@Sybil2 wrote:
I have never quit or even considered quitting. For me, quitting is a sign of failure and failure is not an option for me. I guess it is just my personality or my upbringing. Even when I "quit" a relationship, I still stay friends with the exes. It just works for me.
You totally lost me. Having a no-quit, competitive attitude is usually not equated to being compassionate or loving. Meta-human? I am not a comic book character. Most of my friends are built from the same cloth. We are not rainbows and unicorns kind of people.@GrosMichel wrote:
Your parents must have been compassionate loving people to instill love that goes beyond the pettiness of human differences. Do your friends trip out that you act like a meta-human when it comes to forgiveness and love because those qualities get rare. I understand others quit after getting stuck in jobs that do not pay or are "easy and quick". If a Shop is long, why don't they tell us, why must lying be involved?
@Sybil2 wrote:
You totally lost me. Having a no-quit, competitive attitude is usually not equated to being compassionate or loving. Meta-human? I am not a comic book character. Most of my friends are built from the same cloth. We are not rainbows and unicorns kind of people.@GrosMichel wrote:
Your parents must have been compassionate loving people to instill love that goes beyond the pettiness of human differences. Do your friends trip out that you act like a meta-human when it comes to forgiveness and love because those qualities get rare. I understand others quit after getting stuck in jobs that do not pay or are "easy and quick". If a Shop is long, why don't they tell us, why must lying be involved?
I really don't understand why some shoppers let emotions get in the way of their work. Just do your job and move onto the next job.
@AZwolfman wrote:
My answer to the OP's original question is "NEVER." It has never crossed my mind. I have enjoyed it from the moment I started in late 2008 and dove in full-time. I am still a full-time mystery shopper today, and I love it.
Dude, seriously. Enough with these rambling posts that have NOTHING to do with mystery shopping. Don't begin to associate me with cults and Trump rallies. Enough with the false compliments. You have posted about A+ shoppers and super heroes without knowing anything about us.@GrosMichel wrote:
My friend received a letter from his mother's cult asking for his help financially, she still refuse's to speak to him. When the cult elder begged him to send his mother $1500 a month to help her with her rent and "tithing commitments he said "you want me to help my mother who has never spoken to my four kids because your cult forbids talking to worldly-people leaving my kids without grandparents their entire life?" Sybil, our society is moving away from the love and people are become more divided filled with more anger. I watched Donald Trump Rallies seeing how angry people get, where is all the negative emotions and fear coming from? Our Country could use more people that don't become outraged, you might not be a super hero but you have a composure everyone can learn from.
@Sybil2 wrote:
Dude, seriously. Enough with these rambling posts that have NOTHING to do with mystery shopping. Don't begin to associate me with cults and Trump rallies. Enough with the false compliments. You have posted about A+ shoppers and super heroes without knowing anything about us.
Maybe GrosMichel is a blond!@bgriffin wrote:
And also the posts are often just downright confusing!
@GrosMichel, why are you so obsessed with "the young kid" and why are you asking other forum members about his status? Why don't you ask him directly? Maybe if you weren't so worried about what the Joneses are doing, you would be more successful in your business.@GrosMichel wrote:
@AZwolfman wrote:
My answer to the OP's original question is "NEVER." It has never crossed my mind. I have enjoyed it from the moment I started in late 2008 and dove in full-time. I am still a full-time mystery shopper today, and I love it.
How selective are you regarding the shops you pick, we still have not heard back from the young kid who wanted to make $1000 a week. I thought he was better off trying to move to another area where he could make wages and tips working 60-80 hours a week because being new to MS and wanting $1000 a week is not realistic. I hope he can leave the field if that's what he chose with his head held. Did you think making $1000 a week for being a new shopper was realistic?