How did you pick your career?
peachyxoxoxo
Posts: 1,178 Member
in Chit-Chat
For me I think it's because both my parents worked in hospitals when I was growing up. For many, many years I wanted to be a doctor. I did well in science and that seemed to be the field most suited to my interests. Then I realized there were far more options in healthcare. Now I'm in school to be a dietitian. However, I'm still considering going to PA school in a few years. I can't make up my mind! I guess for the time being I'll just see how the dietitian thing goes.
How did you end up doing what you're doing?
How did you end up doing what you're doing?
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I didn't pick it...it picked me!0
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My career picked me. I fell into a position working at a state hospital when I gout out of the army and fell in love. I worked with kids with issues and that career grew. It grew into the personal growth and life coaching that I do now.
It seems that many people that do something because it makes a lot of money but don't have the all in heart, they don't enjoy what they do and tend to not be good at it. Go with your heart.0 -
I picked the jobs with the best pay, just happens they've all been in the same field.0
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Bump... I'd like to hear what more people have to say!0
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I fell into it. Answered an ad in the paper for an office manager for a court reporting agency. I was hooked. 22 years later and I still love the profession!0
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I am in school to become a Wellness Coach, focusing especially on Nutrition (there's no dietetics program where I live, so I improvised) and with extra knowledge about herbs and natural healing stuff (independent from the university).
I picked this type of career because I experienced the life-changing power of food, exercise, and herbs first-hand. I want to help other people become empowered to change their health circumstances this way, instead of being stuck in the trap of dependency on pharmaceutical drugs.
I'd like to work in a Holistic Health clinic most of all, but would be happy to work anywhere that my focus would translate to: community gyms, drug rehabilitation programs, corporate employee wellness programs, etc.0 -
I wasn't good at math or science or school in general. But I could draw. So I went to art school for animation. Then got a job in animation. And here I am.0
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I'm not in the job I want right now because I'm still in school (and I have a LONG way to go yet). But the job I'm aiming for not many people have the stomach for. I know I can handle it and I find the subject extremely interesting.0
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I'm a PE teacher and have always loved sport.....oh and long holidays!0
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I'm a Finance major..do I see myself being on Wall Street or working in an office 24/7? No! It's a great major to help me with any future endeavors of mine...all businesses use some aspect of Finance. Hopefully the perfect job/career will find me one day!0
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I majored in Architecture...waiting for that after college breakthrough. lol0
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I am a weird anti-social guy with dubious personal hygiene ... Becoming an IT professional seemed the natural choice0
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I always loved to dance and make up dances. I don't know why, it was just natural to me (there were other dancers and skaters in my family, so maybe genetic). Then when I was 11 a friend was going to dance class so I went with her. Then when I turned 14 I was old enough to work and could pay for my own dance classes. I took as many as I could. Then I started traveling a bit to take more workshops in different styles that interested me. I was injured in some car accidents, etc. So, I thought I wouldn't be able to dance as a career. But, I still chose a school with a great dance department that I loved because I wanted to continue dancing (while studying science and psychology). Then they asked me to major in dance and that was what I really wanted. It just made sense. I just loved it so much. Once I started dancing I had found my calling and it just kept calling to me always. I couldn't escape it and I didn't want to. It hasn't always been easy (I've had ups and downs), but it's my life and my identity in many ways. Sometimes I wish I had a career that was not so body oriented, and I think about other options. But, I just keep sticking with dance. I'm happy when I dance. Not so happy when I don't. I still struggle with confidence issues. Dance is a creative field and I always have to be creative and create new dances and have new ideas and perform and put myself out there...and I am actually a shy person (but I'm not shy when I am performing). I never know what the future will be and performance may not always be an option. But for now, I'm still dancing.0
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Fell into it. I was in school for a MA, but knew I didnt like sick ad to do 350 clinical hours and fell into a private practice eye doctors office. Fell in love and now a certified paraoptometric tech. Studying for my next degree. I love working with the eyes. It's so interesting0
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I was working in an office for manufacturing engineers. My daughter 18 months was acting weird when going to daycare. I had a weird feeling so my hubby and I made a surprise visit during lunch. My daughter was in a room by herself eating lunch in the corner buckled in a high chair. The daycare lady said she wouldn't eat her lunch. We pulled her out and started looking for daycare. We didn't have any luck finding scene we trusted. My husband had cancer at the time and we were 20 years old. We both had to work no choice for medical bills. I opened my own daycare to stay home with her plus make money . I didn't plan on staying but I have been going for 10 years. I love what I do. I don't like the stress of long hours and the wear on my house. However I enjoy all the small things every day! Plus their biggest problems during the day is picking between Legos and cars. Yep no "real" life issues to deal with from them! Watching little ones learning to walk, crawl, and talk for the first time makes you remember the important things every day!0
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My current career picked me as well. IMO if it calls you, you should follow. Gotta love your work. More important than pay.0
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Are you ready for a very long story? Okay. Here it goes.
