Well, let's see...the summer I was almost 15 my cousin Becky and I got jobs at Zellwood Farms, sorting green peppers. We stood at a conveyor belt and watched hundreds of green peppers come bouncing along toward us all day while we quickly sorted them for size and whether or not they were good or bad, etc. I remember dreaming about green peppers, like Martians, marching after me all night long! LOL. We did that for about a week and probably made about $40.00, and we thought we were so rich! LOL. The only other thing I remember about that was there were a lot of Spanish speaking migrants working there, and one man asked me if I could help him learn to speak English because I was taking Spanish in high school. We had several conversations with me trying to use what little Spanish I knew. It was an interesting experience. However, I was thankful that I didn't have to do that job for the rest of my life!
Internet Photo
During my senior year in high school I worked part time at a Dry Cleaners for a while. That was another job that I am glad I didn't have to do for the rest of my life. Think about cleaning out people's pockets and also handling some very dirty (and smelly!) clothes...Yuck! I didn't do that for long, thank the Lord!
The summer after I graduated high school I worked as a counselor at a church youth camp. Actually, I volunteered. But my room and board was taken care of and it was a very wonderful summer, where I fully rededicated my life to serving Christ, and made some big decisions about my future that changed the whole course of my life.
When we first got married, I worked in the accounting department of a large insurance company, while hubby finished his senior year of college, working on his Bachelor's degree in Education. That would be my first experience in accounting, and although I was never a good math student in school, I found that I liked accounting and bookkeeping, and that ended up being one of my main jobs throughout my life, in different places (mainly in schools and also at a Christian camp and a large church) as we moved about later in the ministry.
I also worked as a "teacher's aide", a.k.a. a "para-professional in schools, which served me well while our kids were in school and I could have the same hours and school schedule as they had.
Another occupation that I found helpful during our years in the ministry and/or seminary was in sales. I was once a Stanley Home Products representative and gave parties to demonstrate and sell home cleaning products. Then I also sold Watkins products and became a District Manager with the Fuller Brush Company for a while.
When we lived in the White Mountains of New Hampshire in a very busy resort area, I created my own company known as T.O.P.S. =Temporary Office Personnel Services. Basically, I offered my temporary services to a resort to help out in their busy accounting department, and ended up working there full time. That also led to working in that same resort as the supervisor of the housekeeping department, managing the busy scheduling of making sure rooms were cleaned and inspected on time each day, etc. That also led to working with another private company as their marketing and scheduling person, which also led to working with them in another venture of scheduling horseback rides at a local Bed and Breakfast. Life was never dull.
Here is a link to when I worked at the Stables at "The Farm by the River" Here's a picture to give you a better idea of what I was doing:
This might have been one of my most favorite jobs, except for shoveling the "horse poop". LOL.
This list is not necessarily in any order, but basically an overview of the kinds of work I did throughout my adult years. Because we were in the ministry, often serving in smaller churches that did not pay very well, (and moving more frequently than I care to enumerate) I found whatever jobs I could do to help supplement our income. I also worked as the church secretary, typing bulletins, etc., in several places where my hubby was the pastor.
All in all, I am very thankful for all the creative ways that God provided for us throughout the years. When there was no job to be found, I created my own, by God's grace and wisdom. When I was needed at home to take care of our young children, God provided for us, often miraculously, when hubby was in Seminary preparing for the ministry. When we moved more often than was probably wise, but we felt we had no other choice at the time, God always provided a job for me somewhere, even though my resume' probably looked like a pin ball machine of hit and miss and crazy moves.
I was looking for a Scripture that would go along with this whole long story of the changes and moves and years of so many different jobs, and these selected verses from Psalm 26 seemed to speak to what I was feeling, because sometimes people just don't understand how someone could move so many times or do so many jobs, but it has all been done in service to the Lord in one way or the other...
26
1 "Vindicate me, O Lord,
For I have walked in my integrity.
I have also trusted in the Lord;
I shall not slip.
2 Examine me, O Lord, and prove me;
Try my mind and my heart.
3 For Your lovingkindness is before my eyes,
And I have walked in Your truth.
6 I will wash my hands in innocence;
So I will go about Your altar, O Lord,
7 That I may proclaim with the voice of thanksgiving,
And tell of all Your wondrous works.
8 Lord, I have loved the habitation of Your house,
And the place where Your glory dwells.
You certainly have a diverse work background Pamela. It's great to see how the Lord provided for you and your family through every season. Have a great weekend.
ReplyDeleteI meant, have a great week! LOL
ReplyDeleteGreat is His faithfullness, indeed!! Great song. You are right that our 'careers' were quite similar, though I didn't have to move as often as you did. God is good, for sure!! I enjoyed this Tuesday 4!! xo
ReplyDeleteThis was so interesting Pamela! I loved reading about all your jobs and especially the photos of you in your favorite job of wife and mom. That was my favorite too!
ReplyDeleteAll your different moves and jobs certainly point to your flexibility and talents supported by God's grace and provision, Pamela. I'm impressed! I was a parapro in schools, too, while getting my teaching certificate years ago. I worked with some wonderful people who made it fun to go to school every day. My favorite job, though, was raising my kids.
ReplyDeleteBlessings!
I enjoyed reading your work history, we were kinda on the same page. My area of the bank where I worked was the bookkeeping department. There is a lot to be said about the job of a preacher's wife, as I've seen all that our daughter Peggy did in that same position. Great questions today and great answers too!!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this. I don't think I could be a preacher's wife. All the churches I have been to, the Pastors wives' work outside the home and they hire a person to do all what you probably had to do. In fact, the church I attend, I never see her. She's very shy.
