The Entrepreneur Forum | Financial Freedom | Starting a Business | Motivation | Money | Success

Welcome to the only entrepreneur forum dedicated to building life-changing wealth.

Build a Fastlane business. Earn real financial freedom. Join free.

Join over 80,000 entrepreneurs who have rejected the paradigm of mediocrity and said "NO!" to underpaid jobs, ascetic frugality, and suffocating savings rituals— learn how to build a Fastlane business that pays both freedom and lifestyle affluence.

Free registration at the forum removes this block.

Dead-End Sh*t Jobs ... Yours?

Jill

Silver Contributor
FASTLANE INSIDER
Read Fastlane!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
76%
Jan 26, 2008
1,026
775
Frisco, TX (Dallas)
Wow. I've had a few.

Recreational staff (lifeguard/umpire) at a HUGE church camp for 2 summers where temps reach 115 in the summer, and there are no shorts allowed on the volleyball court. (But it was still fun!) But after 5 weeks each summer, I didn't feel bad telling the other staff that I'd missed yet another Bible study because I was spending a little time in The Word. (Little did they know that this was the nickname I'd given my bunk in the staff cabin!!!)

Floor sales in a clothing store where all the young girls were instructed to walk the floors helping the customers, while the old bitty just stood there "goal-tending" the register (in a primarily commissioned job).

So between these high-school gigs and my most recent life, there have been oodles of "OMG, I-can't-believe-I-went-to-college-for-this kind of roles", but in hindsight, I learned from them all.

Then, finally - I'm not even sure how to say this - but the worst job had to be cleaning the crotches of thrift store pants that we were selling on ebay. Armani and Zanella were always the worst. Where are these guys wearing these? and what are they doing? PLEASE don't answer that!!!! But trust me, this was the worst.

Everything I've ever done, in my vast experience of workaday world has taught and prepared me for where I am today. Even the crotch-rot cleaning taught me about myself that I am willing to do just about anything, no matter how disgusting, to contribute to my family's financial freedom.

In fact, I think I may start another thread some day about the serendipitous lessons I've learned from jobs along the way.

Whatever it takes, I'm there for my family and my future!!!! :icon_super:
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

jimculler

New Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
3%
Sep 14, 2007
60
2
Tampa Bay, FL
I am interested in this comment. What do you mean by that? [and sorry for the thread hijack]


Sorry for the Hijack as well

Well at least here in Florida (The last place I brokered loans instead of being an LO for a lender) there are already more disclosures for the broker than there is for a direct lender. Meaning, the bank does not have to disclose YSP on the HUD, but the broker does.

Thats just the tip of it though. There are politicians repeatedly trying to take yield spread premium compltely away from brokers.

MB's are not as organized as Realtors. We dont have NAR, we have the NAMB which does not have the same lobbying power. They managed to stop this crazy legislation once, so we can only hope that continues to be the case.

Of course, if the banks and the FED get behind it, you can consider it pushed through soon enough. It would be the easiest way to eliminate a ton of competition in conforming and FHA.

Bottom line, my future is with a direct lender either way. So thats where I will reside until my passive income greatly outweighs my lifestyle. Once I am there, I will only work on referrals and will no longer work leads.
 

JayKim

Bronze Contributor
Read Fastlane!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
38%
Sep 4, 2008
859
325
Colorado Springs
2 dish washing jobs , telemarketing, theater usher, family bought a restaurant after high school so worked there for 11 yrs but out of business due to the recession. Found a job as a jeweler. After selling everything I've never been happier, I think since I love the job I have compared to restaurant work and have been motivated mostly from this site to learn and start over with something new.
 

ktzn

New Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
9%
Sep 30, 2009
44
4
35
Munich, Germany
heres mine, started out as 13 years old

Young helper at a local book store (about 2 years)
Worked in a grocery store (2 years)
worked in a grocery store of same chain but in my local city instead of the city where my school was. (1 year)
Post Danmark, delivering mail and packaged from eraly morning till midday (3 moths(quick money before moving to germany))
BMW Sales Channel Strategy (intern(Germany, Munich(1 year)))
BMW Financial Services (intern(New Zealand, Auckland(scheduled for 1 year))) and GOD I HATE IT i dosent challenge me at all miss the old position in germany
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

Inphinity

Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
13%
Aug 20, 2007
480
63
Auckland, NZ
Furniture assembly
Retail cashier
Telemarketing

And I'd argue all of the jobs I've held were shit, since I haven't really enjoyed any, and .. it just doesn't feel right.
 

