I Took Vacation Days To Interview, Bought My Own Plane Ticket, And Paid For My Own Hotel

I took vacation days to interview, bought my own plane ticket, and paid for my own hotel.

The first thing the interviewer said was, “I have no intention of hiring you.” I had 8 more hours left in my interview day. It was painful. They ended up continuing with the schedule like everything was fine, and I smiled and played along, pretending like I didnโ€™t hear what I just heard.

The worst part? I believed them. I spent the whole day thinking I was wasting my time, just another box to tick for some HR policy or a formality because they already had someone else in mind. I sat in back-to-back meetings, group panels, lunch with the teamโ€”smiling, nodding, answering questions like I hadnโ€™t just been gutted in the first five minutes.

The night before the interview, Iโ€™d stayed up practicing my talking points. My husband, Drew, helped me run through mock questions. Heโ€™d kissed my forehead and told me, โ€œTheyโ€™d be lucky to have you.โ€ I wish I couldโ€™ve bottled that moment and opened it during the interview, when I felt small and unwanted.

I flew across the country to be told, in essence, I didnโ€™t belong. And still had to play polite guest for an entire workday. Every meeting blurred into one another, and I was mentally checked out by noon. I kept thinking, โ€œWhy am I here?โ€ over and over, like a cruel loop in my head.

By the time I got back to my hotel room, my shoes were cutting into my heels and my blouse was damp from sweat. I stood in front of the mirror, stared at myself, and burst into tears. I felt stupid, embarrassed, and exhausted. Like Iโ€™d fallen for somethingโ€”been tricked.

I called Drew. โ€œThey said theyโ€™re not hiring me. First thing, right out the gate,โ€ I whispered. He was quiet on the other end for a beat, then said, โ€œThen you donโ€™t owe them anything. You gave them your best. Thatโ€™s on them.โ€

I couldnโ€™t sleep that night. I kept replaying the day, the cold tone in the interviewerโ€™s voice, the blank stares from the panel, the small talk over lunch that felt forced. I thought about the money I spent getting there, the vacation days I used up, the time away from my family. And for what? A practice run?

The next morning, I had time to kill before my return flight. So I found a little cafรฉ near the airport. I sat with a coffee I didnโ€™t really want, watching strangers come and go. Everyone looked like they had a purpose. I felt directionless, like a balloon that lost its string.

Just as I was about to leave, a woman at the next table leaned over and said, โ€œYou dropped this.โ€ She handed me my business cardโ€”it mustโ€™ve slipped from my folder. I thanked her, then she glanced at the logo. โ€œYou work in instructional design?โ€

I nodded, unsure where she was going with it.

โ€œMy sisterโ€™s hiring for someone like you. Theyโ€™re struggling to build training materials for their nonprofit staff. You should reach out,โ€ she said casually, like she wasnโ€™t changing the entire course of my week.

I blinked at her. โ€œReally?โ€

She laughed. โ€œYes, really. Here, let me text you her info.โ€

It felt surreal, like life had tripped me, then handed me a cup of tea while I was still on the floor. I sent her sisterโ€”Beccaโ€”an email that night, unsure anything would come of it. She responded within two hours.

โ€œCan you Zoom tomorrow?โ€

I said yes before I could overthink it.

Becca turned out to be warm, sharp, and hilarious in the dry British kind of way. She ran a literacy nonprofit in Baltimore, and they were expanding. Theyโ€™d gotten a grant to scale up, but the team was overwhelmed, and their internal training systems were a mess.

โ€œWeโ€™ve got passion,โ€ she said, โ€œbut no structure. I need someone who can teach the teachers.โ€

That was my wheelhouse.

We talked for over an hour, and at the end, she said, โ€œWeโ€™d need you part-time to start. Freelance contract. But if it works out, I want to bring you in full-time.โ€

I said yes again.

I flew home feelingโ€ฆ lighter. Like maybe the trip hadnโ€™t been a total waste after all.

Back in my own kitchen, Drew handed me coffee, and I told him everything. He just raised an eyebrow and said, โ€œTold you. Theyโ€™d be lucky to have you.โ€

Over the next month, I balanced my old job and the new freelance gig. The nonprofitโ€™s work lit me up in a way I hadnโ€™t felt in years. I was working with passionate people who actually listened. Who actually cared.

Meanwhile, the company that flew me out? They never even sent a rejection email. Nothing. Just silence.

I shouldโ€™ve been mad, but honestly? I felt grateful. They made it easy to walk away.

Three months into my work with Becca, they offered me a permanent position. Remote, with great benefits. It wasnโ€™t flashy, but it was meaningful. And the people? Genuine, down-to-earth, and the exact kind of team I wanted to grow with.

Here’s the twist, though. A year later, I ran into someone from that dreadful interview trip. I was at a conference in Chicago, giving a talk on accessible learning design. Someone came up afterward and said, โ€œHey, I think we met last yearโ€ฆ werenโ€™t you interviewing at Carmichael & Rhoades?โ€

I froze. I couldnโ€™t place his face, but he seemed familiar.

โ€œYeah,โ€ I said slowly.

He gave a sheepish smile. โ€œI was one of the panel folks. I left that company six months ago. Toxic as hell. Half the leadership was replaced. They had a mass walkout right after your visit.โ€

I raised my eyebrows.

He went on, โ€œYou left an impression, though. You handled that day with a lot more grace than most people wouldโ€™ve. Word got around about what the hiring manager said to you. People were furious.โ€

I blinked. โ€œWait. People knew?โ€

He nodded. โ€œOh yeah. The HR rep filed a complaint. That guyโ€™s gone now.โ€

I didnโ€™t know what to say. All that time, I thought no one noticed.

Turns out, sometimes people are watchingโ€”quietly, silentlyโ€”more than we know.

The same week I heard that, Becca offered to promote me to Director of Learning Strategy. Full-time, better salary, more say in the mission.

I said yes, again.

And that same night, as I sat on the couch, glass of wine in hand, laptop closed, I thought about that first interview. About the plane ticket, the hotel room, the tear-stained pillow. The woman in the cafรฉ. The random chance.

Life has this weird way of rerouting us when weโ€™re headed somewhere we donโ€™t belong. Sometimes the thing that breaks us is also the thing that redirects us.

So yeah. I paid for that whole interview trip just to be told I wasnโ€™t wanted. But the universe paid me back with interest.

Hereโ€™s the thing: just because someone says youโ€™re not good enough doesnโ€™t make it true. Sometimes itโ€™s just the wrong room. Sometimes the room is full of people who donโ€™t know what theyโ€™re doing.

But you do. And eventually, someone will see that.

If you’ve ever been blindsided in a job interview, or told you weren’t good enough for something you know you’re great atโ€”share this. Someone else needs to know that detours aren’t always failures. Sometimes, they’re the shortcut.

Like this post if you’ve ever taken a leapโ€”and ended up landing somewhere better.