From IT Intern to Sr. VMware Engineer
So I'd like to think I've been a decent person. I know so many people over the years have been nice to me and other's jealous of the stride I've overcome. Along the way I've found things out about myself that I never knew existed. I was once a very arrogant and dickish person to now I've changed my ways as I've gotten older to be a more humbled and kind person in the workplace and this has followed me into my personal life.
I am human after all and I do admit I've made mistakes along the way. But the journey and the ride have been amazing.
A little backstory about me:
I was born 4 months premature with only a 16% chance to live in the 1st 72 hours, I had 45% brain damage and was told I'd be a mentally-disabled person for life. My gracious mother said no and sent me off to boarding school after boarding school for me to get smarter and be more socially acceptable. It was a struggle I will admit, mainly in the aspect of one key area everyone takes for granted, social interactions. See while many went to public school and had tons of friends I completely skipped public school for the institutional life.
After graduating boarding school is 2003, I went onto a college for all the wrong reasons just because it had a learning disability program. I enrolled in Forestry since I love nature. I got a degree from Paul Smiths college in Forestry in 2007 but only worked for the DEC for 4 months since it just wasn't going to be a fiscally-feasible long-term career.
I started my Associates degree at local community college in computer science and I completed that course in 2009.
I landed my 1st intern job at a newspaper company for 3 months only to be told I'd never make it in IT and that I was too stupid to ever figure it out. I was persistent beyond measure and I landed another job two weeks later at a boarding school, and I worked there for 5 months before realizing just because I lived in boarding schools working for one was too personal for me absorb. I left because it brought back too many memories as a young adult.
I was unemployed for maybe 2 weeks and landed the job as a help desk for President Container Group, I was only there a month and I got conscripted into the IT manager role at 25, a position typically reserved for people much older than me. I had no real certifications to my name just a drive to learn. I will be frank I failed allot, I lacked social skills yet alone corporate social skills and behaviors. I struggled allot along the way. After 3 years of working there I went from a lowbie IT person to a trial by fire experience IT professional versed in networking, desktops, server, storage, security, help desk, and VMware. I still talk to these co-workers on a daily basis.
I ended up leaving PCG for a company that I thought was a good fit but the MSP turned out to be a flop. I then went onto another MSP for 3 months and this was just a place holder.
I then went onto a company in NYC for a few months in the wall street area to work with a bank to setup a VMware 5.5 datacenter and that was allot of fun.
Then I found Mastercraft Industries, a company with a IT infrastructure 15 years in the past. It was my job to modernize the infrastructure solo. I was tasked to make it better with nothing and I had to propose, plan, design, deploy, implement and then manage the overhaul of the companies IT needs. I found it to be the most fun I ever had in my life. I took great pride it being able to implement the entire package by myself over the course of 5 weeks. I ended u leaving Mastercraft because the company has fiscal structuring. I left on good terms and still talk to my co-workers there to this day.
After Mastercraft I did a contractor based role for a local clinic and found out that had a HIPPA violation and when I voice my concern about the practice of covering up the matter they fired me. I was only there a 3 weeks.
Afterwards I did a small stint as a IT manager for a college but found it not to be the job I wanted to do as state employees working in IT that are unionized don't like new people and left them after two weeks.
Which bring me to my current role: Lead VMware Engineer for a hospital of 14,000 end users. This hospital is amazing, they have such an amazing environment and It's my responsibility to manage the entire VMware landscape which is made up of 50+ hosts and over 4000 VM's spanning multiple datacenter with multiple clusters and they themselves spanning long-distance WAN's. This environment is like my dream job. We are implementing Simplivity in Q1/2 of 2017 and thus will be in the cutting edge of gen 4 hyperconverance and we just implemented a Nexus 7/9k upgrade to the infrastructure to replace the 5/9k's from 6 years ago or whatever the models of Neuxs where used back them. I'm honestly away from the networking team but work closely with them. I'm purely VMware and Windows Administration. They want me to get my VCDX, so that's my core focus.
It's been a ride along the way and I've had ups and downs, some had choice words for me and others rooted me on, but the one thing I have is the determination and drive to accomplish ever goal I set for myself. Not every dream is on a beaten trail, sometimes you need to forge your own...