Fermovian

New Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
19%
Jan 19, 2009
59
11
Vancouver, BC
Inventory clerk,

Wooden reel assembler, demolisher

Swamper in a freight cross-dock facility

Residential mover

Window manufacturing job. The actual assembly of the window frames was actually fun at first, but got repetitive. I was transfered to sealing windows, which was unbearable, then to cutting window frames, which wasn't the worst job.

Loading and unloading tractor trailers for a major Canadian package delivery firm

Working in a fish plant: sorting fish guts, packaging fish into boxes, dumping fish into vats of cold water, stacking boxes.

The window manufacturing job was the best in terms of compensation. Medical Dental, $12.76/ hour, overtime plus $100 bonuses for working overtime.
 

MJ DeMarco

I followed the science; all I found was money.
Staff member
FASTLANE INSIDER
EPIC CONTRIBUTOR
Read Rat-Race Escape!
Read Fastlane!
Read Unscripted!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
445%
Jul 23, 2007
38,083
169,506
Utah

JayKim

Bronze Contributor
Read Fastlane!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
38%
Sep 4, 2008
859
325
Colorado Springs
I

Working in a fish plant: sorting fish guts, packaging fish into boxes, dumping fish into vats of cold water, stacking boxes.


This must have been the worst one then?
 

randallg99

Bronze Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
13%
Aug 9, 2007
1,373
180
NJ
I used to pimp some ladies on the corner. just kidding.

I worked in a deli kitchen without air conditioner for a summer. Anyone here ever work in a deli kitchen before? with dishwashers running 10 hours a day? turkeys, corn beefs and chunks of cow at 500 degrees for 8 hours? The kitchen must've ran 140 degrees.... and I think I worked it for $6.50 an hour....

just to cool off, I would step outside even if it was 100 degrees I would get some relief.

also painted, installed kitchens, demo, handy work in my day. they all sucked but they were all learning experiences.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

ndhand

PARKED
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
0% - New User
Oct 13, 2009
6
0
Haven't had one in years (luckily), but they've included:
-shoe salesman
-dishwasher
-telemarketer
 

joeybags73

PARKED
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
0% - New User
Sep 17, 2009
27
0
haha, i love this thread. I've certainly had my share of shit jobs. But, you know, looking back on it they were a great learning tool. At the time, when you're doing them, you think they are shit and you can't wait to get something better. I speak from my own experience. My very first job was at an ice cream stand. The customers and managers were pains in the asses, but the chicks that I worked with were hot, so it had its pros. My friend and I were the only guys working there our first summer and we got to stare at tanned legs of hot girls in shorts the whole time. Not a bad way to make some money. I worked there for 6 years until I graduated from college. The ice cream stand was owned by the same people who owned a very locally famous hot dog stand. I would work there during the winter months. The people I worked with were from all walks of life. Most of them were scumbags. But you dealt with it and they were always good for a laugh. At the time, it wasn't great. I'd come home everyday smelling like hot dogs and my work clothes would be stained with grease. All this for $5/hour. However, looking back on it it was great experience because I learned how to deal with some of the worst people. I learned how to deal with pushy customers. There were a few occassions I almost got into fist fights....yeah, a fist fight because I was carding some punk who wanted to buy our shitty beer. Learning how to deal with all kinds of people is essential for the fast lane. You're gonna have customers who want everything done yesterday and who are unappreciative of your efforts. I'm glad I learned these skills at a young age because I feel it prepared me to deal with rejection and getting doors slammed in my face.

Anyone else have similar thoughts on this?
 

mkzhang

Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
9%
Sep 30, 2009
232
21
Let me see....

