Dear gawd, appears nary a government official between here and Canada has a pea brain to split betwixt
•Electrical Technician
•Transportation Operator
•Construction, Warehouse, Groundskeeper
•Mechanic
•Surveyor
•Carpenter
•Construction Worker
•Mechanical Engineer
•Computer Programmer
•Machine Worker
•Engineering: All Categories
•Computer Operations & Systems
•School Bus Driver
•Police Detective
•Aeronautical Engineer
•Architect
Being a programmer is alright. It pays the bills. It's not too hard most of the time. Low stress. It really doesn't have the hands-on part that I want tho. Since I'm buying a house, I think I'll get my hands-on cravings satisfied with projects at home. I feel a lot more accomplished when I can really see my results than when I write lines of code.
And I'd like to do the rest of the jobs in that list above!Maybe not forever, but I like learning about one thing, coming to a satisfactory proficiency level and moving on to learn something new. Jack of all trades, master of none, really. And that's fine with me.
I am currently a programmer. I've done tech support. I've been a classroom/computer lab assistant. I've tutored. I've been an operating room translator (to and from English and Spanish) for orthopedic surgery.
I hated tech support after the first year or so. It was part time on campus and at some point you kinda stop learning new stuff. It was all the same crap from the same dumb students with the same stupid problems. "My internet won't work." "My computer has popups and it's slow." "I think I have a virus."
Translating was fun. It was always something different, watching the surgery was really cool. Drilling into bones, putting plates here and screws there, cutting parts off, putting it all back together, heal for 6 weeks and voila! Back to normal!
Tutoring was alright as long as the kid was paying attention. I worked with 7th graders for the most part - Math, which they naturally hated. I feel like I'm pretty good at bringing math down to their level and making it seem really simple. Idk why there are so many problems with math classes, I think it's fairly universal too. As soon as a student gets a teeny bit behind it's all downhill and they can't catch up. Then there's not enough time to figure out what they're confused about, at what point did it stop making sense, is there any other way to explain it that will work? One time in a probability class, my prof explained something one way that made sense to almost everyone but me. So I went to his office confused. I can't remember how he talked about it the first time...it was so abstract, but when he said "weighted average" it all made sense. It was totally clear after that, but I could tell he was frustrated with the fact that I didn't understand his initial explanation. Well, that's no way to keep me interested, sorry I'm not as smart as you are.Math classes are good at making people feel stupid, I guess. Lord knows I felt stupid in all of my classes and that's what my degree is in! /rant
Being a lab assistant would have been way more fun if the lead had been able to actually speak English. Poor guy was fresh from China, some of the worst Engrish I've ever heard... He knew his stuff, but he just couldn't get it to the students.
Being a programmer is alright. It pays the bills. It's not too hard most of the time. Low stress. It really doesn't have the hands-on part that I want tho. Since I'm buying a house, I think I'll get my hands-on cravings satisfied with projects at home. I feel a lot more accomplished when I can really see my results than when I write lines of code.
And I'd like to do the rest of the jobs in that list above!Maybe not forever, but I like learning about one thing, coming to a satisfactory proficiency level and moving on to learn something new. Jack of all trades, master of none, really. And that's fine with me.
Totally. I can't stand expending effort and not seeing the tangible benefits of it.
You'll have alot of fun decorating your house and making it totally "tactical" for your lifestyle. I was an Army brat as a kid, and therefore we never painted the walls, we never planted trees, we never improved a place a whole lot because in two years or less we knew we would be out of it.
BUT then I became grown up and bought my own house in 1999. Man, oh man have I overcompensated. The whole place is painted every color imaginable. I've finished everything with trim, shelves, etc. My house is equipped to let me enjoy being comfortable with very little effort. Plus, its aesthetically pleaseing to me and my family, and that's the only audience I care about really. It's my house after all.
Good on you for coming to that realization as you have. I'm of the same thinking. If I do anything for too long I get bored as hell...and then I end up getting into trouble.![]()
Great post. Congrats on your new home. I really had a difficult time in math classes. I had to take Algebra II twice. Couldn't see the point. I was much better at word problems where I could see why I was doing some equation or what not. It had a purpose. Plus, they gave the added benefit, by way of logical estimation, to know if you were way off on your answer and I could go back and figure out what I did wrong myself.
I love this:
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Transportation Operator!! This made me laugh since I wanted to be a bus driver when I was a kidwhich later turned to Pilot...still want to be a pilot lol
After making those daily predictions for a period of four months, I got rather bored with it and said fooey! Time for something else.
I think trading works, in that it involves a "system" and the ability to spot something and anticipate cause and effect.
i.e. In March of 2003 I anticipated a housing bubble
In 2001 I anticipated stagnant wages for a decade.
In May of 2006 I anticipated the financial crisis
Just spotting items in news stories and having the ISTP internal magician pull outcomes together without any applied thought.
Reasoning for stagnant wages was pretty simple. Increased immigration in conjunction with manufacturing, technical and customer services roles being outsourced in mass. If one isn't making something you can't really create wealth.
Reasoning for the housing bubble, changes in lending standards in conjunction with CDS driving a loosening of standards.
Reasoning for anticipating the financial crisis. The Federal Reserve stopped publishing M3, and other related data that indicated the short term lending facility balance sheets weren't "pretty."
Rather simplistic and "gut" responses however later shown to be "spot on."
So yes, I think an ISTP could be good at trading.
Almost forgot, back in February 2009 I predicted the Dow would recover to 9000 by June.
Posted that prediction and would give a forecast daily on what the market would do each day for that entire period. I was only wrong once, and the root cause of that was someone in the SF Fed office making offhand comments about inflation which trimmed about 100 points off.
After making those daily predictions for a period of four months, I got rather bored with it and said fooey! Time for something else.
You should hook up with antisocial-one for some retirement planning advice service.
Anyhow who is to say that ISTP need to have specialized career interest's. Their penchant for reason, is enough to make them suitable for 90% of the world's professions, ranging from professor to professional dancer, or a marine or sports nut. The more they are liable to actively search for knowledge and learning, the more eligible they become. Just a generalization, ISTP's probably have the most versatile career choices of all type's.
•Transportation Operator
•Dental Hygienist
•Construction, Warehouse, Groundskeeper
•Mechanic
•Legal Secretary
•Cleaning Service Worker
•Surveyor
•Corrections Officer
•Carpenter
•Construction Worker
•Steelworker
•Cook
•Small Business Manager
•Physician: Pathology
•Mechanical Engineer
•Craft Worker
•Computer Programmer
•Law Enforcement
•Lawyer
•Engineering