At what age did you finally decide on your chosen career?

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Reading through some of the job threads, it sounds like a lot of people just kinda stumble into their chosen job and find they like it and stick with it. Whereas for me, when I 30 I had a mental jolt in that I need to sort out my future and find the job I'm suited for.

s.rose, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 16:45 (fourteen years ago)

hahahahahaha

Mahindra Satyam people (dan m), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 16:46 (fourteen years ago)

sorry

Mahindra Satyam people (dan m), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 16:46 (fourteen years ago)

I am 39 (and holding, forever)

This is not my chosen career. This is just something I started doing to pay the bills in the meantime. Still. 15 years after I first started doing it.

OCD Soundsystem (Masonic Boom), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 16:47 (fourteen years ago)

I suspect high correlation between this topic and the 'when did you decide to give up on your dreams' topic.

NYC Goatse.cx and Flowers (Merdeyeux), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 16:50 (fourteen years ago)

100!

kkvgz, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 17:09 (fourteen years ago)

I am 39 (and holding, forever)

Hi there! That said I started working in libraries when I was in high school so arguably it's just where I feel most comfortable. The only real interruption was during grad school when I was a TA.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 17:12 (fourteen years ago)

I'm 36. Decided on my primary chosen career age 6. Still working on getting to it. Decided on my secondary chosen career age 16. Ducked out on that between 18 and 28, AKA a decade of wasted time. Lesson (paraphrasing George Melly's father): do what you want, I nearly didn't.

ninjas and lasers and gold and (snoball), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 17:24 (fourteen years ago)

My main concern at being 31 and thinking like this is how long will I have to spend learning/training and building up experience before I'll be earning a living wage (looking to start a family in the next few years). Considering a number of different career options, things like accountancy/bookkeeping and web design/IT server guy look like long haul jobs. Also looking at marketing type stuff, which seems less intensive. What it boils down to is what is a) in demand, b) pays well, c) can be achieved in the smallest amount of time, and d) isn't sometihng I'm totally unsuitable for (teaching, sales, etc).

s.rose, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 18:32 (fourteen years ago)

I was five when I decided I was going to be an architect and haven't looked back once in the 28 years since. Just couldn't ever see myself doing anything else.

I DIED, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 18:40 (fourteen years ago)

Career #1 (computers): age 7. Started getting paid for it at age 18 and have been working full-time in it since age 22.

Career #2 (music): age 13. Got my first paying singing gig at age 18. Gave up at age 22, started singing again as a volunteer at various churches and in a symphony chorus at 24. Got a paid church gig at age 29 and started doing ensemble work with a professional opera company at age 31. Briefly had a small-scale rock band at age 34.

Career #3 (acting): age 10. Did school plays from age 10 through age 18. Gave it up in college. Took it back up with the opera gig at age 31. Did a couple of small-scale shows with a local musical theater company at ages 35 and 37.

So... basically I'm not a superstar but I'm doing pretty much exactly what I wanted to do from a young age.

Opinions are a lot like assholes. You've got LOTS of BOTH of them. (HI DERE), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 18:42 (fourteen years ago)

ugh, total respect and oodles of envy for people who can choose so early in life and stick with it. It's how it should be, I just wish i stuck with my art instead of zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzsoftwarelicensingzzzzzzzzz

Guru Meditation (Ste), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 18:45 (fourteen years ago)

"I suspect high correlation between this topic and the 'when did you decide to give up on your dreams' topic"

Oh yes. Staying far away from this one; I've scrapped three responses already after no amount of editing helped me come up with one that didn't basically reduce to "FFFFFFFFFFFFUCK"

a black white asian pine ghost who is fake (Telephone thing), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 19:21 (fourteen years ago)

I find myself at 46 and still not Jacques Cousteau.

