<p>I hate sitting at a desk. I'd like to get some sort of job that enables me to be outside, while also be able to see the world. </p>
<p>Anything come to mind that is college-education required?</p>
<p>I hate sitting at a desk. I'd like to get some sort of job that enables me to be outside, while also be able to see the world. </p>
<p>Anything come to mind that is college-education required?</p>
<p>Consulting.</p>
<p>High paying, work-intensive, interactive, lots and lots of traveling.</p>
<p>Environmental Sciences/Engineering?</p>
<p>Forestry, wetland science, wildlife ecology, landscape architect, oceanographic engineering.</p>
<p>ER Nursing</p>
<p>Actually, my dad says this alllll the time, and he’s a sales engineer. He doesn’t have a ton of desk time, and travels around the region a lot. </p>
<p>Wait, I just reread your post, um, depends on what you mean by see the world/ be outside?</p>
<p>Well, that’s what came to mind.</p>
<p>Or hospital (floor) nursing-you can’t even stop for eating or bathroom breaks.</p>
<p>Astronaut?</p>
<p>Travel Agent/Flight Attendant
Doctor (Medical, Veterinary)
Nurse
Construction Worker
Teacher (K-12)</p>
<p>[Amazon.com:</a> 175 Best Jobs Not Behind a Desk: Michael Farr, Laurence Shatkin: Books](<a href=“http://www.amazon.com/175-Best-Jobs-Behind-Desk/dp/159357441X]Amazon.com:”>http://www.amazon.com/175-Best-Jobs-Behind-Desk/dp/159357441X)</p>
<p>My niece majored in Outdoor Adventure Education. She will be working with troubled teens on hiking trips but is also a certified First Responder.</p>
<p>Pilot, Officer in the Army/Navy/Air Force (so long as it’s a field officer, not a desk job. And the navy may be a bit cramped). Non-military related careers: lab scientists, surgeon, and look into being an actuary. Actuarying (basically, risk-assessment) sounds like a dull job until you realize that it requires calculations, finding and making sense of statistics and being able to communicate your results. Actuarying is the closest we’ve come to being able to statistically predict the future, and it’s only in the birth of itself as a field (kinda like physics between Newton and Einstein).</p>
<p>What does being outside mean to you? On an athletic field or golf course? Walking a job site? Rock climbing at a national park? That will help us come up with ideas.</p>
<p>pr, sales, buying</p>
<p>You can most certainly stop for eating or bathroom breaks if you are a floor nurse. My mother is a nurse, and she gets a regular lunch break and goes to the bathroom when she needs to.</p>
<p>Military careers definitely require a lot of travel, especially some job specialties. Also, being a foreign service officer – the State Department website has a lot of good information about that.</p>
<p>Reporter.
Photographer.
Documentary filmmaker.
Rock god.</p>
<p>Oil well firefighter-engineer</p>
<p>I’ve been a nurse for 23 years-what kind of unit is she on, Julliet?</p>
<p>real estate</p>
<p>By outside I guess I mean…outside. Not particularlly doing something or in a certain environment, I just like to be out and about, not in an office behind a desk.</p>
<p>Landscape architecture is actually one of my interests, so that’s an idea.</p>
<p>And by “seeing the world” I mean that I’d like to be able to work in many different countries. 6 months in Brazil, a year in India, would be great.</p>
<p>-Military Officer
-Pilot
-Charter Boat Operator
-Police Officer/Firefighter/EMT
-Geologist</p>