At the end of the day, not having a job is an inconvenience, but it's not the end of the world. Use "funemployment" (what many of my friends call being without a job) to blow off some steam.
2011 — Don Peck, Pinched: How the Great Recession Has Narrowed Our Futures & What We Can Do About It, Crown Publishers (2011), →ISBN, page 72:
Aubrey Howell, who'd tweeted about funemployment shortly after being laid off as the manager of a Nashville tea shop in 2009, and was featured in a Los Angeles Times story soon afterward, told me half a year later that she initially saw the layoff as an opportunity to clear her head, refocus, and "go after what I'm really passionate about" — music and graphic design.
2011 — Leslie Simon, Geek Girls Unite: How Fangirls, Bookworms, Indie Chicks, and Other Misfits are Taking Over the World, HarperCollins Publishers Inc. (2011), →ISBN, page 50:
After Jen is fired from her high-powered and high-paying job, she realizes that her high-maintenance ways — Spa pedicures! Expensive dinners! Overpriced highlights! — aren't going to get her very far and being jobless isn't all funemployment and games.