A few years ago, my best friend and I decided to take a road trip from Florida to Chicago. Our two favourite bands were playing a show together and it was kind of a big deal and we were just crazy enough to decide to go. While we were there, a touring production RENT was playing at a theatre there. My friend knew that I loved the movie and she bought tickets for us.
I had never seen live theatre before, and when we went, I was kind of blown away by it. And extremely captivated by what they were doing. At the time, I was a journalism major, only one year into college, and I wasn't loving it. I chose journalism because I am pretty decent at writing, and I figured that journalism was something that I could do. I didn't know if I wanted to do it or not, I just thought that yeah, I could do it. Anyways, after I saw RENT, I became obsessed. I downloaded the original cast recording, listened to it all the time, watched countless videos and bootlegs of different casts, memorized the entire thing, and saw the tour that I first saw in Chicago again -- twice when it went through Tampa, twice in Orlando, three times in Miami -- several times in the front row thanks to rush tickets (wait in line all day, get front row seats for $20). I even made the crazy decision to go to Sacramento for the final three shows of the tour. I ended up seeing that tour eleven times in three different states, five different cities.
Along the way, I started listening to other musicals and became just as obsessed. I wanted to be a part of that so badly.
I was a pretty bad student at the time. I skipped class a lot, smoked way too much pot, had no interest in what I was doing, and my bad grades led to me being 'academically dismissed'. I could have reapplied to the same school, but I decided to switch schools. I got my grades up, and then joined the theatre department. I stage managed a play, I stage managed another play, I was cast in a play, I got an internship in the costume shop of a professional theatre, I got a job in the costume shop at school, I stage managed a musical... I found something that I could do and also wanted to do.
Obviously, it's not my career yet, but it will be. And I'm going to work on Broadway. I don't know if I will be acting or designing costumes or stage managing, but I will work in theatre and I will work on Broadway. And I kind of have RENT to thank for it all.0 -
I had a strong joy and learning ability in the computer industry. 15 years later, 6 figure salary and I work from home. I think I made the right choice!
I love my work and I get paid to do it.0 -
the joy was sucked out of my life at an early age... responsibilities meant i had to work at what paid the bills instead of what I loved...:sad:0
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I needed an elective in high school and the only thing open was accounting so i took it and had the highest average ever at the school after that i competed in accounting competitions that was the only thing I was realy good at so thats what I majored in still doing it0
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I had an amazing 2nd grade teacher, Mrs. Chavez. She made learning fun. Her classroom was well organized and the atmosphere was friendly, peaceful, calm, fair, and caring. I decided that year I wanted to be a teacher. Every year when each new teacher would ask what we wanted to be, I would stick to my guns and say TEACHER. The other kids would laugh at me. Teacher's pay isn't that great and it's hard work! Then in 4th I had another great teacher, Mrs. Cortez. In 6th Mr. Kerwin. And from then on there were other great teachers as well who reinforced the idea I wanted to be a teacher.
In college, I took a few psychology classes and loved them. So I found out that it only added 4 extra classes if I wanted to earn a degree in that field in addition to my liberal studies degree. I became a dual-major. I went to school EVERY summer except the first one in my freshman year and I graduated in just four years with two degrees.
I started to think I'd like to be a psychologist. I was so intrigued by it. But then I started teaching and I moved out on my own and started getting bills and then became pregnant with my now 10 year old son and then got married to his dad.... have since bought our first house 3 years ago and added on more debt/bills and a daughter, now 5. So.. yeah, pretty much, life just happened and I never made it back to school.
I love what I do, but I'd also love to try on the other hat for awhile. Maybe when I grow up....? HAHA.0 -
went out to university to study to be a teacher. Psychology was a minor subject, but I liked it, kept with it to my third year, when I won a place on a psychology honours programme, then decided to try for a masters programme. Qualified as a psychologist, and worked as such, but also did university lecturing alongside that. Gradually became more and more focused on the academic, so moved to the UK to do a PhD. Now a full time academic, just made UK associate professor, in a subject I never really set out to study... I love my job. Teaching and research are a dual vocation for me. I feel privileged that I get to do something I love so much, every day.0
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I got knocked up (I'm a career stay-at-home mom). Before that it was going to be vet medicine- research, because I love the sciences and enjoy figuring things out. Having kids changed everything for me- I backed out of vet school in 2001 with many tears. No regrets though.
