Results 31 to 40 of 44
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February 25th, 2014 05:08 PM #31
sa school ng anak ko may parent dun na lola mekaniko. lola enya tawag sa kaniya. shop niya sa tandang sora. halos lahat ng tanong ko sa oto ko siya lang nakakasagot. kasama ko siyang naghahanap ng mga piyesa dito sa banawe.
*ser jick- sa youtube ko lang pinanood yung pagpalit ng power steering hose and liquid. alanghiya naman kasi. labor 800php tapos wala pang 15 minutes naayos/kabit na!
*ser greenlyt, cardict -kung gusto niyo may free seminar sa ricky ricky institute. crash course in anal surgery.
mga tiga p. burgos sample patients.
pm me ng ma-enlist ko kayo.
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February 25th, 2014 08:27 PM #32
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February 27th, 2014 09:25 PM #33
I am also interested on enrolling for massage classes. It's kinda expensive kasi. Maybe I can moonlight as a massage therapist. FTW. :bwahaha: My former supervisor/friend is good at giving massage and he would tease me that I am horrible at it when I try to return the favor :rant: I think some people are naturally "magaan ang kamay".
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Tsikoteer
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February 28th, 2014 11:08 AM #34
Am interested more on reflexology/hilot. Who knows, when i finally burn out, i can just do hilot. Bawi naman sa tips, wala pang BIR na manggugulo :p
It's nice to have one of these non-techie skills up your sleeve:
- hilot
- cooking
- haircutting(ano tamang term, Barbership?)
- electrical installation/repair
- plumbing
- carpentry
i feel these are skills that are retrenchment/recession-proof. i mean, malabo naman siguro na magkakaroon ng automated barber shop, with lasers cutting your hair?
Sadly i have none of these skills, only good looks :D
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February 28th, 2014 11:55 AM #35
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February 28th, 2014 12:02 PM #36
Hassle naman yung maycomment pa My dad's also a handyman and my Mom is all praises for my Dad even if the results aren't as perfect (rarely happens though). When My Dad painted the master's bedroom himself, may mga lampas lampas :bwahaha: But for the longest time my Mom won't have their room repainted because it's the work of my Dad daw
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February 28th, 2014 02:00 PM #37
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February 28th, 2014 02:43 PM #38
remember when the nyse came crashing and the ceo's and top executives lined up wall street carrying signs "will work for food"?, plumbers, auto techs, carpenters, electricians and other blue collar jobs never did this "will work for food"
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Tsikoteer
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February 28th, 2014 04:19 PM #39It's actually this scenario that made me think i should find a recession-proof skill. It may not earn much, but at least you're earning
Iba kasi sa US, mahal ang manual labor...at least before the rush of illegal immigrants and cheap manpower. During financial crises, nagkaka oversupply ng manpower sa finance. e pag wala ring maghahire sayo walang kwenta din ang diploma mo.
Dunno if it still holds true, but me oversupply daw ng IT people sa US, especially after the dotcom bust. Kaya hirap nga daw yung former officemates namin maghanap ng trabaho dun, e kalaban nila puro me experience, coming from big companies, me certification. And white
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Be careful with channels like "China Observer" on YouTube. There is a clear bias in their posts and...
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