The Worst Job I Ever Had
Friday, 15th September 2006 (by J.D.)This article is about Career, Debt, Real-Life
Your job is one of your most important assets. It gives you earning power. It can bring you personal fulfillment. But what happens when you’re stuck in a job you hate? Here’s the true story of the worst job I ever had.
I made some poor choices at the end of my college career; as a result, I graduated without a prospect for work. No matter — I lived off my credit cards for a few months, basking in the glow of adulthood. Eventually I realized that I needed to find a job.
My father, a life-long salesman, and always a sucker for other salesmen, set me up to meet with an insurance guy who had tried to sell him a policy. We met in a Denny’s on the far side of Portland early on a Saturday morning. The guy gave me long, slick pitch, touting the job’s “unlimited income potential“. He needn’t have bothered. I needed work and was dumb enough to think that this was a perfect. I signed up.
I underwent two weeks of training, during which I learned how to sell crappy insurance (though I didn’t know it was crappy insurance at the time). I spent two days learning why this was the most marvelous insurance product in the world. I spent another two days role-playing the door-to-door sales technique: I’d pretend to be the salesman and the 55-year-old chainsmoker seated next to me would be the customer. It was so easy! I sold him a policy every time.
I spent a couple more days learning “rebuttals”, the magic scripts that would turn a prospect’s objections against himself. Our goal was to sell the customer whether he needed the insurance or not. We were to create the need.
This training period was life-changing. I had awakened a giant within. I was a new man. I began to cast aside the skin of my existing life and take on that of another:
- I broke up with my fiancee.
- I bought a brand new car. (A car that I could not afford, obviously.)
- I bought a new wardrobe, paying full price at trendy stores.
- I ate out every morning, every noon, and every night.
- I bought a brand-new Super Nintendo and a Gameboy.
In one training session, we were required to cut up magazines to make a collage depicting our goals. I cut out a big photo of a log cabin in the woods and declared, “I’m going to retire a millionaire when I’m thirty.” The older folks in the class — they were all older, and all over thirty — stared with vacant, hollow eyes as I made my presentation.
That night I went out for a fancy dinner.
After training, I spent a week shadowing my manager (the man who had hired me), watching how door-to-door insurance sales worked in the real world. We drove to rural Oregon (Enterprise, in the far northeastern corner) and set up shop in a motel. That Monday morning, we met for breakfast in a local coffee shop. I bought my manager eggs and coffee. We drove out and began knocking on doors.
At every house, we’d introduce ourselves: “Hi. I’m J.D., and I believe this will interest you also. For only fifty-eight cents a week, should any accident whatsoever require hospital confinement…” and so on. My manager was slick. He signed up three people that first day. He’d made $120!
The next day, it was my turn to try. And suddenly my enthusiasm ran smack into the reality. It wasn’t a game anymore when I was the one trying to convince the little old lady with the oxygen tank that she needed to buy my policy.
“I’m on a fixed income,” she said, and I had no response. I wasn’t going to try to convince her that she needed this. She didn’t. She needed to hold on to her money. But my manager saw her weakness, and sensed my hesitation — he stepped in and smoothly countered her objections and wrote the policy for her. He let me keep the $40 for the sale. “You can’t let them make you feel sorry,” he told me. “Your goal is to get a signature and a check.”
Actually, my goal was suddenly unclear. My goal had been to make a million dollars by the time I was thirty, to own log cabin in the woods. But not like this. Not selling policies to little old ladies. I went back to the hotel and called my dad. “I want to quit,” I told him.
“You can’t quit,” he said. “You’ve only been doing this two days. You don’t know what you’re talking about. Don’t be an idiot.”
I called my ex-fiancee. “I want to quit,” I told her. She wasn’t surprised. I’d just broken off our engagement, so why would I stick to a job?
I talked with my manager. “I want to quit,” I told him. He frowned, and then he smoothly countered my every argument. The one that made me change my mind was this: “Look how much you’ve spent. You bought a new car. You bought new clothes. You’re paying all this money for food and lodging. If you quit now, that money is all wasted.” I believed he was right, and so I stuck with it. I threw good money after bad.
For the next two months, I travelled with the other salesmen, spending a week at a time canvassing the small towns. “Hi. I’m J.D., and I believe this will interest you also. For only fifty-eight cents a week, should any accident whatsoever require hospital confinement…” I was a terrible salesman. I did not believe in my product. It was a crummy policy pitched in a slimy method to people who didn’t know any better. I felt dirty.
