We are a varied bunch aren't we?
I studied Electronic engineering at my local CFE in Plymouth and then went to Brunel University in West London to do a degree in the same. Didn't get on with the university at all, they were busily trying to get shot of their world famous reputation for engineering excellence so they could bolster the far more lucrative humanities side of things. I was sponsored by Ford and they wouldn't let me change universities, so I came away from 4 years there with no degree, but with a lot of very good friends.
One of the departments I had done a work placement with at Ford hired me the moment I got home to Plymouth, so I turned around and schlepped straight back to Essex and spent the next few years as a component engineer.
Unfortunately I was singled out as the one that knew computers, and as everything was going computerised I rapidly became the mug everyone dumped their computing requirements on, so the actual engineering took a back seat, and Ford being the forward thinking company it is saw that as an excuse to let me go in the next round of cuts.
With my head full of IT, I moved with the girlfriend to West London to be where the head offices roamed in huge, lucrative herds, only to that discover no-one wanted an engineer who could work on their computers, they wanted 21 year old computer studies graduates instead (I wouldn't be bitter about it if I hadn't actually encountered some). Two years of unemployment interspersed with some freelance IT jobs followed before a friend got me a job working on UCL's database. An office full of totty in central London, it beat the automotive industry! It was rather spoiled by a power crazed management wannabe, but after about a year there I had my foot in the door and moved on to work in the Information section of an obscure part of the Department of Health called the MHRA (we regulate and licence medicines and medical equipment).
So here I am, a civil servant earning less than I was on day one at Ford all those years ago and more than 10K less than the average IT worker in London.
Never really been blissfully happy in a job, but the people are great here and it's flexible working, but with a young baby now, the girlfriend is haranguing me to get a higher paid job. (she earns three times what I do when she's not on Mat leave!).
I love being a practical sort, I do lots of diy around the house (SWMBO is even loaning me out to her young mother friends to do all *their* diy too!) and I can't wait to get the garage to workshop transformation finished so I can get on with some proper wood-worrying. When I'm not being practical I'm horribly geeky and play computer games a lot (I used to do role-playing too, and would do so again - that's how sad I am! :lol: )
Vormulac.