George Mason's Career Fair Didn't Just Hand Out Jobs. It Handed Out Something Much Harder to Find.
Every spring, college campuses across America transform into what can only be described as speed dating for capitalism. Students polish resumes they rewrote twelve times, recruiters stand behind neatly arranged tables with bowls of candy, and everyone pretends that a thirty-second conversation might somehow determine the next forty years of someone's life. I've walked through career fairs before, and they usually feel like organized chaos. Hundreds of students shuffle from booth to booth trying to remember elevator pitches that suddenly evaporate the moment someone asks, "Tell me about yourself." Recruiters repeat the same introduction until their smiles become muscle memory. It's loud. It's crowded. It's intimidating. Now imagine experiencing all of that while navigating challenges that make sensory overload, unfamiliar environments, or spontaneous social interactions significantly more difficult. Suddenly, what many people dismiss as "just another c...