When I was 15 I wanted to get a job so I could save for a car. Figured cars were becoming computer controlled so I should learn something about computers. Got a job at a local computer store. That wound up paying for the car, and an engine for it too. Also paid for most of my college tuition and payments on the car that replaced my high school ride.
The computer store closed in the early '90's. Worked that summer (while still taking classes) doing blacktop work for my (now) father-in-law. Then I got a call from another computer shop looking for a tech. That job finished paying for college and had a full time position waiting for me when I graduated.
My degree is in Communications and I minored in video production. Didn't pursue the video field when there weren't any paying jobs available and had the computer gig waiting for me. But the Com degree has more than paid for itself.
Stuck it out at that computer shop longer than I should have. After a couple years moved into corporate IT. Pay was better, and worked at some good places. Was at the last place for 11 years. Didn't always enjoy the work, but liked the people I worked with. The company closed our facility last year. That job ended about 2 weeks shy of the 25th anniversary of my first computer job at 15.
I was burnt out on IT and the corporate environment. Back in '04 I started a hobby business doing what I referred to as an "automotive consulting business" for people working on muscle car era Mopars. Did that to keep sane from the corporate stuff. Was inspired after a nonsense corporate team building event. I'm sure that wasn't the goal of the team building thing, but it made me think back on what I really wanted to be when I grew up. Being a cube dweller and going to corporate team building events wasn't it.
So as the corporate life was closing I decided to take two giant leaps. One was to leave the IT world behind. The second was to take the part time hobby business and make that my new career.
I've opened an old-school style speed shop catering to upgrading '60's & '70's domestic cars, specializing in Mopars. I'll work on the other domestics, and some domestics up into the late '80's early '90's. Basically if it can have a collector plate on it I'll bring it in the shop.
I'm not doing pro-touring over-the-top stuff. The core of the business is making the older cars people already have a little more enjoyable on today's roads. Fuel injection conversions, overdrive transmissions, suspension and brake upgrades without loosing the original character of the car. Not turning the car into another cookie cutter car.
Last week I took out a GRM Marketplace ad space. That was a little frightening, but in a cool exciting way. Another step on the new path. And it feels good too.