some notes from somebody else
and take their ideas with their permission
and write a similar paper.
I'm just lucky I didn't get caught
because that would have been really horrible.
I look back on it now and I just think, wow,
I should have just gotten a good night's sleep
or something like that and written the damn paper.
But I didn't do that because I was a dumbass.
The system is broken, though.
I'm not sure why you need to learn about unrelated things
like skull shapes of prehumans
when you're going to be staring at spreadsheets
and taking meetings all day, but don't even get me started on the scam that is the for-profit and
higher education system as it currently stands. So just be careful. I would say err on the side of not
cheating. Yes, it's a waste of time to study. It's not as much of a waste of time studying and getting
a C-plus on an unrelated class than it is to maybe fail a course. And also, just think of it as something
you need to get through. There's plenty of things in life that you need to do that you're not going to
want to do, like your taxes, for example. So just tough it out, get through it, and do whatever you can
to minimize classes that are a waste of your time. One thing I did in college to minimize this,
because they stick you with all kinds of unrelated BS. I don't know if you remember this, Jason,
but they'll make you take all kinds of unrelated stuff with the idea that you're going to become
well-rounded, but it's really just, I think it's them trying to get more money out of you,
because otherwise you could get the degree in two years, just by taking the required courses,
or less, candidly.
I think they want you to take more credits
and then they can sort of squeeze more tuition out of you.
However, what I did is I crafted my own degree
and it was a huge pain because I had to apply
or appeal to the Academic Standards Board
with the help of my, I think they're called
guidance counselors or career counselors.
And I said, look, I want to make my own degree
and it's going to have a bunch of economics
and a bunch of this and a bunch of that
and here's why I'm justifying each of the courses
that goes into the degree.
And then they approved it.
But only something like five people per year,
do this. And I was at the University of Michigan and I think it has like 30 or 40,000 students.
So think about a single digit number of people doing this every year at that time and the amount of
work that went into crafting it. Now the good news is once it got approved, all I had to do was go to
my guidance counselor and I could tell him which classes I wanted to take and why they were
important. And he basically said yes to pretty much everything. So what I did is I just made an economics,
languages, political science hybrid degree, and I avoided like, oh, you need to take this super hard
pre-biz course where everyone gets a C-minus because it's all in a curve and it's designed to weed
people out who want to go to business school. Or like here, you have to take calculus two, which is
going to be a nightmare on wheels for me for an entire year. And I just said, I don't need those.
And he was like, okay, fine. So rather than having to cheat or go through the hell that would have
been dealing with those courses, I actually crafted a degree based on things that were useful.
and interesting for me. And the result is I'm still pretty crappy at math, but I don't think
taking Calc 2 would have fixed that, honestly. I think I had some sort of math phobia that I still
have. And so I would recommend trying to figure out how to go within the system and use the system
against itself instead of blatantly cheating. One, you can't get caught doing something crappy and
pay consequences. Two, you learn how to quote unquote hack a system in a real way, not just sort of
take advantage. So think about it like this. Let's say you figure out a way to get a bunch of
free stuff from your favorite store by delivering value for the store. You develop a photography account
on Instagram that is all really cool leather jackets, right, because you love leather jackets. Now you can go
to the store and you say, look, I got 38,000 fans of leather jackets. Can I get a free one in exchange?
I'll do a post, take a bunch of photos of it, put it up on Instagram with a link to the store so they can
order it. And the store's like, great, that's a good deal for us. Here's a thousand dollar leather jacket.
Or you can walk into that store and rip off the security tag and run out.
the front door. You're breaking the system or you're hacking the system in both ways, but one is
really crude, results in a zero-sum game where it's a net loss for them, and if you get caught,
you're in trouble, and the other way is win-win, and there's nothing to worry about, and you can
feel good about it at the end of the day. I would always choose that win-win route. It's a little
bit harder, but it's better for you in the long run. It's better for everyone else. Does that make
sense, Jason, and is that just completely weird analogy? No, it makes sense. What bothers me here
about Mr. Pumpkin Eater, is that he thinks he's clever by cheating. I got that tone from his email.
