I graduated 3 years ago and have been working in a call centre ever since. This is pretty much how I feel
How I feel at age 32 when I check out the 20 year old girls on campus
How I feel spending New Years with my heavily Christian friends
How I feel accepting college loans
How I feel as a broke college student after depositing $22 in my bank account
How I Feel Getting My Girlfriend Off
How I feel the morning after being blackout drunk
How I feel after I make a concise, logical point during an argument with my wife
How I feel every time I pull into Walmart…
How I feel after going to the gym for 1 day
How I feel being the third wheel during a date
How I feel working for minimum wage
How I feel when texting a girl I like
How I feel being 27/m and single…
How I feel trying to seduce my wife after eating a huge meal
How I feel with my new George Foreman grill.
How I feel about hand jobs
How I feel at work. Everyday.
How I feel sitting in my 101 elective as a last semester senior…
How I feel like working in Customer Service.
How I feel when charging my phone from my laptop.
How I feel working in IT
After 12 hours of studying and two exams, this is how I feel
How i feel playing video games when i should be studying for finals
After trying to find a job for 4 months, this is how I feel about interviews
If the candidate says nothing and gets fidgety means they can't think well under pressure.
Some one that spouts off something like: "32,199" tells me that they don't want to do any research to get the correct answer and try will slide by with lies and bullshit.
Answering "I don't know" is not good unless followed up with something along the lines of: "What is the square footage available inside the bus and/or what are the dimensions? Are the seats still in the bus? What is the diameter of the golf ball?"
Responses like that. That tells me the candidate shows that they are interested in finding the correct answer once they have the information they need to do so.