Wombat wrote:
Better you should get a bucket and a squeegee and be a window cleaner.
Many years ago, in some recession or another, I lost my job and I did exactly that. I worked for an entire summer washing windows. I quite enjoyed it, actually. I would walk into businesses downtown with my bucket ... "wash your windows? Five bucks!"
Well jeez .. what shop or business owner could turn that down? I'd typically make $50 to $75 by lunchtime (in the 1980's, that was a fair amount of money per day), then take the afternoon off. And you're right ... the feeling of being my own man was exhiliarating.
But regarding the point about being a "hired man" or "wage slave" ... it's a different world now than it was those three or four generations ago. The world economy is more concentrated now. Mechanization and computerization means that very few people are in a position to start their own farm or work for themselves, without very specialized and highly developed skills. The closest we see to that these days is probably internet entrepreneurs, but I wonder about the success rate in that field ...