He wants you to give him permission to do it, is how I really took this, which I don't think is a good
idea, because, you know, what do we used to say? How you do anything is how you do everything.
And he could become an institutionalized cheater for the rest of his life and always look for the
easy way out, never learn anything. And like you said, steal the leather jacket instead of doing it
the right way. And that's what worries me about Mr. Pumpkin Eater here is that he's going to get too
used to this. He already said he's very tempted to cheat in his in-class classes as well. So where do you
draw the line? Yeah. I was in school. I never cheated. I was in photography, though, so it was really
hard to cheat in photography. He can't take somebody else's work. It was never an option for me,
so I never got into that kind of thing. But I think now that he has these options and he thinks he's
really clever. I mean, hey, man, if you want to be a cheater and hack the systems, go into cybersecurity,
skip HR. It's probably better for you. You're right. It can be a slippery slope because then you go,
well, screw it, I'm just going to cheat in everything and focus on my applications for jobs,
because that's easier than studying. And oh, they'll train me on the job. You start to rationalize
those things. That's how, in fact, I do the work in prisons occasionally here, and I see how people
rationalize things. And it is exactly that kind of slippery slope. Like, look, I'm not saying you're
going to cheat on a testing college and end up in a maximum security facility. But I am saying that
a lot of people I know that started off shoplifting for fun or attention or to get candy ended up going
to jail because they just kept doing it because they weren't getting caught. And then one day they did,
and it was a big, big problem. It's better to arrange the system to serve you than to try and cheat the
system itself. And I want to note here that I regret that one time in college that I did cheat and took
that person's ideas. I got their permission. They sent me the paper. I told them I was having a problem
in the class. They said, go ahead, just be careful because I don't want you to get caught. They actually
were worried about me. I did a really good job crafting a new paper. 20-20 hindsight, I was really
tired. I didn't focus enough on creating new ideas and I spent probably the same amount of time and
energy trying to do a good copy of that idea and that paper than I would have if I'd just come up
with my own damn idea. And I still remember it. It's been 20 years. So don't do that to yourself.
We'll be right back with more feedback Friday right after this. Thank you for supporting the show.
Your support of our advertisers keeps us on the air. To learn more and get links to all the great
discounts you just heard, visit Jordan Harbinger.com slash deals.
Now back to the show for the conclusion of Feedback Friday.
All right, next step.
Hello, I'm a 22-year-old chemistry student, getting ready to graduate with my BS.
My grades are slightly above average, but nothing to make me stand out too much.
However, about three years ago, I started working in a research group on campus.
I worked for this professor who I really considered a mentor in the field.
They gave me independent projects, let me take the lead on a lot of things,
and even took me traveling to all sorts of conferences around the country.
The plan was for me to apply to graduate school and go straight in the same.
to working towards my PhD. But last semester I started counseling and realized a lot of my anxiety
and burnout had to do with putting too much pressure on myself. I felt like if I can just push through,
get my degrees, then I would be free. But with the guidance of counseling, I realized I needed to
rest and maybe get some work experience first. So I finished out the semester and let her know
that I was planning to not do research my last semester. Since then, my quote unquote mentor
has done a complete 180. The hardest part is that I need to take one of her classes to graduate.
I want to stop caring so much of what she thinks of me. I'll graduate regardless. But when I get
ready to go to graduate school, I'll need a recommendation letter from her, as I think it would be
very sketchy to not have one from my boss of three years. Now I'm just suffering. I hate going
to class as she's petty and makes me feel less than. I just want to be done and leave.
