It would offer more stability. For me, it's a blue-collar job and it doesn't pya that much money—not to begin with, anyway. Eventually, as you progress through the career, you can make very good money welding, but I was just at the beginning of it.
If I had that stability. If I had a stable home and if I hadn't gone through the emotional duress, I would be back to work right now. My employer would be retaining the investment they had put in me, and I would be able to return to work as somebody who is already trained in it, somebody who has already earned some raises in the company. Right now I'm going to have to start at the bottom again, with a new job, when the time comes.
It's about stability. It's making sure that your housing situation is stable so that you can go back. It's about retaining investment—my investment in the company and their investment in me—which I wasn't able to do.