Thursday, June 6, 2024

Throwback Thursday - Seven Jobs

 


Repost from May 16, 2009

A recent bit of Flair made me laugh: I do many things well. None of which generate income. Seven jobs I've held:

1. General Help. My first job was making artificial floral arrangements. I also spray painted plastic flower pots in seasonal colors, swept the factory floor, cleaned the work benches. Walked across a steep roof in order to open up the shop on Saturday. That wasn't bad during good weather but a little dicey in the winter. I loved this job. [Ed: Not the walking across the roof to break into the building part]

2. Sales Associate. I worked in the Lingerie department of Filene's. Not a thrilling job. Got caught by one of the floor managers counting out my change till early one night. He yelled a department away and I jumped and slammed my fingers in the cash drawer.

3. Lab Clerk. Started out as a receptionist, answering the phones, typing up test slips, handing out urine cups. Eventually, I became a float helping out in the different departments. I was taught how to draw blood using wound drains filled with water and a few brave co-workers. I was the test for new phlebotomists since I have such tiny veins. If they could easily draw my blood, they were qualified to go to the Nursery, Pediatrics, and ICU. I helped out a lot in Microbiology plating specimens. You name it; I had my hands in it. Literally, this in the days before gloves were required. I had to leave this job when the state mandated one had to have a 4 yr med tech degree and be certified on a state exam in order to work in a hospital laboratory. I didn't have enough years experience to get me in under the grandfather clause.

4. Girl Friday. I worked for a cement company. Took orders by phone and sent the orders to one of the plants by teletype machine, dispatched trucks, resolved billing problems. Sat in on a weekly sales meeting as the my sales manager was grooming me for the position of Office Manager. The promotion never happened. When it came time to move up, Corporate decided I wouldn't be effective because of being female even though I had done the work for two years. However, they did want me to train the new male office manager. I went out on my lunch hour and got a new job. Tendered my resignation. I told the regional manager it was ludicrous for me to train the office manager if I couldn't be the office manager. He said he was very disappointed in me. "Not half as much as I'm disappointed in you. If a company can't appreciate me for my dedication, integrity and service, quite frankly, the company can go to hell." I was 24 or 25 at the time. The regional manager told my boss, "Still waters run deep." It's the best compliment I've received even though it wasn't meant as a compliment.

5. Inside Sales. This time for a food brokerage. During the interview, the boss wanted to know if I'd be able to handle the job. I told him I was doing the same job only shipping cement. Didn't seem much different to me if I was shipping bags of cement or bags of frozen potatoes. I was hired on the spot. (On my lunch hour, see #4)

6. After I graduated from computer school, I went to work for my uncle's steel distribution company. I was in charge of the computer room. Responsible for printing all the month end and year end reports. Franny, one of the outside programmer/consultants gave me some training in programming on the new mini computer. I proudly showed her what I had written. She smiled and then slammed her hand against the keyboard. The program crashed and burned epicly. She taught me a programmer had to think of every possible input especially the wrong ones. She sent me back so I included rude little phrases that would pop up if the operator input incorrect responses. I thought this assignment was just something fun for me to do. Had no idea she used the module in a real program for the Purchasing Manager. Some of the rude phrases (What ah you...) popped up while the manager was working. He came back to tell me he loved them. We became good friends. When I had paid my dues and was ready to move up, he was the one who encouraged me to go out and find another position. He gave me a programmer's ruler which I still have and is a valued possession.

7. Letter Programmer. I programmed junk mail for a marketing company. Amazing and frightening the information they collected. Most of what I programmed were form letters from colleges hitting up the alum for donations. Every morning, we went to a meeting called "Shove". Basically, it was confession. You told the manager what you were working on, what you were having problems with (if sales sent you the wrong tape to use) or the printer jammed. If you had nothing in your queue, you were given another assignment. Work was sometimes slow and the bosses didn't like to see us sitting around doing nothing. We worked across the street from a mall so after shove, we'd go to the mall. Then go back to see if there was more work. If nothing came in, we'd go to lunch at the mall. The work wasn't challenging, but it was a cushy job.

As you can see, I've crossed a few hills. What about you? Have you had any odd or interesting jobs?

19 comments:

  1. I guess I did a few interesting things.....😉

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    1. Roller skating supervisor along the Operator line? - CJ

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    2. How OLD do you think I am??????🤣🤣🤣🤣 (and I was only an operator to get my foot in the door....)

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    3. 😺 too bad, that would have been a fun job.

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  2. There's a lot of fascinating material there.

