Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

What Do You Do?


Lisa

Recommended Posts

Lisa Mentor

This topic was started several years ago. We have so many new people on the forum and I thought that it would show some insight. I remember, it did for me. We had homemakers, scientist, engineers, medical techs, therapists, lawyers, teachers, nurses, MD's, professors, stay at home moms who home school.

It is so interesting that we all have a common bond, yet we do.......(I'll leave at that)

I raised my kids in a small NC town and my husband worked for a major airline and he was MIA a lot (especially during the teen years ). I was always involved in community projects. For several years I have been involved in our local Preservation Commission to insure the historical integrity of our town.

What do you do?


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



  • Replies 134
  • Created
  • Last Reply
Tritty Rookie

I think you're right. It's so interesting to hear what everyone is about...

I work part time for a publishing company in the advertising division. We sell How To Magazines and Books. I work with the sales reps selling the ad space in the magazines. I also watch kids two days a week and coach volleyball. I have 3 little ones - 4,2, and 1. My husband works for Children's Hospital in the endocrine research division (not clinical research - scientific research).

Life is crazy at our house - but lots of fun too!

amybeth Enthusiast

I teach 7th graders!

Each summer I work a "fun" part time job and take a few classes.

Right now, the majority of my time is spent getting my new house unpacked, fixed up, and cozy!

Hope to research and possibly pursue some law school once we're settled in :)

LisaJ Apprentice

I am a Clinical Laboratory Scientist. I am the person who runs all the lab tests everyone talks about on this site :)

JennyC Enthusiast

I am pursuing a Master of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology degree. My boyfriend (8+ years together) works with commercial satellite systems--for the most part. We have one son who is nearly 4 years old. He is the only one to be diagnosed so far. We enjoy doing various outdoor activities such as camping, fishing, and mushroom hunting.

Nantzie Collaborator

I'm a SAHM; Jenny is almost 5 and Mikey is 3.5. I used to be a medical transcriptionist - (note impressive semicolon usage ;) ).

My husband is an IT manager at a mortgage company. He's also helping me build a website for travel reviews and recommendations for people with celiac disease.

I remember this thread last time, and how surprising it was how many people had science and medical careers. Glad you restarted it Lisa!

Nancy

corinne Apprentice

I'm a chemistry professor. Yes I do enjoy blowing things up. :P

There always seems to be a disproportionate number of science types in forums. I guess many of us science types hang out more than average on the computer.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



wowzer Community Regular

I work at a bank as a Customer Service Representaive. Really a fancy name for a teller. I work the drive-in most of the time. I have 2 grown children 20 and 27. I have a 5 year old grandson and a 3 year old granddaughter. My daughter is expecting her 3rd child June 22nd. (another girl).

jnclelland Contributor

Math professor here - so add me to the geek list! :)

Jeanne

tiredofdoctors Enthusiast

Physical Therapist -- VERY geeky! Nothing but Math & Sciences, here! I'm the one that loves Physics in the family!! Of course, that's all PT is -- physics of the body! DH is a Naval Architect (engineering degree) and his Masters is in Computer Science. A match made in heaven. Right now, I'm non-practicing, and trying to figure out what I can get involved in . . . . . I am, though, volunteering for the Susan G. Kohmann activities that are happening in our city. I used to play the piano until my brain decided that converting the notes to my fingers on the keys wasn't something it wanted to do! I still sing -- but don't think I have the control over my voice that I used to. My daughter thinks I still do -- it's an ongoing debate.

I have a son, 24 who is the most well-rounded person I've met. He is majoring in advertising and will graduate next year (THANK GOODNESS) He is VERY MUCH English, History, Geography oriented, but also has an appreciation for the sciences. He plays the most remarkable Jazz saxophone -- he has an Alto and a Baritnone sax. Of course, he also has an acoustic guitar, electric guitar, electric bass, banjo and clarinet. I have a daughter, 21, who is majoring in speech language pathology. Very math & sciences, like her mother. She, too, though has an appreciation for the arts. She plays the drums, xylophone, marimba, piano and sings opera.

Okay, I'm finished with my TMI!

mftnchn Explorer

I'm a marriage and family therapists, mostly do clinical supervision of budding therapists in China. :)

tiredofdoctors Enthusiast
I'm a marriage and family therapists, mostly do clinical supervision of budding therapists in China. :)

What a great profession! How did you get to supervising in China? Sounds like a pretty fascinating journey.

tiredofdoctors Enthusiast
I'm a SAHM; Jenny is almost 5 and Mikey is 3.5.

