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What do you do all day?

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  • #61
    I'm a grad student studying lexicography (making dictionaries).

    I read until I bleed.

    Then I go ride and teach the occasional beginner lesson.

    Then I try to find work as a copyeditor.

    Then I fall asleep.

    I like it. I just hope it leads somewhere...

    Comment


    • #62
      permanent student, of the "now I lay me down to rest, a pile of books upon my chest. if I should die before I wake, that's one less test I'll have to take!" variety. and I work nights. sleep is a distant memory. horses are a future dream. spend my "free" time working out how to pay for the horses' "life of Riley" and maintaining their lifestyle.

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      • #63
        I am a cytogeneticist at a hospital. hours arent bad 8-430, can ride before work or after. especially nice since work, home and barn are all within 10 minutes of each other. I just started my Masters degree, so that adds to the fun since I commute to MD once a week. ends up being the horses day off. I teach lessons, train and ride pretty much every hour I am not at work or sleeping (which isnt a lot!) I have done the full time riding thing, but I think I will always at least work part time. I HATE winters, so I do much prefer to be in a warm lab during those days. the summer on the other hand, its hard to sit in here all day, but I do have lots of time before and after to get done what I want with the extended daylight. again...winter is another story!! I hate gettting out of work and its already getting dark!!! ugh. I am dreading it already!!!!!

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        • #64
          After being a Preschool Director for the last several years, licensed for 165 children, I am now an Alpaca Farm Manager!! I love it. I make a lot less but am soo much happier. Now I just have to figure out how I can afford to keep the horse my wonderful friend is willing to free lease to me!

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          • #65
            My degree is in Social Work. In my first job I developed and put in place an annonymous HIV counseling and testing program. Back in the early 90's annonymous testing was really big so I was a social worker that drew blood on those that thought they were infected (and many unfortunately were). My second job was working with the homeless families in Baltimore City. So after 6 not so uplifting years I came into my current position as Director of Volunteer Services in a hospital in Baltimore City.

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            • #66
              McLeanHunterRider: I work with accountants, they seem rather happy, and work from about 8-4:30 or 5. They all have kids and an active social life (we've actually bumped into each other at the movies), and although it can be stressful talking to clients sometimes, they all come to work with smiles on their faces, and are pretty nice all day.

              As for my job, I am an Administrative Assistant, which basically means I'm one of the interns they have to do the stuff they don't want, like mailing things, organizing, setting up things and the like. I work in an office, from 8-3:30 or 4, and I have about a 40 minute commute. I love my job because I've worked in fast food and barns (I know, not that much experience) but really enjoy the heating in the winter, air conditioning in the summer, and best of all, I don't have to talk to clients! (I'm not much of a people person on the phone). I also go to school full time, so my week is school monday/wednesday (9:30-5pm), and work tuesday, thursday and friday. I don't get that much money, but I get paid better than most people I know of my age. The horses get my attention at night, since they are still technically my parents, they take care of them. I do the excercising at night....don't know what I'll do this winter, though...
              Sometimes it's just not worth it to chew through the ropes in the morning....

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              • #67
                Program Manager for a statewide 501(c)3 & 501(c)4 enviro/political organization that works to elect conservation-minded candidates and take down the duds already in office. And we help little orgs like land trusts and watershed groups to use their members more effectively, to work on tackling issues in a more proactive manner, and to build coalitions to make the conservation community stronger in our state.
                "I'm a quitter. I come from a long line of quitters. It's amazing I'm here at all.

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                • #68
                  Licensed insurance broker and consultant. My main area of expertise is mental health malpractice, although I also make group presentations for benefit enrollments for insurance carriers. The later is fun because I get to go all over the place. It definitely beats dealing with malpractice claims and risk management issues.

                  I basically work part time, so I can do things with the horses and the farm, too.

