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Tuesday, April 30, 2024
Zookeeper, Zoning Manager, Zzyzx Operator, ( #AtoZChallenge )
Monday, April 29, 2024
Yard Worker, Yacht Captain, Youth Director, Yo-yo Expert ( #AtoZChallenge )
Since I don't know or care much about yarn, yeast, or yoga then I'll dismiss any occupations associated with those things. I've done plenty of yard work in my life including working outdoors in what they called the "construction yard" when I was working at the contracting company that my father worked for while I was in college. That's a young man's work and I wouldn't want to do much of that again.
Yacht Captain would never come about for me so I can easily dismiss that job. Youth director might be more related to my skillset, but I'm not sure I'd be the greatest youth director. At least not if it were an energetic thing or where I might have to deal with unruly youth. Fact is I don't know that I'd want to be a director of any amassed group of people or any other creatures.
Maybe I'm best at being a yo-yo expert. Not actual toy yo-yos, but metaphorical yo-yos that represent all the ups and downs and highs and lows of life. But haven't we all? Perhaps I should just go out and buy a toy yo-yo and start practicing. It's probably a dead end career. And once you reach the end of the string you just go back to where you've started. Yeah, I guess you could call me a yo-yo expert.
Do you or have you in the past maintained a large yard? Are you good when it comes to working with young people or just people in general? How proficient are your yo-yo skills?
Saturday, April 27, 2024
X-Ray Technician, X-tra in Movies, or just X ( #AtoZChallenge )
Friday, April 26, 2024
Weeder, Warehouse Worker, Writer, Walker ( #AtoZChallenge )
Thursday, April 25, 2024
Van Driver, Visitor Services, Videographer, Violinist (#AtoZChallenge)
Wednesday, April 24, 2024
Underground Worker, Upholsterer, Undertaker, U.S. Government Worker ( #AtoZChallenge )
Tuesday, April 23, 2024
Telephone Worker, Teacher, Tour Guide, Theater Manager ( #AtoZChallenge )
Monday, April 22, 2024
Sales, Security, Stage Manager, Showman, Silly Fellow ( #AtoZChallenge )
Saturday, April 20, 2024
Railroad Worker, Retailer, Radio DJ, Roustabout, Roadie, Road Warrior ( #AtoZChallenge )
Friday, April 19, 2024
Questioner, Quality Controller, Quoter, Quibbler ( #AtoZChallenge )
Thursday, April 18, 2024
Printer, Publisher, Packer, Painter, Psychologist ( #AtoZChallenge )
Wednesday, April 17, 2024
Operator, Office Worker, Order Taker, or Outdoorsman ( #AtoZChallenge )
Operator is a job title that could mean a lot of things, but when I think of the term I think of a telephone operator. Some of you probably remember the days when you could call "Operator" and get a real person instead of an automated system. They could connect you to numbers you needed to reach or find the numbers for you if you couldn't find them. An operator years ago was an actual human who could answer your questions and hopefully help you do whatever it was you needed to do on the telephone. My maternal grandmother was a telephone operator back in 1919. I never asked her about it because I never heard about this until after she died. Operator sounds potentially interesting in its time, but now it is an anomaly for the most part. Many jobs have become obsolete due to mechanization.
A few times over the years I have been an office worker to a certain extent. I've rarely been confined to a desk all day doing clerical work, but I have worked in an office environment mostly answering phones and filling out paperwork. But that is part of a manager job which was why I was doing office work. And much of that office work entailed being an order taker. Customers would call in to my office to place orders and I would enter those orders into the system to be shipped to the customers. Order taking was one of my favorite office related jobs because I enjoyed interacting with customers.
In my young adult years I fancied myself as a bit of an outdoorsman--to a limited extent at least. I enjoyed hiking and camping, but I would never say I was enough of a pro to be acting in any professional capacity of outdoorsmanship. These days I don't go outside all that much. I'd have to drive a bit of a distance to escape the urban wilderness of Los Angeles and I don't care to be an outdoorsman in the city. I like to watch television shows about it, but that's about as much wilderness that I can stand these days.
What are your favorite outdoor activities? Do you enjoy working in an office environment? When's the last time you called an operator?
Tuesday, April 16, 2024
Navy guy, Nurse, Newspaper Writer, Novelist ( #AtoZChallenge )
Navy guy might have been a career route that I could have taken in my life. After I graduated from high school I could have looked into joining the Navy. It was 1969 and Vietnam was going full guns and other deadly devices. Since my father was in the Navy during World War II it might seem logical for me to follow the tradition--that is if I'd come from a military type family. But my father was mostly recruited to play basketball on the Navy team. He wasn't much of a sailor, but he was good enough of a basketball player to make the Navy want him on their team. Sounds like a nice way to serve military time.
My second wife became a nurse after our decade of being in show business together. I heard her stories and those of other nurses who told their stories and I'm pretty sure I would not be good at nursing. I guess a nurse gets used to the gross stuff and other weird stuff, but I don't know how I would be doing that occupation. Sure, I could have been a nurse, but not. No, not me. But don't let me knock the nursing profession. We need them and it's a great career move for young people looking for their life's work.
