What do you do for a living and why do you do it.

ROBDOG

New Member
Aug 12, 2006
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WEST YORKSHIRE
I DRIVE A TRUCK, TO ME IT'S A CAREER IT GIVES ME A GOOD FEELING TO KNOW I'M PLAYING A VITAL ROLL IN THE COUNTRY'S ECONOMY. IT'S NOT FOR EVERYONE BUT I LIKE IT DONE IT FOR 14 YEARS AND STILL LOOK FORWARD TO TOMORROW. (NOT EVERYONE CAN SAY THAT ABOUT THERE JOB)
 

super☆man

New Member
Aug 17, 2006
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I have no direction

I have no direction in all honesty. because my major is not so popular . I usually worry about my major of Art. You know the major which distressed me is not a good specialty. I dare not forecast my future . now the job seems very hard to me . and the company usually be unable to invite applications for the specialty. who show me what I can do now
 

hermanntrude

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Jun 23, 2006
7,267
118
63
46
Newfoundland!
I am currently a research chemist at a university.

very soon I will be nothing. I'm moving to a place with 85% unemployment. Possibly there will be jobs to do but nothing to pay people with... I may do volunteer work or I may end up wandering around naked at home trying to tell the voices things.

I'm a little scared
 

Riyko

Electoral Member
Apr 29, 2006
497
1
18
Oakville, Ontario
I have a job now... i do something (not going to say what) and it's a good paying job that I don't even need college for =D. I'm still going to college and the job is going to pay for it when I start.
 

CFS

New Member
Aug 29, 2006
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Alberta
I'm currently self employed, and still kinda deciding what I want to be when I grow up.... LOL.....

I'm involved with several school things, activities for school, and also am the president of our local chamber of Commerce.
 

cortex

Electoral Member
Aug 3, 2006
418
2
18
hopelessly entagled
Re: RE: What do you do for a living and why do you do it.

s_lone said:
I just graduated in Music/Electroacoustics (Bachelor). In the fall I'll be taking a few additional courses in Computation Arts.

I play, record and compose music. I'm at the precise point in my life where I need to find a job where I'll be decently paid for what I am good at. I'm thinking of giving a shot at the video game industry this fall. A lot going on in that field in Montreal.

Congrats!!!

You are doing what i wanted to do but didnt have the guts to.
So electronic music production has become my big hobby. Ive built a small studio in my bedroom . G5 Mac running emagic logic with tons of plug ins---pluggo by cycling 74. and ive got the entire native instruments soft synth collection--absynth and reactor are my favorites.--also GRM tools running on an older version. Ive basically got about 50 gigs of my own weird heavily processed samples so far--and plan to some day dump them onto a sampler and actually compose something.
i thought i would enjoy music more if i kept it as a hobby rather than a career--having to worry about how to make money from it--problem is without a deadline its really hard to FINISH compositions.

Its great you want to work in the video game industry --and that will probably pay the bills --but with your background there simply isnt any excuse not to actually compose some serious art music--shoot for being the next Stockhausen

oh yeah---got to mention metasynth by u and i software--very cool program.
 

lady_hawk_ca

New Member
Sep 11, 2006
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I teach English as a foreign language to kids (and adults but I prefer children) and I love it, especially when you see the lightbulb (as I call it) come on and they finally understand. It's a wonderful feeling of accomplishment.
 

ponygurl

Nominee Member
Jun 3, 2004
63
0
6
Ottawa
I'm a nurse. I do it because I love it. It is the hardest and most rewarding thing I've ever done.

It's a bonus that I've been able to travel around Canada and parts of the US doing it :) Maybe I'll head to the UK in a few years and try it there.
Hi Tracy.. I am currently a nursing student, at the ripe old age of 41. As a single mom of 4 kids, this is the hardest thing I"VE ever done.. so God , please don't tell me it gets harder! :p

What prompted you to travel and relocate? Are you a Canadian living in the US? Many of my younger classmates are chomping at the bit to get to the US when we graduate.. but that's not really an option for me.