I oversaw an e-retailer's website management and was ran the initial in house SEO campaign. I then got demoted from the SEO thing because we out sourced it, and then I managed the e commerce system integration from system to system while still in charge of managing the website with the IT guys.

I must be lucky compared to most of you... because that was my **** job and I quit. I felt like I've learned all that I can and there were no room for me to go up any higher.

Quitting gave me the courage to pursue and do what I felt I did the best, and its been a roller coaster ride ever since!
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

doubleb

New Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
10%
Dec 27, 2009
10
1
Austin, TX
I'm still getting my feet wet here, but this thread is easy one to join.

1) Taco Bell Cook - Lasted 3 days

2) Pizza Cook - Hungry Howies Pizza - 10 months

3) Dough Master - Pizza Hut 6 Months

4) Union Courtesy Clerk at grocery store (1.5 years included cleaning the meat room nightly 3pm-midnight shift)

5) Lube Tech - changed peoples oil - Actually drove a van that was older than me off the lift (lasted 3 days)

6) various Cubicle jobs (11 years) - this was by far the most evil and vile of jobs and continues to this day, while sorting fish guts, sweeping pizza store floors, cleaning toilets may on the surface seem worse than rotting away in a cubicle, its not.

A job sorting fish guts reminds you everyday that focus and determination are important, you can't settle or fish guts will always be your reality. A cubicle job on the other hand, incrementalizes you, its not that bad some days, others you might even like it. The people are somewhat friendly, you might even like some of them, you get a steady paycheck, enough to afford you a decent house/car but just enough to keep you suspended there addicted on that income unable to move for fear you lose everything or will be unable to make it on your own.

Any job, which separates you like cattle into "like skills" so you can't learn anything about how the business is really run, can not grow, heck can't even see daylight... is a shitty job.

Take a step outside... that's what I did this year and soon I'll be rid of the cubicle forever.
 

Jbellefeuille

New Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
26%
Sep 10, 2007
38
10
San Francisco
1. Age 10 - Delivery boy for the Penny Pincher in Western Rural Colorado - $8 per week
2. Age 13 - Hair Sweeper at Great Clips
3. Age 16 - Burger King, Arby's
4. Age 17 - Cashier and Stock boy at Grocery Store
5. Age 18 - Overnight Janitorial Staff at Life Time Fitness/ Construction Worker
6. Age 19 - Waiter and JCPenney's Jewelry Sales Specialist
7. Age 19/20 - Dell Computer Sales Person / Knock off Sunglasses Sales person

Shit Jobs ended . . . . Dead end jobs began...

8. Age 20/21 - CLEC Telecom Customer implementation Manager - laid off due to acquisition
9. Age 21 - IT Recruiter - laid off due to economy
10. Age 22 - APAC "Rest of the world" Supply Chain Analyst at 3M - contract position. Contract completed.

11. Age 23 - Legal Assistant at a Bankruptcy Law Firm - current.

6 more classes until graduation.. then I can focus on getting a "real" job right... yeah right is more like it.
 
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
0% - New User
Feb 24, 2009
3
0
Oklahoma
My first tax paying job> A&W working in the kitchen area
Loves Country store> graveyard shift cashier
Little Caesars Pizza> crew member
Food Outlet> stocker
Little Caesars Pizza> assistant manager/associate manager

current job>lazy bum
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

schnecke

PARKED
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
0% - New User
Jan 28, 2009
4
0
heres mine, started out as 13 years old

Young helper at a local book store (about 2 years)
Worked in a grocery store (2 years)
worked in a grocery store of same chain but in my local city instead of the city where my school was. (1 year)
Post Danmark, delivering mail and packaged from eraly morning till midday (3 moths(quick money before moving to germany))
BMW Sales Channel Strategy (intern(Germany, Munich(1 year)))
BMW Financial Services (intern(New Zealand, Auckland(scheduled for 1 year))) and GOD I HATE IT i dosent challenge me at all miss the old position in germany


Nahhh you miss Munich!!!
I LOVE THAT CITY!!
 
D

DeletedUser394

Guest
I've never had a shit job....or any job at all.