Nancy

SAHM's are SOOOOOOOOO busy. What a hard job. I was lucky enough to get to stay at home with the first one for one year, and the second one for 3.5 years. It was really rewarding, but it was hard work!

Nantzie Collaborator
SAHM's are SOOOOOOOOO busy. What a hard job. I was lucky enough to get to stay at home with the first one for one year, and the second one for 3.5 years. It was really rewarding, but it was hard work!

I had no idea how hard it would be when I started. I was 31 when I had Jenny and thought I knew what was coming. After all, I had my own business, had employees. How hard could parenting be? Ha!

You know how it is, the only perfect parent is the one who doesn't have kids yet. That was me. Then I had kids. LOL!

Nancy

tiredofdoctors Enthusiast
You know how it is, the only perfect parent is the one who doesn't have kids yet. Nancy

Truer words were never spoken! You know . . . they have all kinds of books, shelves and shelves of them, instructing you about their first year of life. It's not until they're growing up that you realize, "That was EASY. THIS is the hard part -- where are the books???????"

I was at a drugstore when I had two sick kids. Brandon was 3 1/2, Ash was 12 weeks. I was getting their prescriptions. Then, I had to get other things (Get Better Bears, etc.), so I had Ashley in the snuggli and Brandon in the cart. He was coughing and wheezing, she was crying like you can't believe, and I was writing a check in the line. The girl at the register was taking my information and said, "Do you work?" I was so frustrated, I just looked at her and said, "Like a dog, I do." She said, "I MEANT at a job." I said, "You don't think this is a job? You try it." She finally gave up. I think she just wanted my coughing, hacking kid and my screaming her lungs out kid and their argumentative mother to get out of the store!

little d Enthusiast

I am 36 and I have my certificate in Medical Assisting if I worked in a medical office I would be the one to take your history of what made you come to the doctors office in the first place, vitals and such. I also have my licence to take blood as well. But currently I work at local hospital, working in the nursery with the newborns and the transition babies who are not sick enough for the NICU. I am currantly looking for a day time job I think after 4yrs of 3 to 4 night a week is enough of no sleep while working. My husband of 7 years together 8yrs, He is 33yrs works for a distribution warehouse biggest clinets are Coke, Mobil, verison. Our daughter Hannah is 7yrs old. We got confused on which came first the wedding or the baby, we just had a little too much fun with out the alcohol. and drugs, we just had a day off from work. And we have a Boxer his name is Tank and a Pit Bull his name is Mac he is fixing to bye! bye! Not Tank!! and a beta fish his name is King.

little d Enthusiast

Oh yah! I also like to brake my left foot every few years. Don't recommend it :o:o

Donna

Kyalesyin Apprentice

I'm just finishing college, and when I do I'm joining the police.

My wife is a semi-proffesional webdesigner. She'll be a pro when she's finished her university course. Anyone wants a website doing, she works cheap.....

Kyalesyin Apprentice
I'm a chemistry professor. Yes I do enjoy blowing things up. :P

There always seems to be a disproportionate number of science types in forums. I guess many of us science types hang out more than average on the computer.

That is so cool. My chemistry proffesor is about the most amazing person I know. He's been helping me revise for my biology exams because he actually knows more about biology than my biology teacher...

blueeyedmanda Community Regular

My fiance and I are to be married in the fall and we hope to start a family soon afterward. We both work at a large hospital in the area. I work in the Cancer Institute doing clinical trials and he does Shipping and Receiving. We met at this hospital when we both worked as Lab Techs. I still spend some nights in the lab as over time.

It sure is a crazy life.

tiredofdoctors Enthusiast

Sometimes crazy lives are the most fun -- and can give you the BEST memories!!!!! I think it's pretty neat how you met your fiance. Of course, I'm a romantic!

Cheri A Contributor

I am mostly a SAHM with a few part time jobs. I work at a church as a childcare worker during the school year a few mornings/week. I also work at the mall at CJ Banks about 10-15 hours/week. I also work at a dental office as a receptionist a few nights a week and file clerk. But I am quitting that job at the end of this month. It is not flexible enough and I can't stand the person I have to work directly with. My DH is an IT Director for a company with locations in MN, CO and WI. He has to travel some. The dental office will not let me have that time off so I end up scrambling for childcare. I'm also really looking into a WAH thing that I would be able to work around my family.

blueeyedmanda Community Regular
Sometimes crazy lives are the most fun -- and can give you the BEST memories!!!!! I think it's pretty neat how you met your fiance. Of course, I'm a romantic!