But this is my first and only source of contact into the chemistry world. How do I salvage the
professional relationship while not putting my mental health at risk? Any input on this would be
greatly appreciated. Also, I'm a female, and it's already hard enough to navigate the science world
in this male dominant discipline. It just hurts to a new level getting all this negativity
from a woman chemist I've looked up to for so long and considered to be close with. Thanks for
any advice. Signed, stuck with Professor Petty. This is a sticky one, I think, because it sounds
like she's offended about you leaving. I'm not sure here. I would ask for an appointment and
discuss this openly. Put everything on the table. Does she know why you are taking?
a break? Does she know it's for stress and mental health reasons? It's not really any of her
business, why you aren't moving forward with research here? I think it's none of her business at all,
but maybe she feels like she's invested in you and she feels burned. Like she invested in you
and then you quit and she's thinking, you don't even know what I did for you. I invested a lot of
resources in you. Right now, you kind of have nothing to lose here as it stands. If you tell her
what you're telling me here, she might understand and you might be able to repair the relationship.
Don't do it in a freaking hallway.
Don't do it while she's on the way to doing something else.
Ask for a private office hours chat.
She may resist.
She may say, oh, email me.
But you can underline the importance,
and she'll probably be curious enough to sit down with you and listen,
hopefully anyway.
If not, graduate and don't worry about it.
Life goes on.
If someone's going to be petty for no reason
and not let you explain yourself,
then you're better off without them.
Even if they seem like a valuable connection
or reference in the short term,
if someone's going to be that much of a pain or impossible to work with or take everything personally,
you're better off just distancing yourself from them and not dealing with them at all, if you can avoid it.
As for the recommendation letter, I think you can get a recommendation hopefully from someone else,
or you can write a cover letter or another letter explaining why you didn't get a letter of recommendation from her.
Because the problem is recommendation letters, the valid ones, they're usually sealed.
So you don't know what she's actually going to write, which is a massive problem.
So if you're not sure you're going to get a positive letter of recommendation, you should not ask for one.
And with her, it sounds like a wild card.
What if she's, again, super petty and decides, ah, I'm going to torpedo your career now.
You know, a negative letter is much, much worse than no letter.
And you can say, actually, I worked for her for three years, and I took a break because
I was massively stressed out and had some mental health issues that I wanted to deal with.
I wouldn't say mental health, honestly.
I would say stress and family stuff or something like that.
Although you don't want people to think that you have mental health issues that are untreated.
And you can explain that you left and that that resulted in her becoming really upset with you.
And you just have to be honest.
And that's not great, but getting a negative letter is worse.
And having no letter is something that leaves things up in the air.
It'll look sketchy, but when you explain yourself, they can take a chance on you if they want to.
And that's the way these things usually work.
Then you have to prove yourself.
Oh, well, that's how it is with every job.
All right, last but not least.
So this is not a question but an interesting note here from a listener who heard our counterfeit
episode with Chris Buckner.
This stuff's pretty interesting, Jason.
You want to give it a go?
Hey, Jordan.
Back in 2003, when my ex-wife switched careers and went back to school, I picked up a
couple part-time jobs in addition to my career to help maintain our lifestyle.
One of these jobs was working for a security company who was contracted by a law firm to
execute civil seizure warrants.
Their clients, usually prominent entities in the fashion industry, hired us to get the counterfeit
goods branded with their logos off the street. We also worked with the NYPD on certain cases
when either we needed some stronger backup or they needed our expertise or simply didn't want to do
the administrative work. From what I understand, counterfeiting is fully 10% of the world's economy.
I've personally seen a lot of the stuff Chris Buckner talked about in the recent episode.
The company I worked for mostly hired firefighters and retired cops on a part-time basis. We already
possess the legal training and level of professionalism to handle the touchy situations we would
encounter. Our typical raid day started like this. In the morning, they had people, usually college
kids, dress up in disguises and go down to the areas we were targeting. These kids, called spotters,
were actually trained pretty well in surveillance techniques, and they were good at what they were doing.
They would do things like going to stores, get around to asking about the stuff we were after,
observe everything that was going on, make mental notes of descriptions, see where stuff was being hidden,
and report back to the office. They would also find out.
follow people, stakeout vehicles, etc.
