What would you really like to have done ... ?

Discussion in 'Off-Topic Discussion' started by Victoria, Oct 23, 2011.

  1. WolfieKate

    WolfieKate Gardener

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    I am having a bit of a mid life crisis over this right now :yess:

    I went to uni, did a terrible choice of degree (film and theatre) which I hated, left in 1991, filled in a few application forms and ended up at British Rail as a graduate trainee in Marketing. I moved company but stayed in Marketing till 2005 when I resigned as we had yet another change of director and I was sick of trying to impress people and play the political game. This coincided as fate would have it with conceiving my son so I haven't been back in work since! My youngest just started school so I am wondering what the devil to do next! I tried one small admin job but I didn't like the culture so I resigned.

    What would I really like to have done? Well I think I would have suited being a dusty academic, doing sort of research. I loved Geography and Biology at school and I wish I had studied those. :)

    Currently I am stuck as I have to be at school gates at 8.55am and 3.30pm and not many jobs really work round those hours unless I fancy admin. :DOH:I am currently keeping an eye on job sites for PT work but not much out there.

    I think the hardest thing is my brain feels really under utilized! But I don't feel as a family that I could spend money on a new degree or a change of training. I feel as if it's not too late but I am struggling to even know where to start!!
     
  2. shiney

    shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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    A friend of ours is a forensic scientist but he only studies documents :thumbsup:
     
  3. shiney

    shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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    Kate, I hope you think of what you really want to do and can then pursue it. :thumbsup:

    I, like Fidgetsmum, have been lucky in doing what I enjoy. It was all down to my father and his family who believed you could do anything you wanted if you put your mind to it.

    My father was one of ten siblings brought up in the very poor part of the Est End of London before the Great War. Their house originally was a two bedroomed terraced house with a front parlour, rear day room, outside kitchen and toilet and an attic. The rear day room became the third bedroom and the attic was turned into a flat (no kitchen) for his oldest sister, her husband and two children. 15 people in that small house.

    My father was fairly typical of the siblings. He left school just before his 14th birthday to try and bring some money into the household. He worked in a woodyard and whilst there talked his way into evening classes to get himself a better education. He also worked hard at getting rid of his Cockney accent - he still lapsed into it occasionally :).

    When I was a baby the four of us (older sister) lived in a one bedroom flat but by the time I went to school my father had studied accountancy and started working for himself - couldn't get a job in a firm as he wasn't posh enough. He managed to rent a larger house where he could have an office as well.

    I was brought up to believe in myself and my father's motto was 'You can do it - it just takes work'.

    I was cleaning cars at the age of 8 and by the age of 11 I was running a stall, selling greengrocery, in an East End market - for someone. At 13 I had my own stall.

    When I left school I was articled as an accountant but still ran my stall on a Saturday. After having done accountancy I decided on a change and became a hairdresser :scratch: then joined the merchant navy and ran the hairdressing on a passenger ship.

    When I left the ship I started my own hairdressing business (which I ran all my working life) but also managed to do a lot of other things as they took my fancy. I worked part time for an investigation agency, started my own mail order business, ran a photographic agency and wrote guide books.

    In my spare time :heehee: I studied consumer law and contract law and used my knowledge to help people with problems and never charged for my work. I also do volunteer work, have set up a number of organisations to help people and, now, spend most of my spare time playing bridge and gardening.

    You can do it!!!!! :yess:
     
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    • ClaraLou

      ClaraLou Total Gardener

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      Unfortunately, we can't all follow our dreams. Few little boys say they want to be bin men when they grow up, but unlike many other things I can think of, rubbish collection is essential. On the other hand, I think its important not to do something just because other people think it sounds good. My sister in law was encouraged to go into medicine by her parents (who still manage to get 'our daughter is a consultant, you know' into just about every sentence). Unfortunately she hasn't really enjoyed her career and is about to give it up early in life to do what she always wanted to do: she's going to art school and plans to spend her spare time tending an allotment.
       
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      • HYDROGEN86

        HYDROGEN86 Head Gardener

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        I rememer when I was a lad. My mum said to one of my friends "what do you want to do when you grow up?" and my friend replied "i want to be in the SWAT police. But my dad won't let me he wants me to be a brain surgeon" :heehee: .... he is complete waste of space now!! Failed expectations can be hard for people.
         
