It’s Labor Day in the United States, the holiday that traditionally marks the end of summer and the beginning of the new school year. Officially, it’s intended as “a day off for the working citizens”.
Because it’s Labor Day, I’ve spent much of the morning recalling all of the jobs I’ve had in my life. When I was young, I wanted to be a business executive or an astronaut or a writer. I’ve actually managed to become the latter, but it hasn’t been a very direct path.
My first paid work came in junior high. During the summer, my friends and I would pick beans and cucumbers and strawberries at nearby farms. This was piece work, though, and I didn’t make a lot of money. I spent most of it at the video arcade. My first job where I drew a paycheck was planting cauliflower.
High school
During the summer of 1984 (between my freshman and sophomore year of high school), my friend Torey and I worked for a local farmer. We earned $3.35/hour (minimum wage!) walking behind a big tractor, planting cauliflower. The work was hard, but it was fun. I spent the money on clothes and cassette tapes. (I remember buying Tears for Fears and U2.) My father encouraged me to save, but I didn’t listen.
Also during high school, I worked other typical teenage jobs:
- I flipped hamburgers at Burger King (tedious)
- I sheared Christmas trees (hard work, but paid well)
- I flipped hamburgers at McDonald’s (loved it because my managers and co-workers were smart, industrious, and funny as hell)
- I spent a summer as a camp counselor
Most notably, however, I worked in the family box factory. On 31 July 1985, his fortieth birthday, my father quit his job to start his own business. In a dilapidated old building on our property, he built his own machinery and the family began producing custom boxes. I hated it. I wanted to be out with my friends, but dad insisted I spend my evenings making boxes. To show my disdain, I would play angst-ridden teenage music (The Cure, New Order, etc.) at full volume and sulk while I worked. I swore that after high school, I would never work for dad again.
College
During college, I held a variety of work-study jobs:
- Creating posters to hang around campus.
- Hanging posters around campus.
- Delivering A/V equipment.
- Answering telephones.
- Working at the information desk.
- Editing the literary magazine.
These didn’t pay well, though. For real money, I had to find work off campus.
For a couple of years, I worked a hotel 45 minutes away. I’d drive up on Saturdays and Sundays to bus tables (and, later, to wait tables) in the coffee shop. I kept this same job for a couple summers. It was my first introduction to the Real World, really. Before, I’d been working with other kids my own age. At the Holiday Inn, I was working with 50-year-old waitresses and grumpy cooks who couldn’t find work anywhere else. Still, I had a lot of fun and earned a lot of money. (Which I promptly spent on computers and those new-fangled compact discs.)
During my junior and senior years of college, I took a job as a resident assistant to pay for room and board.
Post-collegiate
During the summer after college, I was aimless. I found work at a Japanese school managing the audio-visual equipment. I was paid in room and board.
For spending money, I waited tables at the new Red Robin in town. The interview for that job was memorable. The manager told me, “Remember: the best way to increase your tips is to sell more food. Ask your customers if they would like a drink from the bar. Encourage them to order appetizers or side orders. Offer them dessert.” This had never occurred to me before.
Soon after this, I took a job selling insurance door-to-door around rural Oregon. This was truly the worst job I ever had. I hated it. People would invite me into their homes, and we would have a pleasant chat, but I could not get anyone to buy anything. I maybe sold ten policies in ten weeks. At $40 a policy, I was going broke quickly!
I quit the job with no prospect of another. I had several thousand dollars in credit card debt, I owed on a new Geo Storm, and I was paying rent on two apartments. It was a nightmare. I took temporary work to staunch the bleeding, but ultimately I did something I’d sworn never to do: I returned to work for my father.
The box factory
In January 1992, dad hired me to be his box salesman. This was better than selling insurance, but I still didn’t like it. I stayed at it though, because he was paying me the amazing sum of $20,000 a year. With that money, I could pay off my debt in no time! Only I didn’t pay off my debt. I bought comic books. I bought a new computer. Kris and I bought a house. I got hooked on the income and allowed myself to succumb to lifestyle inflation. When I got a raise, I spent it.
During my 16 years selling boxes, I did a variety of things on the side:
- I spent a year as a part-time computer programmer (I always thought I’d love this, but I hated it)
- I started my own computer consulting firm
- I began blogging
That last item is most important, of course. Eventually, my web sites were generating enough revenue that I could quit my day job to write full time, something I’d always dreamed of doing. I always imagined I’d write science fiction novels, not articles about personal finance, but it turns out I simply love to write. I’m fortunate to be doing something I love.
