
Originally Posted by
Duckfeet
Well, first time I sobered, got off dope, everything...I didn't have much to do, and Louisiana would pay it--partially--so I went back to school, and always liked books--I find most junkies do...maybe it's because we spend so much time *waiting* haha--so I took a student aide job in the university library. I've always loved libraries. I lived in Argentina when I was a troubled young teenager, and the little american library was so comforting to me...and later in prison...even now, I can't walk into a library or book store without feeling comforted....
So I'm working in there, trying to figure out what to do w/myself: I was in my early forties, so I knew just getting a degree in philosophy or english was useless...everybody's got one of those: they aren't really the accomplishment that an engineering, say, degree is...
And someone said you could break into the library field even if you are older, etc. So I graduated, got my b.a. in english and philosophy, and went to Austin TX to get MLIS, which is Masters in Library and Information Science, and worked in University library as paraprofessional, went off to Ohio for first professional library job: I'm a cataloger, which is librarian you *don't* see, assigns call numbers, stuff like that, rather than shushing you and showing you where stuff is is....
But, great story, but I"m what I am, and dialaudids and heroin came into my life, and it all came crashing down...
But anyway, that's how to be a professional librarian, to be a *paraprofessional* you can sometimes get a 2year or even 4year degree in library science, and get in that way, or mostly, just take the civil service exam, for public/county libraries and such, just to get foot in door...trouble w/working in colleges and stuff--which is great, btw--is that often the para jobs, helpers and such, are kind of reserved for students and are hard to come by....
Another *great* way, is that almost all libraries have *volunteer* section, and many of these volunteers, are really just angling to get on w/paid positition--this is common knowledge--and that is often considered the real pool of applicants when jobs open up, and would be first thing I looked into...
And finally, the grim news: more and more our pasts come back to haunt us, as online databases have changed everything...why do you think I became a truck driver? Broke my heart that I lost that career, but the professional world can be unforgiving: I had the best library job in the world, up in ohio: computer world just beginning, i was a spanish university cataloger, spent my days going over old argentine religious texts, and assigning them call numbers, had a new harley, girlfriend...happy life...but it's over....I went from this kindly quiet old guy fiddling w/books...to running around columbus oh with a s&w .38 special stuck in my belt, all strung out, robbing people, fucked, life over...one more time....