Unless housemaid to 8 cats counts lol... It gets quite crazy at times.
 

MJ DeMarco

I followed the science; all I found was money.
Staff member
FASTLANE INSIDER
EPIC CONTRIBUTOR
Read Rat-Race Escape!
Read Fastlane!
Read Unscripted!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
445%
Jul 23, 2007
38,083
169,506
Utah
Bump.
 

CVentures1B12

Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
8%
Oct 18, 2007
286
24
38
Richmond, VA
Nice! What an awesome thread!

1) Grew up on a dairy farm. Talk about shit work...literally. I was shoveling shit, clearing fence posts (hard work but kinda fun since you get a huge scythe to use), milking, feeding and even driving a tractor by the time I was 12. Started working when I was about 8 years old. School, homework and baseball were about the only things that could get me out of work. Needless to say, I played a LOT of baseball, haha.

2) Taco Bell. All through high school. Farm work took a backseat to the now revised list of school, homework, baseball and Taco Bell.

3) Furniture delivery boy. Usually only 2 days a week. A second job I picked up in high school to supplement my Taco Bell job. Mainly so that I didn't have to do any farm work.

*First success ever...farm work down to one weekend day a week!! Second success...saved enough money to buy a car with all cash when I was 16.

4) Computer lab assistant in my university's library throughout the school year (all 4 years of college).

5) Library Grunt in the same library since I lived only 10 miles away during every summer and winter break while I was in college.

6) Pizza making expert...at a local pizza joint on campus. 4 years. On top of my library work, on top of playing college baseball...

That is about it. I had a job at a civil engineering firm in March of my senior year and moved to Nashville a week after I graduated to start. Didn't like where it was headed so I found another job as a marketing consultant and have been here ever since!

If I were out of a job tomorrow, I'd have another one in a heartbeat. It may be at another Taco Bell...but it would pay the bills until I found a better one in another heartbeat.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.
G

Guest3722A

Guest
After I lost my business I:

was hired at Quicken Loans which I quit after about 2 weeks because of the 12-14 hour days they wanted me to work

After that I cleaned carpet and upholstery for the same amount of money and fewer hours

After that I got a part time job working with special needs. The pay was awful but the job was rewarding.

I got promoted to an office / speaker job for Michigan's No Worker Left Behind program where I would speak to groups twice a day and answer questions, administer and check tests and qualify applicants. The pay still sucked and the contract expired with my company so I bailed.

After that I opened up an LLC and started doing commercial loans and mortgages for which the timing was way off and even though I was able to generate millions and millions in loan requests, I couldn't find lenders to lend in Michigan.

After that a friend of mine put me to work in his print finishing shop where I'd set up machines and run them or pass them on to the FNG (F*ckin new guy)

While working there my friend let me bring my laptop daily and I traded a stock account for a friend and some investors took notice. This job enabled me to save up two years of living expenses. (I started trading in '97)

I quit in I think June and have gone through some bumps but I believe I'm almost positioned now to make more money than I've ever made... Will know soon enough but I believe I'm on the right path.


Even though some of these jobs may not seem like shit jobs they all were because going from entrepreneur to employee is NOT an easy thing to do.
 

Bowden

Bronze Contributor
Read Fastlane!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
136%
Sep 29, 2010
236
321
TAMPA, FL
Papa Johns - Made pizza and folded boxes. My first "on the books" job when I was 16
Boston Market - Carver and meat specialist (LOL)
Papa Johns - Delivery Driver
Day Labor - Everything from digging ditches to cleaning up construction sites
Seafood Shack - Grilled & fried food, cleaned the kitchen. Horrible job haha
 

Huey88

PARKED
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
0% - New User
Nov 3, 2010
7
0
35
I'm at a dead end job now..i work at UPS part time...and with the way the economy is going i dont see me going anywhere soon which is pretty balls.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

theBiz

Silver Contributor
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
46%
Jul 9, 2009
1,162
535
NY
1) Pizza delivery (Had to mop floors too)
2) Subway sandwich lunch driver (Lasted 3 weeks)
3) *Student* Painter (Lasted 6 weeks)
4) Charity organization can collector
5) Bus boy, Chinese restaurant (cockroaches in back!!!)
6) Wholesale flower deliverer
7) Plumbing day laborer
8) Stock boy, Sears Roebuck
9) Newspaper delivery at 3am in the morning
10) Hospital TV system auditor (lasted 2 days)



Not sure how you continued on, 1 crap job after another most people would have given up and just stayed content with their life. How did you stay positive considering how bad the circumstances were. I would like to hear your response on this? What made you think you would be wealthy someday, considering you had nothing to show for it.

