What's your job ?
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Re: What's your job ?
I had a few jobs....sales...approved driving instructor mechanic...ran a vehicle delivery company. Also worked a bit in action vehicles . Remember boone? Was on that a bit.
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Re: What's your job ?
I have a few...
Senior project manager for a network/comms company, and I do some freelance work in 'business development' - basically tendering for new framework contracts, and trying to build up the coffee business.
I really should have tried harder at skool... or tried at all really.
Senior project manager for a network/comms company, and I do some freelance work in 'business development' - basically tendering for new framework contracts, and trying to build up the coffee business.
I really should have tried harder at skool... or tried at all really.
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Re: What's your job ?
Wreckless Rat wrote: ↑Mon Nov 16, 2020 9:54 am I really should have tried harder at skool... or tried at all really.
I wonder about this 'should have tried harder' concept. Partly because I was lazy and relied on doing the bare minimum, but mainly because I don't want a high powered 'successful' job.
And if every employee had 'tried harder' and achieved equally, where would those currently at top be?
Even bland can be a type of character
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Re: What's your job ?
I wouldnt say I have a high powered job. Certainly I get paid a lot more than average, but also a lot less than the kind of high powered job you're probably talking about.
I do love what I do though. I also have the luxury of doing the kind of job I want to do, rather than doing the job I can get.
All because I tried hard at school
I do love what I do though. I also have the luxury of doing the kind of job I want to do, rather than doing the job I can get.
All because I tried hard at school
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Re: What's your job ?
Fair enough. Partly I never had an aim or desire.
Thinking about it, I wouldn't have the job I do now without having put a huge amount of time and effort into a hobby, which led to me getting an interview when typically my CV would have been in the bin in seconds.
At one point, I could look around the office and within a few metres were umpteen people with degrees, several Masters and PhDs, and a professor. My day release HTC is a bit low in comparison. For several years I was almost in fear of getting 'found out'
My 'success' here has come from being able to utilise skills that were needed, along with the attitude of giving everything a try.*
* T&Cs apply
Even bland can be a type of character
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Re: What's your job ?
I earn a lot more than the UK average, and a lot less than I used to, but still much more than "average" and I left skool with sweet FA.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Mon Nov 16, 2020 10:25 am I wouldnt say I have a high powered job. Certainly I get paid a lot more than average, but also a lot less than the kind of high powered job you're probably talking about.
I do love what I do though. I also have the luxury of doing the kind of job I want to do, rather than doing the job I can get.
All because I tried hard at school
As you get older, skool qualifications mean less and less - well certainly for my generation anyway. I think that's likely a bit different now - but I also think the tide is turning. Many good jobs used to say "Degree applicants only" - with the plethora of 'colouring-in' degrees and correspondence diplomas in climate change etc, it's starting to wane.
Success imho isn't dependant on trying hard at skool, although leaving skool with decent qualifications certainly makes it easier in many ways to be successful as an "employed minion".
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Re: What's your job ?
Our place they add one word, to make it a 'numerate degree'.Wreckless Rat wrote: ↑Mon Nov 16, 2020 12:21 pmMany good jobs used to say "Degree applicants only" - with the plethora of 'colouring-in' degrees and correspondence diplomas in climate change etc, it's starting to wane.
Even bland can be a type of character
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Re: What's your job ?
LOL tea in keyboard moment
"If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer." Henry David Thoreau
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Re: What's your job ?
My two best friends from school left with a small handful of O'levels/CSE's (as it was then) and both went on to do very well. Both of them became directors in the corporate sector, one of them retired in her 40s. They had, as teenagers, the personality attributes that got them that far - it was never taught to them. They both really wanted to succeed and did. While I hover just above the national wage I wouldn't want to be either of them or have had their lives and I see life as pretty fair.Wreckless Rat wrote: ↑Mon Nov 16, 2020 12:21 pmI earn a lot more than the UK average, and a lot less than I used to, but still much more than "average" and I left skool with sweet FA.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Mon Nov 16, 2020 10:25 am I wouldnt say I have a high powered job. Certainly I get paid a lot more than average, but also a lot less than the kind of high powered job you're probably talking about.
