This is my closing statement of the day. I've been very very apprehensive about starting a business, running a business and everything in between since my return to Wisconsin in 2013. The facts are pretty simple when you think about it from my position. I came home in 2013 because at the time I was living in Louisiana and had been suffering from an unknown lower GI condition since 2011. it deteriorated at such a rate I had two systemic infections in 11 months, the second I had lost consciousness for four days. Prior to that I worked for Procter and Gamble since leaving the service in 2009. I had been operating a computer scrapping business on the side since 2010 and quit in 2012 when the illness took a rapid turn for the worse.
When I returned to WI I sought treatment from VA for the first time having run out of money. Now I get VA compensation for what amounts to a bad shoulder, knees and PTSD...among getting stabbed and so on. I am a fortunate case, it took two years to get compensation which my understanding is 18 months earlier than most...and I don't even have any missing limbs. It makes me feel like an imposter every time I'm able to simply walk in to the VA while my brothers have wheels. This has been weighing on me. I brought it up to Ken(Mudlucky) that I think we should hire veterans, particularly disabled or maybe just guys in a bad way. It's hard to explain. I don't have a desire to get rich, be wealthy or anything like that. My successes are OUR successes, in that I mean everyone from the customers to the employees. I'm not known for beating around bushes or hiding from problems. Frankly speaking there are entities out there trying to do exactly what I do now and thats fine, it's capitalism right? But I should say my personal measurement of success isn't how well I did on
ebay or how many pound of scrap we sent out. It's in who we helped, how we helped. It's college tuitions and charitable donations. It's a veteran who sleeps in an apartment and not on the street or in his mother's basement.
I've personally poured every dime I have into this...thing. I think if I can help a brother in arms...show him that it really is another battle, another war and you must have patience and adapt to it. It's a dream to have Ken as a partner with a mind as focused or more so than mine. I want success as much as the next guy. I want to eat better food, drive a nicer truck and live in a nice house but I don't want to do that on someone else's back. I've been a lead from the front kind of guy since the Army decided I could be a leader to begin with.
So with that off my chest, let me take a moment to explain my goals. Obviously we want to hire someone to help us maximize our incoming scrap so we can pay top tier prices to everyone thus earning us even MORE incoming scrap. I also have the unique position where I can hire a disabled vet because lots of the work we have can be done from a wheel chair or the seated position if necessary. Truth be told cpu testing and even memory testing can be done one handed. Adapt and overcome is what I was taught anyways
I have first hand knowledge of the plights and effects of war on the mind and soul. I want to mentor a vet more than be his or her boss. Not that scrapping electronics takes skill but some of the computer related refurbishing I do DOES take quite a bit of skill. I just want to give back...guess that's all it is, the service mentality never ends and I'd like to give back for my recent successes in life.
I guess for those of you larger in business than me...have any of you hired vets before? Were there any difficulties, did you overcome them? I fully understand it can be a rocky road and at times like babysitting.
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