Is it worth lying on your resume to try to get an actual job that will allow you to learn skills and not be a total wagecukkery?
The worst part about the wagiest jobs is that you could work there for 5 years and you'd not have any skills or be any better than someone who just got hired two weeks ago.
I always lie, you usually won't use all the skills required unless they ask you for some proof on paper.
I always used the internet to find out anyway
>>3463391
>The worst part about the wagiest jobs is that you could work there for 5 years and you'd not have any skills or be any better than someone who just got hired two weeks ago.
That's your problem man, I've been in shitty jobs before, you have to understand the meaning of work and future goals. Over time you can learn something new and make your job work for you, it depends on what your job is but having a gig can be a good thing when your mind is on straight.,
If you are not smart, its going to be harder to achieve anything...
Depends on what you're going for. The issue with lying is that unless your interviewers give 0 fucks it will become apparent pretty quickly if you aren't qualified
Everyone lies bro, last summer when i was off from uni (CompSci) i spent the whole break playing vidya and fapping, then when i came back to uni and had job interviews i simply made up some bullshit saying i spent my summer "working on a cloud based web application which uses specially developed algorithms to sort and categorise vast amounts of anonymized data" or some shit