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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Albuquerque
    Posts
    127

    Unhappy At a Crossroads...Need Career Advice

    I am in still college, I'm in my 4th year of getting an undergraduate degree in Mechanical Engineering, though I probably have another year left. My problem is that I don't want to do a traditional 9-5 job, sitting in front of a desk all day. I would really rather design and build my own bikes, by hand, no middle man and no production line. I brought this up to my mother earlier today, saying that I wanted to build bikes, but all she said was, "Oh No! You DO NOT want to be in production!!" She doesn't understand what I mean, which I know I'll try again to explain it to her. But really everyone seems to think that I'm going to go to graduate school, which I am not. I have no interest in it.

    To be honest, I would be happier working at a bike shop all day fixing bikes. I have more fun working on my bikes, making my hands bloody stumps (ok not really that bad, but I do routinely spend 12+ hours and not even realize it). But I'm not sure I can make a good living at it...houses are really expensive, and I do eventually want to get my own. And not to mention if I do end up having children, I want to be able to provide for them.

    Where I work (I'm doing a MechE internship), there are so many PhD's, and my manager fantasizes about how he did math problems all day at MIT. I mean REALLY??!?!?! I don't have that much fun with it. And I'm not that smart.

    Not to mention, most of what I heard about MechE jobs is that you quite often end up working many many more hours per week than 40, and I just can't handle that. I don't think it would be worth it for a desk job.

    I really need advice!!!

    Do any of you ladies build/work on bikes all day?? How did you get started?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    I'm the only one allowed to whine
    Posts
    10,557
    Why not take the first level of the UBI classes? It's a week long, housing is provided, nothing but bikes 24 hrs a day. http://www.bikeschool.com/

    You could treat it like a vacation (keep your mom happy that way) and you'd learn a whole heck of a lot, and it would be the first step if you wanted to go on from there.

    I've always wished I knew something about MechE, I'd like to be able to design and build wheelchairs/racingchairs/handcycles. (take a peek at One Off, they make some very cool handcycles) I'd love to see my cousin racing around on a road handcycle as gorgeous as a Vanilla. http://www.oneoffhandcycle.com/
    "If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    1,372
    Quote Originally Posted by pinkychique View Post
    To be honest, I would be happier working at a bike shop all day fixing bikes. I have more fun working on my bikes, making my hands bloody stumps (ok not really that bad, but I do routinely spend 12+ hours and not even realize it).
    snip

    Where I work (I'm doing a MechE internship), there are so many PhD's, and my manager fantasizes about how he did math problems all day at MIT. I mean REALLY??!?!?! I don't have that much fun with it. And I'm not that smart.
    snip


    I really need advice!!!

    Do any of you ladies build/work on bikes all day?? How did you get started?
    Wow, this is a heavy question. The biggest reason I'm posting an answer is because my answer is so very different this year than it would have been 5 years ago.
    I have a PhD in toxicology and I've worked in pharmacokinetics at a Nat'l Lab for 10 years. My dream job when I was 25. I loved my job, I like the "authority" I felt, I knew what I knew and everyone else knew I knew it, too... That lasted until I was about 35, then I started to get burnt out. Now I'm wondering if I have the guts (at 41) to retire and do something else, like work in a bike shop!
    I gotta say, I LOVE the "disposable income". Although grad school was a financial difficulty, since then I've been solvent.
    Getting a degree in something like engineering gives you an odd type of Freedom, you have the education to do something, a lot more different somethings than you might imagine. As I said, my education is in toxicology, and I work in pharmacokinetics. Those are two very different, albeit related things. Any education in a science or technical field will give you that.
    Education/a degree is freedom.
    All this rambling, though, is probably leading you in a different direction that you think it is - my thought is - maybe take 1 year off and work in a bike shop. I took 1 year off and worked as a security guard. I actually loved that job, but it let me know that Grad school was right for me, I didn't want to be a security guard forever.
    Good luck! and know what I didn't realize then, you have time to decide. My biggest regret is that I didn't spend another 6 months off between collage and grad school and backpack around Europe.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    Blessed to be all over the place!
    Posts
    3,433
    Pincky, I'm not an engineer...but here's what I suggest:
    • Get your degree
    • Set off on an austerity lifestyle while you pursue your dream with bikes
    • It's either going to work or not...if it does, then you know what to do. If not, you have options.
    • Give yourself a predetermined time frame to reassess (say a year or two) before you'll reconsider your path


    The question is not whether you can pursue your dream and passion...it's whether or not you are willing to make the short term trade-offs to see if you can succeed at it.

    My Mercedes mechanic has a degree in Mechanical Engineering...but like you, he didn't see himself doing that...but he LOVES CARS...and that passion gives him a following...
    If you don't grow where you're planted, you'll never BLOOM - Will Rogers

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Perpetual Confusion and Indecision
    Posts
    488
    I'm assuming that you mean designing and building bikes, frame and all.

