When I turned 16, on my last day of school, my mom said, "Don't think you're going to lay around the house all summer." She usually got me jobs doing inventory at local department stores, but these were just temp jobs.
At one time, I was considering becoming a geologist, but I took a summer course in geology between my junior and senior year of high school - that cured me of that idea!
Even during my senior year in high school, I hadn't decided on a career. I was thumbing through a college booklet and saw a photo of a student putting samples in a centrifuge. I though that looked interesting, so I chose medical technology as a career. I got an Associate Degree in Laboratory Science, then took a Civil Service exam for a position with the New York State Health Department. Aced that and was placed in the Microbiology lab.
I worked there in various positions for 12 years during which I took courses and was able to get a BS in medical science. That qualified me to take a promotional exam. Aced that. At that time, for some cockeyed reason, you couldn't be promoted within the same department as your previous position, so I was transferred to the Toxicology lab.
Toxicology was more research than diagnostic, but I participated in the experiments that led to the discovery of why people that took barbiturates often succumbed when given anesthesia for surgery. I co-authored several research papers. I worked in Tox for 25 years. This was my first paper:
Then for some unknown reason I was transferred to the Environmental lab where ecological samples were analyzed for pollutants. That was my last year working. I once quipped that every time I got a promotion, my desk got closer to the door. I retired in 2010 at age 58 after working 38 years when the state offered "retirement incentives" to their oldest employees . They gave me a certificate and a testimonial luncheon, which was shared with other workers who were also retiring at that time.
I relaxed for a year then got restless. I went to the county offices looking for a paying job, but ended up with a job that cost me money - delivering meals to the elderly and shut-ins. It will be 15 years this July I've been doing that although I had to take time off now and then for various reasons. It may not pay in money, but it gets me out of the house and gives me a feeling of accomplishment.