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    1. Like I said, I’ve crossed a few hills - CJ

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  3. Like you, I do many things well but one of them is not getting a job that pays me TONS of money. Grin. My jobs since you asked: I worked in a lab during college (Maine Cooperative Fisheries) and one summer I worked in downtown Worcester at a cancer research facility. It might have been called Mason Labs, but I can't remember. I didn't really care for that job. I also worked for Jewish Family Services in Worcester for a few summers. I'd go to people's homes and clean, run errands, or keep them company. Most of them were older or housebound. I also worked in the Office of the Big D grocery store one year. Do you're member them? I started out in their building area but my boss who was married made a pass at me and I asked to be switched to another department. And I substitute taught. As well as teaching. I taught high school biology for 36 years, and most of the time that was my best job that I really enjoyed. And now I do my lake job which I actually really enjoy. This past week in one 6 hour shift and one 5 hour shift I had only 2 boats per day, so I sat in the sun, bird watched and did a lot of reading. I hope I didn't bore you...grin.

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    1. I had a friend who worked at JFS and the boss, first name Steve, was the lab manager at the hospital where I worked. I remember the Big D. Small world - CJ

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  4. You had a lot of strange jobs. I did, too, when I was studying, I had to earn money to pay my way - waitress, receptionist, baby-sitting, sorting ancient manuscripts in a castle archive, cleaning and cooking for one of the cathedral canons, in return he wrote my theology essays. Then teaching, including subjects i HAD NEVER HEARD OF....And here in Germany I worked for an airline till I got a vacancy as a teacher. When I left teaching I worked for 10 years in an old people's home, and now I enjoy just doing what I want! Hugs!

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    1. Sorting manuscripts for a castle archive, I want that job - CJ

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    2. It didn't pay well, but it was the best job of all times!

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  5. only thing odd about some of my jobs were the people and the schedule !!!! :) there's not a lot out there that would entice me to walk a roof; had to get on weezer's roof once to take off storm damage....

    getting UP was not an issue, it was the getting back down....and this time it took a LOOOOOONG time.

    weezer asked if I wanted her to call the fire department, and as if ON CUE, ( it was labor day weekend, back when the fire departments collected money in the boot for Jerry Lewis telethon.) Dad had drove the fire truck down her street to get to their collection spot, he saw me on the roof and waved. !!! ♥♥

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    1. Ha, loved the story about the roof and the Chief - CJ

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  6. You've walked an interesting work path.

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  7. LOL, my doc said I look like if I do drugs, my veins are so darn punctured. Yes. From donating blood (she knew that).

    #4 - really?! Congrats, you were brave, thumbs up!
    Same happened to me btw.
    Was told they take over "the other guy", went to a job interview in my lunch break and got a job of 17 years there.
    LOVE #6!!!

    My worst job was packing advent-calendars for 450 people into envelopes too small cause my female colleagues... oh, too long! "Last Christmas" by Wham! on the radio.. all the time.
    AT Volkswagen I lead a B2E-project. We had an internal "mini e-bay" and the peeps were in there with their real names. No content 16+ allowed.
    It was kindy. COD even I can identify as "Call of Duty" and I saw the longest porn-list in my life. User with real name!
    One even said he´ll destroy "my" company (I was working for, not at VW)

    Work-life can be weird, huh? I also worked at a food company. I saw cockroaches and all (I was 17). At night shift the men brought me fresh soup... uhhhh, I ate VERY careful. There were spiders and more of such insects all around. YUCK!
    Handing out newspaper a dog nearly got me... oh, thank you for those memories ;-)
    Yes, we did some jobs, huh.
    And then at ALSTOM the "f-word" was VERY present ;-)

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    1. I would not have lasted at the job with the spiders and bugs. 😱

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  8. Loved reading about your various jobs.

    First job was lifeguard and diving instructor while I was still in high school. Also did a lot of babysitting when I wasn't working the summer job.

    Second job was becoming an independent mail contractor taking bags of mail to various towns. Got my first contract and first route when I was 19. Bid on second route and got it when I was 20. Hired someone to run the 2nd route. Did that also while I did third job.

    Third job was working in a factory. Dirty job, but I advanced quickly and became the only metrologist on my shift. LOVED the job.

    Moved to another state and became first a quality control inspector, then a quality control engineer, all while getting my bachelors and masters degrees. Taught statistics at my work place to those who needed it for their jobs.

    Human factors engineer at ATT as an intern. Used people at the company as subjects for my dissertation.

    Now I take on independent contracting jobs. Probably more than you ever wanted to know.

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    1. No, it's all fascinating to know what friends did in the before times

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