If I ever get back in the work force it will probably be fitness- related0 -
I went to college in Europe and got a degree in Finance ( not even sure why I picked Finance, I guess I liked playing with numbers) I wasnt very crazy about finance, but I went and got an MBA , which helped alot in getting into the field Im now. I cant say the finance degree was useless because even though I am doing something more fun than finance, I couldn't do it with it.0
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I'm only good at the arts, music, photography, and creative things. I also happen to be pretty good at other feilds in working with my hands, like a craftsman of some sort working with wood or metal or whatever.
However, it turns out those things don't pay well, if at all.
So, I got just took a job in the corporate world that paid. I just kept doing that. I now, I'm in a position I hate, in an industry I hate, but I make too much to let it go.
Choose something that you have passion for and let that drive everything.0 -
First I'm gonna say I LOVE my job hehe
Anyway, back in 2008 I had a dayhome. I had only one girl but whatever...it was a dayhome (sounds better than "babysitting") Her mom was expecting a second child and was going on maternity leave in July and I knew I would need a job. I checked around and did some applying to jobs but because of the cost of childcare for my two kids for before/after school care, I had to find a job that would allow me to work around school hours. It was VERY difficult to find a job that would allow me to work between the hours of 9 and 3.
I was applying at a school one day, for their lunch room program and there was a bus there and I I asked the driver a bunch of questions and decided to just apply for the job. Trained over the summer time between my kids' daycamps schedules and have loved it ever since. The hours are perfect, and since I Had to drive my kids to school anyway, I ended up getting a bus route that ran out of their school...so I was getting paid to take my kids to school0 -
I studied three sciences at A- level, but without maths the only one I could pursue was Biology. I got accepted onto a Physiology degree course, but at the last minute I spotted a poster for the first IT course in the country - bear in mind that the Internet wasn't even invented until the year I graduated! I played with computers as a hobby so it seemed right up my street. Business boomed through the 90s and I was paid well, but I wasn't happy either in work or my personal life, and the work side seemed easier to change.
I started writing in my spare time, and when I came to the end of a contract, I signed up for an intensive journalism post-graduate certificate. I've been overworked and underpaid ever since, and loving every minute!0 -
I didn't. It just kind of happened.
Unemployment and sheer boredom got me into a newspaper. Coworker sabotage got me into working for a magazine. The willingness to try my hand at anything at work took me in to design. And it was that same willingness that got me into kitchen design when the publishing company downsized drastically.0 -
went out to university to study to be a teacher. Psychology was a minor subject, but I liked it, kept with it to my third year, when I won a place on a psychology honours programme, then decided to try for a masters programme. Qualified as a psychologist, and worked as such, but also did university lecturing alongside that. Gradually became more and more focused on the academic, so moved to the UK to do a PhD. Now a full time academic, just made UK associate professor, in a subject I never really set out to study... I love my job. Teaching and research are a dual vocation for me. I feel privileged that I get to do something I love so much, every day.
Yay, a fellow academic congratulations on becoming associate professor! I hope I get to be there one day.
I went to uni, studied German and English because I didn't get the course I applied for and I had always found the subjects very easy at school. I just wanted to enjoy being a student and I didn't want to work hard lol To justify my choice I opted for a degree to become a teacher. In my first semester I discovered linguistics and fell in love. I have been working towards an academic career ever since. Now I am studying for a PhD in the UK, after teaching at a university for three years. I feel very privileged, too. I made a lot of sacrifices for my career and don't regret it at all.0 -
Started off in Nuclear Engineering because I tested well for it. Was trying to get into the Air Force Academy, but was pursuing Naval Academy as a backup plan. The backup plan started developing quickly. Woke up one day and thought to myself, "9 months at a time on a sub full of guys? No way!" So decided I'd stay a civilian and enroll in an engineering university. After a year there (where I did less-than-awesomely and lost all my scholarships/grants), met my wife (which is far more rare and challenging at this school than obtaining a NE degree), moved to a nearby big city shortly after as she was a graduating senior, and started our family.
Only university we could afford for me did not have a very large NE program and I just wasn't overly impressed. So I thought to myself, "I really liked Accounting class in high school. Mrs. Nichols (the teacher) was really hot."
So now I'm a Director of Taxation at a (recently publicly-traded, but now PE owned) corporation...all because I had an attractive Accounting teacher in high school. I'm trying to teach my children to base their career choices using slightly different criteria.
ETA: That's the cliff notes version. I should probably type up the full story sometime for my children to read...after I'm dead.0
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