The Key Lesson I Learned from Being Wrong

The feeling of being right is misleading

Rodrigo S-C
Forge

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Photo by author.

Testing, testing, 1,2,3…

The campus employment office advertised a recruiting campaign by the local telephone company. It piqued my interest.

The company was conducting aptitude tests, which could lead to full-time employment as a phone installer, or line technician. I decided to take the test.

I don’t know why I thought that was a good idea. My mechanical skills at the time were rather dismal. What I did know was that working for BC Tel meant full-time work, union wages, medical benefits, and a pension. The kind of jobs that no longer exist.

All I needed was to pass a test. How hard could that be?

I arrived at the testing site early one Saturday morning.

There were about thirty people in the room. Most looked older than me. Some appeared to be tradespeople, which made me feel a bit insecure.

The tester described the three-part testing procedure. The first part was a questionnaire asking general questions about ourselves: education, career goals, that type of thing.

The second part was the technical part of the test. Pages filled with diagrams of gears, belts, pumps, scales, circuits, and…

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