Like the illusion of Wall Street, with its vast and powerful investment banks, now shuttered, China too is an illusion perpetuated by the Globalists that gave us the 15,000 mile Caesar salad, poisoned cat food and lead based paint on babies' pacifiers. Like the illusion that money would come from thin air to always push housing prices higher, China has spent a generation pursuing its illusion. Pursuing an unattainable dream to be like the West, while 6000 years of its carefully shepherded top soil blows into the sea.
Posted: Sat Aug 23, 2008 6:06 pm Post subject: Re: I have a problem
Roccland wrote:
Buy an amtrak ticket to Vernal Utah - work as a roughneck.
You will make 60K a year at a minimum.
They cannot hire people fast enough.
I agree. In West Texas the "worms" start out around $70k with ZERO experience.
That is the reason I decided to go into the oil industry as a landman. Majority of the oil industry professionals will be retiring in the next 10-15 years and there are very few young people in the industry because for decades they could not find work due to low oil prices.
Now with high prices companies are paying ridiculous amounts for employees even ones with no experience. Just get a few years experience then you will be able to write your ticket.
Joined: Jun 30, 2005 Posts: 769 Location: northern California
Posted: Sat Aug 23, 2008 6:19 pm Post subject: Re: I have a problem
Roccland wrote:
Buy an amtrak ticket to Vernal Utah - work as a roughneck...
You will make 60K a year at a minimum...
I have a contact there who knows quite a few of the hiring industry.
Working as a goat tender for my neighbor while honing your writing skills is a better preparation for the future. I have a contact who knows quite a few of the goats... _________________ "When men yield up the privilege of thinking, the last shadow of liberty quits the horizon."
Thomas Paine
Posted: Sat Aug 23, 2008 6:22 pm Post subject: Re: I have a problem
dunewalker wrote:
Roccland wrote:
Buy an amtrak ticket to Vernal Utah - work as a roughneck...
You will make 60K a year at a minimum...
I have a contact there who knows quite a few of the hiring industry.
Working as a goat tender for my neighbor while honing your writing skills is a better preparation for the future. I have a contact who knows quite a few of the goats...
Actually I have a small herd of about 10 goats. And I write for a living.
But I got the sense from the OP that he was leaning towards tools/engines and the like. _________________ 500 MPH into a brick wall - me
Posted: Sat Aug 23, 2008 7:31 pm Post subject: Re: I have a problem
The open pit coal mines in Wyoming are also short of help. Have heard of HUGE salaries and they will need mechanical type ppl for conveyors, dumps, trucks, you name it. Get started young and work hard and you will do well.
Railroads also short of help, not a good lifestyle but good money etc.
Posted: Sat Aug 23, 2008 8:03 pm Post subject: Re: I have a problem
We had been out 6 days in the jungles and were sitting in a village eating rice and dog I spose.......and I looked up and here came a line of buffalo soldiers. All I knew of them was you didnt even look at them as they were known killers. Americans as far as I could tell, anglos anyway, long beards and mustaches, long trench coats, floppy hats, no uniform or insignia I recognized. They were roamers that lived off the land, causing havoc among the enemy, crack heads, cocaine freaks and just scary. We were tough but they were crazy. Oh the memories
Posted: Sat Aug 23, 2008 9:48 pm Post subject: Re: I have a problem
joelcolorado wrote:
We had been out 6 days in the jungles and were sitting in a village eating rice and dog I spose.......and I looked up and here came a line of buffalo soldiers. All I knew of them was you didnt even look at them as they were known killers. Americans as far as I could tell, anglos anyway, long beards and mustaches, long trench coats, floppy hats, no uniform or insignia I recognized. They were roamers that lived off the land, causing havoc among the enemy, crack heads, cocaine freaks and just scary. We were tough but they were crazy. Oh the memories
Why is it that most of your posts spin off into some kind of nam flashback?
And how is it that your flashback includes drug references that are unlikely, if not completely impossible?
You may resume your regularly scheduled flashback.
Joined: Dec 04, 2006 Posts: 251 Location: End of the plateau
Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2008 1:48 am Post subject: Re: I have a problem
Quote:
"never said I was a mechanical genius. but I am 100% confident that I can take the diesel engine out of my car, tear it to pieces, send the block and head to a machine shop, get it all back, press some new seals in, put some new rings on, do the main bearings while its all apart, assemble the lower and top half of the engine, set the timing and fire it up.
Ill call you a mechanical genius when you can take apart an automatic transmission and reassemble it and have it operate like it was engineered to. Not that I have, but honestly, engines are pretty damn simple machines."
You're all talk for now mate and getting ahead of yourself. Come back to me when you have built up your first engine from scratch that hasn't seized up within 10,000 miles because you have forgotten to clear out the burrs from the vital oil ways in the block and crankshaft from the machining process, or an engine with a head gasket that doesn't leak or has been damaged because the surfaces weren't meticulously clean when you assembled it or you torqued the head bolts down in the incorrect sequence, or an engine with piston rings that haven't shattered or worn prematurely because you never thought to clean the carbon from the recesses on the pistons where the rings are seated, or an engine with a clattery top end because you never bothered to install the cam followers back in their original positions....etc. Building engines up is far more technical than just replacing the unit itself and there are many things which can and will catch you out. _________________ Machines are what distinguish modern man from the savage.
Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2008 4:27 am Post subject: Re: I have a problem
EndofGrowth,
Right on target. A little knowledge is a dangerous thing... We go to school and later get experience, then learn how much we still have to learn! _________________ Local fix-it guy..