I do love what I do though. I also have the luxury of doing the kind of job I want to do, rather than doing the job I can get.
All because I tried hard at school
As you get older, skool qualifications mean less and less - well certainly for my generation anyway. I think that's likely a bit different now - but I also think the tide is turning. Many good jobs used to say "Degree applicants only" - with the plethora of 'colouring-in' degrees and correspondence diplomas in climate change etc, it's starting to wane.
Success imho isn't dependant on trying hard at skool, although leaving skool with decent qualifications certainly makes it easier in many ways to be successful as an "employed minion".
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Re: What's your job ?
Very true. I'm not that money driven. Sure, it would be nice to win the lottery or something, but I've never really dreamt of a big house etc - being brought up in a cold old farmhouse, a small warm house with hot water and a toilet that doesn't freeze your arse cheeks is all I really wish for in that respect. I still need to have a cold bedroom - I guess that's a vestige of having a bedroom cold enough for ice to form as a wee nipper.Trinity765 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 16, 2020 1:05 pmMy two best friends from school left with a small handful of O'levels/CSE's (as it was then) and both went on to do very well. Both of them became directors in the corporate sector, one of them retired in her 40s. They had, as teenagers, the personality attributes that got them that far - it was never taught to them. They both really wanted to succeed and did. While I hover just above the national wage I wouldn't want to be either of them or have had their lives and I see life as pretty fair.Wreckless Rat wrote: ↑Mon Nov 16, 2020 12:21 pmI earn a lot more than the UK average, and a lot less than I used to, but still much more than "average" and I left skool with sweet FA.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Mon Nov 16, 2020 10:25 am I wouldnt say I have a high powered job. Certainly I get paid a lot more than average, but also a lot less than the kind of high powered job you're probably talking about.
I do love what I do though. I also have the luxury of doing the kind of job I want to do, rather than doing the job I can get.
All because I tried hard at school
As you get older, skool qualifications mean less and less - well certainly for my generation anyway. I think that's likely a bit different now - but I also think the tide is turning. Many good jobs used to say "Degree applicants only" - with the plethora of 'colouring-in' degrees and correspondence diplomas in climate change etc, it's starting to wane.
Success imho isn't dependant on trying hard at skool, although leaving skool with decent qualifications certainly makes it easier in many ways to be successful as an "employed minion".
Several of the school brain boxes, do things like... drive buses, one works in McD's (or did the last I heard of him) - some have done well for themselves. Even the ones who have excelled, I am pretty sure I wouldn't swap my life for theirs.
I work from home, I live a quiet life in the styx, which suits me, the antisocial fker that I am.
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Re: What's your job ?
I used to design and develop cakes for Mr Kipling. Not many people know that ....!formula400 wrote: ↑Sat Nov 14, 2020 9:56 pm I am a pastry chef, left school after my GCSE's straight into a working apprenticeship, loved it, went from not having much fun at school or doing great to being in a kitchen full of older (18-25 year olds apart from the head and sous chef) and had loads if fun, was hard, but loved it. I started in the hot kitchen and spent around 5 years on that side, then went to work in Lyon for 7 months and sort of fell in love with the pastry side, did a few restaurants back in London then got a job at The Ritz Hotel in 2007, started as a Demi chef de partie (2nd lowest position) and I am now currently the head pastry chef, be so for around 7 years I think.
I get paid to play with chocolate and sugar.
Amedei Chocolate mousse, almond praline by lewis wilson, on Flickr
After that I moved onto engineering biscuits and twiglet technology. I kid you not ....
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Re: What's your job ?
I used to sit next to a guy who did a PHd in chocolate moulding Apparently the machine which makes Twirls is way more sophisticated than one which does fancy structural plastic parts. Supposedly chocolate is crazy hard to mould in machines and Twirls are the epitome of difficult chocolate.
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Re: What's your job ?
