I know a man who came to this country as a youth. I’ve known him since then. After years of hard work, he got a restaurant of his own and then two more. It took decades, and he did very well. Not especially well educated, he sent his kids to college. Before his son was even out of college, he posted a funny video of himself cooking. It went viral, and now he owns a few houses of his own, and probably has made more in a few years than his dad made in his entire life.
I’m not sure what to make of it but if that’s all it takes to make millions then I guess the moral of the story is don’t work like a dog like your dad.
I understand the words Charlie, but there is no such thing as being "theoretically willing." Willing only happens during doing. They seem separable, in our minds, but in the flesh they happen simultaneously, or not at all. It's like, "I coulda been a contender." Well no, as Jordan P might say, if ya coulda ya woulda.
I know a man who came to this country as a youth. I’ve known him since then. After years of hard work, he got a restaurant of his own and then two more. It took decades, and he did very well. Not especially well educated, he sent his kids to college. Before his son was even out of college, he posted a funny video of himself cooking. It went viral, and now he owns a few houses of his own, and probably has made more in a few years than his dad made in his entire life.
I’m not sure what to make of it but if that’s all it takes to make millions then I guess the moral of the story is don’t work like a dog like your dad.
But one should be willing to do so.
I understand the words Charlie, but there is no such thing as being "theoretically willing." Willing only happens during doing. They seem separable, in our minds, but in the flesh they happen simultaneously, or not at all. It's like, "I coulda been a contender." Well no, as Jordan P might say, if ya coulda ya woulda.
All sounds fishy, a story tarted up with hyperbole just to keep people reading after the "I."