What did you want to be when you were a kid?
Stop right there, dear reader! You have an answer to this fun question. Consider how your early wishes morphed over the years and where you are today as you read what our kind colleagues share about their journeys. In this column, adopted from the familiar “Heard on the Street” format, we offer our responders a chance to answer the question posed in the title. These are their replies reported verbatim.
Youthful Wishes
When I was a child, I was 1) good at card games 2) liked telling funny stories. So, logically, I wanted to be a stand-up comedian who owned a Casino.
Leslie Woodward
Oakville, Ontario, CANADA
Magnum, P.I. Mostly because he wore a Detroit Tiger ball cap.
Don Montroy
Rockford, Michigan
HORSE TRAINER / INSTRUCTOR!
Almost from the time I could walk I had an infatuation with horses. I’m pretty sure I probably drove the local stable owner to his 6 pack of beer (or more) every night – I would just never go away! It was, however, where I would learn at an early age the value of exchanging child labor for riding privileges 😊 In the summer I would be at the barn first thing in the morning until after evening feeding. In between I would clean stalls, water horses help tack up horses for the next group heading out for a ride. Brush, feed, put up hay, soap up the bridles and saddles. And never, one time felt my free labor went to waste. Just being around the animals I loved was more than enough pay for me. I did carry that on once I had my own stable. The years and kids have come and gone – the barn door is closed but the love for all things Horses remains!!
Judy Taranovich
Proctor, Vermont
As a kid, I always wanted to be a baseball player. I remember the first time my dad took my brother and me to Comiskey Park to see the White Sox play. We always arrived a little late and as we were walking up the steps to see the field, the crowd roared and I never heard a sound that loud! We got to the top step and I saw the field for the first time. It was surreal to see that green grass and white lines, the slope of the field and pitcher’s mound, and players on the field that I felt I could almost reach out and touch, even though we were 100 feet away. I was in love at that point. Down through the years, my goal was to catch a batted ball. I came close in 1968 and then this….https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=biuiPVu5IdQ
Bruce Swiecicki
National Propane Gas Association
Tinley Park, Illinois
As a kid, I wanted to be a veterinarian. Growing up I was surrounded by cats having kittens, playing with dogs, and riding horses. I also remember that after working as a sales associate at the mall, I wanted to be a buyer and attend Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising. Either one would have been nice. But as fate would have it, working with my father and now my daughter in our family business was the best decision.
Julie Johnson
Baldwin Park, California
I’m sure this may come as a shock to those people that know me, but in the eighth grade, I wanted to be a priest. Once you stop laughing, let me explain. I grew up in a French-Canadian household, spoke fluent French, and attended church on a regular basis with my grandparents, who were from New Brunswick, and only spoke French. I was actively involved in CYO activities but chose not to become an altar boy, despite their recommendation, because I was more interested in playing sports.
My parents did not want me to attend the public high school and I was enrolled in a private boy’s Catholic high school. After my first high school dance in October, when we had busloads of girls attend from the area girls-only schools, it became apparent to me that priesthood was not in my future. However, I did become a CCD teacher when my kids had to take those classes. LOL
Jerry Schimmel
Cumberland, Rhode Island
I was always fascinated with military airplanes and wanted to be a fighter pilot. I never realized that dream, but selling bobtails has been a blast.
Jason Soulon
Shawnee, Kansas
Dreams Realized
As I grew up, I was always around the family business. With that, I knew at a young age what I wanted to do. I wanted to run the family business. Never thought of doing anything else. The business was a full appliance dealer and propane, since 1945. Yes I sold appliances, but I knew this was not the direction I wanted to go as a kid. I always would be in the truck learning routes and how propane, in general, works. I really wanted to concentrate on propane sales and service, not appliances. Now, I am running the propane business and it is what I wanted to do as a kid.
Richard Strycharz Jr.
Walter’s Propane
Sunderland, Massachusetts
As a kid I enjoyed helping my Dad in his propane business by working in the office. I always wanted to do more than just dusting the appliances! I wanted to do more of the bookkeeping, but he had a bookkeeper for that! I eventually got to do more as a teenager and enjoyed it. After a short stint of wanting to be a pharmacist like an older sister, I went back to getting educated in business and bookkeeping!! Full circle!
Susan Peterson
Bird Island, Minnesota
Bob’s boss! Many have heard this story, but when I was 12, I turned to my dad and said, “you better be nice to me, because someday, I will sign your paycheck.” It was a flippant teenage comment, but as we near his June retirement, I am so thankful to have had the opportunity to work alongside my dad for the last 15 years. Bob has been a mentor to me and so many others inside our company and throughout the industry, it has been a privilege to experience this time with him.
Lauren Clark
Toledo, Ohio
When I was a kid, I wanted to be a teacher. I loved learning and the idea of sharing my knowledge with others. Now that I am grown, I am happy to be using my skills to build relationships, educate, and continually improve the propane industry!
Jessica Johnson
Asheville, North Carolina
My Dad was the Purchasing Agent for one of our area hospitals when I was a kid and I thought the business world was very interesting. As a result, I always wanted to be a secretary. When I got to high school, our “Business Office Education” program was very complete in training us for all the various aspects of office work. My success in the classroom translated to some wonderful opportunities to realize my goal of becoming a secretary!
Rosie Buschur
Dayton, Ohio
Dream Big
Childhood dreams do come true and for those people who have realized theirs, there seems to be a great sense of satisfaction, good fortune, and gratitude. I’ve learned in my lifetime that dreams are not relegated only to youth. In a similar realization that lifelong learning is achievable, I find that creating new dreams, wishing for the stars, and creating spectacular goals helps guide my life in ways I would not have known without being open to the aspirations.
Signing off this month with a quote from Albert Einstein, “Never give up on what you really want to do. The person with big dreams is more powerful than one with all the facts.”
This column was first published in Butane-Propane News in April 2023.