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noahrevoy
@noahrevoy
Every young man should have a hard, dirty job in his late teens.

Start at sixteen or seventeen during the summers. Shovel gravel. Haul lumber. Dig trenches. Stack crates in a warehouse or under a blazing sun. Work alongside other men. Get blisters. Get a tan. Bleed. Operate tools. Push through fatigue. Learn how to keep going when everything hurts.

That kind of work recalibrates a young man. It teaches him how the world works. He learns how to manage risk. It humbles the ego. It strengthens the will. And when he later moves into more intellectual work, he’ll carry the weight of that discipline with him. He’ll be grounded in reality. He’ll respect the people who keep the world running.

For blue-collar men, this work may become a permanent path. For others, it becomes part of their foundation. Either way, it builds the man.

For women, the equivalent is care.
Caring for children. Helping the elderly. Supporting a relative. Babysitting or assisting in a daycare. The act of nurturing life shapes them. It brings out their natural strength. It teaches patience, empathy, and the quiet endurance that holds families together.

Both paths form the soul.
One through hardship.
One through love.
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Average Geo · 27w
This sort of work started for me at 8, and it was to help support the family. I thought it was cruel at the time, but it taught me a lot and I appreciate my dad for instilling hard work skills, experience and ethics in me at such a young age.
CR45H 0V3RR1D3 · 27w
Agreed. It’s important to build a good work ethic in a time when people would prefer to work from the comfort of their couch.😅
tuco · 27w
At my grandparents farm we children helped in all the task on our level. It only gave us good and it was really fun.
Tara · 27w
As a mother of two men intraining, I support this message. 🌻
Telluride · 27w
https://blossom.primal.net/0f5341d7282915c07575508e2bd7ae115431fd373ce114d8f576abb8f8b98417.jpg