That’s enough reminiscing for one day. How about you? How many jobs have you worked in your life? Which was your favorite and why? What do you hope to be doing ten years from now?
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This is great, thanks everyone.
I grew up on a farm, so lots of walking beans, castrating hogs, putting up fence, driving machinery, etc. Hard work, but good to be with family, outside, know the seasons.
Worst jobs: Not the blood/mud/animal shit of the farm! For extra spending money in high school I cleaned the grocery store’s milk & dairy & veggie cases on weekends. It was totally gross, wiping up spoiled milk and rotten vegetables. One college summer I was a Rent-a-place guy, and we had to set up and clean up port-a-johns. Ugh.
Best jobs: The Rent-a-place also had giant party tents that I learned to set up. They were always going for weddings or fun events, and people were happy to see them go up. Lots of beer offered to me that summer. Worked as a carpenter for several years, and the combination of hands-on work plus thinking of structure and form was wonderful. Also wonderful to occasionally play with sledgehammers and crowbars, like an earlier poster noted.
Current job: also the best paid, a federal planner. I get to travel a lot, to some amazing places. Not much physical activity involved, but at this pay rate I can join the rock-climbing gym and buy gear.
I once told my boss that I’d never stay at a job I didn’t enjoy. He told me I’d eat the words, but so far so good!
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Interesting Posts!
Pre-high school:
1) Paper Routes X 2
High School:
1) Dishwasher at a nursing home (barf)
2) Grocery store X 2 (pretty good)
3) Cook at Pizza Hut (stunk, but ate well)
4) Warehouse stocker (not terrible)
5) Enlisted in the Navy (sweep, sweep)
Post-College:
1) Back to the Navy (now I told people to sweep)
2) Financial advisor (anxiety)
I would really like the financial adivising biz if it weren’t so hard to find clients. No wonder there is such a high attrition rate!
10 years… Microbrewery, baby!
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Hi!
I noticed some common aspects with my ” past” story..comics terrific spending, insurance sales, never been satisfied with jobs…seems that US is not different from us in Italy!!
I hope you are making good money with your websites..to us your experiences and advices are very helpful!!
thanks again!
enrico
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my first job was after high school.. i was an assistant at a law firm that dealt w/ car accident cases in san francisco.. i actually got paid pretty well considering it was my first job.. but it was only temporary
i also worked as a temp for a warehouse where they made wine bottles.. our job was to pack literally thousands of wine bottles into large boxes daily.. it was boring as hell.. but it helped me get rims for my car =D
i delivered pizzas as my 3rd job.. i always had money in my pocket from tips which i liked.. the guy paid me under the table for a while too
fourth job was for bank of america.. i was a proof operator (10 key).. i basically typed the amount of the check on a machine and ran it through.. i would do thousands of checks daily.. yes.. very boring!
fifth job is where i’m at now.. it will be 9 years in october.. i work for the phone company doing customer service / database / analyst stuff.. i really can’t see myself doing this forever.. but i can’t complain either.. it’s a steady income..
i’m happy where i’m at.. but i’m always keeping an eye out for other opportunities and/or streams of income
even though most of these jobs were pretty redundant.. all of them taught me discipline and self-control.. sort of like learning a martial art or something.. at least that’s the way i see it
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I love what I do now, I had about a gazillion jobs before, but I love blogging.
Writing about money is my passion! and it only took me 33 yrs to accomplish it.
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It has been so great to read everyone’s background. Glad you have so many young readers, too; I learned about the time value of money as a bank teller and have never regretted starting to save at a relatively young age. Hope all your college-ish aged readers take your advice and learn from your experiences. My jobs:
Store clerk
Cafe cook/cashier
Receptionist
Resident Assistant
Bank Teller
Bank Manager
Bookkeeper
Accountant
Volunteer Farmer
Accountant
Best, by far, was the three months I spent farming for room and board on various organic farms. I came home hoping to make it the new reality and am instead working as an accountant again. I don’t mind this work, but I am still working towards farming. With a little luck I’ll have my farm within the 10 year time frame.
