If you work at a fast food joint or a grocery store or are paid under $15 an hour, tell me how you live with yourself? I couldn't wake up everyday being that much of a loser, I'd kill myself.
If you work at a fast food joint or a grocery store or are paid under $15 an hour, tell me how you live with yourself...
Success isn't based on how much money you have but by how happy you are. Based on how judgemental you are i highly doubt you're very happy.
There are lots of worse jobs than working at a nice, air-conditioned grocery store. Answer questions about cheese, peruse the wine selection, hand out samples, I may actually apply once I'm done with my current programming job. Just show up and you're golden.
>tell me how you live with yourself
That's the thing though; they don't live by themselves.
People working a single wageshit job are living with their SO, still living at home or worse, roomating.
i make less than 12k a year and have a 4 bedroom house and 2 cars life is pretty good
what do you do for a living and how much do you make, user?
Yeah and those are the kind of jobs you quit and go through like toilet paper because they "aren't real jobs" then 10 years later you see the kids you were working with there running the place making bank close to home.
I work grocery and it's pretty chill. You network with all the regulars and because of connections I've made I'm having a privacy fence built for my backyard for no cost other than lumber. 401k program is nice and the dividends are starting to pay off after a few years.
Because still in high school and i live with my parents. Min wage jobs are for kids. If you depend on a min wage job to live just kill yourself. You have no skills and are worth nothing to society.
>I may actually apply once I'm done with my current programming job
>my current programming job
You should. It'll be better job security than anything IT, especially programming. Fucking IT is a joke anymore. The only way to do it as a career for more than five years max is to be in a constant state of taking new courses and obtaining new certifications. You're basically going to community college for the rest of your life until you retire.