Once the spotters had enough information to give us a busy day,
we would pile into a couple of rented vans with all of our gear.
We would cruise down to the first target on our list,
then we'd jump out of these vans, 20 of us,
and overrun the place immediately going for the areas
where the spotters said we would most likely find what we were looking for.
In retrospect, it seems a little comical,
a big group of mostly white guys running into a little store all at once
in the middle of the day on Canal Street.
This was all part of business for the people who sold this stuff.
When this happened, the workers in the store would either run, try to further hide their stuff,
or just hang out and watch us do what we needed to do.
We would regularly find secret panels behind displays, drawers with false bottoms, hidden doors
that led to hidden rooms, stairs, all kinds of places.
New York City's Chinatown has been inhabited since the 17th century.
Some of these buildings have basements in their basements, and these areas, sometimes two or three
stories below ground, were often connected to the basements of other buildings.
These places were absolute underground railroads of fake stuff.
We would also find stuff in vacant apartments, office suites, parked cars, and sometimes
people's homes.
We found sweatshops where they stuck labels onto previously unmarked handbags.
We even intercepted a few tractor trailers in my time there.
When we would find the stuff we were hired to take, we would count it all, put it in bags
in the back of a truck, hand the responsible party to their copy of the paperwork and instructions
on how to go to court to get it back, then we'd go on to the next place.
Of course, they all alerted each other to our presence in the area,
so Pickens got slimmer as the day went on.
At the end of the day, we'd bring all this stuff to a storage unit
where it would stay for about six months
until the legal procedure was complete.
No one ever went to court to get their stuff back.
It was the cost of doing business.
When time was up, we would take the merchandise
to a garbage processing facility on Long Island,
where we would watch it get dumped into huge incinerators.
We also saw a dark side of society.
The worst were the scores of young school-aged children
who act as mules transporting merchandise
from one location to another.
These kids don't go to school. They walk around Chinatown all day with huge backpacks full of counterfeit goods.
It's a sad thing to see, knowing how they're exploited and how slim of a chance they have at a good life.
Another very common thing would be to force entry to a hidden room or basement and find a bunch of frightened tourists.
They would be shopping for counterfeit stuff, having a good time, thinking they were being all cloak and dagger,
and they would get locked in wherever they were when the store employees heard we were coming.
They would just lock the door and run. It was kind of funny. They were usually more terrified of us thinking,
we were going to arrest them or something. I also get to see the backs and insides of a whole
bunch of restaurants and supermarkets. Listen to my advice when I tell you, do not eat in a restaurant
in New York City's Chinatown. Don't even buy unwrapped food down there. When we weren't swarming
stores on Canal Street, we were chasing people with briefcases full of sunglasses and watches
through Battery Park and the streets of Chelsea. This almost always led to punches being thrown.
All they had to do was drop the stuff, but no, they ran with the stuff, and we chased them,
running like idiots through the park and into the subway. Eventually someone would stop and try to fight.
Of course, they were vastly outnumbered, but they would take a swing anyway. Aside from the guys in the
park who always wanted to fight, we never had a problem. All of these store owners and salespeople
knew that when we came, we were only going to take what we were contracted to take. There could be a
roll of $100 bills on the table, and there often was, and it would be there when we left, untouched.
It was this level of integrity and professionalism that kept us from getting shot. Another thing we did
for a while was try to stop people from filming movies and theaters and putting them onto DVDs.
We would hang out in a movie theater all day, sitting in the back somewhere for the first
half hour of each showing of whichever movie it was. We'd be on the lookout for things like
the screen glow of camcorders and other recording devices. This was in the early 2000s. There
were no smartphones yet. This part of the job was so boring they would pay us extra for it.
I sat through the first half hour of several movies like a dozen times. Tyler Perry is not
funny the first time. Forget about the 10th. We didn't catch us.
single bootleger this way, but then again, no seized bootleg DVDs were ever filmed in the
theaters we were prowling. They have codes embedded in the film that are specific to the theater
it's being shown in. If you slow the video down enough, the code flashes on the screen.