Ned Trifle II, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 19:33 (fourteen years ago)

I just wish i stuck with my art instead of zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzsoftwarelicensingzzzzzzzzz

Arts/creative jobs bring their own crippling problems. I'm coming out of a few years of unpredictable/low-paid but fulfilling/fun work (which is crumbling to bits due to 21st century economocaust) and my overriding regret is not spending the past 10 years working on something that can give me a decent lifestyle/home/family. It's an age-old argument though, no doubt worth a thread of its own.

s.rose, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 20:02 (fourteen years ago)

Short version:
*Age whenever to about 15: "Oh, computers, those are kind of neat I guess, maybe." Get beaten up a lot because this is Alabama and we don't cotton to no book-learnin' types.
*About 15: Finally get some exposure to all the art and film and writing out there I can actually care about, decide I want to get involved in film. It turns out no one gives a shit about Pynchon or Nabokov or Cronenberg or Fritz Lang or queer cinema or anything. Promptly fail out of school because I can't sleep and I'm terrified of basic human interaction. Transfer into public high school where senior-level biology classes involve coloring photocopied diagrams from the textbook (which, by the way, has a sticker in the inside front cover reminding students that evolution is just a silly theory). Take a film elective, which turns out to be a blatant concession to the football coach (who teaches the class) so his players don't fail out of school. Actual test question: "What is Bruce Willis's name in Armageddon?"
Not his character's name, oh no, that's too difficult. (It's Harry Stamper, by the way. I still remember this because apparently "Who gives a fuck" was incorrect.)
*Finally, college: Got rejected from every school I applied to because as it turns out acing the SAT at 13 doesn't mean shit if you spend the next five years totally withdrawn and depressed and let your grades slide. Settle on an open admission film school in Chicago because holy shit, ACTUAL CITY WITH SHIT HAPPENING IN IT. Decide that directing is an unrealistic goal in a super-competitive field, decide to study editing and sound and maybe pursue the academic side. Last a year and a half before washing out because by this point I am a perpetually shell-shocked social retard barely capable of leaving my apartment without hyperventilating and wanting to die.
Next 6 years: Stuck in Alabama again, try to start again with computers, which it turns out I kind of hate, fail anyway because of massive psychological baggage, live for a while with junior high friend who is in town finishing up grad school because his life has basically been an uninterrupted line from the "computers are neat" stage above, occasionally post half-thought dribble to ILX just to be enthusiastic about SOMETHING. Never leave apartment.
Now: I answer phones! Oh dear, I am deeply sorry your Thomas Kinkade jigsaw puzzle is missing a piece! Yes, you're right, I, personally, should have been more careful! OH NO NOT NEGATIVE FEEDBACK ON AMAZON OF COURSE I WILL DROP EVERYTHING TO PLEASE YOU

a black white asian pine ghost who is fake (Telephone thing), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 20:52 (fourteen years ago)

I want to see a musical with HI DERE in the cast.

Mr & Mrs The Devil (Abbott), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 20:58 (fourteen years ago)

senior-level biology classes involve coloring photocopied diagrams from the textbook

I had this experience in high school, too. It's kind of amazing I had any interest at all in biology after that.

Mr & Mrs The Devil (Abbott), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 20:59 (fourteen years ago)

I decided to be a music writer my senior year of high school. I had told my college I was going to study "advertising," but then changed it before my first semester started. Probably a pretty stupid decision in hindsight.

Elektro Guzzi Mane (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:01 (fourteen years ago)

age 24, not too long after I'd gotten $40K+ in debt getting a degree in something entirely unrelated. but I love it and am now freelancing, which is great when I have enough work and terrifying and awful when I don't.

angry virgins seeking validation (sciolism), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:01 (fourteen years ago)

hahahahahaha

― Mahindra Satyam people (dan m), Tuesday, June 29, 2010 12:46 PM (4 hours ago) Bookmark

obliquity of the ecliptic (rrrobyn), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:02 (fourteen years ago)

yes

Flowers By Pete (admrl), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:05 (fourteen years ago)

first grade i guess but who knows how long i have doing this before i burn out

max, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:11 (fourteen years ago)

Sort of fell into graphic design at age 26. Too lazy to find anything better to do now.

Darin, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:12 (fourteen years ago)

well yeah that's the thing, writer as career is weird. i think, for the sake of self-preservation, that "writer" is less something i would say my career is and more something i would say i am no matter what and that it has always somehow played into whatever my career is. career-wise, i have just started to say "i'm in communications and media"

obliquity of the ecliptic (rrrobyn), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:13 (fourteen years ago)

xpost

obliquity of the ecliptic (rrrobyn), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:13 (fourteen years ago)

I want to see a musical with HI DERE in the cast.

at least one person on these boards has high school productions of "West Side Story" and "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat" featuring TWO ILX moderators (and one occasional poster) on videotape

Opinions are a lot like assholes. You've got LOTS of BOTH of them. (HI DERE), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:16 (fourteen years ago)

Still not an Amazon afaict.

the soul of the avocado escapes as soon as you open it (Laurel), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:18 (fourteen years ago)

Still Not A Player

Flowers By Pete (admrl), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:19 (fourteen years ago)

I'm 31 now and no closer to knowing what career I have chosen than I ever have been, even though I now have a career. I did just kind of fall into it, though.

