I'll bet no one here's had as varied a rollercoaster ride as I've had in my working career. Hold on to your hats:
Seed Salesman - When I was very young I sold flower and vegetable seeds door to door from a catalog company for prizes. Mom bought most of them and I'm not sure I remember ever winning a prize.
City Labor - Teenage outdoor summer work to earn a few bucks.
Bass Guitarist - In a band all through high school. Three piece core with periodic additions. Guitarist/Lead singer's father/accountant ran the business and we got monthly balance sheets and P&L's. Free beer for under-aged members playing the bar/sorority/fraternity circuit.
Forest Service Labor - Work study leading to college. They'd fly us into the Boundary Waters canoe area via Beaver float planes on Monday morning and fly us home from a different lake on Friday afternoons for the weekend. During the week our three man crew built and maintained campsites and portages, canoed white water, fished, camped and relaxed. Best job ever for $4.50/hour.
Janitor - I left for college and needed money. It took two hours to do the job and I got paid for four and could do it any time as long as it was done once a day. Perfect college job.
Janitor - Not sure how/why I ended up in this one but it was taking care of a Sears store. I left for lunch at noon my first day and never went back.
Junk Mail Delivery Guy - Paid by the piece door to door. You could make decent money with a good route (closely packed homes) but those bags were heavy loaded up. I, of course, got the route through the most expensive, most widely spaced homes in the city on occasion.
Record Store employee leading to Record Store Manager - I left college for this job. My best friend hired me. It was destiny. I left after a heart to heart with the owner. There was no where left for me to go and I wanted more.
Record Store employee - Got an opportunity with a multi-location shop with a chance to grow until my old boss bought them out.
Warehouse Employee leading to VP of Sales and Marketing plus Director of IT and overseeing manufacturing and shipping (and anything else that needed to be done) - Music and computer software distribution company. I was on a role; big bucks, stock options, executive suites. I married my secretary and exited the company.
Owner, Record Label and Entertainment Marketing Company - Well, company is a misnomer. It was just me. I made good money in marketing but spent it on the label. My wife made me go back to work after two years to actually make money.
Sr Marketing Manager - Moved to NY and ran the internet unit for a major retailer. Maybe the most fun job I've ever had. Back to big money, stock options, meetings at Goldman Sachs, private planes, etc., etc.
VP Business Development = Great concept company trying to intertwine TV with the Internet. I was primarily a liaison with the entertainment industry. Investors pulled the plug after distribution wasn't secured. Most pure money I've ever made but the fun was fading.
Sr Operations Manager - Multi-location boat and RV dealership. I was a fish out of water from both an economic scale and an industry background perspective and didn't last long.
Sales Manager - Consumer computer and golf show promoter. I'd moved from NY to MN in the midst of a divorce with no where to live and no job so had to take the first thing that came along. This was a cash business preying on the lowest common denominator in terms of both attendees and vendors. It made me feel dirty.
Sales - This was with an company that drummed up leads for Fortune 500 companies. I learned a lot about a lot of different industries but the owner was raping the clients and it all ended with the great recession.
Sales - After over a year off I went to work for a Fortune 500 financial services firm doing sales. The work is satisfying and I like to think I'm helping people but the pay and the atmosphere are crummy.
I may have forgotten a few along the way. I'm also not sure why I keep getting these sales jobs because I'm really not that good at it. Mom? Marketing yes, operations maybe, sales; not so much.
I've moved around a lot. Done a lot of different things. Been a laborer and an executive. Made money and not made money. I see the benefits of a steady course in a more stable line of work but life's a journey. Embrace today for what it is. Tomorrow will happen tomorrow but, a word to those in their 30's and 40's; you're likely in the peak earning years of your career. Save now because you don't know what tomorrow will bring.