Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Healthcare, especially nursing, can be physically taxing. Lots of strain and repetitive stress injuries.
Dentistry seems to be age proof. My childhood dentist, who was also my mom's dentist in her teens, just retired this year in his 80s.
I don't think dentistry really counts because you are effectively a business owner and any business owner that can successfully market their practice to clients will not be subject to ageism. Admittedly dentists have the advantage that their customers are generally repeat customers and there is probably an inertia to switching unless people move, insurance changes or they screw something up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tech isn't inherently ageist, IMO. It's a field that:
1) is fast paced
2) rewards current skills
3) rewards demonstrable output
As we age (myself included), fewer of us have the energy or inclination to meet those criteria. Hell, I didn't want to keep pace with emerging tech 5 years into my career, let alone 20. Layer on top of that the demands of middle-age - families, aging parents, life in general - and there's a disconnect between the demands of the industry and what some aging people are able to deliver.
There are PLENTY of 50, 60, 70 year olds in tech. But, as a percentage, they drop off over time because of the above.
Disagree as they are constantly trying to use offshore ppl. I've seen good ppl given the ax or forced into early retirement in their 40s.
Anonymous wrote:GenX is about to become Madame President.
Anonymous wrote:Tech isn't inherently ageist, IMO. It's a field that:
1) is fast paced
2) rewards current skills
3) rewards demonstrable output
As we age (myself included), fewer of us have the energy or inclination to meet those criteria. Hell, I didn't want to keep pace with emerging tech 5 years into my career, let alone 20. Layer on top of that the demands of middle-age - families, aging parents, life in general - and there's a disconnect between the demands of the industry and what some aging people are able to deliver.
There are PLENTY of 50, 60, 70 year olds in tech. But, as a percentage, they drop off over time because of the above.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tech isn't inherently ageist, IMO. It's a field that:
1) is fast paced
2) rewards current skills
3) rewards demonstrable output
As we age (myself included), fewer of us have the energy or inclination to meet those criteria. Hell, I didn't want to keep pace with emerging tech 5 years into my career, let alone 20. Layer on top of that the demands of middle-age - families, aging parents, life in general - and there's a disconnect between the demands of the industry and what some aging people are able to deliver.
There are PLENTY of 50, 60, 70 year olds in tech. But, as a percentage, they drop off over time because of the above.
One would think the people with young kids are in their 30s and one’s with aging parents are in their 60s. That leaves 45-55 open for those types of work.
Anonymous wrote:Tech isn't inherently ageist, IMO. It's a field that:
1) is fast paced
2) rewards current skills
3) rewards demonstrable output
As we age (myself included), fewer of us have the energy or inclination to meet those criteria. Hell, I didn't want to keep pace with emerging tech 5 years into my career, let alone 20. Layer on top of that the demands of middle-age - families, aging parents, life in general - and there's a disconnect between the demands of the industry and what some aging people are able to deliver.
There are PLENTY of 50, 60, 70 year olds in tech. But, as a percentage, they drop off over time because of the above.
Anonymous wrote:I would say accounting. Not necessarily for permanent jobs, but if you want to be an interim or do project consulting, there is usually something available. As a colleague put it, there may not be a lot of regular jobs, but there's a lot of work that needs to get done.
Anonymous wrote:Healthcare, especially nursing, can be physically taxing. Lots of strain and repetitive stress injuries.
Dentistry seems to be age proof. My childhood dentist, who was also my mom's dentist in her teens, just retired this year in his 80s.
Anonymous wrote:Porn.
So shocking there’s mature and granny porn, but there is!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in healthcare. We hired a 70 something in April at top pay and she just left because she was poached for even higher pay by another hospital.
Nurse?
No, I'm in laboratory science/blood bank. As long as you can keep up with the ever-changing software and your eyes are good enough to look through a microscope we don't care how old you are.