In reply to pheller:
A friend of mine is a GIS Specialist/Application Developer for a utility company in CT.
Me - 46 - Electrical Designer (architectural engineering). I design building electrical systems. Mostly for the pharmaceutical industry, but did supermarkets and retail in the past along with a smattering of high-end residential. I've also been a project manager and client manager. My 21st anniversary in the industry will be next month. A side effect of this is a general understanding of MEP (Mechanical Electrical & Plumbing) systems and the various Codes covering them. I am comfortable with (and have) almost completely re-wiring a house if I need to.
How did I get here? Not very directly. Out of high school, I went to an engineering school (Drexel University) for mechanical engineering. Because I wanted to design cars. Within the first year or so, I realized engineers don't really design cars. Engineers make the design work, but "designers" design cars - and that is generally a totally different educational path (more art school). So once I learned what engineers actually "do", I became somewhat disillusioned and quit.
After a year back in the "real world" I decided since I enjoyed writing, I would go to the local community college for journalism. Did that for two years before realizing I didn't really have what it takes to dedicate my life to a career (and journalism is pretty much an all-consuming career). So back to the "real world" again (although I was working at a comic book store while in school).
Since my retail job was barely paying me enough to pay my bills, I'd watch morning re-runs before going to work and see adverts for computer drafting schools. I thought, "hmm... sitting in front of a computer and drawing doesn't sound like a bad way to make a $..." and I'm lucky there's a school a few miles from my house. So I signed up for the night CAD course and 10 weeks later had a certificate that said I know how to use AutoCAD. The course instructor liked me, and recommended me to a small engineering firm in NJ that specialized in supermarkets. I interviewed and a few months later had a job in the Electrical group. I moved up through the ranks from a straight red-line CAD operator (takes manually marked up drawings from an engineer and inputs the info into the computer) to a designer and within about 4 years eventually a project/client manager, almost tripling my salary over that period.
While supermarket design is not technically difficult, the schedule and quantity of projects was often insane. After almost 5 years, I was burnt out and needed a change. A former coworker had called me about a year prior asking me if I was interested and moving. At the time, I said I was OK, but I kept him in mind. Sitting in the office at 9 PM on Tuesday, ready to shoot myself, I dug up his phone number: "Hi - I have to get out of here." I interviewed the next day. He made me an offer Weds afternoon. I accepted and gave my notice on Thu. It was the end of the year and I had use-or-lose vacation time. Because of that, my last day was Friday - although I was there until about 8 PM Friday trying to clean up loose ends.
I started at this job on Jan 8, 2001 and have been here ever since. Do I like it? Not really, but as I often say to people, "I didn't really choose to be an engineer, engineering chose me - it's just what I am." When I was in engineering school, I knew the last thing I was interested in was electrical. I prefer visual "things" and electrical principles are somewhat difficult to visualize. That said, I am paid very well for someone without an engineering degree. Few people seem to get into this field, so job security is good. My direct boss doesn't really micro-manage us as a dept so our stress level is pretty low. If there is one big downside, the commute (over an hour each way) sucks balls and I have no desire to live in NJ.
If there is one overall take-away from this long, rambling diatribe, it's that sometimes life takes you in strange directions you would have never expected and often success can depend on being in the right place at the right time and making the best of opportunities presented to you.