This is the hardest part for everyone. To have a shitty life, low capital and believe we can just flip it around one day and go big considering people in better circumstances STILL don't get to the level we think we will get to. Did you purchase your premium domain and just think everyday you would do something with it or this was after?
 

GlobalWealth

Legendary Contributor
FASTLANE INSIDER
EPIC CONTRIBUTOR
Read Fastlane!
Read Unscripted!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
225%
Sep 6, 2009
2,582
5,818
Latvia
grocery store bagger
mowed lawns
cleaned offices
worked at the local gokart track as ticket taker
ups, unloading trucks
sold vinyl siding
sold meat
sold long distance service
tree service work
 

lightning

Bronze Contributor
Read Fastlane!
Read Unscripted!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
35%
Aug 24, 2007
542
188
41
Northern, NJ
I had several "shit" jobs over the years before I graduated college at 22 (I'm 28 now).

They include (in order):

Star Gazette "Paper boy"

-field hand at a Christmas Tree Farm (helped customers pick out, cut down, net and load the trees on their car). Fortunately the tips were good at this job.

-Chicken cook at the GREASIEST privately owned small-town fried chicken restaurant in the entire COUNTRY! "Golden Skillet". I would slave over the fryers trying not to get burned with these POS 1960's fryers they had, and would come home at the end of the night literally DRENCHED in greasy oil sweat (even my sneakers smelled like stale oil). To this day I still want to throw up when I think about working those fryers and having to mop those greasy tile floors at the end of the night.

-Laborer for a Roofing contractor - (Was paid to constantly watch the sky as shingles, nails and wood got flung off the roof, which I would then be responsible for lugging away. Got plenty of nails lodged in my foot, but fortunately gained alot of muscle that summer. I was also paid under the table so although it was back-breaking labor for a VERY cranky contractor, I was paid well for being a 16 year old kid.

-Kmart "Stock Boy". Funny thing is, I remember this job actually being described glamourously by the store manager that interviewed me. Man was I fed a load of a horse shiit. She told me, "Stock clerk is actually a great position because you get to work in every department and work with all of our managers, which helps with your job experience for when we're ready to promote you. Most of our top managers started as stock clerks, blah blah blah BS! What "being able to work in every department" ACTUALLY meant was that I was the stores BI#TCH for every department manager in the store (of which there was like 10 of them). Because I was not formally assigned to any one department, I would actually be fought over from the moment I punched in every night, as I was "extra" help for any department head who felt like he needed help that day. So whatever "job" for the shift that the regular department clerks didnt feel like doing, they just paged "Stock boy to drapery, stock boy to garden center, stock boy to softline stock room, etc. etc. etc. Spill in the bathroom? No problem, page Mike. Huge cart of returns? No problem, page Mike. 5-year old vomited in aisle 6? Nor problem, page Mike. I should ALSO mention that this job included the priveledge of emptying the ENTIRE parking lot of shopping carts every night (and being that it was a mall store, there were TWO parking lots, one on each side). That was always fun in 20 degree weather.

Paintball Field Referee - I cant really complain about anything about this job other than the pay, which was terrible. Was paid a flat $40 a day for a 7:30-6PM shift (and heres the best part), NOT IN CASH! That $40 was paid in store credit to the pro-shop or the field, which I immediatly would spend on more crap (equipment, paintballs, etc.) so that I could play and hit the fields on my day off once a month. I had a lot of fun with it though and made some great friends over the years that I still keep in touch with today. As a teenager, this was one of the "cooler" jobs I held.

