Sonic, Painting, and Working as a warehouse temp...
i think that people are seriously overstimating how hard manual labor is and underestimating how terrible it would be to work at a car rental place in downtown wichita while having to wear a shirt and tie and sell damage waiver to people who shouldn't even be allowed to drive.
Quote from: Weird Roberts foam finger on July 24, 2009, 05:20:57 PMWorst job for me was being a telemarketer (needed the money). Wouldn't mind this. Would be incredibly boring though. Pay is pretty good isn't it?
Worst job for me was being a telemarketer (needed the money).
Food runner at Timberline steakhouse. So much pressure. Trays were incredibly heavy. "Hey, little 15 year old scrawny boy, go take this tray of 7 full stack of ribs with 7 drinks to that table over there with important business men."Still have nightmares......
Quote from: Rick Daris on July 27, 2009, 09:27:26 AMi think that people are seriously overstimating how hard manual labor is and underestimating how terrible it would be to work at a car rental place in downtown wichita while having to wear a shirt and tie and sell damage waiver to people who shouldn't even be allowed to drive. I'm with you on this. It's "worst" job, not "most physically taxing."
dishwasher, manko, mow/weedeat cemetaries. The worst was the summer I worked as an inspector packer at an insulation factory in McPherson. Incredibly hot and 12 hour swing shifts. Worst job in all of history.
Quote from: Ginger on July 27, 2009, 01:08:14 AMdishwasher, manko, mow/weedeat cemetaries. The worst was the summer I worked as an inspector packer at an insulation factory in McPherson. Incredibly hot and 12 hour swing shifts. Worst job in all of history.Is being a ginger considered a job?
Quote from: pwrcat1 on July 27, 2009, 09:48:06 AMQuote from: Rick Daris on July 27, 2009, 09:27:26 AMi think that people are seriously overstimating how hard manual labor is and underestimating how terrible it would be to work at a car rental place in downtown wichita while having to wear a shirt and tie and sell damage waiver to people who shouldn't even be allowed to drive. I'm with you on this. It's "worst" job, not "most physically taxing." There is a difference between a boring job and one where you physically work your ass off. "Worst" and "Physically taxing" go hand in hand in my book.
Quote from: WillieWannabe on July 28, 2009, 08:37:37 AMQuote from: pwrcat1 on July 27, 2009, 09:48:06 AMQuote from: Rick Daris on July 27, 2009, 09:27:26 AMi think that people are seriously overstimating how hard manual labor is and underestimating how terrible it would be to work at a car rental place in downtown wichita while having to wear a shirt and tie and sell damage waiver to people who shouldn't even be allowed to drive. I'm with you on this. It's "worst" job, not "most physically taxing." There is a difference between a boring job and one where you physically work your ass off. "Worst" and "Physically taxing" go hand in hand in my book.I guess I disagree. I liked working construction/contracting way better than working retail.
Quote from: PettMB on July 28, 2009, 01:28:20 PMQuote from: Ginger on July 27, 2009, 01:08:14 AMdishwasher, manko, mow/weedeat cemetaries. The worst was the summer I worked as an inspector packer at an insulation factory in McPherson. Incredibly hot and 12 hour swing shifts. Worst job in all of history.Is being a ginger considered a job? Probably pretty hard, IMO.
last summer i worked 10 hour days on a ranch where myself and 3 other guys took down barbed wire fences every day all day in the Texas heat with only pliers.
I don't mind physical work, But putting up hay is fine if it were 75 degrees out and some breeze. But it's not it's 100 degrees out maybe a breeze outside but inside the barn there is no air and lots of dust.I have waited table at manhattan CC. Was kinda fun, waited on Snyder a couple of times (he drinks johnny walker red label.) I did drop a dish off of my tray on the back of some rich ladies head (still had some food on it.) She was pretty nice about it. I was all . Washed dishes at the fraternity house I lived at wasn't too bad but probably not the same as a resturant though.
Quote from: jthutch on July 28, 2009, 12:22:33 PMI don't mind physical work, But putting up hay is fine if it were 75 degrees out and some breeze. But it's not it's 100 degrees out maybe a breeze outside but inside the barn there is no air and lots of dust.I have waited table at manhattan CC. Was kinda fun, waited on Snyder a couple of times (he drinks johnny walker red label.) I did drop a dish off of my tray on the back of some rich ladies head (still had some food on it.) She was pretty nice about it. I was all . Washed dishes at the fraternity house I lived at wasn't too bad but probably not the same as a resturant though.I almost killed myself putting up hay last summer
Beat this:I worked at IHOP in Manhattan. Totally sucked balls. I quit after 2 months
Physical labor is fun/good most of the time. But like I would rather dig a ditch and sing black ppl songs than do anything with moisture or allergens involved.Worst job I ever had I think was working for a hay farmer near MHK. It was good other than getting screamed at constantly, the crappy equipment he had, more yelling, high humidity, and bucking bales... Bucking bales is kinda fun except when we did it, we had to do two SEMI loads at a time, with one of them being an old reefer. 2200 bales in like 4 hours. And I swung the hay hook into my (tender) thigh meat once. Got yelled at.Long story short don't work for a guy who farms right next to Flush.
Quote from: BigCat on August 23, 2009, 03:46:25 PMPhysical labor is fun/good most of the time. But like I would rather dig a ditch and sing black ppl songs than do anything with moisture or allergens involved.Worst job I ever had I think was working for a hay farmer near MHK. It was good other than getting screamed at constantly, the crappy equipment he had, more yelling, high humidity, and bucking bales... Bucking bales is kinda fun except when we did it, we had to do two SEMI loads at a time, with one of them being an old reefer. 2200 bales in like 4 hours. And I swung the hay hook into my (tender) thigh meat once. Got yelled at.Long story short don't work for a guy who farms right next to Flush. unless i just misunderstand your story, 2200 lil squares are not fitting on two semi's, once again if in a drunk stupor i misunderstood my bad
Quote from: RonLongshaft on August 23, 2009, 04:05:17 PMQuote from: BigCat on August 23, 2009, 03:46:25 PMPhysical labor is fun/good most of the time. But like I would rather dig a ditch and sing black ppl songs than do anything with moisture or allergens involved.Worst job I ever had I think was working for a hay farmer near MHK. It was good other than getting screamed at constantly, the crappy equipment he had, more yelling, high humidity, and bucking bales... Bucking bales is kinda fun except when we did it, we had to do two SEMI loads at a time, with one of them being an old reefer. 2200 bales in like 4 hours. And I swung the hay hook into my (tender) thigh meat once. Got yelled at.Long story short don't work for a guy who farms right next to Flush. unless i just misunderstand your story, 2200 lil squares are not fitting on two semi's, once again if in a drunk stupor i misunderstood my badThey weren't legal loads by any means. The reefer couldn't hold anywhere near as many as the flatbed, but it wasn't just any flatbed. Drop deck that also had an overhang up front, and he'd welded panels on the side to widen the trailer by a couple feet and had about a 12 ft. extension to lengthen as well. Not a highway-licensed setup. Plus we stacked WAY higher than they should have been. So all in all you could fit a ridiculous no. of bales on the flatbed. They were also kind of small bales dimensionally, maybe because he had the plunger pressure on the baler turned up or something.