Though now maybe more dream than reality, being a newspaper writer was long a dream profession in my younger days. From the time I could read I was always fascinated with newspapers and the wonderful array of information and entertainment those pages contained. My paternal grandfather had worked for a newspaper, but he was mostly a printer, though he did write some pieces for the paper at times or so I heard. I never met him since he died several years before I was born.
Novelist is more like it for me. I've long aspired to be a novelist. I've done some work on a few novels but haven't actually followed any through to completion. Maybe someday I'll get a novel published. Or something published. Or maybe not. But never say never as they sometimes say.
Would you be good at a care job like nursing? Did you like to read newspapers in your younger days or even now? Have you achieved the dream of publishing your own novel?
Monday, April 15, 2024
-Marketing Researcher, Movie Star, Make-up Artist, Magician, Musician ( #AtoZChallenge )
Saturday, April 13, 2024
Landscaper, Librarian, Lawyer, Lecturer ( #AtoZChallenge )
Friday, April 12, 2024
Kitchen worker, Klutz, or King ( #AtoZChallenge )
Thursday, April 11, 2024
Journalist, Jeweler, Judge, Journeyman, Juggler ( #AtoZChallenge )
Wednesday, April 10, 2024
Ironworker, Insurance salesman, Interior designer, Indian Chief ( #AtoZChallenge )
Tuesday, April 9, 2024
High Act, Host, Hotelier, Human Resources, or Historian ( #AtoZChallenge & #BOTB Results )
High acts in the circus were some of my favorites. By that I'm talking about trapeze artists, wire walkers and other acts that challenge gravity. I've always dreamed of doing a high act, but I don't know that it would really be for me. I don't mind being high as long as heights aren't involved.
I've been a host at my house on occasion, but I'm probably not such an attentive host as would make me a good professional host. In the same sense, I've stayed at many hotels in my life, but I can't say I'd be a particularly good hotelier. Wouldn't want that job either.
Human resources might have been a good field for me, but these days I don't think I'd want to deal with this. There are too many different kinds of humans to deal with. It used to be easier I think. Now there are too many issues to think about and so many more that still need to be imagined. Maybe I could just be human. That can be a pretty tough job sometimes.
Ideally I might like to be a historian. Seems like quiet work that would entail a lot of research. At my stage of life I'm probably far better with the past than the present or future. Anyone want to hear about how things were when I was younger?
How are you with heights? Do you like to host parties at your house? Have you ever had to deal with a human resources department in your job?
Battle of the Bands Results
Both Sides Now
On April 1st I had a Battle of the Bands featuring versions of the Joni Mitchell song "Both Sides Now". My first exposure to this song was from the Judy Collins version which was a hit when I was in high school. Later I got the Judy Collins album with the song and have loved the sound ever since. Neil Diamond did an excellent version of the song, but Judy's version is still my favorite.
Final Vote Tally
Judy Collins 8 votes
Neil Diamond 5 votes
Monday, April 8, 2024
Golf Caddy, Gardener, Guard, Guitar-God, or God? ( #AtoZChallenge )
Saturday, April 6, 2024
Fireman, Funeral Director, Fundraiser, Farmer, Friend ( #AtoZChallenge )
Friday, April 5, 2024
Eater, Elephant Trainer, Easter Bunny, Economist, Environmentalist, and Entertainer ( #AtoZChallenge )
Thursday, April 4, 2024
Dishwasher, Driver, Deliveryman, Dreamer ( #AtoZChallenge )
Dishwasher is one of those drudgeries that we often think of as a bottom level job. Yet, one of my most memorable jobs was that of a dishwasher and it really wasn't a bad job at all. Then again, it was a job I only held for a couple of weekends. It was October of 1975 and the magic show that I had been working in was in a lull of a layover that found us staying in Terre Haute Indiana. We didn't have any immediate bookings so I went to Manpower temp agency to find some job that would give me quick money to get me through the dry time. What they offered was a weekend job washing dishes for the National Guard. Apparently they were trying to encourage their members by hiring outside workers to do the grunt labor like dishwashing. The pay was above the norm for that type of job and the hours were ideal for me. The workplace conditions were outstanding and my coworkers were educated guys like me just looking for extra money. It was a very nice job actually and we could fix our own breakfast and lunch when the meal rushes were over. The best part for me was having access to all the milk that we wanted including chocolate milk. As a chocolate milk fanatic at the time it was like my ultimate milk dream. It's not a job I would want to do forever, but in those conditions it was not a bad dishwashing job at all.
