Why every man should work a shitty job

I’ve worked many jobs in the past 4 years—many of them pure shyte.

Some notable ones are:

Working in nightclubs, raking leaves, vacuuming wedding venues, scrubbing toilets, cleaning windows, loading in trucks, repairing used festival speakers, guiding traffic at private parking, and many, many more odd jobs like these.

Now I didn’t just work weird jobs.

I’ve also worked more “normal” jobs such as a door-to-door salesman and a bartender when I was younger.

Yet that’s beside the point.

The fact is, I’ve seen and experienced many things, worked for/with, and met countless people in all stages of life, and learned to hate different aspects of every job I worked.

But I don’t regret any of them.

I wouldn’t do it over, that’s for sure, I’d rather stay far, far, far away from all of them, never to get anywhere close to jobs like that in my, hopefully, many years I’ll spend on this earth.

But, yet again, all of those jobs helped me develop into the person I am today.

Even more.

All of those jobs made me appreciate “doing the work” and putting in effort for the things I’m doing right now. Sure I might complain once in a while that I’ve got a lot of stuff to write, or there’s a lot I need to think about, or that a certain promotion didn’t do as well (something I learned not to care about at all, because it doesn’t actually matter at all in the long run and whether I make a sale or not, I’m eating steak either way).

When it comes down to it, I’m blessed to be in the position I’m in right now.

In fact, I’ve got no doubt many would kill to be in this position (chances are people would kill to be in your position as well if you’re lucky and blessed enough to be able to read this email—yet that’s not something we ever realize, much less think about).

The reality is.

Everyone (or at least every man) should, at one point in their lives, have worked a terrible job, with shitty pay, awful working conditions, incredibly long hours, little to no recognition whatsoever, and without any (known) hope of landing a better job in the future.

Why?

Because those jobs are what’s needed to be grateful with the better ones you’ll undoubtedly land eventually.

Just as there’s no light without darkness, neither can there be a good situation without bad ones to compare it to—life only makes sense for us in comparisons after all.

Anyway.

I don’t know what kind of jobs you’ve had in the past or what kind of work you’re doing as we speak. But if you’d like to get to know a better opportunity then I’d recommend you to check out Email Valhalla today.

Check it out here: https://alexvandromme.com/valhalla