I sold some policies, it’s true, but my income was a miserable $280/week or so. My expenses were much more than that. I had reconciled with my fiancee, and so was paying rent for an apartment with her. I was also paying rent for an apartment in Portland because I was required to live close to the office. (Why? We were never there!) And I was paying for hotel rooms four or five nights a week. I was essentially paying for three sources of lodging. And for a new car. And for a shocking amount of gas. (I put 20,000 miles on that car in three months.) And for food.
It was during this period that my problems with food began. I was stressed, mentally conflicted. I began to eat poorly. In the morning, I would buy a box of old-fashioned donuts and a quart of chocolate milk, drive to some secluded spot, and down it all while thinking of my ruined dreams. I don’t even want to think of how many calories I consumed every morning. I gained twenty pounds in three months. I charged $10,000 in credit card debt. I bought a brand-new $10,000 car.
My life was a disaster and I was only twenty-two years old.
The nadir came on a drizzly Friday. I was selling policies in hilly country west of Portland. It was early morning, and I had just driven up a long gravel road to make a futile pitch to an old farmer. He was getting ready for work, and didn’t want anything to do with me. “You need to leave,” he told me, and so I did.
I drove my brand-new car further up the gravel road to a fork in the road. I could have continued straight, but I took the road less travelled by (and that made all the difference). I drove downhill and around a corner. The road narrowed and the gravel vanished. The road ended. I considered backing up, but instead decided to make a three-point turnaround. I had pulled forward into a newly-plowed field. My tires sunk in the mud. Cursing my luck, I attempted to rev myself out of the jam, but that only dug the tires in deeper.
I got out to survey the situation. The drizzle had turned to rain. I believed I could push the car back onto the road, so I rolled up my pant legs, took off my sports jacket, and tried not to worry about my muddy shoes. I went to the front of the car and pushed. The vehicle moved slightly, so I pushed some again. I rocked the car back-and-forth, and soon it rolled free. Gravity doesn’t care about bad days or crappy jobs. When the car came free, it rolled in the opposite direction from what I had intended. Because it was resting on a slope, it rolled toward me. I dove into the mud, and watched as my car rolled fifty feet downhill, where it struck a fallen tree with a crunch.
I lay still for a few moments, trying not to think about the ruined clothes and the damaged car. I was in shock. I got up and walked up the hill, back to the farmer’s house. “What do you want?” the farmer asked me. I explained my predicament. I think something about the situation must have moved him to pity, because his features softened, and his voice mellowed. “Stay here,” he told me. “I’ll get a tractor and pull you out.”
I drove home (to one of my two apartments). I took off my wet and soiled clothes and took a hot bath.
And yet I still did not quit the job.
This, my friends, was the worst period of my life in nearly every way: emotionally, physically, mentally, and financially.
There are good jobs, and there are bad jobs. And then there are shitty jobs. You should strive to work only at good jobs. Sometimes you’ll have to endure bad in order to meet a greater goal. But you should never put up with a shitty job.


When and why did you decide to look for another job, then? I would really like to know about that part of the story!
Ah, good question. That’s worth another entry, but I can provide a capsule summary:
No one thing made me quit selling insurance. It was an accumulation of things: the work that made me feel like I was violating my principles, the weeks away from home, and the lack of fulfillment. I quit abruptly on a cold evening in December and drove all night to get home. I had no job and no prospects. For a couple of weeks, I took assigments from a temp agency. Eventually I did what I had sworn I would never do: I went to work for my father, selling boxes. I still work for the family business today.
Wow, that’s quite a story. You live, you learn, I guess.
Oh my god. Another reason I could never work in sales. Everything about it just seems so unctuous.
So were the insurance policies complete scams?
I think anyone thinking of going into sales should watch this clip:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=TROhlThs9qY
If you can be Alec Baldwin (the guy speaking), go for it. But most of the rest of us are the Alan Arkin, Ed Harris, or Jack Lemmon characters.
Oh, that clip is NSFW due to language, which, in my experience, is the real language of sales offices everywhere.
Thank you for sharing.
MakingItBig has it right: you live, you learn. “What does not kill me makes me stronger.” Though I loathed the job, I would not be who I am today without the experience, and for that I am grateful.
@Snarla
I wouldn’t say the insurance policies were scams. They really did what they said they would do, and there was nothing secret about how they worked. It just wasn’t very good insurance. It didn’t pay much and didn’t cover much. It wasn’t a useful product for most people (though it was great for some), and I felt duplicitous trying convince people they should buy it when I could tell it wasn’t right for them.
