Anonymous wrote:Something specialized with room for growth - yes, absolutely.
Something dead-end - absolutely not.
Anonymous[b wrote:]Some of the greatest literary figures of the last century had "blue collar" jobs[/b]
Charles Bukowski is just one example.
Anonymous wrote:I'd be pissed if I just spent 4 yrs of paying for (expensive) college tuition when kid could've gone to a vocational school instead.
Anonymous wrote:Cop, plumber, firefighter - yes of course
Cashier at Walmart- probably not. My family is very blue collar and I’ve worked hard to establish a career that isn’t retail focused.
Anonymous wrote:Contractor; electrician; plumber; HVAC; auto mechanic -- sure. Frankly I'd encourage something in the building trades because you have a very real chance of owning your own business which allows you to control your destiny to an extent; though obviously I'd tell them they need to work 24-7 when young to make their money before their bodies get old (which is a very real issue for contractors) and to take full advantage of good economic times because business totally falls off when recessions hit.
If they were the military/cop/firefighter type -- I'd be honest, I'm not going to be wild about them choosing to be in harm's way for a government salary. If I see them with those interests by middle school, I'll be pushing the service academies or ROTC hard -- they can go live that life as officers for 5 years and then go into the private sector and make real money without day to day danger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Considering how snobby everyone on the board is, what if your child grows up to end up working at Walmart as a cashier or becoming a plumber?
Or what if he grows up to become a cop?
What will you do?
If child is a women she shouldn’t have to work so side jobs like those would be fine with Me. Her husband will be supporting her
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Considering how snobby everyone on the board is, what if your child grows up to end up working at Walmart as a cashier or becoming a plumber?
Or what if he grows up to become a cop?
What will you do?
If child is a women she shouldn’t have to work so side jobs like those would be fine with Me. Her husband will be supporting her
Anonymous wrote:Considering how snobby everyone on the board is, what if your child grows up to end up working at Walmart as a cashier or becoming a plumber?
Or what if he grows up to become a cop?
What will you do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something specialized with room for growth - yes, absolutely.
Something dead-end - absolutely not.
What’s the need for growth for? Money?
At a certain point, our lives are all dead ends
PP here - so true!
Growth is important because it allows a person to build upon what they've established themselves as being able to do. This is only true to a point, I recognize.