Blue-collar income fuels filmmaker's dream
For longshoreman, dual career provides fulfillment and a living
Joe Van Blunk’s father was a longshoreman. Many of his uncles were longshoremen. But his dad didn’t want him to end up on the Philadelphia docks doing one of the most difficult jobs around, loading and unloading ships.
Despite his dad’s wishes, at age 18, Van Blunk became a longshoreman.
But his career story doesn’t end there, even though you might think this backbreaking work would have been all-consuming, leaving him little time to follow his real passion. And yes, he did have a real passion, just like many workers out there who spend too much time daydreaming about the career they always wanted.
Van Blunk always wanted to be involved in the film industry. And today, at 52, he is a documentary filmmaker. Well, he’s actually a filmmaker/longshoreman.
After years of pining for a job in film and dabbling in the profession, writing screenplays that were never sold, he finally took the plunge in the late 1990s and made his first film, "Echoes From a Ghost Minyan." “We did it by the seat of our pants, borrowing film equipment, reading books on filmmaking. But we did it,” he says proudly.
The film is about an old Jewish section of South Philadelphia that had all but disappeared. Van Blunk’s interest in the topic came from having grown up a Catholic kid in the once-thriving immigrant Jewish community where he was often a “shabbos goy,” turning off lights for religious Jews who were unable to do so during the Sabbath.
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He is one of a growing number of individuals who are keeping their day jobs but also following their dreams and embarking on long-pined-for careers. His story is the second in a series about working stiffs I have been profiling who were able to find their career bliss by creating unusual work situations. The last profile was on Allen Sheffield, a high-powered corporate accountant who also ran a youth ministry.
Both Van Blunk and Sheffield were able to create the right job fit for them by taking on two careers at once, something author Marci Alboher calls “the slash effect,” which she explores in her book “One Person/Multiple Careers.”
Alboher points to Department of Labor figures that show about 7.7 million people work multiple jobs, about 1 in 19 or roughly 5 percent of the population.
One of the main factors driving the trend, she says, is that people are working longer than ever today and not retiring at the same rate as they did in the past. “They want to be able to incorporate all types of different experiences in their careers,” she said. So instead of making a wholesale career change, she adds, “they are looking at careers in a more holistic way.”
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People who decide to pursue a second career, she advises, should think about what they liked to do as children. They should also be prepared to start at the bottom if it’s something they’ve never done before or only dabbled in.
Also, don’t be afraid to approach your supervisor at your present job with a well-crafted plan of how you can make an additional career work. And remember, timing is everything. “If things are heating up at your present job then you might want to wait until a slow period,” she says.
There are several reasons a dual career might be the way to go — you need the income from one job to fund your passion; you love both jobs; or you just want to try something new without leaving the security of your present gig.
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