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I have a couple of good friends in Vancouver who have done this for years and years. No, not an easy job, they've told me lots about it.
Me?
Professional nomad. Seriously? I am a Jill of all trades. I still don't know what I want to be when I grow up. I do whatever moves me in the moment and this gave my parents no end of grief from the day I quit university onward. (Sorry Dad!)
My longest and most important career to date was as a professional stunt performer. I did that for over a decade. I walked away six years ago for a variety of reasons but mostly because I have itchy travel feet and wanted to see the world.
Four years ago, I decided to pursue writing as a career. I am published but a long way from achieving the goals I've set for myself. I think I'll be at this one for a long time to come, working at whatever I can, in the meantime, to pay the bills.
But really, my resume reads like the yellow pages.
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Stunt person! Wow! I bet that's really hard on the body. What takes you to the current place you're in? I know you said you only had a few months left, so I wasn't sure if it was for work, or a missionary thing.
Sorry, part in bold made me smile. (I don't believe in any gods).
Yes, I am forty with the body of an eighty year old. LOL. Actually, I fare pretty well despite all the damage.
I came here because I had an opportunity to have a house here for a few years - I've always dreamed of living in the South Pacific. My contract expires in three months, as does my visa. In retrospect, two years was too long but I'm a water baby so having the most beautiful lagoon in my front yard kind of hypnotized me. I can write from anywhere in the world and I make a *small* amount in royalties that is enough to feed my travel habit. I do, however, have put in some time with a couple of environmental groups here and I've also worked with the tourism board, since I feel it's important to make a contribution to the place you live.
Great mangoes here. No complaints about that.
Added: There is a special place in my heart for nurses. Heroes to me.

I play with undergarments for a living.
For a while I dealt in vintage lingerie and clothing (1890 - 1965), but resources became too scarce to build the business; now I do modern stuff (I spend about 40 hours a week in dressing rooms selling high end pieces) and collect vintage lingerie as a hobby.
Every time I think I've figured out what I want to be when I grow up, something changes and I end up searching for a new grownup thing to be... but it will somehow involve artishness. (I made up a word.)
It's a nice word...Should be a real one.I play with undergarments for a living.
For a while I dealt in vintage lingerie and clothing (1890 - 1965), but resources became too scarce to build the business; now I do modern stuff (I spend about 40 hours a week in dressing rooms selling high end pieces) and collect vintage lingerie as a hobby.
Every time I think I've figured out what I want to be when I grow up, something changes and I end up searching for a new grownup thing to be... but it will somehow involve artishness. (I made up a word.)
I play with undergarments for a living.
For a while I dealt in vintage lingerie and clothing (1890 - 1965), but resources became too scarce to build the business; now I do modern stuff (I spend about 40 hours a week in dressing rooms selling high end pieces) and collect vintage lingerie as a hobby.
Every time I think I've figured out what I want to be when I grow up, something changes and I end up searching for a new grownup thing to be... but it will somehow involve artishness. (I made up a word.)
I think that's great. Now would you be the person to ask if someone was looking for hard to fit lingerie? I'm a J cup and I have a terrible time in that dept. I'm only 38 around so that makes it harder. I drool over corsets but have never seen one that would come close to fitting.
I won't clog up the thread with boring fitting questions, but feel free to PM me if you have any.
As for the corset - you could always go for an underbust in a basic color (like black satin or brocade), then get a cute matching set. (that one goes up to a double H, which depending on cut may fit a J cup)
I love lingerie... every woman deserves a drop dead gorgeous matching set; it's a very powerful thing to feel sexy and desirable - even if no one else knows why.

Most of them are boring as hell, nothing like you see on TV courtroom dramas. Some of them are interesting, but I really can't think of any that I've ever done that I would call "exciting." I've done murder, manslaughter, DUIs, and just about every other felony in the books, and probably half or more of the misdemeanors in the books, over the past seven years, lots of DV cases - some of them make me laugh like a loon - juvenile criminal/delinquency... but the worst cases I've done have all been in the same area: juvenile dependency/termination of parental rights.Do you ever get to do really exciting cases?

As a former journalism (print and broadcast) teacher (high school students), I'd suggest that even if you don't do the double major, taking a few extra courses in composition, etc., would be helpful to you as a journalist, even if you go broadcast journalism. The better broadcast journalists do as much of their own writing as they're allowed to....... I'm also going to school to be a Journalist. I might, possibly, double major in English, we'll see.
As a former journalism (print and broadcast) teacher (high school students), I'd suggest that even if you don't do the double major, taking a few extra courses in composition, etc., would be helpful to you as a journalist, even if you go broadcast journalism. The better broadcast journalists do as much of their own writing as they're allowed to...
I love that you've turned what for many would be a devastating loss into something that's so positive for yourself - and others. You're one of those folks that would, in another thread that's goin' on now, be one of my picks for role model.I love this thread!
Professionally, I'm a sign language interpreter. I went back to school for my bachelor's in 2007, so I only work a few months out of the year, desperately trying to scrape together enough money to not have to work during the semester! It would be a fabulously well-paying job if I did it full time; as it is, I make just enough to survive and pay tuition. Not really socking away any savings right now.
Prior to my hearing loss, which was in 2006, I worked in all kinds of different settings. Medical, educational, government, retail, any place that needed an interpreter. Since that happened, though, I've been restricted to working in video relay only. It's partly a convenience issue - the center is on campus, so I'm there all year, and I can pick up hours during the semester if I want - but it's also partly due to my hearing loss. I wear hearing aids, but an interpreter needs to be able to hear in any situation, and I can't always guarantee that. If the acoustics are good, if the room is quiet, etc. then I'm fine. If not, I can't do the job. With VRS, though, I wear a binaural headset and my hearing aids and everything is straight into my ears, so there's no concern about being able to hear. I've done a couple of leather community jobs since 2006 because that's my community, and I've done one hospital job because it was for the boss of the VRS center and he wanted people he trusted. (A hospital room for an extended stay patient is usually pretty quiet.)
So yeah, I'm a hard of hearing person interpreting for deaf and hearing people. That's me!

I used to be a nurse (RGN, A/E and then Renal) but left due to a number of reasons, some of them my own health issues.
Me too. I trained as a nurse and technically still have RGN status, but it's almost 10 years ago.
I'm a reference librarian and author (yes, I get paid to write!). I love my job![]()