@bodangles retail does not pay very good. Is it still good to be there even if the pay isn’t the greatest? It’s just a steeping stone until I have another Job.
It doesn’t pay much more than minimum wage.
I was getting $10/hr, which I felt was about as good as I could expect while still being a student without a finished degree and working part-time.
If you need the money, it’s probably better than nothing. If you don’t need the money, or if there are better-paying jobs available to you, maybe it’s not worth it to you to stay. But that’s a decision with too many variables for anyone to make for you – you have to weigh all of your options and decide what’s best.
I could be going to target soon which pays just as good as Wal-Mart.
Plus Target is a good place to shop so the employee discount would be worth having.
That sounds like a good deal! Good luck, hope it works out.
This isn’t how it works either. Unless you’re counting on a Keynesian multiplier, it’s a mathematical impossibility for everyone to receive a net subsidy.
Back to the OP’s question, yes you can quit a job.
Would working at a pet store help me learn more about species, wildlife, and there habitats even Though these animals are not in the wild? Would working at a hardware or garden store help me learn about garening and ponds?
Would working at a Temp Agency over the summer be useful?
Is it bad how i still don’t have a Car yet at 20 years old? It just seems too expensive.
Nah. Do what’s best for you and your family.
Do employers or other people even care when I very first got my car or Drivers license?
Employers: as long as you can get to work somehow, and the job isn’t driving-based like pizza delivery or Uber, I don’t think they’ll care.
Other people shouldn’t care. Don’t pay any mind if they do.
@bodangles as long as I can drive, can do the Job, and I don’t have any bad things on my driving record I could still probably get a Job doing some kind of driving? I don’t plan on going into a field like that but some professional jobs such as ones in STEM, Business, Healthcare, and Education do travel and are required to drive there own car.
Sure, once you have both a license and a car there shouldn’t be any constraints.
@bodangles with the Job I have, how much should I be saving?
By the way, is lack of travel experience bad for being 20 years old? I’ve only been to five or six states and they are Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio,Florida, and Georgia. I know lack of travel experience doesn’t define someone but people make it seem there’s a correlation between being educated and travel experience or being college educated and having strong family,travel experience, and many others.
Only you know how much you’re making and how much money you’d like to have for the future. I’ve read online that one thing to do is to pick an amount and set it up so it happens automatically – like 25% of your paycheck is automatically routed to savings, or however much you want. Then you don’t have to really think about it and it just happens.
I think many college-aged students haven’t traveled much.
@bodangles do you think video games can help with problem solving, critical thinking,and being challenged skills? I like Nintendo and sonys exclusive video games. I also like games from Bethesda, Bioware, and Capcom. A few from EA as well such as Dead space and Dante’s inferno as well. Ubisoft is only good for assassins creed and Rayman. I like rock star for red dead redemption and grand theft auto.
I highly respect video games as a medium. As a writer/reader I tend to like narrative games, but I also like puzzle games and can appreciate skill-based things like shooters even though I don’t really want to play them.
Since I don’t have the time or the money to play every game I’d like to try out, I watch a lot of Let’s Plays, which are all of the vegging out and none of the critical thinking skills. 
I’d love to try Prey but I probably wouldn’t be any good at it. Stuff like Life is Strange is more up my alley.