And one more nosy question.. what kind of nursing do you do now and what have you done? I absolutley loved my psych rotation, and they are VERY short staffed on psychiatric floors, but our professors tell us we lose skills we have developed , and never fully develop other skills if we become pysch nurses, and I can see how that would be so.
 

tracy

House Member
Nov 10, 2005
3,500
48
48
California
Hi Tracy.. I am currently a nursing student, at the ripe old age of 41. As a single mom of 4 kids, this is the hardest thing I"VE ever done.. so God , please don't tell me it gets harder! :p

What prompted you to travel and relocate? Are you a Canadian living in the US? Many of my younger classmates are chomping at the bit to get to the US when we graduate.. but that's not really an option for me.

And one more nosy question.. what kind of nursing do you do now and what have you done? I absolutley loved my psych rotation, and they are VERY short staffed on psychiatric floors, but our professors tell us we lose skills we have developed , and never fully develop other skills if we become pysch nurses, and I can see how that would be so.

Hi Ponygurl:) Unfortunately, it does get harder in some ways, easier than others. I remember the anguish of being a student and I am so glad those days are behind me!!! I am a Canadian working in the US, and I really like it here. I worked in BC and Ontario before coming to California. You're getting into a crazy career, but I still love it and can't imagine doing anything else. I left BC after a nasty round of contract negotiations with the government. I was getting burned out and sick of feeling disrespected. Toronto seemed like an exciting place, so I went. I enjoyed working there, but didn't like the weather much, so I decided on California. It's great down here, not perfect, but I really do like it.

I work Neonatal ICU, but I've also worked OB (L&D, PP, antepartum). I hated my psych rotation, but oddly enough most of my nursing school friends went into psych when they graduated. I heard the same spiel about specializing when I was in nursing school and it's bull if you ask me. If you love psych and only want to work psych, who cares if you lose some med-surg skills? You develop skills that matter for your specialty. Plus sick people wind up in psych wards too so you will get exposure to diseases. If you spend years in any specialty you do lose med-surg skills, that's a given. After 10 years in psych, it really won't matter if you did a year of med-surg as a new grad or not. I think too many nursing instructors are stuck in the mentality of the 80s where every nurse had to start on med-surg. It isn't like that anymore, especially down here in the US. I went almost straight into L&D and despite the warnings of some nursing instructors, it didn't impact me negatively at all. I learned the skills I needed to work L&D and was exposed to med-surg illnesses at the same time. Then I went into NICU and it's waaaaaaaayyyyy more skill heavy than anything I would have done on med-surg. I've received several offers to train into adult ICU because of my NICU experience and am also considering a move to the OR. Down here, the notion that new grads have to start in med-surg is seen as old fashioned. I know NICU managers who prefer new grads to nurses with adult experience.

The only piece of advice I would give you that was great for me is write the NCLEX when you graduate. You may think you won't go to the US but if you ever want to, it's best to have that exam done when you're a new grad and all the specialties are fresh in your mind. Your situation might change in 10 years. I know a lot of nurses who just do short term contracts in the US and then return to Canada. It's great for things like saving for a car or a kid's college tuition.

How close are you to graduation?
 
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CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
43,839
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Ontario
I fabricate custom items out of steel. I specialize in Stainless steel now, but I have welded in or on Aluminium, Brass, Pig Iron, and plain ol' steel. In all kinds of places, from thousands of feet under the earth, to the tops of Skyscrapers, in more then a dozen countries and in all kinds of weather.

I do it, cause I love it. I think it's in my blood too. My lil brother does it, and all but 4 of my cousins.
 

Dalreg

Electoral Member
Sep 29, 2006
191
1
18
Saskatchewan eh!
I am currently sans job! New job will start in November in Australia. I will be working for a farm machinery manufacturer. In the plant foreman position. Can't wait!
 

bogie

Electoral Member
Jun 21, 2002
681
0
16
77
Barrie, ON Canada
maltesefalcon.bogart.com
'Work from home' type of guy. Been doing it for many years. Commute is short ... stagger down the stairs to my cave in the morning (walk-out thank goodness, so I do get to see the light of day). Day starts at about 6 a.m.

All Internet-based: Financial Services Industry Continuing Education - one of the largest in Canada InfotrendsCanada.com, a new Canadian Health Insurance information and Wellness site AccidentAndSickness.com, and various Internet Marketing endeavours like GeeksNetwork.net. Seguing my webhosting and domain registration business GeeksMedia.com over to a provider that I rep. No longer offer website design - just too busy to do that anymore.

