.... far far away

I just thought I pop that thread in here as a lot of non-IT people ask how to get there. So here my journey.
I am coming from a complete different background myself. I wasn't able to go into IT due to my education (long story) but I did get a degree in Electronic-Engineering. Then I ended up in driving lorry and coach / bus - so clearly nothing IT related again.
THen I left Germany and moved to Ireland. In Ireland you can find most big IT companies because that is where they have their call centres (bear that in mind if you are in a similar situation).
I started to work in Xerox as tech support agent - they hired anything and everything which spoke a different language. They offered non-officiel MCP / MCSE courses so I blasted through them during lunch and spare time.
From that point on I did similar jobs in different companies and with every move I increased not just my level of exposure to more IT related tasks but also knowledge ... Again in spare time I worked towards MCSEs .. (NT4 and 2000)...
I then found a job in a large online casino in Gibraltar .. I am sure the big names on my CV / Resume helped a lot (worked there for Xerox, HP, Symantec, IBM and Intel) but nontheless, I managed to get a 1st line job where I was working part time as 2nd line / infrastructure engineer.
Needless to say, a lot is based on the CV / Resume as well and how you can sell yourself. If I worked with a new technology, I made sure I know more than just the basics so I can put it in confidence on my CV / Resume.
Then I made yet another jump and moved to England and had the chance to work again first as 1st line monkey, then infrastrucuture where I then hit the exams hard. In 5 years I got 3 MCITPs, 3 VCPs (and some I forgot) and more importantly, a lot of additional skills I don't have a cert for (Linux / Cisco to name a few).
Since I moved to England (2007) I doubled my salary and worked in a few of the largest finance companies out there, increasing my technical skill set even more (I do slow down on certs though).
I also worked as technical architect, designing complicated infrastructures, been responsible for datacenter consolidation and moves and the list goes on.
Whats the time frame ? I left German and worked for Xerox in 2001 so it took me all in all 10 odd years until I started to get "proper" jobs

And you know what the first piece of kit was I touched which made me realise that I REALLY want to go into IT ? A small Parallel Port Print Server from Xerox ... At that time I was even wondering why someone would need two PCs and what the hell is a network (Remember Token Ring lol).
So there you go .. It wasn't easy, but certainly worth it