- Joined
- Nov 20, 2006
- Messages
- 28,871
- Reaction score
- 26
Come back in 10 years.maybe. maybe not.![]()
Come back in 10 years.maybe. maybe not.![]()
Come back in 10 years.
let's piss together and see who pisses the furthest
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Jiro...so what is this line of work that you make so much money and have all this free time? HIRE ME!
let's piss together and see who pisses the furthest
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I'm usually the guy working my fingers to the bone and helping others with thiers work and still getting "pissed on" for very low wages, I need to find something that little work and big pay!
I like to help others but yea I have same feeling as you. Working like a dog while making small pay from it. It's frustrating.
My work philosophy and way of life have changed a few years ago to "Minimal Work, Maximum Pay." I know that line implies you are lazy and do nothing while making lot of money. So no that's not what I mean.
You have to work hard and be damn good at what you're doing. and people will pay LOT for that kind of quality and reliability. Be an efficient and smart worker while making tons of cash. With big cash in your pocket, you have time and money to help people in needs.
Hope that explanation helps!
I like to help others but yea I have same feeling as you. Working like a dog while making small pay from it. It's frustrating.
My work philosophy and way of life have changed a few years ago to "Minimal Work, Maximum Pay." I know that line implies you are lazy and do nothing while making lot of money. So no that's not what I mean.
You have to work hard and be damn good at what you're doing. and people will pay LOT for that kind of quality and reliability. Be an efficient and smart worker while making tons of cash. With big cash in your pocket, you have time and money to help people in needs.
Hope that explanation helps!
Right now, I am a university writing instructor (TA). It's not a bad gig. I get paid well for the amount of work I do, which isn't a lot since I only teach 1 or 2 class a semester. I have a lot of freedom in teaching, too. Basically, I can do whatever I want and mold the little suckers in my likeness. Muwahaha!
Prior to that, as an undergrad and before going back to grad school, I was a maintenance supervisor at a large apartment complex. I loved the job: fixing things and solving problems, working with my hands, having a constant feeling of accomplishment. It was good. Didn't pay too well for the physical exertion required though. The people I worked with, however, were not honest and didn't have a lot of integrity. That was hard to deal with sometimes. And the tenants, being college students, could be little pricks from time to time.
My dream job? Being a writer and actually making good money doing it...
I have most skills required for maintenance but just can't seem to get a foot in the door there either, and trust me it still pays better than anything I've ever been paid, I even have my own tools in most areas of construction but I just can't make enough consistantly to be self employed.
Where do you live? It helps to be in a city that has a large rental market and a rotating population. Usually, that means a college town. The complexes that have the most people moving in and out are where you have the most work. Most of our tenants were college students, and few stayed for longer than one or two years. College students are constantly changing their plans, and because few of them make their own money or pay their own rent, they don't think or care about the financial implications of their changes in living conditions. More opportunities for maintenance guys! Of the 250 units in my complex, we typically turned over about 120 of them per year.
Scope out the area. Find the complexes that seem to have less families. In my experience, family complexes usually have the least amount of work, since the tenants with families are reluctant to leave. The bulk of maintenance work comes from turnovers and remodels/upgrades, not day-to-day maintenance.
Also, maintenance can be a sweet gig when a tenant can't take all their stuff when they move out and have to leave some behind. Usually it's junk, but sometimes you make a nice find. The best scores for me were always when the vacating tenant was an international student (at our complex, they were usually from the Mideast) and couldn't take much back home with them. They'd pretty much leave behind completely furnished apartments!
I have most skills required for maintenance but just can't seem to get a foot in the door there either, and trust me it still pays better than anything I've ever been paid, I even have my own tools in most areas of construction but I just can't make enough consistantly to be self employed.
IT production support Officer *(at work)* here and Networking technical support for my business.
of course, it is fun than being bored my ass with.Fun, eh?