It is said that owning one’s own
business is the American Dream. I don’t
believe that’s true. Roland majored in
business and would like to start up a business and has had that desire for as
long as I’ve known him. The problem is
that over 90% of those who try their hand at business don’t succeed with
keeping said business open. Over
90%! Holy Cow! That is not a dream! That is a nightmare!
We have been in Myrtle Creek only four
years and have seen several businesses come and go - not that Myrtle Creek is the booming
establishment of getting one’s business started. But still . . . opening a business, regardless
of location, seems like such a gamble to
me. It has never nor will ever be my
dream. And yet it doesn’t seem satisfying
to collect a paycheck on somebody else’s dream.
I remember when malls were
popular. I remember seeing stores come
and go for various reasons. They weren’t
meeting the public’s demands, the overhead was too high, financial obligations
much huger than profit. I remember one store that sold cutlery. They had the nicest personal. I would have liked to see them make it, but I
personally did not have a need to go shopping there daily or even weekly. There were several shops that did not have
the same friendly personal that somehow survived. Over time the malls seemed to cater more to
the posh people one didn’t think would ever dare show up at a mall. I was never an avid shopper anyway, but over
time I really felt like I was squeezing through a crowd of upper class people
that I didn’t nor have a desire to relate to.
But it’s not as if my dollar was going to save any single merchandiser
anyway.
Roland will look at buildings downtown
or one’s we have seen marked “For Sale” and constantly asks, “What could we put
there? What would work in this town?” I’m
certainly not willing to take the risk to find out. It would be great if Roland could make it on
somebody else’s money, but I think we already gamble with ours just with
personal purchases. There’s no way I
want to file bankruptcy for something I never wanted to get into in the first
place.
I'm happy in education where the rewards are students who recognize me outside of the school and will wave to me or express pleasure toward me. Those rewards are greater than the paycheck.
I'm happy in education where the rewards are students who recognize me outside of the school and will wave to me or express pleasure toward me. Those rewards are greater than the paycheck.
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