- Joined
- May 16, 2021
- Messages
- 315
Got into the Machinist Union many yrs ago and retired from there.
I left it out of my bio, but in there I spent 1 and a half years, but that consisted of two very cold winters. doing construction- framing and cement work. Brutal and it sent me back to school.My dad was a garbage man so to rebel, I am a garbage man. It ticked him off but he's proud. He did it so idiot have to and now I'm doing it some my kids won't have to.
The money is good, most of the work is not. I'm too far in to change jobs now as I got 7 years left until a decent pension.
I wonder how many were actually satisfied with their profession after their father pushed them in that direction ?
After 20 miserable years of working my way up through the ranks in the finance side of Telecom, I had a serious conversation with myself about what new career would fit my personality and my strengths. I saw the writing on the wall when Verizon bought XO Communications, and I turned out to be right. Combining this revelation with information I got from friends and relatives in the legal industry, I chose corporate paralegal. I've been at it for 6 years, and I love it. I work in a much more stable, professional environment, the management isn't constantly seeking ways to "reorganize" (I lost count years ago how many layoffs I've survived, they finally got me in 2017) , and I'm making nearly twice what I was making when I left Verizon. I was unemployed a total of 3 weeks, and I started my new career one semester before I completed my paralegal certificate. Not many things in my life fall into place beautifully, but this did.
Growing up I always wanted to work on cars. Only juniors and seniors in high school could take vocational, which was at another school about 20-25 minutes away, so sophomore year anyone interested had to sign up because classes filled up quick. What my “home” school neglected to tell me was they required us to go to the open house (the only school in the county that did that), I was sick the day they said that and naturally didn’t go.
So they come and tell me that I have to fill out for some more classes because I’m not in vocational, I asked why not since everything was filled out and they told me all that BS. My mom got involved and my school relented, but automotive was full. As was diesel mechanics, welding, CAD, and electronics.
They had one spot left for machining, and I wasn’t going to sit at my home school all day so I jumped on that. Turns out it’s pretty cool, been doing that, if we include high school, for 11 years now. Work for a great employer now, the only thing I’d change is my shift. I’m over this 12 hour night shift stuff.
I don’t want to publicly say, but when I see a +/-0.001” tolerance I know the job is an easy one lolMachining for what type of equipment / industry ?
I don’t want to publicly say, but when I see a +/-0.001” tolerance I know the job is an easy one lol