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trentonlf: Consider Punished_Snake's and MaxFulvus's Game wishes fulfilled by a random draw I did
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foxworks: Sneaky, sneaky. Awesome stuff! :D
Yes, thanks all, guys. I retired my entry so other have another chance to win. :)
Gog is a wonderful community, I have not other words to describe it. :)
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rtcvb32: Although unemployed, i don't think i'm in such dire straights as to join this give away.

Actually i have a couple codes that wouldn't mind some homes...
Thank you for the kind offer. I have sent you a PM about the codes and a +1 for your generosity.
Not in, but +1 and a bump for your generosity.
Not working , but NOT IN (have quite a backlog to get through thankfully), +1 for the giveaway, its a beautiful gesture.
I've managed to find work only for a few weeks this year (it's better than nothing, though not much), but fortunately I have a huge backlog of unplayed games, so I'm NOT in, but I wanted to post my support for such a great and generous gesture.

+1
I am (thankfully) employed, so don't qualify, but I love what you are doing. It is stuff like this that makes GOG great!

Thank you!!!
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trentonlf: Consider Punished_Snake's and MaxFulvus's Game wishes fulfilled by a random draw I did

Awesome giveaway by the way, very generous of you!

Peace all!!
I'm truly astonished by your generosity, trentonlf ! Thank you so much ! How wonderful is the GOG community !
I hope to find a job quickly to be able to be as generous.
Thank you ddickinson for this GA, hope the others in the same situation will be as happy as I'am right now !
Of course, I relinquish my entry here ;)

Thanks to all !
I was laid off in Summer 2007, after which I went into freelancing. Things were pretty good up until 2011, when the EU crisis found its way into my line of work. Contracts got more sparse with the last decent paying one in early 2012. Ever since, I got almost no paid contracts (last time was a small one in early 2013), and am basically living on my savings which are running pretty thin. Trying to land an employee's position is practically impossible for someone not in their twenties or early thirties, and with considerable expertise and experience in a specific field - in my own field of expertise, no one is hiring, and looking outside of it, being my age and having my qualifications is a major downside that puts you at the bottom of the candidates list; the only positions regularly on offer are for telemarketing, a line of work where, apart from long hours with no guaranteed income, my age and my qualifications are still an obstacle.
I keep looking and applying for a paid position and trying as a freelancer, but good news has yet to arrive.

Being this inactive and feeling unwanted after many years of working long hours daily and even many weekends in a row is very frustrating; the uncertainty of no steady work and income at my age is extremely stressing, as asides from living costs, I'm burdened with taxes and the cost of my social security coverage.

Since I'm a freelancer I don't count towards the statistics of unemployment, so I'll let others have a chance at the prizes of this very kind and thoughtful giveaway, i.e. I'm not in.

Big thanks to the host and everyone else that contributed, and good luck to those that entered. :-)


EDIT: Damn typos! ;-P
Post edited August 08, 2014 by HypersomniacLive
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HypersomniacLive:
Thank you for sharing your story, I'm sorry to hear about your troubles.
If you change your mind and want to be in at a later date then you are more than welcome.
I saw this earlier but didn't have time post and now that I do...

I am NOT in but just wished to thank ddickinson and everyone else who has contributed, and say that even though I am working I certainly don't have job security. With that in mind, I have a game I was either going to gift on these forums or the steamgifts group...I'll make a decision and then perhaps add that game here.

Cheers and beers!
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ddickinson: Thank you for sharing your story, I'm sorry to hear about your troubles.
If you change your mind and want to be in at a later date then you are more than welcome.
Thank you for the kind words - such is life, it has its ups and downs, and one hopes that after a prolonged period of downs some nice ups will emerge if they keep trying their best.:-)

And thank you very much for the open invitation, but I'm good - life has taught me to be patient and work towards fulfilling any wishes, so I view my wishlist as a bag of goodies to look forward to in the future. ;-)
Not in but thank you for your giveaway .
Not in +1 for awesome giveaway, i don't have a job either, it's such a hard time to get 1 these day
This is the first time that I have made a post that appears to be too large to be done in one go, so I'll break it up lol Oh the irony, I used notepad and have to edit the formatting so it is readable :P

[i]"Far out in the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the Western Spiral arm of the Galaxy lies a small unregarded yellow sun.

Orbiting this at a distance of roughly ninety-two million miles is an utterly insignificant little blue green planet whose ape-descended life forms are so amazingly primitive that they still think digital watches are a pretty neat idea.

This planet has – or rather had – a problem, which was this: most of the people living on it were unhappy for pretty much of the time. Many solutions were suggested for this problem, but most of these were largely concerned with the movements of small green pieces of paper, which is odd because on the whole it wasn't the small green pieces of paper that were unhappy.

And so the problem remained; lots of the people were mean, and most of them were miserable, even the ones with digital watches.

Many were increasingly of the opinion that they'd all made a big mistake in coming down from the trees in the first place. And some said that even the trees had been a bad move, and that no one should ever have left the oceans.

