IT? I'm not in it.

Yeah, and 0101100101101111011101010010000001101100011011110111011001100101001000000111010101110011001011000010000001100001011011100110010000100000011110010110111101110101001000000110101101101110011011110111011100100000011010010111010000100000010000100100100101010100010000110100100000100001
I run the SFCC PC Shop, and am Tech Coordinator for the SFCC/EGI TECH initiative.
Meh. I make my students get certs. Me? I have 17 years of experience (started on an Atari 800XL - built my first OS from scratch on that baby).
I've done everything from run a full network for Wildwood High School (They gave me a class to do it, while I was in 10th and 11th grade) to re-wire the city of Mascott's computer infrastructure, to VPN the main offices of Polaris in Leesburg to Tampa.
I've programmed Cisco routers, built software from scratch, designed computer systems, designed and implemented networks, and even made Windows ME stable.
There is literally nothing I have come across in the computer world that I can't fix/build. I'm in college for a dual major in ECE/CIS - I want to get into chipset design - unfortunately, for the wrong reasons. Damn good money, and work that I am damn good at.
I don't need a piece of paper to let someone know that I'm good at what I do

(of course, that gets used against me, too - 'oh we could pay you better if you had your certs')
I'm not worried about it. I make more money than most of the Professors at Santa Fe Community College

Which pisses them off, but hey - I've developed the reputation that commands top dollar.
But I do it because I'm good at it, not because I love it.

What I really want to get into is stellar propulsion systems. I flat out love to build and fix things. I'm an engineer at heart, and always have been.
I live to learn - I honestly feel I will die when I walk through a day, and learn nothing new.