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218

Just dont let others bully you along the way.

Always show courage, and perseverance. It takes blood, sweat, and tears to achieve this.

We need more master builders, (at the risk of sounding masonic), and less soft hands who watch as others create from behind a desk.

Swallow your pride, and put on some steel toes.

Just dont let others bully you along the way. Always show courage, and perseverance. It takes blood, sweat, and tears to achieve this. We need more master builders, (at the risk of sounding masonic), and less soft hands who watch as others create from behind a desk. Swallow your pride, and put on some steel toes.

(post is archived)

[–] [deleted] 5 pts

We have a shortage of skilled craftsmen where I live. There is not only no shame in being one, one can make a decent living as long as they're skilled and don't rip people off, thanks to the average age increasing every year. They may have done the work themselves in years past.

[–] [deleted] 2 pts

Here where I live, every journeyman makes six figured

[–] 2 pts

I have a university degree and I respect skilled craftsmen as much as any degree holder.. for many degrees more.

Financially you also need to understand the huge opportunity benefit of finishing school years earlier. All those years out working early, you can stack investments and precious metals and gain skills along the way, while others stack debt.

[–] 2 pts

Yes, there you go.
There's no reason at all that one shouldn't work, but there's infinite reasons why one shouldn't work for someone else.

The more of these posts I see out of you, the more I'm convinced you missed the point I was making.

[–] 2 pts

Just look at how many people with worthless degrees are stuck waiting tables or working crappy retail jobs.

[–] 1 pt

Better....become master of new craft ?