@Roger
Heh. The original title of this entry was “the shittiest job I ever had”.
And one more thing: I hope it doesn’t sound like I’m moaning or complaining here. I’m not. I realize perfectly well that this job came as a consequence of my choices. I tell the story because it’s amusing (in a nightmarish sort of way), because it illustrates the consequences of a failure to plan, and because those three months form the bedrock of all my debt. The choices I made then still affect me every day, fifteen years down the road.
I think this is important for young adults to realize: small decicions you make now can have a huge impact on future happiness.
Eloquently written! Too bad it was about your young demise…
Thanks for sharing. Hopefully your story can serve as an example for someone, somewhere.
Very interesting and well-written. I can identify with many aspects of your story, although I’m long out of college and (thank goodness) never had to try selling insurance! (I did office temp jobs for a year, myself.)
Oddly enough, I just recently came across a little essay about how if you have money in the bank you can afford to walk away from that kind of situation. I thought of it immediately when I read your tale of woe.
[url]http://rebirthofreason.com/Articles/Setzer/Saving_for_Greatness.shtml[/url]
The really odd thing is, it appears the essay is being handed out by salesmen. Still…
Wow, great story
Thanks so much for sharing. I sold Kirby Vaccuums for awhile, and although it never got this bad, it hit home.
A deeply honest and well-written post. Sadly, many people do not come to the same conclusion you did until well into middle age. Thanks very much for this entry!
I recently graduated from college and was recruited by four or five different national banks for their “financial planning” departments…i.e. thinly veiled insurance schemes and retirement/investment products. This is not a job you need a college degree to do (obviously) but they make it seem really slick, like a job in banking.
So anyways….this stil happens today.
Great life story! I too had an experience in this kind of sales routine, only I was trying to sell industrial lighting. Oh my God! I had to learn a script and once we got into a business (usually by the back door) and introduced ourselves, we began reciting this script and did not give the person a chance to speak until we were done. The key I was told, was to not let the person get a word in edgewise. I only lasted a week, Thank God.
That was long ago….. We live and learn.
Wow, wow, wow! Quite a story, well, I am so glad you are not doing that job anymore. It’s amazing though, the way we can trap ourselves into a job (usually has to do with not being able to afford quitting)
The Worst Job I Ever Had…
…
Wow - that sounds a lot like my early twenties. It took me many years to dig myself out of the emotional and financial pit I dug for myself between the ages of 20 and 25. Only now do I feel healthy, happy, and reasonably financially stable. There really needs to be a “real life” curriculum in high school and college (home ec doesn’t count), where they teach you the ins and outs of personal finance, job seeking, and having healthy relationships. At least, I could have used it.
A job, or someway of bringing in money is important, but it is not an asset. An asset is generally something that puts money in your pocket, most likely passively, that you can turn around and sell.
Selling is a skill that we all need- too bad many of us learn throuhg unpleasant experiences! lol
I picked the link on your story from http://www.bearmode.com
it is a web site that allows members to rank financial and business stories. It also has a category on personal finance.
Your story is an interesting one and it reminds the first job I had which I hate.
Thanks.
Great story. Really made me think of what I’m doing and where I should be. Good stuff.
I’m really glad you came out on the other side. I walked out on a typical “college sales” summer job presentation (the one with the knives), because it seemed really cult-like. I suspect a lot of high-pressure sales places are probably the same.
I hope somebody who is looking for their first job finds this and reads it thoroughly.
Excellent story. Very nicely written.
It sounds like the same company I worked for. I did that after the knives…lol. Good training, and definetly makes your skin a lot thicker. My demise was not nearly as bad as yours though, well I did end up in the hospital. Hopefully it only served to make you stronger and wiser.
I feel for you, I really do. I tried my hand at sales a few times, and failed each one about as miserably as this story. However, none compared to the place I worked that lead to my site.
Oh, one more question: that fiance of yours…is it your current missus?
Carnival of the Vanities #212…
Good morning and welcome to the 212th edition of the Carnival of the Vanities. The last two editions I’ve hosted have been massively long and I’m not sure I have the energy for all that today so please forgive me……
[...] I want to hear your best stories about money! (I shared my best money story in The Worst Job I Ever Had.) [...]
