Most People's Idea of an Engineer

BREA, California – Back down at my local pub I was once again reminiscing with my fellow retirees about our days in the petroleum industry and the subject of engineers arose.  This was a natural follow-up to our discussion of geologists [2P News, February 14, 2022].  Since most engineers, like geologists, are loathe to admit their profession, we discussed how to determine if a person is in fact an engineer.  With several more rounds of Boddington’s Ale with some Guinness Extra Stout thrown in, we came up with this list:

You might be an engineer if…

    • You’ve been asked if you know how to drive a railroad train at least 100 times.
    • You’ve been asked if the “P. Eng.” after your name is short for Penguin.
    • Your calculator goes out to 16 decimal places.
    • Your spouse hates it when you try to explain what you do for a living.
    • You get politics and parlor tricks confused.
    • You wonder why an engineer is never the hero in a movie.
    • The damned thing keeps exploding.
    • Two plus two is exactly four, provided you’re using base-10 numbers.
    • You have no idea what your shirt or pants size is.
    • The salesperson at Best Buy can’t answer any of your questions.
    • You laugh the loudest at jokes about geologists.
    • You have a drawer full of old power cords.
    • When asked if the glass is half-empty or half-full you say it’s twice as big as it needs to be.
    • You think “Dilbert” is a documentary, not a comic strip.
    • The field operators hate to see you coming.
    • You love to point out the technical inaccuracies in science-fiction movies.
    • The only calculator worth having is a Hewlett-Packard.
    • All your dress shirts are short sleeve.

Mind you, my group of retirees are mostly engineers with a landman and a geologist thrown in to stir things up.  We are equal opportunity scolds.  If you can’t laugh at yourself, there are plenty of people who will do it for you.

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Sir William Shortspeare
Sir William Shortspeare, hereditary lord of Bentknee Manor in Slopshire, has over fifty years’ experience at being a devout prig. Staying one step ahead of the nancy boys at Clovenhoof College, he graduated with a degree in Nothing Special. Thus eminently qualified, he joined British Petroleum and was immediately posted to Houston. After enduring one summer of Texas heat, he spent the remainder of his career demanding a transfer. Now retired, he casts a jaundiced eye on the world from Southern California and reports his findings to 2P News.

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