Tag Archives: jobs

More on jobs, careers, and … passions

Quite a few young people have no idea what they want to do with their lives. Some of them end up going to college, choosing a career, and they make out just fine. Others spend a lifetime (or a good part of it) searching for something that will be the right fit for them.

Then there are the odd few who have a burning passion, sometimes from a very early age. I am one of those people.

In 1949 my mother bought a piano for me and my sister to take lessons. I was seven years old. She got the music teacher from the local school to teach us, and I started out with John Thompson’s “Teaching Little Fingers to Play.” I was quite happy to sit at the piano for a half hour each day, and never complained.

Before long, I started making up little melodies on the piano and writing them down. My teacher, Mr. Jones, was impressed. In those days, no one taught how to play by ear. It was something I just did naturally.

Around five years later, Mr. Jones said he had nothing more to teach me and passed me over to his wife, who was strict and mean and would only allow me to play classical music. But during those five years I had been listening to a lot of jazz records. My father had a nice collection of big bands and small groups, and by the time I was twelve years old, I was spending my allowance on records by Charlie Parker, Gerry Mulligan, Dave Brubeck and Thelonious Monk at the local music store.

So Mrs. Jones found that she had a rebel on her hands. After studying with her for a year or so, I just upped and quit. But I kept playing and making up little tunes.

Then one day my father came home with a jazz record by an obscure blind pianist named Alex Kallao. I put it on the turntable and listened. Something clicked into place in my mind, like the planets stopping in their orbits for just a split second. I thought, “This is what I want to do for the rest of my life. I HAVE to learn how to play like this!” I was thirteen years old.

So from then on I was at the piano for as many hours as my mother could stand it, sometimes as long as five hours a day in the summertime when there was no school.

I would try to capture melodies and improvisations from the records I was listening to and then I would make up chords with my left hand and try to improvise with my right hand.

I worked like this for a year or so, and then word got around that there was a little girl playing jazz piano…a real oddity back then. I started getting invitations to play with some adult musicians from my town and the next town over, and I felt quite proud of myself. Before long I was teaching jazz at a little music school, and when I turned fifteen I joined the musician’s union and gigged my way through high school. And the rest is history, so they say…

Well, not quite. Life has a way of offering up a million distractions, and I found myself going off in a number of different directions over the years. But that core passion of loving to play and write music has never changed one iota.

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Work

Our work is one of the most important things in our lives. We generally spend a lot of time at our jobs, and even though sometimes our work may seem humdrum, I’ve found that the attitude I bring to it helps a lot. And then, too, sometimes we find work that is a perfect fit for our talents and who we are. In past years, many people worked at the same job their whole lives, whereas now people tend to have more than one job in their lifetime.

Here are some of the jobs I’ve done over the years:

Housekeeper

Babysitter

Piano teacher

Piano player

Singer

Waitress

Gardener

Hotel chamber maid

Short order cook at a truck stop

Cook for factory employees

Cook in a macrobiotic restaurant

Keypunch operator

Secretary

Sewed leather items (hats, bags)

Sold crafts at outdoor fairs

Ran a hand-made teddy bear business

Artist’s model

Seamstress

Sales person in a boutique

Carpenter

Assistant to Brazilian percussion teacher

Yard worker on an estate

Security guard

Created sheet music for composers/musicians

Music critic for a major newspaper

Editor for same newspaper

Radio and TV reporter

English teacher

Translator

Composer and arranger

Bandleader

That’s all I can think of at the moment…

What about your work? Have you always had the same job?

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Filed under work