Better than I expected in some ways. I wouldn't do it for free but it's one of the better jobs I've had in my life.Bubble Boy wrote:How's that going Broomstick?Broomstick wrote:Hell, this week I'm learning to hang drywall - it's not that I'm unwilling, it's just that I don't fit the profile for whom those programs were set up. I'm "too educated" and frequently too old - nevermind I might well have a good 30 years of working life ahead of me.
Yes, there is an athletic component - we were actually hanging the ceiling, and I got to be the one holding the panel up while the boss drove the screws. At least it was a thin panel but it still had weight. The boss is rather surprised at both how long I could hold it up there without complaint and that I wasn't sore the next day. I pointed out I'm short, I'm used to working over my head, at least more so than he is. (He's not particularly tall himself, but taller than me)As a professional drywaller myself, I know it's far from the physically easiest job and it isn't mindless work either (at least if you want to do a good job).
And it's not mindless, none of it is. You have to think ahead, plan, use math, know a crapload about materials, assembly, and rules, be aware of what's going on around you at all times. If you're working on someone's home, like we currently are, the customer is twitchy because you're pulling apart a piece of the most valuable object they own, hammering, drilling holes and doing scary things like that and you have to conduct yourself in a manner so that they can trust you really are going to make this look and function better.
Nope, education of any sort never hurts, and neither do new skills. The person I'm working for is a general contractor and jack of all trades. He used to have a crew of a couple dozen, but the economic downturn has whittled that away to almost nothing. When I started it was just painting because we thought it would just be for a couple months then I'd get a full time job somewhere else. Now, it's looking more and more like that's not going to happen so I'm becoming more of an apprentice. It's ironic since I really am not interested in owning a house but by the time he gets done with me I'll probably not only be able to maintain a home but actually build one.Me personally, I'm currently working for a company that is utilizing/expanding my skills beyond just boarding; steel studs, fire taping and T-Bar installation. Certainly doesn't hurt to do that in this economic crisis.
In a lot of ways I think I would have been happier being a tradesman all along, but when I was young "young ladies just don't do that!", it was before several lawsuits that forced the unions to take on female apprentices, and because I was smart I was pushed into academics and college. It's sad, really, because we need tradesmen who can think and reason and I like to use my hands and build things.