Stigmorgan
Established Member
So I'm feeling curious and wondered what people do/did to earn a living and if they consider it to be a career or just a job, my definition of career is doing something that you absolutely love and enjoy and just a job is what you do because it pays the bills.
I'm 38 and have worked in many different areas since leaving school, my first part time job from leaving school starting college was in a car parts shop, hated that because it was working with my mum's partner who was the store manager, from there whilst a college I had 2 years work experience in the bird collection at Waddesdon manor in Buckinghamshire (I was studying animal welfare at college) due to a difference of opinion with tutors I didn't finish college and joined the Army where I became a bricklayer in the royal engineers, during the recruitment process I had an agency job in a slot machine house (which put me off gambling for life) due to an accident I was discharged from the Army after only 2 years, from there I got a job in a college teaching brickwork (never should have been given the job, I was only 21 and no real brickwork experience, also learned at that point I don't like teenagers.) From there I spent a couple of years taking whatever agency work I could get, pot collecting in pubs, cleaning offices, kitchen work, mail sorting in a factory that inserts leaflets into the magazine and then wraps in cellophane, refuse collector, at this point I was around 25 and moved in with my girlfriend, got a job as a motorcycle courier, that lasted about 6 months, the money was terrible and the hours were even worse, went back to doing more agency work in kitchens and pubs, had one lovely agency placement at a local public park and woodland then a friend who is a civil engineer told me the company he works for was looking for labourers on a new school build, so I scraped the money together to get my CSCS card and a few weeks later was finally earning what I thought was great money, I've always been able to pick things up very quickly just from watching what people are doing so within 2 years I was acting as site manager (still paid as a labourer though) for the first time in my life I had found a job I was very good at and loved doing, I worked for the same firm for about 8 years before I got fed up of being paid as a labourer for doing a site managers job, from here I got a job as a labourer working on London underground in the tunnels, then got a job as site foreman installing/building two bridges over a river that cut through a local farm, this is the one job I am most proud of, myself and 2 others managed to build both bridges in less than 6 months. From there I went back to labouring on local sites for a while until my godsons friend told me about a caretakers job, turned out the school was a 5 minute walk from my best friends new house so I applied and got the job, 2 years later I'm still here and haven't had a single moment of regret, I consider this to be my career, even though there is no ladder to climb I absolutely love it, sure there are times when I the academy get on my nerves but for the most part, the teaching staff are great and regularly tell me they appreciate everything I do and I absolutely love the children, but then I am the biggest child in school.
I'm 38 and have worked in many different areas since leaving school, my first part time job from leaving school starting college was in a car parts shop, hated that because it was working with my mum's partner who was the store manager, from there whilst a college I had 2 years work experience in the bird collection at Waddesdon manor in Buckinghamshire (I was studying animal welfare at college) due to a difference of opinion with tutors I didn't finish college and joined the Army where I became a bricklayer in the royal engineers, during the recruitment process I had an agency job in a slot machine house (which put me off gambling for life) due to an accident I was discharged from the Army after only 2 years, from there I got a job in a college teaching brickwork (never should have been given the job, I was only 21 and no real brickwork experience, also learned at that point I don't like teenagers.) From there I spent a couple of years taking whatever agency work I could get, pot collecting in pubs, cleaning offices, kitchen work, mail sorting in a factory that inserts leaflets into the magazine and then wraps in cellophane, refuse collector, at this point I was around 25 and moved in with my girlfriend, got a job as a motorcycle courier, that lasted about 6 months, the money was terrible and the hours were even worse, went back to doing more agency work in kitchens and pubs, had one lovely agency placement at a local public park and woodland then a friend who is a civil engineer told me the company he works for was looking for labourers on a new school build, so I scraped the money together to get my CSCS card and a few weeks later was finally earning what I thought was great money, I've always been able to pick things up very quickly just from watching what people are doing so within 2 years I was acting as site manager (still paid as a labourer though) for the first time in my life I had found a job I was very good at and loved doing, I worked for the same firm for about 8 years before I got fed up of being paid as a labourer for doing a site managers job, from here I got a job as a labourer working on London underground in the tunnels, then got a job as site foreman installing/building two bridges over a river that cut through a local farm, this is the one job I am most proud of, myself and 2 others managed to build both bridges in less than 6 months. From there I went back to labouring on local sites for a while until my godsons friend told me about a caretakers job, turned out the school was a 5 minute walk from my best friends new house so I applied and got the job, 2 years later I'm still here and haven't had a single moment of regret, I consider this to be my career, even though there is no ladder to climb I absolutely love it, sure there are times when I the academy get on my nerves but for the most part, the teaching staff are great and regularly tell me they appreciate everything I do and I absolutely love the children, but then I am the biggest child in school.