Quote from Max E. Pad:
+You know something thats kind of funny? When i was in University I ran my own business hauling shit to the dump for people, I had an old truck I had bought with the box built up 5 feet high on each side so i could fill it up, and I just ran an ad in the paper saying i would pick up a big load of garbage if people needed a truck to haul it to the dump.
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I did the exact same thing for about 6-7 years, I had a blast made tons of cash money. women would call, their husband had left them, they'd pay me to take all his shit. I got tools, coin collections, you name it.
I opened a booth in a flea market and sold the crap, made beacoup money on scrap metal.

Quote from nutmeg:
Quote from Max E. Pad:
I did the exact same thing for about 6-7 years, I had a blast made tons of cash money. women would call, their husband had left them, they'd pay me to take all his shit. I got tools, coin collections, you name it.
I opened a booth in a flea market and sold the crap, made beacoup money on scrap metal.

Quote from nutmeg:
Yea, I got some moving jobs too.
One guy built a nice picinic table at his campsite and wanted me to move it back to his house at the end of summer. I put a moving blanket on the bottom of my Pu and slid the table upside down on top of the blanket.
he rode back with me to his house (about 50 miles). Cruising down the highway I throw my cigarette out the window and no shit, it ends up on the blanket, cathces fire and burns the guys picnic table. I pull over on the side of the road and throwing sand on this thing, leave the blanket on the side of the road.
It was an intense ride, to say the least. I gave him a break on the price...![]()
Quote from CaptainObvious:
I don't necessarily think a low paying labor type job is a worst job, especially if you're young. I remember working at McD's when I was 16. We'd be shooting mustard and catchup at each other all day and eating junk food till we puked. All for .90 an hour. It was great!
Quote from 377OHMS:
These days a plumber can make a very good living. It can be some dirty work but its certainly an honorable trade.
Quote from Tsing Tao:
And it's recession proof. You can try to save money on other things but when the toilet backs up, or the sink won't work...you call the plumber.
I remember stepping out of our office every morning. There was a construction site two buildings down and the smell of the sewer work there would always waft over to us. My boss would take a deep breath and go "Aahhh....the smell of money."