Joined: Mar 18, 2006 Posts: 1264 Location: Off with the Fey Folk
Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2008 4:40 pm Post subject: Re: I have a problem
joelcolorado wrote:
I have a farm with animals, trapped my way thru college, have killed over 60 deer, 5 elk and thousands of ducks and geese so WHO do YOU think is ready?
You sound like a very scary person. I am glad you are a long way away from me & my children.
JP _________________ I see a dark sail on the horizon
set under a black cloud that hides the sun.
Bring me my broadsword and clear understanding.
Bring me my cross of gold as a talisman.
Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2008 5:52 pm Post subject: Re: I have a problem
JPL wrote:
joelcolorado wrote:
I have a farm with animals, trapped my way thru college, have killed over 60 deer, 5 elk and thousands of ducks and geese so WHO do YOU think is ready?
You sound like a very scary person. I am glad you are a long way away from me & my children. JP
The only difference between you and me is I make my own hits. You pay someone to do your killing for you. For your food.
Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2008 11:36 pm Post subject: Re: I have a problem
Between now and when you figure out what you want to do for the rest of your life, you still need to earn a living. You seem to have some aptitude for mechanical work and you may as well go with that. It sure pays better than Wal Mart. You may not relish this but if you get booted out of the house you'll have far fewer choices and they may not even include education.
Forget trade school. You're eligible so I'd strongly suggest you re-enroll in high school, in a district that has a vocational/technical program that includes auto mechanics. This beats the hell out of wiping out your savings and landing deep in debt for a trade school that you may not like either. (Face it - you need to learn to complete what you start on a smaller scale than a long trade school program. Most of these trade schools are structured to prepare immature people for the work force, so expect to be punching a time clock and to have tardiness impact your grades, etc., etc. I don't picture you liking that environment, and if you're gonna hate something and possibly fail at it, it might as well be free!)
While you're finishing school you should continue saving money and building the skills and preps needed for the uncertain future we face.
I'm curious just how much you really know, and I have an idea: Just for grins, go take the GED tests without any further preparation. (There are plenty of people who have a HS diploma who couldn't pass the GED exam to save their lives.) Just go do it and see how you fare. If you score 90 or above on all sections, then you can concentrate more on your vocational classes. Otherwise keep after the academics as well.
WARNING: It's possible that passing the GED exam could make it impossible to re-enroll in school. I have NO idea how this works, but don't take a chance on losing a free vocational education. Perhaps there is a mock test for GED prep or you could find a way to take the test anonymously. It'd be really interesting to see how you do.
I've been self-employed almost continuously since I was your age, and I've been alive more than twice as long as you have. If you think a few hours a day of school is tough, try arriving home exhausted after a long day with two or three more hours ahead of you (paperwork and preparation for the next day) before you can go to bed. I wouldn't trade this life for a corporate job, but I sure know the meaning of tired during my busy season.
I liken a person's knowledge to a living sphere - the more you know, the larger that sphere grows and hence the greater your contact with the unknown. As an example, when I started playing with cars I became a wizard at jetting Weber carbs on BMW's. That was then. Last week I flashed an LS7 computer, using injector duty cycle, knock retard data, etc., etc. along with the readings from wideband O2 sensors I installed - all of which I recorded on this very laptop while testing the car. I don't consider this work - it's what I do for fun...
Just because someone can remove and replace parts doesn't mean they're a mechanic. Parts swappers are the bane of the industry. We need people with real diagnostic skills and an understanding of complex systems, and for that you need the jump start of some formal training. Nothing else will produce the foundation of competence faster or more reliably. We've come a long way from reading spark plugs, and you can count on at least the same amount of technological progress in the next few years as I've seen in the last equal period. (I say AT LEAST, because remember, the more we know, the more we encounter and deal with the unknown. It's only in retrospect that you'll appreciate how true this is...)
If you want to deal successfully with future unknowns, you need to be pretty strong in the fundamentals (math, reading, writing and speaking skills, the sciences). The stronger you become at fundamentals the more you'll accomplish in life and the more you'll enjoy yourself.
Someone mentioned earlier in the thread that you can expect to have 4 or 5 different careers during your life, and this will probably be the case. I'm on my fourth already, and past endeavors that once supported me (mainly cars & commercial photography) are now just enjoyable hobbies that kick off some revenue now and then. That's toy money...
Consider too that you may wish to get a college education down the road, and having the diploma (and some decent grades) will be a big help then. In the meantime, prospective employers will take you more seriously, and be more willing to invest in specialized brand-specific factory training if you stick with auto mechanics.
As a bonus, your dad might respect you enough to give you permission to use some land - who knows??? If not, you'll have an income and therefore some options of your own. I know us old farts are a pain, but I wouldn't want you building your yurt in my back yard either, until I saw you were willing to pull your weight. Till then you're just a squatter.
Sounds like he cares about you, and if he does there will come a point where your dad kicks you out to force you to start growing up. It would be a disservice to you to enable you much longer. Please don't let it come to that. I don't know how strained your relationship with him is right now, but if you can have a serious conversation with him about life you'll find out that he, just like the rest of us, didn't always enjoy the job he had or being responsible for a family. Sounds like he did what he had to anyway. It's called being a man.
(BTW, I also agree with what someone said about being the child of an alcoholic. That can do a real number on you, and you need to start dealing with it ASAP. I think you'll find a lot of answers there.)
The sky has been falling as long as I remember. Peak oil adds some spice to that because of the peril and profound change it promises but mostly it means you should expect to work even hard. And guess what - EVERY generation has had to deal with profound change! Now it's your turn...
Good luck on the willpower thing - you're going to need it... _________________ Oil - it's what's for dinner.
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