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Jobs I’ve had (that I remember):
-ride attendant (go-karts, bumper boats, etc)… had to work food services with them a few times
-maintenance technician at a amusement park
-state exam test tutor
-mainframe computer operator
-control system designer for a contractor
-engineer
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-cashier at a Chinese fast food place $4.40/hr in 1992 – San Antonio, TX
-Cashier at a computer store Dallas, TX
-call center tech support for a Printer Giant Dallas, TX
-call center tech support internal at a PC Giant in Boulder, CO
-wedding catering server
-Engineer at a large satellite TV company – Denver, CO (best career growth)
-Program Manager at the Software Giant in Redmond, WA (Worst people I have ever worked with)
-Project Coordinator at the Chip Leader in Hillsboro, OR (Best people I have ever worked with)
-Currently an Engineer at an electronics company (great steady income)
-Future job: my own business working for myself (want to start this on the side)
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Let’s see… I like many was a camp counselor (CIT) one summer. I don’t remember if I was paid or if my parents paid to have me out of their hair for the summer. I don’t remember seeing any money from it.
My first “real” job was as a Radio Shack sales guy pushing “TSPs” (Tandy Service Plans) with every purchase.
I worked for my mother in her office (university) and for my father in his office (as a helper to the tech guy, but I never really did much of anything there).
In college I worked in the music library, I worked with local high schools teaching music and marching, and I was a “consultant” for university departments and professors who wanted to build their own websites (in 1995-1998).
I’ve worked as a teacher in middle school and high school, worked for a non-profit arts organization, and eventually found myself in accounting and finance. Now I do mostly financial reporting and performance metrics.
Also, my blog brings in about twice my day-job salary.
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nothing really all that exciting, i will have to admit. its the things i don’t get paid for that have always been more interesting.
but that changes this year (coincidentally, turned 30). am off to go to field research in a country i’ve always wanted to visit and will be paid a modest sum. am also looking to start a new venture that, while not bringing in big bucks, should at least pay for itself and then some.
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What great posts from you, J.D., and everybody! Truly fascinating reading.
Here’s my list:
Jr. High/High School/1st two years of college:
1. Worked as a page at my local library, and I consider it the best part-time job I ever had. The head librarians, my co-workers, and the patrons were nice, interesting people, and I remember having a blast virtually every day I was there. Since I wanted to go to school to be a graphic designer, I was always called upon to make posters, signs and brochures for library events, which made working there even more fun.
College:
1. Worked for a summer as a laborer in a hat factory. By contrast, this was the worst part-time job I ever held. It was hot and dirty, with the bosses and supervisors very demeaning to the workers. I felt very sorry for the women who had to work there on a permanent basis – no one should have to put up with those kinds of attitudes on any job, no matter how humble. The only thing I gained from working there (besides never wanting to see the place again) was weight on my 98-lb. skinny frame from being constantly on the go running the machinery and delivering boxes of the partly assembled products elsewhere in the factory.
2. Tutored remedial English (my major) to freshmen who were failing the course, with mixed results. Only one of my students cared enough to bring her grades up from an F to a C; the other two thought that since they were in other fields of study (business and – incredibly – journalism), they didn’t really need to bother with freshman English. “You have to pass this course to graduate.” I told them. That pretty much fell on deaf ears and I never saw either of them again.
Post college/art school:
1. Worked as a cashier in a grocery store while I attended art school during the day. This was definitely the best paying part-time job I had thus far, and it was OK, for the most part. The best part was getting to work on the express lane – I was committed to getting people out of the store as fast and as efficiently as possible. Later on, I was always asked to train new cashiers. The worst part was the four-month stint working in the deli department – the sight of lunch meat would make me retch for years afterward.
Post art school graduation:
1. My first real art job out of school was nothing to write home about. It was in a family owned screen shop/lettering outfit that manufactured lettering on jackets and t-shirts for high school sports teams. My job was to illustrate and prepare the lettering – sometimes script, sometimes block – for the patternmakers and seamstresses. One of the better things about the job was that I was the only artist there, I got along very well with my boss, and I could set my own pace. The lousy thing about it was that it was a proverbial dead end job, which did nothing to increase my art skills. I discovered just how lousy that was when I was laid off and the place went out of business.
2. Talked my way into the art department of my local newspaper, knowing absolutely nothing about newspaper advertising and was hired part time. I’m still working at that same newspaper, having had three different jobs within it.
