Peaty jobs
-
stone mason or bricklayer perhaps. mentioned somewhere else that grip strength correlates with lifespan
-
@brenn My friend, the only "Peaty" job is a job you love.
-
@brenn Yes, but increasing your grip strength doesn't increase your lifespan.
-
@oliveoil thank you!
-
@MB my husband has a lawn mowing/ gardening business which earns 100k a year. This is in Australia, we definitely don’t struggle. But he hates his job…so I guess he’s not one of the statistics
-
@MB I’m a beach lifeguard; the job could pay your bills depending on your location and rank. More popular beaches or places that are warm year-round tend to make something closer to a living wage or even salary.
Obviously rookies and the first few years tend to only make minimum wage or slightly above it, but if you take on more serious roles like such as a supervisor you start making a considerable amount of cash. The role can take over a decade(possibly two) to reach, but Captains can make a very comfortable salary as well.
-
@Blitz I'm a health researcher and I run 3 companies and use a Peat perspective because he has helped me explain so much. I always think that it's better to work for yourself, than hold a job.
-
@cale proximity to strong EMF though?
-
@brenn depending on the type of work, yes sometimes. This seems to be the one big downside. I'll have to research ways to mitigate damage
-
@brenn although come to think of it, it's not much more than most people get, as there are powerlines everywhere lol
-
@Shar_to_the_dae He must be super fit, checkout SB Mowing on YT, he seems to have fun, far too strenuous though IMO