If you dreamed of a different career, what would it have been?

WheatenLover

Senior Member
Location
Georgia
What were your dreams about career possibilities from childhood onward? I had a few, but this is not to say that IRL I could have achieved any of them.

I wanted to write and give speeches (not write for someone else), to write books for children, to be a Special Agent in the FBI, to be a surgeon, to be a spy with the CIA, to be a homicide detective, and to be a farmer's wife. I briefly flirted with being a drill sergeant in the Marines (I took their test at age 18, and that's what they wanted me to be), owning a restaurant and catering business and being a chef, being a famous pianist (alas, no piano), and with being a veterinarian (one that didn't involve animals being in pain -- ain't gonna happen).

The farming idea came from children's fiction books set on farms in which all animals are clean, there are no bad smells, no manure, no flies, and every farmer has cows, horses, goats, sheep, chickens, dogs, children, delicious food, no poverty, a wonderful, big strong husband who was also a great handyman/builder of things, and no actual crops to speak of. Hardships included waking up to a cold house and once in awhile, outhouses and chamber pots. The hard work of farming was never all that evident. I had seen historical movies set in NYC and there was zero problem with manure.

I was in my mid-30s before I visited a farm. It was then I discovered that the animals don't get baths every day (not that they did in books, I just assumed that of course they would). Around that time, I found out that farmers who grow crops don't always have a wide selection of farm animals as pets. Then I moved here, and discovered what hard work actual farming is.

I loved mysteries and thrillers, hence the interest in the FBI, CIA, and being a homicide detective. I was worried about becoming a dead spy, though, so I preferred the FBI.

I loved reading and always wanted to write, but didn't have time. My childhood dream was to own a big house on a big hill in snowy New Hampshire. It would have a 500 acre lot, on a lot of forested land, totally fenced so my pack of highly-trained German Shepherd protection dogs (who were very sweet, although could be lethal) wouldn't run loose, long extended family visits on holidays, someone to take care of the land, someone to clean the house, and a cook. Meanwhile, I'd sit back writing best sellers to support my lifestyle, books that would just flow from my brain and fingers to the pages. I had no idea how writers really work. I would use a pseudonym and not give interviews or have any public appearances. (I liked J.D. Salinger's books and he was big on privacy.) Still, my personal safety was important, and so was my anonymity. I don't recall a husband or children in this dream of mine, or anyone except family visiting on holidays. What was I thinking?! I hate snow and I don't like the idea of living in isolation.

Being a surgeon would be fun and that was inspired by loving to read books about the field, watching St. Elsewhere and Quincy, M.E., and always being curious about what the insides of human bodies look like and how the parts function together, plus having spent a lot of time in hospitals when I was a child. Neither of my husbands was at all supportive of me going to med school (to much time away from them), and I didn't have the money or want huge loans. Anyway, being a surgeon can easily lead to a major varicose vein problem, and probably back problems too -- but I didn't realize that then. Plus maybe it's boring, doing the same operations over and over.

When I was a child, I thought wives read all day, eating bon-bons, so wanted to be one, as long as the husband didn't leave his socks on the bedroom floor (like my dad) and didn't have false teeth (like my aunt). My mother didn't do that, but then again I was either in school, reading in my room, or outside playing most of the time. And she did like books and chocolates very much. By the time I was home from my endeavors, all I saw my mom doing was cooking. I knew she cleaned because the house was *always spotless*.

Today, I am glad I'm not a farmer's wife, a CIA spy, a surgeon, or a speech writer/giver. I'm not sure speech writer and giver is an occupation, except on street corners. I'm not the street corner type. I can think of only three jobs in which street corners play a part, and I'm not interested in any of them (Independent speech giver, drug dealer, street walker). Well, I guess school crossing guards would be the one legitimate occupation.

Being an FBI agent would be cool, though.
 

Well, of course, a famous singer. Lots of preteen hours singing in front of the mirror with a hairbrush microphone ...no matter at that age that I don't have the voice for it. Since age eight, I loved to draw house plans...still do...but not enough to do all the advanced math and keep up with increasingly restrictive building codes.

I did seriously consider anthropology (PhD and university instructor) but didn't like the idea of having to go where a job was available and stay there due to tenure.
 
After thinking about it I can honestly say I had no dreams of becoming anything special. I hated school and didn't want to go to college, so any kind of "professional" type career wasn't in the cards. I just kind of floated from one boring secretarial position to another, never finding anything that inspired me.

I guess the closest I came to really enjoying a job was when I sold real estate. (Which required school of course, but I didn't mind that for some reason.) I would have stayed in that, but my ex-husband didn't like me doing that because of the odd hours required and other reasons I could never understand...he was very controlling. He didn't like me interacting with other people when he wasn't around.

If I rewind the clock and do it all over again, I'd go to college, get a doctorate and become a psychiatrist.
 
I'm finding now, when I am old, the things I love to do.
I would paint ,sculpt for bronze and write when I was very young,
if I had it to do over. I was continually told I had NO TALENT!
This was beat into my head by my Mother, brother, boyfriends, first husband, etc.
So, because of this, I didn't start until I was aged!

As a career option, architecture would have been interesting.
I have all the designs in my head, but not the math.
Furniture designer? Interior design?
I "see" all these futuristic designs in my head all the time.
Don't have the training to enact them.

or,
be in some "think group" to build stronger thought in humans and
combine this with actually integrate the powers of the soul and
human consciousness with powers of the mind.
Silly, I guess. I'd have to have the intellect of a physicist,
but I'm so intrigued by this!
 