ReplyDeleteLooking back over one's life span is an amazing journey. I too feel that being a wife and mother is my best Job ever.
ReplyDeleteThere are so many twists and turns but I'm thankful how they have brought me to where I am today. I went into a lot of detail on Debby/My Shasta Home 's blog today.
Thank you for the verses today. They say it all.
Sue
Hi Pamela, I enjoyed reading your post. I agree, motherhood was the most important. There are things I wish I had done differently, but all and all, it has gone well. I wrote about my mostly paying jobs. I did not talk about the positions I had at church. The training I got at my postal job taught me things to use in ministry. I always enjoy the verses you include in your post. Video too!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this. I totally forgot I was a stay-at-home mom until Kelly went to school. Then I too got a job as a parapro at her school. I spent a lot of years doing this - and I was always home when my kids were. Then I had to quit - or had the opportunity to quit to help raise Andy. I had a lot of the same jobs you had - but no taking care of horses or horse poop! lol
ReplyDeleteHi Pam! It was fun to read about all of your different jobs. I agree with you that being a wife and mother is the best job of all. Hope you are having a good week!
ReplyDeleteIsn't it curious, how what we actually wound up doing for a living bore little resemblance to our childhood dreams? Tho' I never finished my Bachelors, I found "on the job" experiences far outweighed whatever the classroom might have taught.
ReplyDeleteInteresting post!
This is what I posted on Mary's Blog today. I'll just copy it here.
ReplyDeleteI started out at 14 working at the airport cafe until I turned 15 and was old enough to go to the nursing home as an aide. I did that full time 3-11 all through high school and I loved that job SO much. I helped care for the most interesting people and I loved "almost" all of them dearly. I married at 18 and stayed home for a few years doing day care off and on when friends would ask me. During those years I also worked as a manager at a dry cleaner because I could take baby Mandy with me. When she got older I job shared with my dear Mom-in-law who eventually took over the job and I stayed home full time and did day care for all of the kids from church as we had two more babies. I had a houseful every day! After our move to Spokane, I worked as an administrative assistant and then as a bookkeeper/account manager for my last 17 years in the workplace. I "retired" at 51 and have loved being home ever since.
My favorite job outside of my home daycare was at the nursing home, but would never go back when I was offered jobs there again because of abuse I witnessed. I couldn't stand that and I couldn't do anything about it. But I also said that I wouldn't't be part of that system any longer.
Blessings and love,
Betsy
I enjoyed seeing you when you were younger with your three boys at home and outdoors. Good memories for sure!!! I opened a photo book that I gave my mom and dad years ago. It was one that my brother David still had in his apartment in Albany. Going through a lot of things there after he died late October were ones to keep and donate as well. Do I really need all of this old stuff that we don't need? Good to view those photos, including when Phil and I were in Oregon after we left England being in the US Air Force. A reception at the Halsey Christian Church Dec 1978. Thanks for reading my latest blog post. I need to read more now during the week. God bless you and your husband .
ReplyDeleteGood and blessed,
DeleteBeautiful blog
ReplyDeleteThis is GREAT...it is so fun to learn about our dear blogging friends.. And the photos...they are priceless. I would have to agree with you that there is no better job than being a housewife and a mom. This job unfolds blessings after blessings..and even though the pay is not in dollars, it pays much more in love. I had to laugh about the peppers. Even bell peppers make my nose burn so I can only imagine how strong the smell was. One job I had for a few years was working at the school in special education. although I enjoyed it at the time, this is something that I would not want to do again. This post presents a great picture of the years gone by for you. I sure enjoyed it...
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful testimony of God’s faithfulness throughout your life. It’s so special to read how He guided you through so many different seasons and provided for you each time, even when things felt overwhelming.
ReplyDeleteI especially loved how you described your role as a wife and mother as your favorite “job” ... that really speaks to what truly matters. And your honesty about the harder moments makes it even more real.
Thank you for sharing this. It’s encouraging to see how God gives strength exactly when it’s needed. 💛
I haven’t had that many jobs in my life.
DeleteAt one point, when I couldn’t find work, I started a small school for my father. He was the head of the school, and it gave me something meaningful to do in a time when I felt quite lost.
After that, I worked for an organization that you could describe as a kind of family care service. But in practice, it meant driving out to remote farms, checking in on people who were hard to reach — sometimes elderly, sometimes struggling with things like dementia. I would go from one place to another: a farm, then a trailer somewhere far off, helping a woman with a broken hip. Simple tasks, really, but they added up. More and more people were assigned to me each day, and I found it hard to say no.
My dream had always been to become a writer — and in time, I did. Just before I got married, and in the early years of my marriage, I wrote a small stack of books.
I loved becoming a mother, and I still am so thankful for it. But I also felt the weight of that responsibility. Writing gave me something I needed — a space to breathe for a moment.
Wife, Mom and Grandma are my favorite roles.
ReplyDeleteWhat a varied and creative resume! What a blessing that the Lord provided for you all those years, all those changes. I loved seeing the pictures of you, thank you for sharing this part of your life with us.
ReplyDeleteAn interesting and blessed life indeed! I loved reading your reminiscences and seeing the old photos, especially the one in the kitchen and you with the horse. Oh the pepper sorting job sounds hard ... I don't even like green peppers, and if I get one I have to leave it on the windowsill till it turns red or yellow!
ReplyDelete