                  Then, of course, I am on-line at COTH and doing goodness knows what horse related activities, too. In fact, I need to leave for Costco so I can pick up the drinks for talloaks' ISR/OLDNA inspection next week.
                  Where Fjeral Norwegian Fjords Rule
                  http://www.ironwood-farm.com

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                  • #69
                    I go into debt financing my start up marketing agency.
                    \"Riding a horse is not a gentle hobby, to be picked up and laid down like a game of solitaire. It is a grand passion. It seizes a person whole and, once it has done so, he will have to accept that his life will be radically changed.\" -- Ralph Waldo E

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                    • #70
                      OK! I'll bite, I own my own farm and thought this was the perfect world. 75 acres wide open spaces, green pastures and dogs and horses frolicking all day. That's all that get's to frolick. I spend my day opening bills, paying bills doing the bookkeeping and worrying how I am going to pay the pills and how I am going meet all the deadlines.

                      I was a psych major in college and trained in fine arts at the Art Students League and National Academy. I did all the glamorous exotic things that girls dream about, took Fashion Design at Parsons and Traphagen. Taught dancing for Arthur Murray, had a stint on 7th Avenue doing the catwalk modeling and some photography modeling. Even a TV Commercial back when TV was only on for two hours a week and there was one channel.

                      Here I am living in sweat pants and sweat shirts, if it's hot t-shirts schlepping around in cloddy boots or barefoot. I would guess this all means I have lost my mind and I'm totally delusional and escaped being locked up because my family forgives me.
                      http://www.usAHSA.org and http://www.noreinstatement.org

                      Comment


                      • #71
                        Snowbird - you went to Art Students' League in NYC??? So did I when I was in jr jigh and high achool (Saturdays and summers - intaglio and drawing). That was when I was going to be a famous writer/illustrator/equestrienne. I started college thinking I'd dump it all and go back to NYC (generating infarctions in both parents, I suspect), but then I woke up one day and thought, "I really want to do research in biochemistry." One could blame that on mind altering substances except I wasn't taking any.

                        Now I study them. The bad thing about what I do is that you're always tied to it, like a barn: I'm in every day, even when I'm sick (my rule is, if I amokay to work a full day I can still go to the barn). I have a small lab, so that I am still at the bench and very actively doing research. The other bad thing, of course, is that the US used to be a major power when it came to scientific research - that's history now. Funding is zero. Guess it doesn't matter as govt types don't listen to us science types anyway (witness Katrina and things like global warming and energy resources).

                        The good part about it is that I make enough to pay for a horse (though academe is not well paid), I am always excited about what I do, I get to mentor students (which I love, and thankfully my teaching is team taught so no big classes of 300 pre meds). I have colleagues all over the world and I don't have to dress up (now that I have tenure, I just wear nice slacks for seminars, I go to meetings and even review panels in jeans).

                        One of the best things, when I have reading for a grant or for a paper, or I am reviewing rseearch grants, I take my horse and we go into a pasture, and he is grazing peacefully and I am also at peace...I just wish the people who reviewed my grants would do the same thing. It really puts you in a very receptive frame of mind.
                        www.specialhorses.org
                        a 501(c)3 organization helping 501(c)3 equine rescues

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                        • #72
                          Yep! After I gave up being a model because I didn't want to the things a girl needed to do to make the big time, and my feet hurt in stilettos. Then I went to NYU and became part of the Bohemians the the "real" Greenwich Village and I was going to be the world's greatest portarit painter of horses. I even believed that when we bought the first barn in West Orange. I thought I would sit and paint and the barn ran itself. What a joke on me that was.

                          My paints have dried up in the tubes in the beautiful studio my husband built for me. I wistfully look at my easel with unfinished pictures on cracking canvas.

                          I spend my time doing what I do the worst, typing and bookkeeping. I was so bad that a friend of my mother's had to teach me how to file. I am totally unqualified because all my education and training was in totally esoteric and abstract logic in order to be a painter.

                          BUT...I have to say I love it all, the smell of manure, the whinny of a horse and their eyes. I think it is such a gift to watch little kids when they feel the first thrill of flight over crossed rails. To watch them gain confidence and start to trust their judgment. The adults who had the horse dream and now finally can afford to learn.

                          Their thrill and their pleasure is so much greater than those riding million dollar horses trained to do everything for the unskilled rider who just needs to sit there and look pretty.
                          http://www.usAHSA.org and http://www.noreinstatement.org

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                          • #73
                            Snowbird - you had to go ruin a lovely post with your last statement!
                            \"Riding a horse is not a gentle hobby, to be picked up and laid down like a game of solitaire. It is a grand passion. It seizes a person whole and, once it has done so, he will have to accept that his life will be radically changed.\" -- Ralph Waldo E

                            Comment


                            • #74
                              What a lot of talented people we have on here! I'm surprised how many of us are in science. I manage a research lab for a university. I headed off to school to be an equine vet, but switched over to a BS in animal science, then on to work toward a masters in vet science. I quit a thesis shy of completing that goal and have been at my job ever since (8 years). I like it just fine and am fortunate to work for a boss who understands that my horses are my children, therefore if I'm late due to waiting on the vet/ farrier/ hay guy, no biggie. Gotta love that

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                              • #75
                                McLeanHunterRider:

                                I am a CPA and I can tell you that the accouting career is a great financial choice, and the work enjoyable if you like that kind of thing. BUT, the hours, etc. are totally dependent on what track you take. When I did my two years in public practice, right out of college, I worked 80+ hours a week. During tax season and audit crunch time, it was seven days a week, for weeks on end. I did it to get my experience requirements for the CPA exam, then went into controllership for private industry. Much better $$ and hours. Finally got to a point where I started my own small practice, sole-owner deal. THAT has been great and allowed me to focus much more time on my horses.

                                Good luck - financial is the guts of the whole thing, if you can get through that (mine was three semesters worth) you'll be fine.

                                Comment


                                • #76
                                  <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Their thrill and their pleasure is so much greater than those riding million dollar horses trained to do everything for the unskilled rider who just needs to sit there and look pretty. </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

                                  What's the matter with this statement? I watched a little girl in her back yard trying to ride a dressage test using buckets for the letters. I am certain her dreams of what might be some day are more vivid and take her outside of her own world further than that of the kid who actually get's to live the dream on the perfect horse.

                                  Don't you think that dreams of what might be are more perfect than even perfection can be? Haven't you ever looked forward to a party or and event and then when it was really happening you were not thrilled any more?

                                  I think in dreams or imagination the world is a wonderful place that doesn't always match the reality when you get there. What I enjoy is giving young people the dream of what might be. When I learned to ski that little bump on the beginner slope felt as good as if it were the Alps. Flight over snow, flight over fences and flights of fancy are all equally joyous.

                                  We don't need to remind them that it will never happen for them do we?
                                  http://www.usAHSA.org and http://www.noreinstatement.org

                                  Comment


                                  • #77
                                    I sit in a stockbrokerage office and surf COTH and the newswires all day - esp. now...w/ the disaster. Can't get the animals off of my mind! Can one experience PTSD w/out actually being in the affected area?
                                    www.savethehorses.org GA Horse Rescue
                                    http://community.webshots.com/user/seahorsefarm

                                    Comment


                                    • #78
                                      Uggg...Ok - I'll answer your question.

                                      1) How do you know that horse is trained to do everything?
                                      2) How do you know it's an unskilled rider on it?
                                      3) How can you have a clue as to what they feel, i.e., their thrill or their pleasure.

                                      I know you meant well, but sometimes it just comes out wrong. I'm all for the kids/adults that scape (hey - I've definitely been there) to be able to ride at all. But, to say that they derive more pleasure than a person who's blessed with more money and/or less skill is not right.
                                      \"Riding a horse is not a gentle hobby, to be picked up and laid down like a game of solitaire. It is a grand passion. It seizes a person whole and, once it has done so, he will have to accept that his life will be radically changed.\" -- Ralph Waldo E

                                      Comment


                                      • #79
                                        My opinion is that a little bit of pleasure for some one whose doesn't have much pleasure is more important than someone who lives a life which all pleasures so that the sensation is not unique.

                                        A dip of ice cream any flavor for a kid who can rarely afford to waste money on ice cream is a real treat. A dip of ice cream to someone who can have it whenever they want in whatever flavor is not so thrilled.

                                        For heaven's sake I said I think in abstractions and I think that a dream is the most valuable thing we can share with someone.

                                        You don't agree Fine! Retract it.
                                        http://www.usAHSA.org and http://www.noreinstatement.org

                                        Comment


                                        • #80
                                          vero-dressage, please check your Private Messages. Thanks!

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