Treat your employees the way you wanna be treated. He ran his own business and he always told his people that if they finish their work early, they can go home early and he'll pay them as if they stayed the entire day
my mom and dad taught me to never let a day go by that you don't tell your loved ones that you love them. i learned a very hard lesson on this. a few years ago i lost my son to a drunk driver. i had my own business and he was in another town starting his own business. i hadn't talked with him for a few days when he passed away. i never really got to tell him at the end how i felt. i do not let that happen now. always live each day like it is your last as tomorrow is never promised.
my dad used to tell me "Early bird gets the worm" and "before you ever ask a girl to be your gf, look at her mom because that's what she will look like after she has kids" and "family comes first", "golf comes second after family but 1st before girls"
My mom taught me to keep fighting when the odds are against you. She had stage 4 *** cancer and the doctor told her to tell us goodbye because she only had weeks. Well, she wasn't giving up and it was another 4 years she gave us since she decided she wasn't going to lay down and die. I miss her and am sad that she has many grandchildren she never met. Don't lay down and die people. Keep fighting and believe!
Just remembered another one - Never be cheap with yourself or your family. Don't buy cheap *** - spend the few extra bucks to buy quality, take care of it, and it'll last forever
My dad taught me things a bit differently. I learned what to do by watching what he did, and doing the opposite. Don't get me wrong, I love him, but that only came in the latter part of my life.
My Dad has taught me lots of good lessons over the years. Treat others how you want to be treated is at the top of that list. Pretty cool to see him these days, passing his life lessons on to the grandkids.
My Dad taught me to never ask someone who works for you to do something you wouldn't do yourself. I've tried to live by that throughout my career and teach it to my sons, one who is a police Sergeant and one who is a Captain in the 82nd Airborne.
I think a lot of the stuff my Dad taught me was unintentional. One of the big ones I learned was not to be a hypocrite. He was really big into "Do as I say, not as I do". I could see through that nonsense then as a child, and now that I have a kid of my own I can see he see's though it too. You have walk the walk, and not just talk the talk if you want your kids to listen and actually believe what you say.
Some of the most important things my dad taught me was to have a sense of humor and to always carry a pocket knife. I use both of those lessons every day; humor keeps me sane and I use my knife every single day on the job.
My dad taught me things a bit differently. I learned what to do by watching what he did, and doing the opposite. Don't get me wrong, I love him, but that only came in the latter part of my life.
+1 Cabbie, He sobered up while I was still young but was still knda a douche until I was 18 then he taught me how to forgive by being there for me during the toughest part of my life when he was never there before. Sadly he passed away a year after we really started to bond. at the ripe old age of 49..... oldest a Foster man in our family has lasted so far.
My dad taught me. Being a man isn't about doing what you want to do, it means doing what you need to do
.. the very same lessons taught by my father. Also, always tell the truth, respect your elders, always call adults Mr. or Mrs. none of this six year old kids calling adults by their first name crap, and... he taught me how to fish.
My dad taught me how to fix a car right. I'd watch him work on the car, cuss at it, cuss at me, hand him the tools he asked for, cuss at the tools. Then when he was done, after spending the day on it - it still didn't run right. He taught me when I have engine problems, call a mechanic...
Comments