If you dreamed of a different career, what would it have been?​


I wrote something about this a while back;


When I was about four, five maybe, all I wanted to become was a cop.
Not a Dragnet, Sgt Friday cop, but one that wore the blue, the boots, the service cap, the badge, the…gun…and holster.

OH YEAAAH
Not a doubt in my mind.

Thing is, I was never around cops per se, at least not for a few years.
So all I had for ready reference was the local service station guy. The ‘almost a cop’ guy.
He had a uniform, and if I recall, had some sorta badge.
And he had a service cap. The one with the glossy bill, and high rise front.
Yeah, he was almost a cop.


shell_station_attendant.jpg
I always liked stopping there.

‘Fill’er up?
‘Ethyl?’

He’d get the pump going, cranking the numbers to zero, sticking the nozzle in, flipping the lever, filling the back seat with the glorious aroma of gas fumes of which I breathed deep (couldn’t get enough).

‘Check ‘at oil?’

He lifted the hood and did….something, appearing at the driver’s door, showing Dad the dip stick, resting it in display on a really cool red rag, then tucking that rag in his back pocket. Letting half of it stick out……cool.
Sometimes he’d go to the rack of oil, grab wunna the glass bottles with a stainless steel spout, and pour in a bit of oil.
Then he’d spray the windshield with some sorta soapy liquid, wiping all that off with the magic blue towel until the grime and streaks was totally gone. All the while talking about the weather or the ‘GD Yankees’, or Joe Louis.
And he had BO…yeah, real big guy aroma…..wow.
Man, I wanted to be him, only I’d strap on a gun, as that was the only thing his was missing.
What a cool job!
Just doin’ that all day long.
‘Check ‘at oil?’
‘Whuddaya think about them GD Yankees?’
tuck
wipe
pump
….kids in the back seat, lookin’ at me in awe…wide eyes ogling my holster…and ivory gun handle….and red rag.

One day me and Dad were headin’ down the road.
Just him and me,
and he sez, ‘Whaddya wanna be when you grow up?’

‘A service station guy!’

Things kinda turned south right then.
Dads.
Go figure.
Whud he do for a living? Work in a warehouse?
Prolly jealous.

p0ut.jpg


After that, I never shared my true thoughts with him….for years….decades maybe.

Heh, turns out folks rather frown on service stations guys….with guns.

But, hey, if that ever happens……..
 
I had several other career ideas. Standup comedian. Radio DJ, and politician. I did take one of those "career" tests in high school. And strangely, radio DJ, and comedian came up as a career choice for me. I was surprised those types of careers would be included in a standard H,S. aptitude test.
I took one of those tests too and it said I was a good candidate for an accounting job.

I flunked math in high school.

My very first full time job was in a payroll department.

Scary, huh?
 

If you dreamed of a different career, what would it have been?​


I wrote something about this a while back;


When I was about four, five maybe, all I wanted to become was a cop.
Not a Dragnet, Sgt Friday cop, but one that wore the blue, the boots, the service cap, the badge, the…gun…and holster.

OH YEAAAH
Not a doubt in my mind.

Thing is, I was never around cops per se, at least not for a few years.
So all I had for ready reference was the local service station guy. The ‘almost a cop’ guy.
He had a uniform, and if I recall, had some sorta badge.
And he had a service cap. The one with the glossy bill, and high rise front.
Yeah, he was almost a cop.


View attachment 226653
I always liked stopping there.

‘Fill’er up?
‘Ethyl?’

He’d get the pump going, cranking the numbers to zero, sticking the nozzle in, flipping the lever, filling the back seat with the glorious aroma of gas fumes of which I breathed deep (couldn’t get enough).

‘Check ‘at oil?’

He lifted the hood and did….something, appearing at the driver’s door, showing Dad the dip stick, resting it in display on a really cool red rag, then tucking that rag in his back pocket. Letting half of it stick out……cool.
Sometimes he’d go to the rack of oil, grab wunna the glass bottles with a stainless steel spout, and pour in a bit of oil.
Then he’d spray the windshield with some sorta soapy liquid, wiping all that off with the magic blue towel until the grime and streaks was totally gone. All the while talking about the weather or the ‘GD Yankees’, or Joe Louis.
And he had BO…yeah, real big guy aroma…..wow.
Man, I wanted to be him, only I’d strap on a gun, as that was the only thing his was missing.
What a cool job!
Just doin’ that all day long.
‘Check ‘at oil?’
‘Whuddaya think about them GD Yankees?’
tuck
wipe
pump
….kids in the back seat, lookin’ at me in awe…wide eyes ogling my holster…and ivory gun handle….and red rag.

One day me and Dad were headin’ down the road.
Just him and me,
and he sez, ‘Whaddya wanna be when you grow up?’

‘A service station guy!’

Things kinda turned south right then.
Dads.
Go figure.
Whud he do for a living? Work in a warehouse?
Prolly jealous.

View attachment 226654


After that, I never shared my true thoughts with him….for years….decades maybe.

Heh, turns out folks rather frown on service stations guys….with guns.

But, hey, if that ever happens……..
LOVE THIS!!!
 
What were your dreams about career possibilities from childhood onward?
Thought about being a writer, an accountant, a cop. Became a diesel mechanic in the Army instead, eventually was an automotive mechanic, an industrial maintenance mechanic and finally a correctional maintenance mechanic(all phases of building maintenance in jails & prisons).
 

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