One of my son-in-laws thinks I could remotely launch the space shuttle from my office :d
 

MattUK

Electoral Member
Aug 11, 2006
119
0
16
UK
I own an insurance Brokerage. Means I am my own boss, get lots of holiday time and I get to drive a nice fast car.
 

ponygurl

Nominee Member
Jun 3, 2004
63
0
6
Ottawa
Hi Ponygurl:) Unfortunately, it does get harder in some ways, easier than others. I remember the anguish of being a student and I am so glad those days are behind me!!! I am a Canadian working in the US, and I really like it here. I worked in BC and Ontario before coming to California. You're getting into a crazy career, but I still love it and can't imagine doing anything else. I left BC after a nasty round of contract negotiations with the government. I was getting burned out and sick of feeling disrespected. Toronto seemed like an exciting place, so I went. I enjoyed working there, but didn't like the weather much, so I decided on California. It's great down here, not perfect, but I really do like it.

I work Neonatal ICU, but I've also worked OB (L&D, PP, antepartum). I hated my psych rotation, but oddly enough most of my nursing school friends went into psych when they graduated. I heard the same spiel about specializing when I was in nursing school and it's bull if you ask me. If you love psych and only want to work psych, who cares if you lose some med-surg skills? You develop skills that matter for your specialty. Plus sick people wind up in psych wards too so you will get exposure to diseases. If you spend years in any specialty you do lose med-surg skills, that's a given. After 10 years in psych, it really won't matter if you did a year of med-surg as a new grad or not. I think too many nursing instructors are stuck in the mentality of the 80s where every nurse had to start on med-surg. It isn't like that anymore, especially down here in the US. I went almost straight into L&D and despite the warnings of some nursing instructors, it didn't impact me negatively at all. I learned the skills I needed to work L&D and was exposed to med-surg illnesses at the same time. Then I went into NICU and it's waaaaaaaayyyyy more skill heavy than anything I would have done on med-surg. I've received several offers to train into adult ICU because of my NICU experience and am also considering a move to the OR. Down here, the notion that new grads have to start in med-surg is seen as old fashioned. I know NICU managers who prefer new grads to nurses with adult experience.

The only piece of advice I would give you that was great for me is write the NCLEX when you graduate. You may think you won't go to the US but if you ever want to, it's best to have that exam done when you're a new grad and all the specialties are fresh in your mind. Your situation might change in 10 years. I know a lot of nurses who just do short term contracts in the US and then return to Canada. It's great for things like saving for a car or a kid's college tuition.

How close are you to graduation?
Thanks for all the info Tracey.
I finish in April, complete my 400 hrs. consolidation, and then write my provincials in September.
Since I posted this I was tlaking to a nurse on the ward that started with the unit 25 years ago.. (I mean she started when the unit opened). She was in Obstetrics and left when a baby died in her arms.She's quite upfront with the fact that she couldn't handle that.
I know I'd never be able to do what you do. I've worked geriatrics a lot as a PSW, and understand that death happens regularly there, but I"m wise enough to know I'd burn out fast with sick children.

They have the study guide for the NCLEX in our campus bookstore as well and the one for our Provincial exam.Perhaps I"ll pick it up and have a boo.

My aim is to be gainfully employed in a fulltime job (which is quite the trick in Ontario) by the time my eldest daughter hits College herself.. and that's two years away.:D
 

DaveyJones

New Member
Oct 1, 2006
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1
Im a newbie here.

I work at the KSC (Kennedy Space Center) in Florida and live in Melbourne,Fl (about 30 miles south)

Why Do I do it?? I think where I work is self-explanatory.:) :)

Who would NOT want to work there??
 

I think not

Hall of Fame Member
Apr 12, 2005
10,506
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48
The Evil Empire
Im a newbie here.

I work at the KSC (Kennedy Space Center) in Florida and live in Melbourne,Fl (about 30 miles south)

Why Do I do it?? I think where I work is self-explanatory.:) :)

Who would NOT want to work there??

Yeah can't argue with you on that. Welcome to Canadian Content.

P.S. How many souls do you have in your locker? :confused: