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What Do you do for a Day Job?

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  • #41
    I do back office work for a broker-dealer firm...if you know what that means....well...that is pretty impressive. Basically I work in a cube all day talking on the phone with other people in the same job and then do things on a computer I'm pretty sure a monkey could be trained to do. To be a bit more descriptive I work for a brokerage firm and I work in the area that only wrks with other brokerage firms. The pay isn't fantastic, but its not terrible, I have good medical benefits, which given my health is important, and I have a respectable amount of vacation, though not tons. I have my BA in Economics, a minor in English, and my Series 6 and 63 securities licenses. I really wish I had done what I had thought I wanted to do in college and gone for teaching (I would say something medical except I am terrible at science). I also want to get my masters in english very much, but don't have the funding or a local program available to me. I really want to be a para-professional (assistant in special needs education) but can't take the pay cut at the moment.

    On the bright side I have a pretty decent schedule- I work 7-4 and even with a stop at home to get my barn stuff and let the dog out, I can be at the barn by 5. However, with two horses and kids that like my help I am often not home from the barn until 10, but since I get a pretty decent amount of barn time I really shouldn't complain. I just have to admit my heart isn't in the job- it is at the barn....lesson learned....take your time in college; don't rush through it and don't let people persuade you that what you want to do is stupid.
    My blog:

    RAWR

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    • #42
      I work for a medium/large software company that supports health insurance companies. Our stuff processes your claim, and you may be talking to our people when you call to complain about said claim I have nothing whatsoever to do with any of that: I facilitate professional and managerial development courses within our walls and function as the administrator for a learning management system for our associates.

      Background? Master's level work in Health Informatics, BA in English, many years in electronic medical records consulting and training got me here. Prior to that it was working in a clinic to pay for said Master's work....Good pay, great benefits, some telecommuting and minimal travel. It's a good job I'm glad to have.

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      • #43
        I'm a graduate student in Industrial/Organizational Psychology... currently working on my MA, but on the MA/PhD track. I study feedback, (executive) coaching, and self-regulation processes. Since I know there are oodles of other I/O psychologists on the boards (), know that you can find an article of mine in this month's IOP Perspectives on Science and Practice.

        Luckily, I have full tuition remission and a stipend. I taught Intro Psych last year, but this year I was lucky enough to secure a research assistantship. As has been said elsewhere on this thread, graduate students make peanuts, but I have dreams of securing a high-paying job upon graduation. And subsequently buying some very nice horses.

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        • #44
          I work in Marketing and Advertising for a national figure skating Tour. It's an office job but a really fun one!

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          • #45
            farm
            Production Acres,Pro A Welsh Cobs
            I am one of the last 210,000 remaining full time farmers in America.We feed the others.

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            • #46
              Congrats on your upcoming graduation! I hope you find something you love in quick time.

              I work as an executive communication manager for a Fortune 200 automotive supplier. I handle all internal communications for our executive team (lots of writing). I go through phases where I work long hours, but thankfully both work and the barn are less than 10 minutes away from my house. I typically ride 3 or 4 days a week after work, and then on the weekends too. We have a lot of worknig adults in our barn, so 7 p.m., lessons are offered Monday through Thursday year-round.

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              • #47
                I work part time in a tack store. I love my job and my boss, my boss loves that I show/event. My horses are at home. My husband makes the money. I used to work in banking, thank goodness I got out before the crash.

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                • #48
                  I'm an embryologist/microinjectionist.....fun and pays the bills. Since I'm in research, the hours are really flexible

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                  • #49
                    Before the accident which disabled me, I was an Environmental Health and Building Surveying Consultant.

                    I provided Expert Witness services to Solicitors and Barristers. I appeared in Court on both Civil and Criminal cases.

                    I provided legal advice to client's and surveyed more properties than I care to remember.

                    I was also part of a Housing Law Group which lobbied Government in respect of Housing and Environmental Health Law.

                    I hate to admit it, because at the time my professional life took up most of my time, but, god I miss it.

                    I'll never be able to go back - I have to walk with 2 crutches and to be a surveyor you need to be physically fit.

                    But, when all my operations are over and if they work out, I'll probably go back to legal practice doing Environmental Health and housing law.

                    Paddy
                    "Chaos, panic and disorder. My work here is done"

                    ~Member of the "Addicted to Lessons" clique~

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                    • #50
                      Jobs

                      Lets see, I have my Masters in Social Work and three jobs at this moment. My "full time" job is a case manager for a company that works with people with disabilities, trains the client for jobs, provides job placement in the community and then follows up with the client for the life time of the job. It is very rewarding, great hours I am done between 3PM and 4:30PM every day and I have the best boss in the whole world. Unfortunatly, I make almost no money although I do have excellent benefits (paid vacations, health care, dental).

                      I also do some free lance grant writing for local non-profits. I am paid hourly for the time it takes me to research and write the proposal. Finally I wait tables 3 nights a week at a restaurant on the lake where a lot of people with deep pockets come to eat. It is this job that allows me to build a savings account and finance my horse hobby.

                      I keep my horse at home, live about 30 minutes from each of my jobs but am still able to ride 6 days a week either before or after work. Oh, and occasionally I am asked to teach a pony club lesson or prep and make a little extra money doing that.

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                      • #51
                        I'm an attorney. The hours are long, and making it to the barn after work more than once per workweek is challenging. I do not own a horse of my own, but I have a great half lease situation and I get to the barn 3x per week.
                        Love my "Slow-T T B"
                        2010 OTTB, Dixie Union x Dash for Money

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                        • #52
                          I teach Pre-k/K. It's at a daycare so I work 9-5, and I'm also getting my masters in mental health counseling. I usually ride 3-5 times a week depending on how motivated i am.

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                          • #53
                            Originally posted by katarine View Post
                            I work for a medium/large software company that supports health insurance companies. Our stuff processes your claim, and you may be talking to our people when you call to complain about said claim
                            If they're not complaining to your people, they're complaining to me and my people. I work for a medical billing company, and receive a fair amount of phone calls per day from patients. We get a lot of, "Why did my insurance only pay X amount?" usually followed by, "What's a deductible?"

                            Not a bad job. I'm in a cube all day, and much of what I do is fairly easy once you understand the basics of billing and how insurance companies work. I do mainly OB/GYN billing, and I really like it - but some of it scares me. I may never have kids after seeing the things some poor women have to go through!

                            I also work part-time in retail, usually only 1 weeknight and for a few hours on Sat and Sun. Easy job for a little extra cash.

                            As far as riding, I work my office job M-F from 8-4:30, so I go ride at night. I'm at the barn most days, occasionally I skip a night for whatever reason, and I have a shareboarder who rides one day a week.

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                            • #54
                              I'm an admin assistant for a commercial real estate company. Admin assistant sounds like a boring title, but I do a lot of different things with my job, so it's always interesting. I do a lot with spreadsheets and budgets, so it can be pretty detail oriented, especially because my bosses are perfectionists. Ironically enough, the residential real estate branch of my company offered to buy the farm where I board my horses, but this was well before I started working for them.

                              Technically, I also have a part-time job in the evenings proofreading/editing and editing court depositions and hearings, however, because things are slow right now, I'm working on an "on call" basis. It sucks financially, but at least it gives me more horse time until things pick up again.

                              Most of my horse time happens on the weekends and on nights I don't work. In April, I'm moving closer to the barn, so I hope then that I'll be able to quit my second job and can be riding 5-6 days a week (instead of only 4) and also ride more horses.
                              In a society that profits from your self-doubt, liking yourself is a rebellious act.

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                              • #55
                                Currently a cashier for Tractor Supply Company, but in college for Marketing. I will hopefully graduate this spring.