Captain Ostensible (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:19 (fourteen years ago)

admrl: do you fuck a lot

Opinions are a lot like assholes. You've got LOTS of BOTH of them. (HI DERE), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:20 (fourteen years ago)

I have way less of a (tangible, at least) "career" than I had 4 years ago and I am learning to love this fact, finally.
xp haha

Flowers By Pete (admrl), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:20 (fourteen years ago)

always wanted to do be a journalist, like from age of 5 or so. detour into writing about music wasted a good 8 years, then working in news/sport for 2 years and finally in the last year finding the right type of job for myself.

I see what this is (Local Garda), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:24 (fourteen years ago)

The exciting field of webpage editing allows me to utilize both of my primary skills (criticizing minutiae, surfing the web).

no turkey unless it's a club sandwich (polyphonic), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:34 (fourteen years ago)

the exciting field of bookkeeping allows me to tell my boss, "I'm sorry but that's not possible." and not get in trouble for being "disempowering" like my previous career in commercial radio.

sarahel, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:38 (fourteen years ago)

i don't have a career, sorry

mookinho (mookieproof), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:42 (fourteen years ago)

well yeah that's the thing, writer as career is weird. i think, for the sake of self-preservation, that "writer" is less something i would say my career is and more something i would say i am no matter what and that it has always somehow played into whatever my career is. career-wise, i have just started to say "i'm in communications and media"

― obliquity of the ecliptic (rrrobyn), Tuesday, June 29, 2010 5:13 PM (27 minutes ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

this is a nice way to think about it.

sometimes i think that i will quit writing altogether in a few years and teach english classes, but i sort of dont think i could ever really quit

max, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 21:46 (fourteen years ago)

lol oh man this q

flapjackin (gbx), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 22:01 (fourteen years ago)

Always thought teaching would be dope from maybe 15? After four years I still think it is dope but I am thoroughly sick of *working*, so probably quitting to pursue fortune on the moon :(

Gravel Puzzleworth, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 22:04 (fourteen years ago)

i've gotten to the age/stage where 'teaching' now looks like not a bad option, after 10 years of working to just cover day-to-day bills didn't get me anywhere.

,,,,,,eeeeleon (darraghmac), Wednesday, 30 June 2010 08:50 (fourteen years ago)

im at that stage as well. though a job like web page editing is quite appealing as my primary skills are criticizing minutiae and surfing the web as well. i need to find out how easy it is to get work in this sector and how to train for it.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Wednesday, 30 June 2010 10:04 (fourteen years ago)

Decided to be an academic at age ~6 because my Dad was one and had lots of books (I liked books a lot). Now am on the way to being an academic. It seems to have worked out so far, luckily enough; at least, I think I would be less happy in most other kinds of work.

seandalai, Wednesday, 30 June 2010 10:40 (fourteen years ago)

22, still haven't. ;_;

samuel :D (a hoy hoy), Wednesday, 30 June 2010 10:44 (fourteen years ago)

aw hell stfu you don't know yer born at 22, leave us failed wrecks in peace

,,,,,,eeeeleon (darraghmac), Wednesday, 30 June 2010 10:46 (fourteen years ago)

yeah 22 is too young. theres nothing wrong with not knowing at 22.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Wednesday, 30 June 2010 10:47 (fourteen years ago)

what kind of academic, sean? that's always been the dream tbh

,,,,,,eeeeleon (darraghmac), Wednesday, 30 June 2010 10:47 (fourteen years ago)

do you need to have a 1st to be an academic?

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Wednesday, 30 June 2010 11:01 (fourteen years ago)

in a broad sense ("I want to be an academic!"), @ 21, in a more specific sense ("I want to be *this kind* of academic"), @ 27

I still think the idea of just 1 career is kind of a drag: there are so many fun things to do & fun places to live that getting stuck in any one is a bit depressing. I'm doing pretty well on living lots of places but I'm not sure about whether I'll ever change careers.