[...] I just read a great post on Get Rich Slowly where J.D. talks about a crappy job experience he had selling bad insurance to people who didn’t really need it. J and I met when we both worked for a large company, doing a job that we hated, basically just for the paycheck. A year after we met, J decided to quit and look for something else. What he found was health insurance sales. His first experience in the insurance industry was a lot like J.D.’s. He worked for a company that offered what was essentially a crappy policy, and he spent most of his time driving all over the state to sell it to people who didn’t understand just how bad the policy was. The managers told J that it was the best thing around, and so much better than all the other products out there. But in order to work for them, he had to agree to not sell any other company’s products. So the only way he got paid was if he convinced someone that the one policy he had was the best fit for them - even though it really wasn’t the best fit for anyone. [...]
You might’ve been a dud at selling sleazy insurance, but you’ve got a gift for writing. I enjoyed your clear, honest narrative style.
[...] This was a learned behavior. I was imitating my parents. After college, I allowed myself to be trapped in a life of credit hell. About five years ago I began to wean myself from credit. And in December [...]
just get out while you can. I did the same deal, but “giving away” security systems, it ruined my career life, and set me back really far with my family. I thought I was the gifted “one in a million” who was going to be making 300,000 by the time they turned 22, bs.I never broke even and my boss was a scum bag. I quit a very nice job to work there, and the way the boss was there, I had to start the next day or the deal was OFF, so being as young as I was at the time, I didn’t smell anything funny, so I quit my well paying job without notice. I can’t use my job that I was at for 3 years as a reference bc of the way I left, and I am to embarrassed to use my secuirty sales job as a reference, so bascially, here I am, mother of one, 20,000+ in debt, and starting over, no college, nothing. SOL. as soon as you feel scammed WALK AWAY!!!
I just read this piece to learn more about insurance sales for the novel I’m writing; not only did the author teach me about insurance, he showed me some d@#ned-good narrative writing, as well!
[...] in 1991, I had acquired two additional credit cards. I was glad I had them, too — when my job plans fell through, the credit cards became my emergency fund. I lived off them for months. I also bought a brand-new [...]
your story sounds eerily familiar…
I too have had a shitty job. I would as a childcare worker for abused and neglected adolescents. The kids were bad, the hours and environment, and pay were worse, and since I had a part time job I ended up working two jobs with little pay on opposite schedules. I learned then you learn what you are willing to get paid to do, and working with this population of kids was not one of them for me.
[...] worst job I ever had was selling insurance door-to-door to little old ladies in rural Oregon. I know the tricks and [...]
[...] awesome, doesn’t it? This is the territory in which I spent much time selling insurance door-to-door when I was fresh out of college. That was a terrible experience. This ride will be entirely [...]
Fantastic post! Very enlightening! I have been to a similar place and back. Once i had graduated i had the world at my feet, excellent job prospects and i could work anywhere in the world i wanted. However due to bad choices, and worse money management skills i ended up taking the first job that came my way. Which ended up being a shitty job, i was bullied, worked in a place i use to have nightmares about at univesity, which lead me to spend money to make me happy.
Once i eventually left the job, i was in more debt than i had ever been in my life. job prospects were good, so i relied on that to get me through. I did eventually get through but it took me many years to get to where i am now. I still have some redisual debt, but i’m paying it off and financially and emotionally i’m in a better place. I still have a lot of baggage from my youth that lead me to make these bad decisions, but i’m delaing with it with the help of my fantastic wife (i really don’t deserve her
). So all in all if it weren’t for those bad days i would never be where i am today, it makes me better and stronger.
Those dark days are still dark but they are also the most valuable lessons i have ever learnt
Great story.
Is it weird that I think this section is the nadir, rather than the car crashing?:
In the morning, I would buy a box of old-fashioned donuts and a quart of chocolate milk, drive to some secluded spot, and down it all while thinking of my ruined dreams.
I want to frame that quote and put it on my bathroom wall.
J.D, thank you for the story. It was written with great detail and clarity, making it easy for me to empathize.
I’m currently in the process of looking for a new job after being laid off from my previous one, the first job I’ve ever had. It was a good job, in management consulting, but it really didn’t make me excited or energized to get up every morning. And although I didn’t accumulate financial debt, I definitely incurred an “emotional debt” through the level of second-guessing and self-criticism I’ve put myself through as I didn’t succeed as much as I hoped I would.
Like you, I think this was the result of uninformed choice (in my case, taking the most prestigious, first job offer I got) instead of taking the time to think about what I really wanted to do. Now that I have some time (due to unemployment!) I’ve been giving serious thought to the next step. Even if it doesn’t work out perfectly, I know my next job will help me advance closer to my career goal of producing positive social impact in education.
