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i can't remember who the swan was, but it makes me feel better about

having wanted very badly to be a giraffe. so as an " adult " , i ended up

dropping out of beauty school, teaching preschool in a daycare setting

for 2.5 yrs, apprenticing in a florist shop for a while, doing homecare

with elderly, developmentally disabled, mentally ill, and people with

AIDS for 2.5 years, nannying for a couple years, working in a candy

store for a short while, working for an internet company that filtered

porn and other inappropriate for children off the internet for places

like schools and libraries (which was probably the most awful job i ever

had, reviewing about 400 sites a day looking for yucky things), and i am

now a massage therapist, hoping to be a hellerworker and/or someday have

a psychology degree from someplace like bastyr. *deep breath after huge

horrendous run-on sentence*

 

the last part of that, the part about my future wishes, brings me to my

next inquiry. i am curious to know how everyone managed to pull off the

huge financial obstacles of education. this is repeatedly my biggest

problem, being single and self-employed, with a background of very

extremely low paying job experience. i'm especially curious about how

people have gotten themselves through programs of education that

mainstream resources still don't see fit to assist financially with.

hellerwork training especially is very rigorous financially, having a

really high tuition and requiring students to be away from home and work

3 times during just over a year, for 3 weeks each time, and also 3 times

at 9 days. i know there are ways to pull things like this off, 'cause

people do it, i just am having trouble figuring out how. thank you all

in advance for your insights!

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Hi Kim. Wow! That's some dynamite life experience you've

got there, even if it doesn't put you in line for a CEO position.

Also, your writing skills are obviously superior. How one

survives in the ol' academic subculture is kind of one of those

best-kept secrets. Once you get in the system (on the campus)

the possibilities surface like magic. Colleges and universities

are part of the bureaucracy so they don't like the work of new

people coming into the system, but once you get there, they

want to keep you ( especially if you're a good student) so the

$$ opportunities kinda pop up. There are also some back-door

possibilities--employment situations that spring for the costs,

etc. One of the reasons college grads seem smart is not so

much what they learn there, but it selects for those smart

'nuff to figger out the system. It's very do-able for you, Kim!

 

Carl

`````````````````````````````````````````````````

At 02:04 AM 3/18/00 -0800, kim wrote:

>kim <berlee

>

>i can't remember who the swan was, but it makes me feel better about

>having wanted very badly to be a giraffe. so as an " adult " , i ended up

>dropping out of beauty school, teaching preschool in a daycare setting

>for 2.5 yrs, apprenticing in a florist shop for a while, doing homecare

>with elderly, developmentally disabled, mentally ill, and people with

>AIDS for 2.5 years, nannying for a couple years, working in a candy

>store for a short while, working for an internet company that filtered

>porn and other inappropriate for children off the internet for places

>like schools and libraries (which was probably the most awful job i ever

>had, reviewing about 400 sites a day looking for yucky things), and i am

>now a massage therapist, hoping to be a hellerworker and/or someday have

>a psychology degree from someplace like bastyr. *deep breath after huge

>horrendous run-on sentence*

>

>the last part of that, the part about my future wishes, brings me to my

>next inquiry. i am curious to know how everyone managed to pull off the

>huge financial obstacles of education. this is repeatedly my biggest

>problem, being single and self-employed, with a background of very

>extremely low paying job experience. i'm especially curious about how

>people have gotten themselves through programs of education that

>mainstream resources still don't see fit to assist financially with.

>hellerwork training especially is very rigorous financially, having a

>really high tuition and requiring students to be away from home and work

>3 times during just over a year, for 3 weeks each time, and also 3 times

>at 9 days. i know there are ways to pull things like this off, 'cause

>people do it, i just am having trouble figuring out how. thank you all

>in advance for your insights!

>

>

>

>

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http://askcarl.net

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