Middle-Age Superbook #1 Book 3. Career Change-Older People Job Guide Buy on Amazon

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Middle-Age Superbook #1 Book 3. Career Change-Older People Job Guide

Book Details

Author(s)Tony Kelbrat
ISBN / ASINB0103NKP7Q
ISBN-13978B0103NKP79
MarketplaceFrance  🇫🇷

Description

The world is changing so fast that many industries and jobs are obsolete for two reasons:

1.) They are really obsolete because the world has moved on like shoe makers and typewriter stores. Assembly lines are being replaced by robots.
2.) NAFTA and other free trade agreements have trashed industry in the western countries because the multinational corporations get most stuff made by peasants on the cheap in peasant nations. Look at Apple.

The saddest story I heard was about a guy about my age who lost his job then couldn’t sell his house so it was foreclosed on. He went to college to retrain for some allied health profession. Who has that kind of courage, to start all over again at 55 as opposed to doing something like suicide or giving up?

I watch youtube videos about the illuminati. They say it’s all part of a plan to trash the United States and turn arrogant westerners into a bunch of peasants.

It’s a huge tragedy. You would never know it by watching mainstream TV. They pretend there is no tragedy. Everything is cute and sanitized. The desperation of life is hidden.

I wrote a plan to change government called the People Power Program. Aside from that, I don’t see any solution if we keep going the way we’re going now.

It doesn’t matter what job you do, most fields can be wiped out quickly. I’ve seen architects and realtors get wiped out by computers and the internet.

Everybody says, "Follow your heart.”

Find some emerging or steady field that will be there no matter what. People always need to eat.

Change always brings fear but you can deal with it by being adventurous and going one day at a time.

If you see that your current job or career might die, start looking for something else now by getting educated for it.

In life, you always have two choices:

keep going
stop, do nothing

Save money to have a safety net.

Simplify your life now to live as cheaply as possible.

What is your true nature?
What do naturally like you do?
What naturally inspires you?

Test the waters by finding job videos on youtube, vimeo, hulu, etc.

Do job shadowing or an internship if you can.

A transferable skill is to find careers related to what you already do or know.

What exactly do you want?

Take courses in a field you’re interested in. It’s easy online or through a community college.

Your library probably has a booklet around for continuing studies that the local universities and other schools offer if you live in a fair-sized town. You might even get your own company to pay for your education if you say you want to upgrade.

Some careers only require a few months of part-time schooling.

With some careers, just apply. They might take you because most things are on-the-job training anyway. Some gu ycalled some film company. They asked him if he had a truck. He was in the movie industry.

Search your local phone directory under schools, training, vocational schools, colleges and universities.

Most community colleges have good practical certification programs.

Many universities have certificate programs at university extension programs.

Use search engines to find education in your field.

You could try starting a part-time business.

Check private vocational-career schools for education in practical fields.

If you have never gotten a student loan, you can get one and/ or grants regardless of age in approved programs.

Try these business websites, sba.gov, score.org, business.com. forbes.com, score.org and wahm.com.

Go to search engines. Type in internship and volunteering t otry to get your foot in the door of a new field.

Career Change Basics 2

Being afraid to change is natural. It’s all about fear versus saying I must look at it as change and adventure.

The world is alive. I see it for myself in all the research I do writing a job book. There are plenty of jobs. You need need some training and guts. Often it takes less than

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