2a. Eventually was hired full time and worked as a designer in the advertising services department for about eight years. I enjoyed many aspects of it – got to exercise my creativity and design ads for the various merchants in the circulation area and the sales reps would bring them back with only minor modifications. One of the bad aspects was trying to cram reams of used car copy, photos of new cars with descriptions and other assorted paragraphs into one full-page ad. Most of my coworkers in my department were cool and fun to work with, but there were the occasional few who were memorable because they were very irritating personalities. Fortunately, our interactions with each other didn’t last long, and none of them were my bosses.
2b. Transferred to the pre-press department as a photo technician for about four years. This job was my first experience getting used to a swing shift, as the newspaper became a 24/7 operation. But I found many things to like about that job, in addition to gaining valuable experience in print production.
2c. Transferred once again to the editorial graphics department, and that’s where I work today. I really enjoy this job – its capacity for creativity and learning and its laid-back atmosphere. Recently, I was hired to teach part-time at the art school I attended, which will be a new experience for me. Hopefully, I’ll be able to share my love for graphic design in a classroom environment.
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You were such a busy boy and lucky enough to have such opportunities.
Well, I have been working since I was 10. Not that I want to, but I need to. Being born in a very poor family, I was forced by life to earn a living instead of enjoying my childhood.
They were odd jobs such as selling street foods, washing taxicabs, getting clams at seaside at 5am to catch up with the morning market rush, fetching water for neighbors and the worst job I had – selling cigarettes in the bust streets of Manila at the age of 15.
Oh well, I cannot help but wonder where my earnings went, as they did not seem to help my family live normal.
Anyway, I became an engineer after all that hard work, and has worked in different electronic companies locally.
But now that I am in my early 40s, I found the real career that I wanted – to communicate with others through blogging.
Just sharing though.
Thanks!
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I’ve worked at Nordstrom and Amazon. I’ve worked in film as a make up and FX artist and photographer.
Marketing and research are my thing and now I do online publishing.
Every now and then for friends I’ll do film gigs like AD’ing, writing, FX and photography and I actually say no a lot. I should broker these jobs out!
My plan is to never have another job. So far it’s been nine years!
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@Enrico: ciao! I’m Italian too.
Yeah, the US are in a recession too. Anyway it seems that it’s a bit easier for the American youths than the Italian ones. When we get out of University we’re being told that we are “too skilled” and offered a temporary job a call centers… Or other kinds of shitty jobs which won’t last.
I don’t hear about people having good jobs at 25 here.
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In elementary school I would pick and sell flowers and strawberries. When it snowed, my brother and I would shovel the local doctor’s sidewalk and steps for a buck.
At 11 years of age I was babysitting, making a princely 75 cents an hour. Two of the families I sat for a lot had kids who were only two years younger than I was!
The summer of my 13th year I started picking tomatoes inside an explosively hot greenhouse in high summer. Two-mile bike ride to get there, and I’d come home literally green from being brushed by plants on all sides. Seriously: When I washed my hair, green suds flowed over my hands. That earned me $1.35 an hour.
The same greenhouse operator hired me now and then to help pot chrysanthemum starts, too. Thousands and thousands of them.
Other jobs I’ve held: housecleaner, glass factory worker, clerk at a big-city newspaper, pet-sitter, secretary, freelance writer, apartment house manager, produce stand salesgirl, typesetter-proofreader, doughnut seller and newspaper reporter.
I’ve mystery-shopped, participated in medical research, typed term papers, sold my blood, and even baked cakes for a chicken farmer in exchange for free eggs.
Now I’m writing the Smart Spending blog for MSN Money, which is technically a part-time job. (Technically.) I also manage the apartment building in which I live, and take the occasional babysitting job from families whose kids I really like. I consider it timeshare grandchildren. I also make a lot more than 75 cents these days: $10 to $12 an hour.
Oh, I’m also in school full-time. My scholarship, from a private foundation, includes some money left over each quarter for books and living expenses. I guess that means I could add “student” to the list of Every Job I’ve Ever Had.
Since I expect to have to work a lot longer, I’m looking forward to what’s next on the list.
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1) Paper-shover in a public administration
2) IT jockey
3) Translator
My cat* is much less ambitious than I am:
http://icanhascheezburger.files.wordpress.com/2008/09/funny-pictures-your-cat-will-sleep-for-food.jpg
*This is not really my cat
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This is a great post… inspires me to make a similar post on my blog
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