Does it get easier after a few years of being a journey man spark? Not long passed and it’s very stressful at times lol!
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Discuss Is it always stressful! in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
The old adage?when the RAF kindly taught me the basics of flying an aircraft
spot on. i did once manage to damage an open cockpit glider. landing them was advisable as no parachutes.The old adage?
A good landing is one you walk away from.
A great landing is one you can use the aircraft again.
cheeky twot. not quite that old.telectrix was that a T21 could it have been a Dagling, I know your old but?
Sounds similar to my job.Like a jobbing spark. Going around houses, shops etc doing smaller sized jobs. Part that I find stressful is fault finding etc, and trying to do the job neat tidy etc but also trying to be quick. Feel like I’m chasing my tail a lot of the time
I must admit until this thread started I thought the term was well known in many building trades that employed apprenticesSorry I don't know what a "journey man spark" is, but what are you finding stressful?
Now that is insulting to suggest I would remember back that far. ??I must admit until this thread started I thought the term was well known in many building trades that employed apprentices
The term dates back to medieval times when they had trade guilds and the journeyman period started after apprenticeship completion until you were accepted as a master craftsman
I don't think you can really compare two different generations and say it's more "stresfull" now or people deal with things better or worse now etc. Theres a tonne of other social/economic/ technological/educational etc etc differences that all come in to play. The way we are brought up, what, and how we are ( intentionally or otherwise) taught to think about ourselves, others and life in general all have an effect on how people percive themselves in the world and how they deal with difficulties in any form.I think you have a fair point there Mike. I think it has been realised that things weren't being dealt with properly in the past, but we have probably 'over corrected' a bit.
Great advice, thanks!Sounds similar to my job.
A few things I stumbled on,
1, Fault finding takes as long as it takes, sometimes you get lucky sometimes not. Plan your approach, be methodical and rule one thing out before moving on.
2, Plan. Take time to work out what your going to do, how your going to do it and what pit falls you may hit. Setting of drilling and running in only to find your route obstructed leaves you either starting over or leaving a rough looking job. Half an hours thought over a coffee will save time.
3, Don't be afraid to ask for help, everyone has to learn.
4, Don't think your doing a customer favours by saving them money. If something looks iffy replace it, within reason, all that happens is it fails a week later and its your fault.
5, Your boss gets what they pays for, if they could have got better for what they pay, they would have.
6, Dont believe how good people tell you they are until you see it with your own eyes, there are a lot of sparks who think they are way better that they are. In other words dont compare yourself to others BS.
7, Don't beat yourself up, there's plenty of others that are will do it for free.
8, Enjoy your successes and remember them.
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