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I guess real estate even though I don't buy and sell it.I do title abstracting for the purposes of drilling oil and gas wells. I research the land, the minerals, and the people who've owned it since they started keeping records of it.
That sounds more like "paperwork".
What best describes your occupation?
What! no "Retired" option??doc
I picked "other" because I seem to be a Jill of all trades these days!
Manual/craftwork, even though it's skilled craft for a utility. And lots and lots and lots of paperwork, with some computer work involved.
Chalk another one up for "paperwork".
I know some of the things you're ran across doing title research. My wife worked for the county road commission. She had to do title research in order to get the land for road projects. Had to locate the true owner of the land. Some of the deed restrictions that were imposed on buyers 80/90 years ago would get a person thrown in jail today.
What's funny is that we JUST overhauled our entire workflow process AND computer system at work. Everyone's responsibilities changed and the whole system is new. It's going to be much better once we have about 90 days under our belts. But right now? Giant pain in the ***. I'm at the ones who think they are going to be able to get away with doing it the "old way" because they are in for a rude awakening when we pull that old plug.
I am in Benefits Administration. I picked paperwork, if you saw my office, you would know. But, it could have been bureaucracy, or health I suppose. If I had thought things through in my youth, I would have been a meteorologist. Not a TV one though.
Went with medical/healthcare.I'm still a student, but starting in January, I'm changing my bachelors to Medical Technology. Lots of biology and chemistry and I'll be learning to work in a hospital lab. Maybe grad school in biochem, microbiology or something similar one of these days.Currently I'm doing surgical technology at the local community college, but I don't think I'm going to be continuing after this semester.
That ain't no community college! Why the change?
I'm going back to UNT full time for my bachelors. Surgtech was at NCTC. I'm not learning anything. I'm too paranoid when I'm in the OR that I'm going to **** up and hurt the patient that I'm not doing well. The book knowledge is easy. The technical part is killing me. I have my final semester checkoff in a month and I'm not sure I'm going to pass.