So in sum, I agree completely with your thesis - never put up with a shitty job, and move your career forwards in jobs that reinforce your goals and principles.
This was a fabulous post! I’ve been a subscriber to GRS for several months, and I’ve learned a great deal during that time.
I do want to make a cautionary comment based on what others are saying: Not all sales people (insurance or otherwise) are sleazy and focused on separating old ladies from their money! My new favorite book is “Top 10 Distinctions Between Millionaires and the Middle Class” (by Keith Cameron Smith) He says to ask yourself (when evaluating a business opportunity):
1. Do you LIKE the people that are doing this already? Can you see yourself being around them, and enjoying it?
2. Do you BELIEVE in the product?
3. Do they have an established, supportive TRAINING system?
It is virtually impossible to be a successful entrepreneur unless you 1. Know how to sell/promote, 2. Are willing to learn how to sell/promote, OR 3. Have a partner/other staff member that will sell/promote your service or product!
I have what many would consider a good education, and a solid resume of corporate and (recently) non-profit management & operations work. I’ve always wanted to work for myself, but I hate selling. Hate it!
It wasn’t until last year when I met a successful entrepreneur that owns her own executive recruiting firm that I learned the truth: If you want to work for yourself (and earn an income), you MUST learn how to SELL/PROMOTE.
After getting a glowing performance evaluation and a CRAPPY RAISE (due to company performance) I realized that J.O.B. stands for Journey of Broke(!). So I’ve decided to set out. Slowly.
I’ve kept my job, but I’ve found an established, NYSE traded company and I’ve launched my own ‘virtual franchise’. I’ve learned that when you actually believe that what you are offering has REAL merit, it is no longer selling. It’s sharing.
I’ve also learned that no one likes high-pressure techniques, so I don’t do it. In my business, ‘Some will (buy), some won’t (buy), So What? Next (person)!” I can say that because I KNOW I’m offering something meaningful that most people need at some point, and don’t typically have!
So, the morale of the story is, don’t judge ALL sales opportunities by the cover!
Nicole, you sound like the you’d be the company I’d love to work for.
I’m currently working as a sales associate in a high-sales retail store. We’re expected to harass our customers to help them better get the computer/printer/digital camera/etc. that suits their needs. I have no problems helping people, and we do sell products I firmly stand behind, the only problem I have is that I have to semi-lie to the customer and tell them they’ll need a new Microsoft Office Suite with their new computer. This is a lie because the computer comes with a trial and you can enter your old serial number in the trial, assuming your old serial is for the same program. I’m also expected to attempt to sell the higher up Norton Internet Suite before going to the lower-end stuff.
I don’t mind that, except that as far as *I* know, AVG Antivirus, Zone Alarm Firewall, Spybot Search & Destroy, and Lavasoft Adaware are the best antispyware, firewall and antivirus programs out there. I’d like to be able to sell *those* specifically, instead of the stupid Norton thing. Especially since all of these are available for free on the ‘net. Yes, I want the business I’m working for to benefit, but not at the excuse of the customer’s wallet. I’m told that it’s not my money, and if the customer wants to spend $1000 on a laptop + overpriced software (obviously not the phrasing my boss used ;)), it’s not my concern.
I’m also supposed to sell a “remote help” kind of thing. It does antivirus and spyware scans for the customer from a remote location. It claims it does everything so “you don’t have to!” Well, I don’t like selling this because a) I wouldn’t trust *anyone* accessing my computer from a remote location, and b) antivirus/antispyware can do the same thing, if you set it on a schedule.
Perhaps I’m a bad salesmen, because I will flat out tell the customer, “I’m sorry, but I’m paid to harass you with these questions.” So far, people have kindly understood what it’s like having to do something you don’t agree with for a job.
Meanwhile, I’m semi-seriously contemplating developing a ’schizophrenic’ side like I read about in Mother Night.
My coworkers are awesome, and I love working where I work, I just don’t like selling things that are over priced (ie: You can buy the same thing for cheaper at WalMart, and WalMart makes enough money to thrive 5 times over, so why can’t my company?).
Company’s name omitted to help protect my identity (because I’m überly paranoid that way).
Heidi,
That sounds like a really tough job; I can’t imagine having to recommend something that I *know* isn’t the best product or service in the marketplace!