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                                • #56
                                  Originally posted by Punkie View Post
                                  I am a full-time researcher and student. I study ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis aka Lou Gherig's Disease) and I am finishing up a master's in bioinformatics and will go on to do an MD/PhD in 2011. At the moment, I would make quite a bit more money flipping burgers or serving coffee, but ultimately I will make a very fair salary that will allow me to ride and show as I please. My job and schooling are both incredibly time consuming and I spend an incredible amount of time in the lab, but my work schedule is 100% flexible and I have enough undergrads working for me that I am able to go to horse shows or go to the barn and still get work done (whether I do everything on the computer and Skype into meetings, etc. or I go into work early, go to the barn, and then go back to work). I love what I do, but it is very consuming and stressful.
                                  Punkie: are we long lost twins or something???? I'm a current MD/PhD student studying acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), should defend my thesis in a year (well I better otherwise someone is gonna die) and graduate from med school in 2012. I do A LOT of bioinformatics stuff plus bench work. I didn't do a master's so by the time it's all over, you will have me beat for total years in school....I'm currently in the "23rd grade," which is frightening to say out loud.

                                  The last few days have not been kind to my barn time because I'm in the middle of the annual crunch before abstracts for my field's big national meeting are due (midnight tonight!EEK) But normally I take a weekly lesson and hang out at the barn roughly half the days out of the week. Lab flexibility is nice...I'm more concerned about the med school end of things, but plan on making it work some how.

                                  The plan after school is to do residency, fellowship and then do academic medicine, somehow combining 80% research and 20% patient care. My horse time is a non-negotiable part of "The Plan." I will sacrifice lots of other things for my career, like sleep and sanity, but not my horse
                                  BES
                                  Proudly owned by 2 chestnut mares
                                  Crayola Posse: sea green
                                  Mighty Rehabbers Clique

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                                  • #57
                                    Originally posted by katarine View Post
                                    I facilitate professional and managerial development courses within our walls and function as the administrator for a learning management system for our associates.
                                    Hey me too! I am a business analyst that manages all our employee learnin' systems....but for a coffee company.

                                    background? Actually, my college degree (Anthropology & French) didn't do much to get me in my role. My side gigs did- all throughout highschool and college I would work in offices, and eventually started taking on computer-ish things that the older crowd couldn't figure out. A few years of that and voila= BA material
                                    My blog: Change of Pace - Retraining a standardbred via dressage

                                    Comment


                                    • #58
                                      I am in law enforcement. Have been for nearly 18 yrs. I can't get over how lucky I am to have the time off to ride. When I'm on night shift, I can ride every day if I want. I always have days off during the week and have every other Fri-Sun off. I have a degree in econ, but I really love what I do. You can almost say I whistle while off to work!

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                                      • #59
                                        I'm in law enforcement too. I'm a probation officer full-time, and am also a police officer with our county reserve unit. My degree is in CJ so it's what I've always wanted to do.

                                        Comment


                                        • #60
                                          I am a part-time biostatistician at a big university. I work 3 days a week and usually ride the other 4; when I get my horse moved closer to home I may be able to add a day or two, at least to go visit her even if I can't ride.

                                          It's a good job, though it can get a bit tedious at times as much of what I do could be done by a trained monkey... But the rest of it requires specialized skills; hence the MS in the field. (I also have a Ph.D. in psychology but I have not done anything in that field for years.) University pay is less than private sector, but the benefits are excellent and the university has been very good to me WRT part-time work, and when I had a serious fall from a horse and was out of work for 5 weeks, with the next 3 weeks pretty much run at half-speed.

                                          My husband is retired from the computer industry thanks to working at the right start-up many, many years ago, and much of our income comes from investments.... so this past year has been a bit scary! We have cut back on traveling, eating out etc. and have postponed a few non-emergency house repairs. If things got tight, with a little work and a few thousand dollars invested in fencing and repairing one of our outbuildings, we could keep my horse at home... Husband says we would get saddlebags for her, or a cart and harness so we could drive her to the grocery store
                                          You have to have experiences to gain experience.

                                          1998 Morgan mare Mythic Feronia "More Valley Girl Than Girl Scout!"

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