      • capney

        capney Head Gardener

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        Me? Well after 12 years as an Engineer in the Royal Air Force and 34 Years as a water treatment process engineer. I think I sometimes regret coming away from the aviation world. Who knows where I could be now?
         
      • daitheplant

        daitheplant Total Gardener

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        I wanted to go to university to study archeology and art, but wasn`t allowed to. At the age of 12 I passed the exam for entry into art college once I`d turned 16, again, I wasn`t allowed to do so.:(:(
         
      • ClaraLou

        ClaraLou Total Gardener

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        :( That's a real shame, Dai. But they're the sort of interests you could take up later in life. Reading University is excavating Roman Silchester at the moment and you can apply to take part in their summer digs. Although that might be a bit of a busman's holiday for a gardener. :)

        The Silchester Field School | Silchester Insula IX
         
      • Val..

        Val.. Confessed snail lover

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        When I was 17 I wanted a big house with a big garden and 6 kids!!!!
        didn't get either!!!

        Val
         
      • ClaraLou

        ClaraLou Total Gardener

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        :D I wanted a big house and garden too! (Although I never wanted six kids.) Where did we go wrong?
         
      • Victoria

        Victoria Lover of Exotic Flora

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        I had no formal art training, just an 'O' level and then 6 months of architectural draughting which has been useful as we always seem to buy ruins and renovate. :DOH: I did do some part-time draughting for NASA in the late 60s working on chassis assemblies and wring harnesses and such like for the rockets. .. my name is on quite a few blueprints. :heehee:

        I only took art up in December 2006 after I joined GC and we all wondered what we were going to do in the winter. I now display my art in various places here and sell occasionally in the UK, the States and here. :) Doesn't make me rich .. but makes me satisfied and happy. :yess:
         
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        • Val..

          Val.. Confessed snail lover

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          Well, ...........................how much time have you got?????

          Val
           
        • ClaraLou

          ClaraLou Total Gardener

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          :D Think I've missed the boat on this one. Although my Mum tells me that a lady who lives near her and who is well into pensionable age has done rather well for herself by choosing very elderly 'boyfriends'. The last one was eighty-five. He used to carry all her baggage and run errands for her, with the result that he keeled over within the year. He had no kids so she's copped the lot. She's now replaced him ... with an eighty-seven year old.

          Actually, I wouldn't swap OH. And he's very clever. He might yet end up doing rather well. :)
           
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          • Trunky

            Trunky ...who nose about gardening

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            When I left school at 16 with my handful of O levels, my family tried to push me in the direction of an office job, so that I could work my way up the greasy pole and become 'successful'.
            My instincts said this was not for me, that I was a creature of the outdoors, not one to be cooped up under artificial lights all day, but hey, what did I know?
            A number of unsuccessful interviews followed in various offices until my uncle, who could see that I was getting nowhere, heard of a job as a horticultural apprentice and said "Why don't you give this a try?"
            Thus began a lifelong career in horticulture which has spanned the past 35 years and counting.
            A 3 year apprenticeship in glasshouse growing and propagation was followed by redundancy at the age of 21 as the glasshouse industry went through tough times in the early 80s.
            I knew though, that I had found my niche and soon got another job as a groundsman/gardener for a local authority. After 5 years, promotion to area foreman followed, 3 years later came further promotion to Assistant Area Manager and two years after that, Area Manager.
            I had become 'successful'.
            I spent the next 12 years as an Area Manager; it nearly drove me mad.
            Then one day during my annual 'performance review' I simply said, "I'm not doing this any more" and asked to be 'downgraded' so that I could go back to actually doing what I liked best, being a hands on gardener.
            A few years back working at grass roots level as a chargehand groundsman enabled me to regain my sanity, until I saw a small advert in the local press for a full-time gardener on a large private estate.
            So, I applied, and got the job of my dreams!
            I now spend my working days in a beautiful garden, with woodlands, streams and paddocks surrounded by gently rolling countryside on the edge of 'Constable Country'. There is no hassle or pressure, we are simply there to keep the place looking beautiful.
            Conclusion: find out what you enjoy doing, what you are good at and do it.
            What would I really like to have done?
            I'm doing it!
             
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            • Val..

              Val.. Confessed snail lover

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              I should have added that I also wanted some dogs, so I can't complain, I got the dogs!!!:loll:

              Val
               
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