And then, one Thursday, nearly two thousand years after one man had been nailed to a tree for saying how great it would be to be nice to people for a change, a girl sitting on her own in a small cafe in Rickmansworth suddenly realized what it was that had been going wrong all this time, and she finally knew how the world could be made a good and happy place. This time it was right, it would work, and no one would have to get nailed to anything.

Sadly, however, before she could get to a phone to tell anyone about it, a terrible stupid catastrophe occurred, and the idea was lost for ever.

This is not her story. " ~ Foreward from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams[/i]

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ddickinson: Thank you for sharing your story, I'm sorry to hear about your troubles.
If you change your mind and want to be in at a later date then you are more than welcome.
Not in as I have one of the largest game collections in the existence of unemployment and gaming history :)

Thank you for creating this giveaway. I linked this thread to the person who introduced me to GOG(he's never posted here) to exemplify what it is that I love about this community as this sentiment is rarely shared to the extent on the internet(especially on a gaming forum) as I have experienced it here. I still haven't read the entire internet yet, so this is merely my subjective perspective :P

Given who I am, this will most likely be my typical long-winded post that draws all manner of subjective experiences and ideological perspectives to conclusions that to some may not see as relevant (I'm a big picture kind of guy) and may draw praise or criticism and appear rather negative in the presentation of my views. I most likely won't respond to either as neither are important to me. So with that said, let me preface it by saying that I am okay, I know my path in life and what my "job" is. My intention is not to engage in debate but rather to share personal stories as I love to do in order to provoke thought and encourage change.

If you'd rather listen to a song with poignant lyrics which has a similar theme to some of what I am saying, then I'd highly recommend listening to Everlast - What It's Like. Don't judge another unless you have experienced what they have in life, for you cannot comprehend what it is like. Also read this article on Cracked.com that illustrates the points I am making about inequity and placing the blame on the unemployed or poor for being that way.

Unemployment (Quest :P to relate it to gaming) is generally such a contentious topic when discussed as all manner of judgements and conclusions are made and generally little is actually achieved in terms of producing results that are beneficial to those who suffer the most from unemployment, namely the unemployed. So much of the discourse centres around economic rationalist thought that is devoid of a human element. Economics as I learned during my university studies is not purely mathematical and the majority of discussions I have partaken in regarding this topic have an agenda that is counter-productive to the survival of our species. The blame for the poor being poor or the unemployed being unemployed is almost ALWAYS placed on the poor or unemployed individual.

I was raised by a relatively wealthy family who came from a poor background and thus initially embraced this capitalist ideology. My father is an orthopaedic surgeon. He works very hard and given his position in society is rewarded very well for his endeavors. I was that kid in school with the shiniest of toys that drew the attention of others. I had some of the most expensive toys a child from a middle class upbringing could have and I defined myself in many ways through my father's wealth. We went on expensive holidays and I was very fortunate to have an education that allowed me to succeed in school with very little effort(when I wanted to) as I had superior mathematical and language skills and decent social skills that allowed me to communicate with others. I can clearly remember my goal when I was 13 years old and had just started high school. My father asked me "Blake what do you want to do in life?" whilst driving in his fancy Mercedes that had a car phone(the only one I ever saw in the 80s). My response was "I want to be a millionaire by the time I am 18 and I don't care what I do to achieve that." That was how I defined success. Money = success in life. Money = happiness. Money = the solution to all problems.

I couldn't have been more wrong and I am glad that life has thrown so many challenging experiences my way to help me to develop compassion and understanding and to put it bluntly, to not be as much of a self-centred and uncaring fuckwit as I was. This is a life long journey of change. I have a lot to learn still and a lot of changes to make in my life to be the me I wish to be.

What wasn't seen or even comprehended by me at the time was the toxic environment I was raised in and the damage that it did to me and how I then mimicked(and still do) that behaviour and passed my hurt onto other beings. Anyone who has been through an abusive upbringing will understand what I mean without me going into details or passing on blame. My parents did the best they could with the tools they had from their own upbringing and life experiences. I started to release this pain by punching walls when I was 12. By 15 I started drinking and smoking. By 16 I was cutting myself and suicidal. Love helped me to survive to 19 and when my first girlfriend ended our relationship(and rightly so, I was passing on the abuse I had been trained well in) all I wanted to do was die. I couldn't bring myself to take the fast way, so I chose the slow one of drinking and drugs from dusk til dawn, getting into fights and harming myself and others. But surely coming from a wealthy background, this must have been my choice(and yes I did make choices).

When I was in love at 18 and had finished school and was offered a place in education at university, I turned it down to follow my passion - writing. I spent 10+ hours per day for 6 months writing an epic post-apocalyptic pen and paper roleplaying game. I researched anything and everything as I wanted it to be the most comprehensive and realistic RPG. I dabbled in various forms of programming later as I have always had this desire to create and saw pen and paper gaming dying compared to CRPGs.

