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porsche4life 06-20-2010 08:13 PM

Not sure what I want to do when I grow up...
 
After spending a few months working in a Pharmacy I'm just not sure what I want to do with my life.... I could do it but I would be miserable after a while I'm almost certain...

I love the outdoors, I'm very mechanical, I enjoy sitting learning how things work, I can work my way through most things on a computer, I've yet to find a fix on the Porsche I couldn't handle. I'm analytical to a fault.... I've over analyzed relationships until they crumbled. I lay awake at night and go over things in my head....


Oh and I'm coming to hate chemistry....


Plz.... No flaming... if you feel the need to call me a wuss and say I'm a quitter just don't post....


I'm looking for career field suggestions... Throw 'em out there....



(edit).... Thought I should add that I'm an autocross fanatic....

Heel n Toe 06-20-2010 08:18 PM

Sid, I'm thinking some area of the engineering field from what you've said.

Check out this book (or one like it):
Amazon.com: Now What?: The Young Person's Guide to Choosing the Perfect Career…

Kaliv 06-20-2010 08:20 PM

I've done a mixture of different jobs from construction, to computer support, to engineering...mutliple location and companies. I've enjoyed some aspects of every single job, and I've hated some aspects as well. What I've come to figure out though, is that it's normally the people you work with that makes the job. So when job hunting, trying to make sure you fit the culture of the people already working there. It'll help tremendously in your job enjoyment...whatever you pick.

porsche4life 06-20-2010 08:23 PM

Ya... I love my coworkers at the Pharmacy I am in... Its just dealing with the customers and the doctors.... Not sure I want to spend the rest of my life doing that....

Noah930 06-20-2010 08:24 PM

Take your time before you make any career-ending decision. At the same time, it's better to find this stuff out now, than in 4 or 5 years.

porsche4life 06-20-2010 08:25 PM

Yes... I'd hate to spend 4-5yrs suffering through pharm school and then decide I want to do something totally different....

I'm not dropping out of classes or anything... Just looking...

Kaliv 06-20-2010 08:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by porsche4life (Post 5414755)
Its just dealing with the customers and the doctors....

If you do anything with computers, make sure you aren't Tier 1 then.

porsche4life 06-20-2010 08:27 PM

If I dealt with computers I would want to stay away from the public at large....

masraum 06-20-2010 08:29 PM

Check with the counseling center at school. They often have resources that you can use.

Welcome to the Self-Directed Search...the world's most widely used career interest inventory!

I took this once at a head hunter. It was interesting. You get a few scores. I was told that the highest score is what you should be doing as a job and your second highest score was often a hobby.

My highest score said that I should be in computers or engineering, in my field I've sort of combined the two things.

My second highest score said that I like to work with my hands making things or repairing things. I do enjoy working on cars, building things around the house, etc...

For me it was pretty right on.

masraum 06-20-2010 08:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by porsche4life (Post 5414763)
If I do anything, I would want to stay away from the public at large....

Fixed it for you. ;)

:D

Yeah, anything even remotely retail, I couldn't do it. I've done several gen pub facing jobs, auto parts store, bartender, Tier 1 tech support (foot in the door job). I learned that I don't much like the general public.

porsche4life 06-20-2010 08:32 PM

On the people thing... I have heard people tell my boss how personable I am... I try to always smile and be as helpful and friendly as possible... Making a point to learn customers names and to call them by name... I'm not saying that I'm not a people person... I just don't love dealing with the public...

Oh and add Eagle Scout to my list... That is what has driven a lot of my love for the outdoors....

BlueSkyJaunte 06-20-2010 08:32 PM

I'm 35 years old and I still don't know what I want to be when I grow up. :D

Noah930 06-20-2010 08:33 PM

The schooling for engineers is pretty brutal (I'm not an engineer, but all 4 years of undergrad I had engineer roommates). And there are plenty of disillusioned professional engineers who are just as unhappy with their career choices as you might be with pharm. But if your passion is there, somebody's got to build the cars and racecars of the world.

One of your greatest assets right now is your youth.