So Messi! (Euler), Wednesday, 30 June 2010 11:09 (fourteen years ago)

Managed to have dream career as under/postgaduate 1996 to 2003.

calumerio, Wednesday, 30 June 2010 11:10 (fourteen years ago)

I'm a computer scientist, freshly arrived in the not-quite-grown-up world of being a postdoc.

xp titchy: A first doesn't hurt - especially for getting PhD funding - but in general a decent 2:1 + good references + maybe some research experience should be enough to get a PhD position. After that nobody will really care what grade you got in your undergrad.

seandalai, Wednesday, 30 June 2010 12:34 (fourteen years ago)

cbc sounds like, "anything need doing? chop a bit of firewood or anything?" "yeah actually u seem competent can u edit our election footage also? cool."

zvookster, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 15:41 (thirteen years ago)

thats when I wish I lived somewhere that you have a national health service instead of trying to pay1500$ a month for your own coverage at your self employed work

Splendid Curving Oasis of Ivory (Latham Green), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 15:42 (thirteen years ago)

Honestly, CBC work, in radio, is trickier than you'd think. They take the public's opinion very seriously and will consider all incoming feedback. The opinions of the 'executives' also count for a lot, many shows get retooled and reshaped.

Ópen W. (Ówen P.), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 15:47 (thirteen years ago)

people ALWAYS say I should get involve din voiceover work but I have no idea how to break into that career

Splendid Curving Oasis of Ivory (Latham Green), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 15:48 (thirteen years ago)

But yes, the show's producer-- my boss, who is a year younger than me and owns a house and car and pets and does CrossFit, bless her-- she finds herself knocking down walls, driving long distances and engaged in surprising research activities.

Ópen W. (Ówen P.), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 15:49 (thirteen years ago)

Seriously OP, the music is about the only thing tolerable about DNTO, so good job!

kate78, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 16:06 (thirteen years ago)

(The show I worked for was not DNTO.)

Ópen W. (Ówen P.), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 16:15 (thirteen years ago)

still not settled

notorious ilx wet noodle (remy bean), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 16:15 (thirteen years ago)

do not troll owen

am/sand (Lamp), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 16:17 (thirteen years ago)

didn't you do the theme?

kate78, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 16:24 (thirteen years ago)

Roughly age 20, I guess. I think I just want a career that involves a lot of researching and analysing stuff that isn't all just numbers/statistics. It's what I enjoyed most in uni and it's what I enjoy most in my current job, even though currently I'm not working with stuff I'm interested in.

My backup/second love has been video games (since around the age of 13) but I have zero programming skills and I don't want to work on the marketing/branding side of things.

salsa shark, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 16:25 (thirteen years ago)

you should be a freelance playtester

now I have to imagine your penis (DJP), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 16:28 (thirteen years ago)

can you get paid for that?

That's my default query these days btw

Juata Man (darraghmac), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 16:35 (thirteen years ago)

sometimes the world makes "final decisions" for you- an opportunity presents itself or it doesnt, a job is offered or denied, and so the decision isn't really yours . . . and even when you have a career, nothing's ever final- you are still free to do - or to try to do - something else, it just gets harder to imagine that you have that freedom, or more threatening to imagine the work involved in changing your life to be something/someone else, if you're already far down a particular road

I am someone who, even as a child in the 1980s, imagined that by the year 2000 I would be going to graduate school in something, but I wasn't sure what. I was always aware, probably because of parental expectations, that that was "the plan": you go to college, then grad school, then you work at whatever you did grad school in. But as a child I always also wanted to be an artist of some kind (I used to draw pictures all the time). Now I'm a college professor and (sometimes) a moderately successful touring musician. So I guess I have succeeded at being the person I was expected to be by others, and I did turn out to be the person I wanted to be, more or less. But there is something kind of rigged and circular about treating this like a "decision"- you are the person who makes the decision because your environment and your parents and your institutions shaped you to think that X was desirable and not Y. The economics of middle class comfort-oriented American life encouraged the idea that splitting the difference between day job and art hobby is just how things go. And separate from that, huge amounts of good luck permitted me to actually have a tenure track position after eleven years of getting a PHD, which is quite unlike the experience of most of my grad school peers, who struggle for adjunct positions. So if I said that I made some "decision" and then stuck by it and that's why I am where I am today, that would disavow all the other factors in play (parents, lucky breaks, institutions, timing, economies) which made this possible.

the tune is space, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 16:45 (thirteen years ago)

you should touch people's secret areas!
(waiting for default query with miscellaneous delight)

Splendid Curving Oasis of Ivory (Latham Green), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 16:45 (thirteen years ago)

Work for an indie gaming house how bout

Ópen W. (Ówen P.), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 16:52 (thirteen years ago)

Play-testing video games is poorly paid and I imagine quite boring after a while!