I was constantly told that I should get a job when I was 18 but didn't understand why. I was working. Why would I want a menial job when I had the opportunity to create and become a "success"? My mother owned our house. My father was absent from 14 onwards but there was enough money for food and bills and I thought following my dream was the best way to go.

So I gave in to those pressures and tried to get one. I figured publishing was the way to go given my writing endeavours, and cold called every single publishing house, large or small in Sydney. It was the same response over and over "experience and qualifications". I offered to work for free for every job as a trial run. I almost landed one after a 40 minute interview until I was asked "So what did you do during this period?" The true answer was that I was writing and reading and playing games by day and partying and socialising and enjoying love by night. I couldn't think of an answer that was relevant in the spur of the moment so I stumbled and faltered in my reply and was told "Until that answer, the job was yours. Goodbye." I cried. I had put so much energy into trying to get a job and I couldn't understand why it was so difficult. Just give me a chance! Shit I worked at McDonalds when I was 14(the youngest one can legally work in this country) until my parents forced me to quit it as they thought it was interfering with my studies. You can't get much worse (in my mind) than working at Maccas.


(last part to come)
Post edited August 08, 2014 by Tarnicus
high rated
My mother kicked me out of home on Christmas eve when I was 19. She ironically couldn't handle my drinking. Pot. Kettle. Black. I had $35 to my name, no life experience, no job and a lot of pain and a lack of understanding of it. Fortunately friends that I drank with took me in. At one stage we had 14 people living in a 3 bedroom house. I just wanted to die. What was the point of life? No love, no money, no support, constant pressure that I was "bad" for the naive choices I had made. At every stage where I was in a situation where I had the opportunity to die, love saved me. Love from strangers, animals from an unseen force that I felt strongly. I am the luckiest person I know. I am always taken care of but it is challenging to have this in the forefront of one's mind with so much struggle and adversity.

I did what I could to find joy, motivation and not give up on life. Love is the healing force of the universe. Those who are unable to see it, feel it or find it in it's many forms(I consider the sun shining to be a form of love, just as I do when the birds come to my balcony every morning to ask for food and cheer me up with their songs) have the most difficult time out of any I have met. So why is there all this focus on earning money (differs from "work") in environments that are totally devoid of love? (time to bring it back to unemployment lol)

We currently live in a world where there has never been such an inequity in the distribution of wealth. The basis of all wealth is the fallacious concept of land ownership(it can only be occupied and used, never 'owned') and all wealth derives from that. Sorry I do not have the time to write an economics essay so my apologies to those who do not understand what I mean by that nor do I have references on hand to point others in the direction of that concept. Use a search engine <3

We live in a world where we are willing slaves to sell our labour short in order to keep a very small minority insanely rich. We are taught that through hard work we can make it too. This is complete bullshit. This way of human existence is unsustainable. Money has no intrinsic value, it is merely a means of exchange with no value in itself. We are heading towards a global economic collapse and this is constantly being propped up by band-aid measures. Our species cannot continue to live this way without a collapse. It isn't a matter of if but when.

How would you live in an interdependent specialised society with skills that have very little application to survival if your way of life vanished now? Can you source your own food, water, shelter etc? In the Great Depression(something I have researched extensively) people grew food and knew how to find it. People went bush and built squats. People had a far greater understanding of nature and life and how to survive. Community and family existed in a way then that has since been fractured for many. These days it is far more of an "everyone for themselves" mentality.

How can I live freely as a being when I am not allowed to "trespass" or live where I choose or source or share food without breaking so many stupid laws that are merely there to protect the interests of the elite? Why is law applied differently based upon wealth? (my reason for ceasing my legal studies, too much injustice in the legal systems worldwide) If I simply wish to "be" and live, why is there a threat of force if I choose that path?

I am fortunate to currently be taken care of financially through a disability pension but the way this country is heading, that won't last. I can survive myself without money, I have no doubts about that and have spent the past 8 years learning anything and everything I can about survival - sourcing water, food, building shelter and tools, learning the land, medicines, combat, networking with the community here and elsewhere, etc. My greatest concern is my dependents (animals in particular).

So fellow unemployed people(I manage to get some casual gardening work illegally as is the most common form of labouring where I live as it suits the employer best due to the extra costs of doing it legally, so I have no history of official paid work since the year 2000) I would like to say this:

1/ You are not the problem in this world, no matter what others tell you. The most generous people I have ever met are always poor and are often willing to help. The poor are the majority in this world.

2/ Try your best to find joy and motivation as being poor and unemployed has enough challenges without adding the judgement of others to your burden

3/ If any of this resonates with you and you want some basic tips on survival knowledge, PM me

4/ Love (as is being shown by this giveaway) is the answer. People do care, especially once they get an understanding of what your hardships have been like, even if you have not found people who care.

5/ Find your own path in life and do what feels right no matter what anyone else says and whether it is paid or not. That is the key to finding a place of belonging and finding some form of validation. The universe rewards those who give <3 Give your labour to those who reward you for doing so, even if that payment is a 'thank you' or smile or cup of tea. Remember money is only one means of energetic exchange.