Evans, Marv 06-20-2010 08:51 PM

Sid,
Lots of people find themselves in the same situation you're in at the same age you are now, so don't feel strange about it. Very few people fall into the perfect career for themselves and love it for the rest of their lives. Now days it seems to me like there should be an online website where you can plug in the things you like and get a list of likely careers, so maybe a search would be at least entertaining. Have you paid a visit to the counseling center at school? Also, maybe there are other areas of pharmacy that would meet some of your requirements. I dealt with the public about all of my working life and was good at it. Some of it I enjoyed, some of it I didn't. I figured it's like anything else, there are parts that are better and some that are worse. I tend to agree with Heel n Toe (John R.) about the engineering field as a possibility. You still have time to try out some majors to see how they fit. Lots of people do that. Also, lots of people go through life wondering what they'd like to do when they grow up (Hell, I'm in my late 60's and retired and I still don't know what I want to do when I grow up). For some a good strategy is to get into a field that generally fits and look around for related jobs that lead you in a direction more to your interests. Good luck - you seem like a pretty on the ball young guy.

Geronimo '74 06-20-2010 08:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BlueSkyJaunte (Post 5414770)
I'm 35 years old and I still don't know what I want to be when I grow up. :D

Lol, I thought I was alone in that....


Sid, it's good to think about that stuff now, but there's no need to worry.
You're still plenty young, you're mind may change another two times... don't sweat it.
Are there any other career possibilites with the chem degree you're studying for now?? Or is your only option working at the chemists??

Technical studies are a complete u-turn away from where you're now, you'll have to start over again. (which is not dramatic but maybe not necessary)

And just remember, whatever you do, there will be days that you'll be fed up with it...

porsche4life 06-20-2010 08:59 PM

I'm not studying for a chem degree... I'm completing pre-reqs to apply for a Pharmacy professional level program.... When I get all the reqs done... Just a little over a semester to go... I will apply for Pharmacy school... Once I am in the program its 4 more years of school... 18-20hrs/ semester

Bill Douglas 06-20-2010 09:03 PM

Same here - I've no idea what I want to do when I grow up.

As mentioned above engineering is good. And I don't mean handy with a welder, I mean a degree or post grad qualification in engineering. A place where I worked (Industrial Research Ltd) there was a chickie who sat around on one of the cutiest butts I've seen in a long time, anway stop visualising her butt and listen to the story. She sat around getting paid a LOT OF MONEY because she had a phd in engineering to do with metallurgy and gas cylinders that had blown up in industrial accidents would come in and she would say why they blew up. No one around had more qualifications than her so her word was law. Such a good butt.

vash 06-20-2010 09:07 PM

the best thing about studying engineering..for the most part, the first two years are pretty much the exact same classes for every engineering school. you can take your time, at least two years before you decide on a direction.

sid, there are two schools of thought. one, you get a job that defines you. two, you get a job that doesnt make you puke, and do fun stuff on the side that defines you. the older you get, the less and less you get to be part of that decision. i exaggerate, but..you know.

at my hospital, and the pharm chicks are cuties.. and that never sucks.

fxeditor 06-20-2010 09:15 PM

Hey Sidney,
I hate to say it but the odds are you will get dreadfully sick of any career after a certain period of time. In my case I just turned 40 and have been an editor/visual effects artist since I was 19. While I love the challenges of my job, not to mention the income level, I am getting tired of it. I think it's simply doing "something" for 20 years that begins to wear on a person. You get to know the ebbs and flows of your industry so well it ceases to be interesting. This feeling has led me back to school, taking a smattering of classes at a local community college that fit in with my work schedule so I too can discover what I want to do next. There is a book I read recently: Amazon.com: Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry into the Value of… that has given me some thought into doing something more visceral but I'm not quite sure something like that is right for me. In the meantime visual effects is starting to get a little more exciting again. 3d film making is like the wild west and nobody really knows what their doing (don't tell Michael Bay I said that! :p ). In ten years who knows, maybe I'll open up a motorcycle repair shop like the author of that book, at least I will keep it interesting!

Good luck,
Michael

cbush 06-20-2010 09:16 PM

I have often thought the same thing. Love being outdoors, working on cars, etc. Problem is, I never figured out how to make a living doing that.
I read something recently that the idea of "find the job you love and do that" is really a crock. The reality is that most of us slog away doing jobs that are less than ideal but that is part of being an adult. Just not too many opportunities like that guy that got hired to oversee that Island in Australia. To be honest being a Pharmacist isn't a bad deal. Decent hours, interacting with other people, helping people, and a good salary. My brother in law is a pharmacist, runs his own business and does very well. That gives him the time and $$$ to do the things he loves which is playing (a lot) of golf.
Sounds to me like you have your head on straight, and are having the same questions that many of us to. Sadly, there just aren't that many opportunities to care for and exercise Jay Leno's car collection.
Personally, I have been in the Army for almost 30 years. I have loved many aspects of it- working outdoors a lot, working on mechanical stuff (pulling howitzer powerpacks in the mud), and such. But it isn't for everyone:)
Good luck!


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