I could get along with writing game reviews, but I'm not interested enough in that to put in the effort to pursue it. I think the problem I'd have with working in the video games industry is that my favourite sorts of games are all fairly Japanese-ish, and I'd find it difficult to get motivation to work on like, FPS games or something. I mean, currently I sort of do work with Act1v1s10n and I'm not really into their output so it's difficult to get into it at times (also COD fans are insufferable). The stuff I do for Xb0x (working on a bunch of their Facebook pages) is alright but I think I'd get tired of it quickly as a f/t job.

Doesn't matter. Going back to uni in a month in potentially ill-fated attempt at career switch. If it fails, video games it is.

salsa shark, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 16:59 (thirteen years ago)

@ the tune, you say "luck" but we know your tenure is the product of many hours honing your craft on message boards

Ópen W. (Ówen P.), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 18:16 (thirteen years ago)

you caould make more money insutling video gmaes loudly while playing them on youtube

Splendid Curving Oasis of Ivory (Latham Green), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 18:22 (thirteen years ago)

well I don't have tenure yet, and if I keep posting here I definitely won't get it

this is my fifth year, I have another two years before they make the big decision for me about whether I stay or go

*fingers crossed*

the tune is space, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 18:40 (thirteen years ago)

does this mean i can blame my parents for being clueless/aimless at this stage?

Juata Man (darraghmac), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 18:41 (thirteen years ago)

blame the internets

Splendid Curving Oasis of Ivory (Latham Green), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 19:14 (thirteen years ago)

good post, the-tune-is-space. i just have jobs instead of a career but i think i would be similarly wary of assigning much of it to being an over-arcing plan, particularly in circumstances when, even if you were making decisions, you were making them in the light of certain conditions & the likelihood of some things coming off. the more specifically consequential decisions are probably more to do with what's tolerable, i think. like i used to think that, around here, after school people going into casual work were doing so either in offices, retail or some part of catering (idk what encompasses bars/kitchens & cafes, maybe not catering), which after some flapping around seemed like the kind of thing that would reflect some sort of this-is-the-most-bearable-thing attitude in light of, like, having some contact with other people or, eg, not having to come into contact with other people.

(Chris Isaak Cover) (schlump), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 20:00 (thirteen years ago)

-arching rather. i wasn't sure.

(Chris Isaak Cover) (schlump), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 20:01 (thirteen years ago)

I decided to be a music writer my senior year of high school. I had told my college I was going to study "advertising," but then changed it before my first semester started. Probably a pretty stupid decision in hindsight.

― Elektro Guzzi Mane (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, June 29, 2010 5:01 PM (1 year ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

Kind of curious as to what age I'll choose my next career...

delmar dillinger (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 20:03 (thirteen years ago)

it was pretty much decided for me, by everyone around me, when i showed some "promise as a writer" as a very young boy. i wanted to be a cartoonist or a filmmaker until my late teens, when i realized i didnt have the talent for the former or the personality type for the latter. i then dicked around until i was 23, not taking writing too seriously, taking time off to fuck around in shitty noise/punk joke bands or go-nowhere record labels, and then finally started making contacts/selling music journalism stuff, in large part thanks to ilx.

i do wish someone had told me, as a very small boy, that a life of poverty and frustration awaited me, or that someone had told me, as a teen/early twentysomething, to stop dicking around and start taking it seriously sooner. (i didnt even bother to try and sell a piece of fiction until i was 31. it sold, but life has sort of conspired against me finishing anything since.) i think i'd be much further along than i am, even given how shit the market for any kind of writing is right now.

strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 20:24 (thirteen years ago)

I always wanted to be a songwriter/recording artist and I still do but I'm not sure I regret a life of relative ocmfort so far and health insurance with random office jobs - also - anyone choosing xray tech as a job re-think it

Splendid Curving Oasis of Ivory (Latham Green), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 20:28 (thirteen years ago)

True to my display name, the idea of a career always seemed rather alien to me. I did manage to have something of a career as a technical writer, but the only career I ever wanted was as a non-academic poet, which does not exist apart from my fanatsies.

