I just discovered this forum recently.
I'm a Subway "sandwich artist" who has dealt with at least a few SCs every single day since I was hired.
I've actually enjoyed my experience at Subway and dealing with SCs, I'm currently a 5th year senior MIS major. For four years or so I was living purely on scholarships and financial aid, so I really had little to no experience working a wage slave job and was pretty much living the "good life."
When I decided that electrical engineering probably wasn't how I wanted to spend my life and switched majors, a lot of my scholarships started to dry up since they only covered four years. So I bit the bullet and started putting in applications around town (this is a relatively small college town where you even see some grad-students working at QSRs since there's nowhere else to make any sort of money.)
When I finally do graduate, I'm actually going to like that I spent time at Subway because it's taught me how to never be an SC myself.
I'm a Subway "sandwich artist" who has dealt with at least a few SCs every single day since I was hired.
I've actually enjoyed my experience at Subway and dealing with SCs, I'm currently a 5th year senior MIS major. For four years or so I was living purely on scholarships and financial aid, so I really had little to no experience working a wage slave job and was pretty much living the "good life."
When I decided that electrical engineering probably wasn't how I wanted to spend my life and switched majors, a lot of my scholarships started to dry up since they only covered four years. So I bit the bullet and started putting in applications around town (this is a relatively small college town where you even see some grad-students working at QSRs since there's nowhere else to make any sort of money.)
When I finally do graduate, I'm actually going to like that I spent time at Subway because it's taught me how to never be an SC myself.


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