"Don't put off getting your cat spayed or neutered. There are too many of us wandering the streets unwanted and without homes. There are lots of ways you can come up with the money to do the right thing."This article was contributed by Nano, a member of The Cat Site: There are always people who say they want to get their cats spayed or neutered but lack the money or are experiencing financial difficulties. The reality is that some of these people are irresponsible types who just want to make excuses. But I really think a good number of them are legitimate and I agree it can sometimes be difficult to come up with an extra $100 at the end of the month to get the cat neutered. I -- and no doubt many of you -- have been there! |
Sometimes it is tough to take a "second job" where you have
to (1) apply, (2) interview, (3) get on the schedule, (4) wait for your first
paycheck, etc. And many employers expect new hires to promise 20+ hours/week and
a commitment that they will stay long enough to make hiring worth the bother
they go through for the sake of training...plus it is on your employment
history, and constantly taking on and then resigning from secondary jobs makes
you look irregular.
Solution? Get a temporary job or a casual arrangement (=
payment within 24 hours). Here are the top five ways I have earned extra
money when things were tight:
1. Picking strawberries (or any kind
of fruit or produce). Situations are usually advertised, and you basically just
show up at the farm and get an ID number. As long as you don't look violent or
inebriated they will let you on the premises. You pick fruit or produce, turn in
baskets that get weighed and are given tickets or vouchers as you work. When it
is time to go, you turn in all your tickets to the cashier and are paid cash
based on the amount that you picked. When I was in junior high, I rode my bike
out to a farm and did this for eleven days in a row. I made $600 and used half
of that money to repay the vet bill from an expensive visit for my two pets --
yep, caused by me neglecting to spend about $30 on preventative care. (Not my
proudest moment as a pet owner!)
2. Delivering phone books. Those
phone books have to arrive at your doorstep somehow, right? You show up at the
advertised location -- it was a VFW building for that city. They verify proof of
auto insurance and give you a "route" of phonebooks that need to be delivered
(usually 10 hours worth of effort). Load them in your car and away you go. Work
at your own pace delivering the books -- all in one day or split it up over
multiple days -- then call back to homebase when you are done. In a matter of
hours they will cut you a personal check that in my experience translated to
$10-11/hour after expenses. You can keep taking additional "routes" until the
entire delivery for your city is complete. It can go on anywhere from 2-3 weeks
depending on circumstaces. More than once I used this opportunity to pick up a
quick $1000-1200 -- but even doing a single route could pay for neutering a
cat.
3. Run errands for a realtor. Realtors are basically
self-employed people and the successful ones have a million-and-one things to
do. Basically just contact a busy looking realty office and offer your services
to help run errands for anyone needing help. A realtor might need someone to
drive out in the middle of nowhere and slap a "SOLD" sticker on a for-sale sign.
Someone might need you to go around and fill up a dozen baskets with little
flyers. There are also publicity issues -- I once made $60 walking around
putting a notice on 500 doorknobs at a large condo complex for a woman to
announce she had sold one of their neighbor's condos and could help anyone else
who needed a listing agent. It took most of the day and man my feet were sore,
but...$60 cash in hand isn't bad and it was cheaper for her than paying postage.
It is true most companies employ their own full time "handyman", but successful
realtors don't want to wait four days for the company "errand boy" to do it.
They are too busy showing property or too tired from doing their primary work,
so they will throw someone some cash to take care of these miscellaneous tasks.
I never did it but they also sometimes want a person to fix up vacant houses
that are having a hard time selling -- either regular cleaning or more
heavy-duty repairs.
4. Christmas work. There's a lot of casual
jobs available around the holidays. I once worked in a Christmas tree lot that
involved helping customers pick a tree and then loading it onto the roof of the
car. Cash was paid at the end of each shift plus there were generous tips from
customers who were in the Christmas spirit. It was about $12-14/hour --
informally hired (hey, you don't look scary or stink of booze, can you handle
picking up a tree?), work as much as you can for two weeks, then...thanks, we
are done here! I found it by calling a phone number that was offering two jobs
-- the tree job and a second opportunity where they needed people to help
mass-produce bows for Christmas wreaths and gift wrap stuff to be picked up the
next day.
5. Delivery for a florist. While I'm sure it is nice to
give and/or receive on Valentine's Day or Mother's Day, someone has to actually
deliver all of those flowers! Basically there is a huge overflow and no way even
the most well-staffed florist can keep up with all the deliveries, so people get
paid cash (or a personal check) by number of deliveries made and it is an
informal situation where they trust anyone who is dressed nicely and appears
responsibly insured. I made $160 one Valentine's Day from delivering roses --
think how far that'd go towards taking care of a cat! Again, we are not talking
about selling flowers by the side of the road or anything -- this was delivering
nice flowers to homes or businesses.
These are just five ways that I have
made money from temporary jobs over the course of my life. All of it was honest
work and none of it was charity or people taking pity on me. None of it required
fees or charges to participate -- although sometimes it did require a full tank
of gas to get started. All of these examples paid cash money immediately or a
personal check by the next business day. I almost always broke a sweat, but I
never felt in physical jeopardy or danger by being involved and never felt
humiliated or pathetic by taking on any of these opportunities to make some
money. None of them required me to hassle others by phone or try to sell someone
something, and in most cases we are dealing with neutral or even positive
things. (Who gets mad at someone delivering flowers?)
And no, you won't
get rich or even make it above the poverty line if you try to permanently
subsist on this type of work. But it is a valid way for working adults and teens
or students to make some extra cash that helps with expenses such as fixing your
cat.
The purpose of this article is not just to list my random employment history
-- I am encouraging the responsible people who want to care
for their cats to "think outside of the box" when it comes for paying
for neutering or spaying. The irresponsible people will shrug off any suggestions because it honestly
isn't a matter of money, they just don't care or simply can't be accountable for what
goes on in their life.