Aimless, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 20:58 (thirteen years ago)

fantasy careers are the best careers

puerile fantasies (Matt P), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 21:06 (thirteen years ago)

I have refused to do anything other than my chosen career since I decided that I had to stop working in shit jobs I hate an just go for it. That was a year ago. Starting to come together but I haven't had any money for a year and I'm really hungry.

owenf, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 22:30 (thirteen years ago)

so that kind of worked? considering it tbh

puerile fantasies (Matt P), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 22:31 (thirteen years ago)

I knew I was going to spend my life reading and writing, so I've chosen careers in which I can do both as much as I can in my spare time.

a 'catch-all', almost humorous, 'Jeez' quality (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 22:34 (thirteen years ago)

not for the faint hearted. Many sacrifices must be made.

owenf, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 23:37 (thirteen years ago)

hm i like money and food too much atm

puerile fantasies (Matt P), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 23:45 (thirteen years ago)

I once worked somewhere looking after troubled teens over night - as long as they slept you coul dbasically have your own career while working there - like writer or something. Just sit in an office for 11 hours and give some meds

Splendid Curving Oasis of Ivory (Latham Green), Thursday, 1 September 2011 12:38 (thirteen years ago)

nine

conrad, Thursday, 1 September 2011 12:51 (thirteen years ago)

owenf hats off to you

Splendid Curving Oasis of Ivory (Latham Green), Thursday, 1 September 2011 12:55 (thirteen years ago)

i don't have a career, but between writing, editing, and teaching humanities i think im in on the ground floor of three fast-rising industries, so watch this space

HOOSy woosies (history mayne), Thursday, 1 September 2011 13:01 (thirteen years ago)

i don't have a career, but between writing, editing, and teaching humanities i think im in on the ground floor of three rapidly dwindling industries, so hold your breath

my life^^ lol u.s.

notorious ilx wet noodle (remy bean), Thursday, 1 September 2011 13:01 (thirteen years ago)

In the future the only jobs will be farmer, IT support, prostitute and plumber

Splendid Curving Oasis of Ivory (Latham Green), Thursday, 1 September 2011 13:04 (thirteen years ago)

I even get my haircut online these days.

It was a Thursday night. I was working late... (dog latin), Thursday, 1 September 2011 13:46 (thirteen years ago)

For better or worse, never seriously considered anything but writing. When I was four I wanted to be a cartoon, when I was five I wanted to write and draw Pogo, when I was seven or eight I wanted to be an astronaut. Haven't strayed since. Never really did anything else for pay apart from working for the university as part of my assistantship, and managing a convenience store for a few months.

Bill, Thursday, 1 September 2011 13:47 (thirteen years ago)

Wait... you're an astronaut?

It was a Thursday night. I was working late... (dog latin), Thursday, 1 September 2011 14:18 (thirteen years ago)

Keep it under your hat, I don't need to hear CaptainLorax's thoughts on the moon landing.

Bill, Thursday, 1 September 2011 14:23 (thirteen years ago)

what is writer?

Birth Control is Sinful in the ILE Marriages (Latham Green), Thursday, 1 September 2011 14:30 (thirteen years ago)

I've worked in advertising and marketing since I was 18 but it wasn't until I was 27 or so that I faced the fact that I was never going to be a famous writer and decided this would be my career n shit

homosexual II, Thursday, 1 September 2011 15:32 (thirteen years ago)

he has excellent penmanship xp

Ópen W. (Ówen P.), Thursday, 1 September 2011 15:33 (thirteen years ago)

I have cut my own hair for 7 years now. Once you get the hang of the back bit w/mirror you'll never go back. big society.

owenf, Thursday, 1 September 2011 17:41 (thirteen years ago)

is anyone else in tis bitch a hairdresser?

Birth Control is Sinful in the ILE Marriages (Latham Green), Thursday, 1 September 2011 17:45 (thirteen years ago)

im fucked

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Thursday, 1 September 2011 17:46 (thirteen years ago)


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