Home handymen (handypersons?) are worth their weight in gold and never without emplyment. I needed one, asked my plumber for a recommendation, called the guy who told me it wasn’t worth his time to come five miles to my house. I finally lucked into one. Plumbers are also never unemployed and I don’t think they are likely to be replaced by robots any time soon.
You are going to need a four year degree from a university to legally teach English in Japan and Taiwan (and probably several other Asian countries).
Some kind of “English Teacher certificate” is not going to get you any where in these countries…
Sushi chef.
Truck driver or bus driver (even a school bus driver) - hey, you said you wanted to be mobile. There always seems to be a big demand for truck drivers. Are you single?
Installing cabinets or fixing doors that stick are part of “carpentry”, too. My current rental has several doors which could use a fix.
Hiya Cuauhtemoc (how should we pronounce that and what does it mean?)
I am a current subscriber to The Caretater Gazette and there is a wide variety of jobs for someone who wants to travel. frequently, someone who is honest and “handy” is all they are looking for.
http://www.caretaker.org/ it’s a good site because they don’t take ads.
I’d be doing it myself except I am UNhandy and I currently have two dogs
Yeah. Did you see this?
It’s like “kwow-TAME-ock.” Actually, you gotta aspirate that second ‘w’, almost like “kwowph-TAME-ock.” I guess that name must have been significant to me sixteen years ago.
Thanks for that link, but I can’t honestly call myself “handy”. You know those people who love to fix things, or even who can tell the difference between things that are working and things that aren’t? I’m not really one of them. Not naturally, anyway. I guess I could learn.
That is what I was going to suggest. My husband is a level III and can work just about anywhere. He’s trained a dyslexic friend to level II (I think… maybe just a I) but the level III stuff (military specs and training others) is what makes him marketable.
One of his certificates is close to expiring and he has to decide if he wants to go for Points (from attending seminars or something) which don’t count in some states or go take the classes and tests again. Either way his company will pay to keep him certified.
The last time it was just a test so I went along and hung out in the hotel room. My first and only time in St. Louis and I only got to see the Arches from a distance. Oh, and a double rainbow, Walmart and a Petco We couldn’t enjoy the nightlife the night before because he needed to study and rest. After the test he was mentally exhausted and we had the 6-7 hour drive home to go. Plus,we just wanted to get back home to the kids.
Move to one of the states that has recently legalized marijuana for medical or recreational use and set up a cultivation facility or dispensary.