Originally posted by capt. apathy 
when I was 17 I thought "if I could just make $12.50 an hour.  I'd get $500 a week and I'd be living high."  man was I a moron. 
 $7 an hour is what i work for, about $240 per paycheck, every 2 weeks.  It's not bad, but then i'm not paying for insurance on my car, healthcare, food, etc.  I pay for gas, soon my AH2 account, and whatever else I want.  My parents pay for nothing anymore except my account and soon not even that.  
I can see the toll that worker on cars has.  Hell i'd get home from a 10 hour day and wonder how the other 2 guys that did the harder stuff survived.  I was doing 5 oil changes, maybe an alternator, maybe a started, brakes, a water pump perhaps, and balancing tires.  I wasn't removing heater cores or doing AC work.  I enjoy it though, it's the times when you think, "If I don't do this right, it could be someones life" that get to me.  School auto shop has been a pretty big help in why things do what they do.  I'm planning on military for a few years after high school then vocational school for mechanics, or a 4 year college for business and mechanics.  It seems like the author is trying to discourage getting into the business.  Reading "Tomorrow's Technician" also gives a nice slant to the other direction though.  
I dunno, we'll see what happens in the future.  Step dad's auto shop is paid off in 4 years and if I go into the business with him it won't be a horribly paying job being that he basically owns what is left of the business (after his 2 other co-owners took off) and he stops paying for their million dollar life insurance policies.  Hell i've thought about building a car a few times with my step dad.  
Alright i'm done.