Sears Stock Clerk - Started in the garden center, but worked my way up to department manager fairly quickly my sophmore year of college before I left to take my next job, which was...

Home Depot Front end Manager, responsible for the opening 5:30AM shift- You want to talk about cranky customers? EVERY contractor is cranky and pissed off at 5:30AM in the morning when they come in to pick up their sheet rock and lumber for the days job. And they ALL think you are there to do nothing but bow to them.


Fortunately, I worked that job at Home Depot right up until my graduation from college, where I was very lucky to get an entry level position as a Specialist with the Department of Defense. After 6 years of service (celebrated this summer), I am proud to say that I worked my way up fairly quickly and have greatly advanced in salary, and am now waiting on paperwork to be processed as Im being promoted to a warranted Officer (something Im VERY proud of, as I will be one of the youngest warranted Officers in the entire Command when it happens). Although its not fastlane (in ANY way), it is definitely one of the best "jobs" i could hold in the interim while I work some other fastlane plans on the side, as it provides me with almost a 6-figure salary, job security, great benefits, easy "bankers" hours and schedule, etc. So I dont mind my "job" nearly as much as most do while I get my ducks in the row to break free from this rat race. :) My only concern initially was that as many government workers do, I was afraid I would get "comfy" in my position and begin to value job security and a high steady salary more than my freedom. However, that has NOT happened, and even though I make alot more than I did when I started back in 2004, I am happy to say I still visualize my escape daily, and am working constantly to break free very soon.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

Rick

New Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
11%
Sep 8, 2010
46
5
Bonn, Germany
Usual Stuff

  • Pizza delivery
  • working a printing machine (included maintenance and cleaning)
  • hospital help
  • nursing home help
  • foundry
  • telemarketer
  • newspaper delivery
 

mlsalters77

New Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
39%
Jun 2, 2010
23
9
Lawrencville Ga, currently in Afghanistan
Excellent Thread!!!!! It's funny when I was young working my share of "crappy shitty hate to go in-kill to leave" jobs, I always felt like I was racing against the clock and if I didn't make something happen soon I would suffocate! lol. One thing is for sure (and all will agree...) my desire to succeed was never stronger or more tried. I started working very young, too many jobs to list so I'll start with the most important and biggest shit job of them all...

U.S. Army!!!! (the best-worst job I've ever had and wouldn't change it for the world!)
Pizzahut delivery driver
home depot stock clerk
telemarketer (I once had a house full of people take turns telling me to f##k my self)
wakenhut security (those guys really took that job too seriously)
Electrical wiring tech for kemtech (this might have been considered a good job to some but I felt like I had finally
reached the production worker grave yard. I was 26, prior army and had an associates in Audio Engineering and I was wasting away in a production factory with a bunch 40+ men and women who where thankful to god for their day to day death march. I loved those people, on my lunch breaks I would work on my music projects and they would stop by my station and say thing's like "remember me when you make it." or "Young man, why are you wasting away your youth here with the rest of us old farts?" I really loved those people they made me feel like my success was immanent.

One of the last shit jobs was as a cable guy with comcast this job was a great motivation because I would do 8 to 16 installs a day in these huge homes half a million dollars and up and I would just stand in aw of the accomplishments of these well to do people. I remember each time I went into an expensive home I would just stop for a second and inhale deep and tell my self, "its just a matter of time, this is my future!" I meant that shit! there where times I would sit in my driveway and think about what their lives must be like and I would literally be wiping tears from my eyes. I grew up basically homeless so that had an effect on me that I carry to this day.

I could go on for days about the jobs I've worked to not have enough money put food on the table at the end of the week. I love shit jobs because the fight to escape them fuel our drive a nuclear power plant up my a$$! lol
 

Post New Topic

Please SEARCH before posting.
Please select the BEST category.

Post new topic

Guest post submissions offered HERE.

Latest Posts

New Topics

Fastlane Insiders

View the forum AD FREE.
Private, unindexed content
Detailed process/execution threads
Ideas needing execution, more!

Join Fastlane Insiders.

Top