Driving is one of my favorite things to do and fortunately for me many of my jobs involved a great deal of driving. My favorite driving was when I was touring on shows and drove my van or occasionally a show truck. That was long haul driving much of the time and I'd enjoy listening to music and enjoying the scenery. However, I also had a job with an airport shuttle which I enjoyed. My shift would start very early morning and I was usually off by early afternoon. Those were some great hours despite having to wake up much earlier than most of my jobs. I've also done a number of delivery jobs which I enjoyed a great deal. That work was especially interesting in towns where I was staying temporarily because it gave me a fast track learning experience of unfamiliar territory. It was like sightseeing with occasional delivery stops. Delivery work has it perils. Since my experience was typically in smaller towns I didn't have to deal with the types of things we've been seeing lately with Amazon drivers and such. Dogs were a concern at times and weird places could be a bit uncomfortable, but mostly the work wasn't too bad. If I had pursued a career with some company like UPS or FedEx then I'd probably have a nice retirement right now, but that's not what I did and now I am where I am.
My dream job would be to be a dreamer. I find it annoying when certain political hacks refer to certain immigrants as "dreamers" and even pass laws referring to that term. Heck, I used to call myself a "dreamer" before it became a political term for people who are dreaming about whatever handout they can get from our government. All of us are dreamers. We all have some kind of dream so no one group can claim that exclusive right. I've dreamed in my life and I've actually lived my dream working jobs that I had only hoped to have when I was a kid. I am a dreamer. Now if I can only get paid just to dream and share my dreams with others. Sounds like a true dream job to me.
What work have you enjoyed that might be considered drudgery by some? What is the worst work environment you can think of? What is your biggest dream of a job you'd like to do or have done?
Wednesday, April 3, 2024
Carnie, Cook, Clerk, Customer Service ( #AtoZChallenge & #IWSG )
Join us on the first Wednesday of each month in Alex J. Cavanaugh's Insecure Writer's Support Group--a forum of writers who gather to talk about writing and the writer's life. For a complete list of participants visit Alex's Blog.
The co-hosts for the April 3 posting of the IWSG are Janet Alcorn, T. Powell Coltrin, Natalie Aguirre, and Pat Garcia
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
Barker, Baker, Booker, Blogger, ( #AtoZChallenge )
Monday, April 1, 2024
Accountant, Acrobat, Actor, Amanuensis (#BOTB & #AtoZChallenge )
April Alphabet time has arrived again! My theme this year is "I Coulda Been..."--all the paths I could have taken but didn't as well as some of the paths I did take on my life journey. Ready? Let's go...
I could have been an accountant. My father's main occupation in life was that of an accountant. So I guess I could have taken that route in my own life, but I don't think I was really cut out for that kind of a job. My mother had been a acrobatic dancer before she married my dad and she continued this until my sister took dance lessons and took her place as the acrobat in the family. My parents tried to get me to join my sister in dance lessons when I was probably about five, but I was having none of that either. I stubbornly resisted that talent--probably because I didn't really have that kind of talent.
My shyness kept me from pursuing acting in school. I appeared in a few school productions, but not as an actor. In later life I somewhat dabbled in acting. For over a decade I managed a stage production where I sometimes also played one or more roles. Since the soundtrack was prerecorded maybe I wasn't such a legitimate actor, but I was acting out the parts being "spoken" on tape so I guess I was an actor of sorts. Movie actor would have been an interesting career track I think, but other than working as an extra in the film A Walk in the Spring Rain back in 1970 I never became a film actor.
These days I don't often run into an English language word that I've never heard before, but recently while reading Richard Dillon's Meriwether Lewis I came upon the word amanuensis. According to Dillon, Lewis was an amanuensis to Thomas Jefferson--in other words according to one definition: a literary or artistic assistant, in particular one who takes dictation or copies manuscripts. Well, that seems pretty cool to have for oneself. I could use one of those in that occupation. But, alas, I am an amanuensis to myself. Since I can't afford to hire my own amanuensis then the burden falls into my hands. Now I realize I can't even afford myself.
And that's all I have for the letter "A"!
Battle of the Bands
Battle of the Bands is the blogging event started by Far Away Series and now hosted by StMcC Presents Battle of the Bands. This event happens each month on the 15th and on some there is also a Battle on the 1st of the month. My blog is one of those with a second Battle excepting over these summer months. The premise is simple: Listen to the songs presented below and then in the comments vote for your favorite and tell us why you liked it. Then visit the links listed near the bottom of this post for more Battle action.
Both Sides Now
Just about anyone knows this great Joni Mitchell song because now it's become a classic standard performed by numerous artists. The song is fitting for my A to Z theme since it reflects on the options we face in life and the myriad things we have all done. Here are two well known versions by top artists. Which do you like best?
Judy Collins "Both Sides Now" (1967)
Neil Diamond "Both Sides Now" (1969)
It's just time to have some fun. In other words, which song version do you like best? Hopefully you have an opinion of some kind. You don't have to know about music to have an opinion since it all comes down to your own personal taste.
Please vote on your favorite by letting us know your choice in the comment section and tell us why you prefer the version you chose. Then after you've finished here, please visit the other blogs listed below who may or may not be participating this time around. And if you've put up your own BOTB contest let us know that as well so we can vote on yours. I don't know if anyone else will be doing a Battle this time around, but you can still check out these sites.
Here are some other places where you might find BOTB posts:
StMcC Presents Battle of the Bands
'Curious as a Cathy'
Sound of One Hand Typing
Jingle, Jangle, Jungle