Aside from this particular job, I've also run across counterfeiting operations as a firefighter.
More than once during building inspections and fire prevention duties, we discovered sweatshops
making fake Adidas track suits and stuff like that. One time we got a call for a possible
cardiac arrest, and when we arrived, no one answered the door.
We forced it, and the place was empty, except for a whole bunch of machines set up for making credit cards,
driver's licenses, work IDs, and stuff like that.
Obviously, someone in the neighborhood dropped a dime on them.
This stuff is absolutely everywhere.
And when you shut down one operation, two more take its place.
Anyway, that's about it.
Even though this was a part-time job that I only did for a few years, I had a blast.
I made good money, made some really good friends.
I learned new skills, such as picking locks and using fiber optic cameras.
We also got to hone our firefighting skills as some of the forcible entry to
we used were identical to what we used in the fire department. I also know how to spot fake Oakley's
on eBay. That's pretty much my expertise with all this world in a nutshell. It really is interesting
stuff. Signed Ted. Pro tip of the week, Jason, what do you got for us? So I'm big into daily routines
now, and there's one thing that happens when you get into daily routines for a long enough time.
The days kind of blend together, and you think you did something, but you didn't do it, and it just
comes back to bite you in the ass. And I just had this problem with vitamins. Because
my vitamins, I always have to take after food, and sometimes you walk the dog, you forget to have
breakfast. So I'm sitting there one day thinking, how can I fix this? So what I did was, I went out and
bought one of those little calendars that you usually put on your desk and you peel off a day every day.
So I put that next to my vitamins. So every day when I go in, I can just take a quick glance and see
if I've taken off the day for what day it is. I got this little, I was it, science trivia facts.
So they're at least good to read. So I know I'm not just picking them off and throwing them away.
and I haven't missed a day of my vitamins since I got my calendar.
It just worked out to be a nice little hack for about five bucks.
Nice.
I'm almost positive.
I saw that in your bathroom when I was there.
You did, yeah.
A little science calendar right next to all that big stack of vitamins.
Yeah, not bad.
I thought you were going to say you sprinkle your vitamins on your cereal in the morning
or something like that.
Sounds disgusting.
No, my vitamins taste very bad.
Yeah.
No recommendation of the week.
We've been binging Narcos Mexico, so, you know, do with that what you will.
Yeah, I hope you all enjoyed that.
I want to thank everyone that wrote in this week.
Link to the show notes for this episode can be found at Jordan Harbinger.com.
Quick shout out to Thomas Connoffre.
He listens over there in Ireland.
He is really active on Twitter, so I appreciate that.
Thank you for writing in and thank you for being a valued listener, Thomas.
Go back and check out the guests, Dennis Carroll,
and our deep dive on how to ask for advice, if you haven't heard that yet.
And if you want to know how we managed to book all these amazing folks on the show,
it's all about the network, and I'm not teaching you about guest book, I'm teaching you about
how to develop a network for yourself. You cannot make up for lost time when it comes to relationships
and networking. The number one mistake I see students, business owners, anyone for that matter
making is postponing this kind of thing, kicking the can down the road, and not digging the well
before you get thirsty. Once you need relationships, you're too late to leverage and make them. So do these
drills. They take five freaking minutes a day, if that, it's not fluff. Find it all. It's free. Jordan Harbinger.com
slash course. I'm on Instagram and Twitter at Jordan Harbinger. It's a great way to engage with the show.
Videos of our interviews are at Jordan Harbinger.com slash YouTube. Jason? You can check out my tech podcast,
Grumpy Old Geeks. We discuss what went wrong on the internet and who's to blame along with
cybersecurity apps, gadgets, books, and more. And we do that twice a week. That's Grumpy Old Geeks.
This show is created in association with Podcast One. This episode was produced by Jen Harbinger,
edited by Jace Sanderson. Show notes for the episode by Robert Fogarty. Music by Evan Viola.
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