mrspotatohead wrote:
On another note, I had a job stocking shelves when I was younger, and I would do things like arranging all of the cans with the labels facing exactly the same way (not just visible, but exactly the same angle), or actually make sure every single greeting card was in the right spot, and I ended up getting "laid off" for being too slow--no one cared about the aesthetics, which I think they probably couldn't even see. Most people are blind to minute aesthetics.
Been there. Done that. Got the perfectly-folded, expertly-arranged, symmetrically-stacked t-shirt.
I worked at Goodwill for a while, and I took a long time to do my job. Cognitively, it is harder for me to do something imperfectly than to try for perfection. That means that I start out very slow and very accurate and gradually speed up to somewhere around low-average. Only in science is such accuracy appreciated.
Have you considered becoming a lab tech or similar? If you have that same tendency to consider perfection the default, that may be an asset in one of those highly-detailed jobs.