I tried at school, to say I worked hard would be a lie, but I came out with 7 O levels and a CSE, I got a job as a lab assistant at 16, then I discovered something, I don't like work, it's boring and repetitive, and nothing in the last 37 years has changed my opinion, so I do what will earn me the most money for the least effort - which in my case is IT networking and security, apparently I think differently to most people and for this reason I find the work easy (been told this by a number of people, including one of the people who wrote Checkpoint Firewall courses and books)
So in brief, I don't think "tried harder at school" is the recipe for success (or at least the western capitalist interpretation of success), I think having the right attitude is the recipe for success, I don't have that attitude, but then again my idea of success appears to be different to most peoples, I'm happy with enough money to live on, a motorcycle to ride and a woman to shag.
So in brief, I don't think "tried harder at school" is the recipe for success (or at least the western capitalist interpretation of success), I think having the right attitude is the recipe for success, I don't have that attitude, but then again my idea of success appears to be different to most peoples, I'm happy with enough money to live on, a motorcycle to ride and a woman to shag.
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- Mr Moofo
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Re: What's your job ?
Funny you say that - I could have done a Phd in food technology - and it would have been at that sort of level. But I hated academic research. It was the same when I finished my biochemistry degree and was offered a PhD in the endocrine system of pregnant guinea pigs!!. Had it been the migrating behaviour and the affect of the ring climate on Bald Eagle, I would have jumped at it!Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Mon Nov 16, 2020 2:07 pm I used to sit next to a guy who did a PHd in chocolate moulding Apparently the machine which makes Twirls is way more sophisticated than one which does fancy structural plastic parts. Supposedly chocolate is crazy hard to mould in machines and Twirls are the epitome of difficult chocolate.
I can remember sitting through lectures on heat transfer through UHT pouched pureed pork casserole ....
But I did my time in chocolate - and its a sneaky little bastard. Nasa may well have sent and recovered Apollo 13 with the computing power of a pocket calculator - but chocolate is much more difficult than that!
Chocolate needs to be tempered - because it actually has a crystal structure - this effects have it sets and how much sheen it has. Moulding choctaw in generally much smoother to the bite.
Something like Twirl ( or Aero - but it isn't chocolate) will use "re-work"- so it nucleates and sets up quicker - but it is grainy , and a bit crumbly ...
But then again it matter how long you conch the chocolate , cocoa solids, cocoa butter content etc ....
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Re: What's your job ?
Did he tell you how they get the chocolate coating onto a Maltezer while keeping it perfectly spherical?Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Mon Nov 16, 2020 2:07 pm I used to sit next to a guy who did a PHd in chocolate moulding Apparently the machine which makes Twirls is way more sophisticated than one which does fancy structural plastic parts. Supposedly chocolate is crazy hard to mould in machines and Twirls are the epitome of difficult chocolate.
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Re: What's your job ?
Yep...I was working with him on Thermoplastic carbon fibre, the polymer in that is also semi crystalline and needs the correct heat treatment. Apparently if you've mastered chocolate jet engine parts are a doddle.
- MingtheMerciless
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Re: What's your job ?
Oh I'm so using that one at work, where the HR/Management fascination of employing "Grads" stops them employing time served people with plenty of experience in roles where that's vital like Project Management. Grads are usually cheaper as well.Wreckless Rat wrote: ↑Mon Nov 16, 2020 12:21 pm
Many good jobs used to say "Degree applicants only" - with the plethora of 'colouring-in' degrees and correspondence diplomas in climate change etc, it's starting to wane.
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- Yorick
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Re: What's your job ?
I never wanted a champagne lifestyle, but I did want to retire early, so worked towards that.
My best man, has the champagne lifestyle as both him and missus are company directors. To keep this when they retire, they're having to work until 65.
I'd rather have a 3 star pension at 55 than a 5 star pension at 65.
My best man, has the champagne lifestyle as both him and missus are company directors. To keep this when they retire, they're having to work until 65.
I'd rather have a 3 star pension at 55 than a 5 star pension at 65.
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Re: What's your job ?
Having spent most of my life twatting about I'll be lucky if I get a 1 star pension at any age.
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