The Weirdest/Craziest Job You Have Ever Done
I hope there are a few spies who come forward. Anyway, Aj's post on robots is the muse for this post. This is going to be a wild ride. ok I'll start with a sad job-but I will save my most controversial job for later-I want to see what you all can bring to the table.
to pay for college tuition, I sat in a back room at the bookstore and tore off book covers. Yes-from most beloved novels to Aristotle. We sent the covers back to the publisher's and we torched the books. Yes! Torched them! If you were caught "stealing" the body of a book to be torched (!) you were fired.
to pay for college tuition, I sat in a back room at the bookstore and tore off book covers. Yes-from most beloved novels to Aristotle. We sent the covers back to the publisher's and we torched the books. Yes! Torched them! If you were caught "stealing" the body of a book to be torched (!) you were fired.
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We performed completely 'in period', which means that if someone commented on the machine stitching of a hem, the reply was, "Yes, my lady's tirewoman has marvelous even stitches, does she not?" (Sometimes it became quite a game to try to stay in period when one of the tourists asked questions.) My part was that of "Jennifer Oakes", a young scallywag who had been found aboard a ship (yes, documentable) and who was trying to be reclaimed as a proper servant.
When we were not 'on stage', I was the fight choreographer, driver of one of the vans, and armorer (needed to be repaired occasionally). I was also part of the 'keep her sane' staff of the director, which in one case involved me holding up a shield and having her hit it with a sword until she was exhausted.
FYI. American tourists are every bit as bad as we are writ up to be. We learned to cringe when a bus full of our countrymen pulled up. (We were all speaking with British accents, so the tourists did not realize that we were not American.)
Jan, has a lot of fun stories
All loaded and off we went. We cruise south into the Gulf of Mexico when I hear a gurgling sound. I look into the cabin where the crates are and we're taking on water. I tell the guy to call the Coast Guard because in about 10 minutes we will be under water. He refuses. I push him aside and go to the radio. I don't have a clue as to how to work it. Doesn't matter because by that time the water shorts out the wires. The water is now at deck level and we're barely afloat. Luckily, a Mexican fishing boat comes by and picks us up just as we see the last of the boat go down in a stream of bubbles. The only sailor who could speak English said they were heading for Apalachacola, Fl. and we'd be OK there. I wasn't familiar with that town but later I realized it was as far away from Miami as you could get and still be in Florida. I questioned the guy about what kind of cargo was lost. At first he refused to tell me, but finally, I guess since they were at the bottom of the Gulf it didn't matter, it was rifles. I'm thinking, was he a gun runner and for who, and it is got to be illegal. When we docked, he disappeared. As I tried to figure out what to do, he zoomed by me in what I suppose was a rental car. I had enough money for a Greyhound ticket to Miami. I got to my hotel late that night, hungry, and no $100.
I remember signing documents when I got my security clearances saying I wouldn’t reveal any details of my work for 75 years, so I wouldn’t expect to hear any juicy info if a real spy happens along here.
Jan
I grew up on a farm so I did many jobs but they did not seem weird or crazy to me. They were just part of living. From shoveling chicken coops to calf pens, stacking hay and milking cows there was never a dull moment.
Then I worked for a feed company. The craziest thing I ever did for them was hang on the roof of a grain bin by a rope that was tied around my stomach, while running a hand held power saw cutting holes in the steel roof to install ventilation covers. No it was not really dangerous. [sarcasm] That was in 1980 at minimum wage and I had no complaints. I had a job which were hard to come by at the time.
Also crazy, selling accident insurance door to door. A job I hated but it the taught me the most about life and people.
Oh and starting my own business so I could become one of those people that "did not build that". It was no work at all. I never worked a single 40 hour week...since most were 80. :) But when the government finally help me built it to somewhat of a success, they decided that I was not giving them enough so they took more. That may be the craziest job I ever did. lol Oh... that is not really funny.
They eventually moved to a larger location and the three 4-deck presses had to be dismantled. Before they could be taken apart, years of accumulated ink had to be scraped and kerosened from them. Another kid and I crawled into these things, lay on our backs and scraped and cleaned. At the end of the day, I would take a bucket of kerosene into the shower and use it to first clean the ink out of my hair and off myself before showering with soap and water.
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