    In my opinion, there is no time like the present to go for what you want. Have you researched bike manufacturers in the U.S.? Trek, for example - I'm sure they employ lots of M.E.s . You could get in somewhere like that to get some serious experience before heading off on your own. My dream when I was at your stage in the process was to go and work for a ski manufacturer, but I'm too chicken to pursue anything that far from home (not too many xc ski companies in the States). I don't think a career building bikes necessarily means making any trade-offs. Just don't start your career in a cement plant (or, in my case, a paper mill - man I detested that place!). Use your education and your passions to go in the direction you want - they should work hand-in-hand.

    I'm an ME, and so is my DH. I work more hours than he does. He rarely puts in more than 40 hours per week, while my boss claims that 50 is the average for mechanical engineers (I suppose in a serious hint that he'd like to see that happen, but I try to set reasonable boundaries, and also work way late when needed - bosses do have a tendency to promise customers the world). My last job required 45, which often turned into 50-55 (with 1 week of vacation and 0 sick/personal time ). I don't often put in more than, say, 43 right now, but last winter my whole ski season was wrecked due to my job. You may as well be doing what you love - otherwise, what is the point? If you end up going into business for yourself, believe me, you'll be working plenty! Your degree is a tool to get you into the life you want. Personally, I limited my career opportunities to live where and how I want to live (no big cities for me!).

    Good luck, and follow your dreams!

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    MD suburb of Washington, DC
    Posts
    1,832
    I'm a ChemE, and I haven't done any engineering work in over 20 years. It's an education, not a life sentence; engineering school teaches you how to solve problems, and you can apply that to any career you choose.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Perth, Western Australia
    Posts
    5,316

    Oe

    A thought for you..

    Why not finish Uni and then work your way round the world like many NZ/Aussie/Saffies do? Alot of young people wander away for many years, find themselves & head home to work.

    Why not do some volunteer work with Engineers without Borders??

    Just a thought.

    C

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Colorado
    Posts
    326
    Ditto what the others said.

    If you do what really appeals to you, that is what you will be most successful at. And don't be disappointed if you don't find it right off the bat. Having been in business for myself, I recommend that you start by working with a well-established company in a role that may not be your dream job, but that gets you closer to where you want to be. Managing your own business is its own adventure, and one that is best approached with some serious savings and/or backing.

    But I wish more than anything that I'd taken a year off between school and starting work to travel. It may seem like there is no money, no time, but trust me, that feeling only increases as you get older. And travel on the cheap is not only the best kind, but a lot easier than you might imagine. That, and in traveling I have learned so much about myself and what I want from life. Work is only a part of that. Take the time while you can to see how people in other countries, other continents, other cultures live.

    And whatever you do, enjoy it, that is the most important thing.

    Anne

  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Colorado
    Posts
    326
    aha, I cross-posted with you.

    An idea for a year off: you can travel the world by bike.

    You'll get plenty of experience working with bikes, and a cheap mode of transport too.

    Anne

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Albuquerque
    Posts
    127
    Quote Originally Posted by onimity View Post
    aha, I cross-posted with you.

    An idea for a year off: you can travel the world by bike.

    You'll get plenty of experience working with bikes, and a cheap mode of transport too.

    Anne



    I love that idea!!....now...to build a bike trailer....

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Albuquerque
    Posts
    127
    Thank you for the advice!! It really helps! I think I have a vague plan now:

    1) Finish my degree (as I was planning but that's what I keep getting told, too)
    2) Take a year or so off of engineering stuff if I don't have a engineering job that I know that I'll absolutely love
    3) Work at a bike shop and take classes about bikes ( I liked especially that the UBI has a bike MAKING course because ultimately that's what I want to do)

    and see where it goes from there....

    now to that dynamics homework that I'm being so productive on...

    but also, I'm an up-and-coming triathlete, I am showing some real potential, and someday (maybe next summer??) I'm hoping to qualify for my pro card. But what that means is that I need like 30 hours a week to train.....And that's rough without trying to hold down 40 hour job...that's what I did last summer, and I'm going to have to next summer so that I can pay for a trip to ITU long course worlds...I'm probably in the worst sport for the broke college student....
    Last edited by pinkychique; 10-21-2007 at 05:17 PM.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    the foggy wetlands,los osos,ca
    Posts
    2,860
    Got a art background at all? Any sculpting skills? Ever played in the sand? You want an odd job come work for me! www.sandscapes.com
    Blessed are the flexible, for they shall not be bent out of shape.
    > Remember to appreciate all the different people in your life!

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Mar 2004
    Posts
    427
    Hi Pinky,
    DH would love to share all the wonders of bike design and fabrication! He's an up and comer, I'm still working on his website, but he's done frames here in town and a few out in CA. I'll talk with him further and then send you a pm.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Vernon, British Columbia
    Posts
    2,226
    I love this place! Look at all these great opportunities!

    Pinky, follow your bliss! You already know what you'd like to do, take some of these great ideas and go for it!

    And if you'd like some inspiration, check out this blog - I love this one!
    http://swimpupstream.blogspot.com/

    Your passion is going to take you places you never dreamed of - and the places you have dreamed of are already very cool!

    Huge, "think big" confidence filled, anxiety lifting butterflies surrounding you....

    ~T~
    The butterflies are within you.

    My photos: http://www.flickr.com/photos/picsiechick/

    Buy my photos: http://www.picsiechick.com

 

 

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