Telling customers the truth doesn’t make you a ‘bad’ sales person…just an ethical one! I’m crazy enough to believe that those still exist, and I’m lucky enough to have several of them as my business partners!
I don’t have any employees, so I’m sorry that I can’t offer you a job. What I can share with you is how you can do the same thing I am doing: helping people with high-quality services they *actually need*, and earning a profit at the same time.
My company website is listed below; get in touch with me if you’d like to learn more.
All the Best!
Nicole A. Dunbar
Independent Associate
Prepaid Legal Services, Inc.
http://www.prepaidlegal.com/hub/nicoleadunbar
Listen to this nightmare:
That sounds like an experience I had in the early 80’s after graduation, except it was under my Dad’s company, training with an old, chain-smoking, fast talking and gifted salesman also. I was treated like the “little rich kid” and never really taken seriously at all. I was treated like the Male Tori Spelling of the insurance world!
They were very similar in their sales approach in that “everybody needs the policy-get the signature”, etc. Problem was, I was too honest for the job, or something close to that.
They had me driving all over creation, and often into Philly’s worst neighborhoods, from day one. I swear, my Dad was trying to get me killed. When I finally quit, after a torturous two years of being broke all the time, Dad stuck me in the office shuffling papers, and never gave me any respect after that. In fact, weeks would go by without him saying two words to me. I left his company in disgust after another five years in a cubicle, and my relationship with my parents never recovered, nor did my career.
Today, I see my aging parents about once a year, if that, and I am struggling along, apparently permanently screwed.
The worst I ever had was at Vantage West Credit Union, formally DM. Unpaid overtime, no days off, managers unethical behavior and etc is all you will get working there.
[...] part of women. I know that it would never have occurred to me to get the sort of job that Ron and JD have described. Most of the women I know (including fellow blogger Mrs. Micah) would get temping [...]
I, too, was in sales for a summer, selling security systems. It was simultaneously the best and worst summer of my life. I was outside, meeting lots of people and living in a really nice apartment that the company provided (sort of). But I was bad at sales, working in a difficult area, for a company that filed bankruptcy the following January. I ended up without the promised “back-end” bonus check and no way to pay my tuition. So even though I got the job specifically so I wouldn’t have to go into debt, I ended up getting a student loan anyway.
I freely grant that sales programs are not inherently scams; I would just warn anyone being recruited for such a job to look at it very closely. Talk to people who have worked there for more than two years. Make sure they have an established training program. And never trust any company that will let you “fudge” or lie to a customer. Even if you maintain your integrity, the company as a whole will be shaky.
I was enjoying the stories until I came upon the one who works at a “high-sales retail store” - just say you work for Best Buy. It’s okay, we’ve all had shit jobs. The kicker for me is the poster Nicole who responds with sagely advice then completely invalidates any point she has made by selling Pre-Paid Legal. Christ. Do not listen to this person.
Ask yourself this, why would any legitimate business not operate out of an office but solicit other people to be sales people for a joining fee of $250? And guess what, that recruit’s money gets divvied up, from the bottom up to the top. The person who recruited you gets a small portion, then the person who recruited them gets a slighter larger portion, and so on and so on all the way to the top. You can almost imagine this flow of money in a shape, like I dunno, a PYRAMID.
Hi there, that’s a nice story. I’m feeling quite aimless now. Currently, I’m studying in uni. I’m 20 but I feel that my resume seems pretty empty. I’m considering taking up some part-time job while studying but am not sure whether I can cope or not. Another thing is I have trouble sticking to something for long. I have to work on that.
Thanks for the story. I enjoyed reading it.
J.D.,
This was the post that got me hooked on Get Rich Slowly about a year ago or so, and after finding out that I was getting laid off 2 weeks ago, (this is my last week) it was good to come back and read it again. I’ll take from this that sometimes life throws you lemons, and what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger. Keep on writing!
Hey.
I’ve just come back home from a day of training EXACTLY what you were doing.
& Basically, everything you said was right.
Its a con.
I felt really bad ‘mithering” old people & other people to do shit like that.
& The hours are ridiculous.
I spend 9 hours on my feet knocking on doors asking people to donate to such & such.
There is also a lot of lying involved. Like you said you feel dirty.
Also, if you dont get a sale…You dont get the money.
I got the job given to me today.
But my parents searched it & they found out it was one big brainwashing scam too.
Im not going into work tomorrow.
I want a job where i dont have to lie about everything to scam some money out of people.
Its mean.