Aww thanks! We worked side by side (as we were dating steady) for 2 and 1/2 years in the lab. I then went dayshift to come to this job and for a few months we barely saw each other, he was on 2nd shift and by the time he came home I was sleeping. In Jan of 06, he got his dayshift job. So it is much nicer. Neither of us work weekends now either. We used to work every 3rd weekend in the lab, but on seperate weekends, so one weekend was free and then one I worked and then he worked. So we would take a long weekend every 6th weekend, a Mon/Fri off or something to that extent. A few months before I left the lab, we were on the same weekend, I worked 2nd shift and he worked 3rd. It worked well.

It's much nicer now though.

ptkds Community Regular

I am a SAHM of 4 wonderful kids. I am currently studying to be a Medical Transcriptionist.

ptkds

ArtGirl Enthusiast

My working career was mostly clerical, word processing, typesetting and desktop publishing. I had a home transcribing business and mostly transcribed reports from psychologist and a detective agency. About ten years ago I began to pursue my lifetime dream of painting and began to learn how to draw and how to paint with watercolors. Three years ago I started selling my artwork, and now I am teaching watercolor in my home. I love to draw with pencil and colored pencils but my first love is watercolor.

I have been an avid gardener and birdwatcher. I am always happy when I am out in a park or other natural setting.

My husband and I are retired now. He has done some counseling work as regard to helping churches and members resolve conflicts without going to court. He is what I call a Biblical scholar - studies from the original Greek and is learning some Hebrew. He has written a commentary on Revelation and many articles relevant to sections of scripture. (He has these articles on a websit and if anyone is interested in the link, PM me.) Living with us are two small, elderly dogs - a Chihuahua and a mix of some sort. We adopted both dogs from a rescue agency.

I commend those of you who are stay-at-home-moms. That is the highest profession.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - cristiana replied to KathyR37's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      4

      New here

    2. - trents replied to KathyR37's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      4

      New here

    3. - Theresa2407 replied to Theresa2407's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      2

      Probiotics

    4. - KathyR37 replied to KathyR37's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      4

      New here


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,817
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    sleuth
    Newest Member
    sleuth
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • cristiana
      Hi @KathyR37 and a very warm welcome here.  I am so very sorry that you are going through all of this. I just wanted to check, have you ever been tested for any other gastrointestinal conditions? Cristiana  
    • trents
      @KathyR37, I would suspect that in addition to gluten intolerance, you have other food intolerances/sensitivities. This is very common in the celiac community. The most common offenders are oats, dairy, soy, corn and eggs with dairy and oats being the big two. Have you considered this? Have you tried keeping a food diary to detect patterns?
    • Theresa2407
      thank you for your advice.   I have always taken them and I use Stonehedge because they are in a glass bottle, but don't have to be refrigerated.  I also like they are 3rd party tested and state gluten free. But you never know if something better has come alone over the years.
    • KathyR37
      Thank you for your response. I have already learned about the info you sent but i appreciate your effort. I am the only one in my family cursed by this disease. I have to cook for them too. I make sure that my utensils are free of gluten and clean after using them for other food. I use non-porous pots and pans and  gloves when cooking for them. One huge problem I have is a gag reflex out of this world and if something doesn't taste good it is not going down. Most commercially made breads and such taste like old cardboard.Pastas are about the same. I did find one flour that I like and use it regularly, but it is so expensive! All gluten free food is way more expensive. I only eat twice a day because I cannot afford to buy all that. We live on a very low income so my food purchases are quite limited.
    • Scott Adams
      What you've described—the severe weight loss, the cycle of medications making things worse, and the profound fear of eating before leaving the house—is a heavy burden to carry for 15 years. It is absolutely not your fault. While everyone's journey with celiac is different, the struggles with the learning curve, social isolation, and dietary grief are feelings many in the community know all too well. Your question about whether you should just eat what you want and manage the symptoms is a heartbreaking one, born from years of frustration. It's crucial to know that the diarrhea is a sign of ongoing damage to your small intestine from gluten, and simply managing the symptom with Imodium doesn't stop that internal harm or the risk of other complications. The fact that you are still getting sick within an hour of eating, even while trying to be gluten-free, is a huge red flag that something isn't right. This could be due to cross-contamination in your kitchen (e.g., using a shared toaster, colander, or condiment jars), hidden gluten in foods, or the possibility of another concurrent condition like refractory celiac disease. Don't give up!  This article has some detailed information on how to be 100% gluten-free, so it may be helpful (be sure to also read the comments section.):    
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.