Done a bunch of different things, mostly all farming or automotive oriented. My dad always worked in shops or ran salvage yards, so grew up either tearing cars apart or putting them together. Worked for a stone mason who also ran a hog farm for a few years in my teens, as well as for another guy who made baskets for a living and needed someone to help keep his small mountain farm up.
After my family moved to the Carolinas when I was 19, I worked in various shops and junkyards. In my early 20's I got fed up with cars and worked on a horse farm for 7 years. Decided to try auto repair again with a friend, but we never really had the right location or setup so couldn't make enough money.
Got my first regular paycheck, corporate job in '14 as a part-time counter man at Oreilly Auto Parts, made hub store manager by late '15. Did that about 6 months before I decided it wasn't for me, too much administrative bull**** and not enough parts selling (which I love doing). Dropped back to Asst Manager at a smaller store, loved that but doesn't make enough money with today's inflated prices on everything and me being the only one working (wife has always stayed home and took care of the house and the kid, also has health issues, she has a small craft business started but doesn't make much yet).
So I just started a new job as a PM tech on forklifts a couple weeks ago. So far I like it, it's not automotive but uses the same skill set, it's hot and dirty but that's never bothered me. And it's super easy as at this entry level. starts out at 16/hr, not great but decent, and can work whatever overtime I want/can get. And promotions to higher pay levels seem easy to get if you learn well.
I'm considering going to school for Mechanical Design or Engineering. I'm 35 now, and in the next 5 or 10 years i'd like to be at the 50/hr mark (about 100k/year in salary terms). My family immigrated here from Canada, and had many problems trying to get legal (long story, as much due to mistake my dad made as it is due to a biased system). I got legal permanent residence about 3.5 years ago, and am about to apply for full citizenship soon. So, I kinda got a slow start in life, need to push hard and make up for it

I really like putting things together and/or making them work better, and growing up poor figuring out to make what you had work has taught me a lot. Figure engineering is the next logical step to take. Maybe then i'll finally figure out why engineers put bolts in those stupid places you can barely reach lol.
annnd just realized i wrote a book hehe, sorry guys