by JudyJB » Tue Apr 04, 2023 4:41 pm
Tina got it almost right, but my parents paid for my BA degree, and I got my MA when my kids were in elementary school, and finished it just before my divorce in 1984. The Ph.D. I got in my 50s, and my employer paid for it, but at the time, I still had a teenager or two, was teaching two college classes, and taking two classes, while working a full-time job. Just not doable, so in 1997 I took a 5-year hiatus from teaching. I thought I had quit college teaching forever in 1997, but in 2002, my old dept chair called me and asked me to come back to develop the online class so the college would not assign someone who had never taught it to do it. It was the best thing that happened to me because by that time, my kids were married and gone, and i had more time. I never made much money at my regular job, so teaching part-time allowed me to save money for retirement, and eventually to buy my RV and live my current life. I am very thankful to that college that paid and treated me well over 30 years of part-time employment!!
Frankly, I never planned most of my life--I just got jobs accidentally, for the most part, or because I needed money. I got my first job as a factory training coordinator after getting divorced because I hit it off with the training manager. (I was desperate for money after my divorce and would have taken any job, but even at that job I earned less than the college interns I managed!) My second job with a training and consulting company because they wanted someone who had worked for GM as a training coordinator. And because that second job was with a small company, I got to do things because no one else wanted to do them or were not available. I learned marketing and the printing business because I was given the job of managing the production of the GM training catalog. (Had the power to stop the presses and got to watch the big newspaper-type presses run.) Also learned about direct marketing and the fulfillment industry. Also got to do multiple customer satisfaction visits in 52 GM plants in the 90s. mainly because everyone else had more important things to do!!! Really. That turned out to be really fun, and I learned a lot about manufacturing and getting along with the UAW.
Oh, and the truth is that I cannot spell well either. However, teaching made me more sensitive about watching for errors and using spelling checkers so students would not catch me making errors, which they loved to do!!
And I think working multiple jobs, especially since my main job had so many varied tasks I had to do at the same time, really taught me to document stuff and make lists, etc. At any one time, I could be editing other people's work, writing training manuals and developing training courses, teaching technical writing seminars all over the country, answering weird calls the receptionist always sent me because I would take them, producing a catalog and brochures, taking orders for catalogs from GM training people, writing and arranging for mailing of a customer newsletter, keeping track of the company's supplies of give-aways, and sometimes even making cold calls to sell training. My cube was full of sticky notes, but all of this is REALLY what made me even partially organized.
Retirement is MUCH more relaxing.