Monday, January 5, 2009

New Horizons

Back in the '90s I got a degree in computers from New England Institute of Technology. I've had a few computer jobs since then, but have never been able to break into programming, which is what I thought I wanted to do. Everywhere I went I was told that programmers are hired from within a company and they start out doing something else. I did get a temp job at one point where they allowed me to learn MS Access on my own, and then design a database for their parts.

After several years of various jobs (some not even computer related) I finally got hired at Carrols Corporation in Syracuse, where I stayed for six years. The job was as a Help Desk Analyst, but there was a possibility that I could move into programming at some point. I developed a few small applications in MS Access, and when they started having their own parts depot I worked on a database to keep track of inventory and shipment of parts. I worked on it, as a side project, for several months, and pretty much stretched the limits of Access. It really needed a standalone application. The company must have realized that too, and also that I was limited in my ability, so they gave the project to their IT department. Later I helped develop a few other small applications in Access, but never got the opportunity to do any "real" programming,even though I took a couple of classes in Visual Basic.

In the last couple of years at Carrols, I wasn't even sure if programming was what I wanted to do. As I have written previously, I thought I wanted to be a pastor and went to Atlanta Bible College in '07. I couldn't find work there and eventually ran out of money and ended up here in Seattle (previous blog entries explain all that). Since I've been in Seattle I have found that even Help Desk positions were looking for experience and skills in things that I didn't know or only dabbled in at Carrols. And I wasn't all that crazy about Help Desk anyway - I hate phones - although I enjoyed my time at Carrols for the most part.

I was looking at an article on Yahoo about the hot fields that are still growing in spite of the poor economy. One of them was Technical Writing. I'd heard about that because my sister does it. I have done a lot of writing on my own (mostly theological) and enjoyed it. And at Carrols I also wrote procedures as well as user guides for the Access applications I'd developed. So I had kind of done it a bit already. I began researching to find out how to get into the field and found a site with online training courses. It's called Online-Learning.com and is accredited by Ohio University. They have a course specifically in Technical Writing, which I started today.

I have always loved words and enjoyed manipulating them to say things in just the right way. And I have often been frustrated by technical manuals that weren't clear, so I recognize how important good tech writing is. I am looking forward to this course, and getting into a field that I really think I will enjoy. And having a job I enjoy is important to me. I've done my share of crappy jobs in the gotta-make-a-living-somehow field, and it will be great to actually enjoy something again. From what I've read the pay's not bad either, but honestly that has always been of secondary importance to doing something I like doing. There's nothing worse than having to drag yourself every day to a job you hate. Things are starting to look up.