How British Pragmatism Turned Charity Clothes Into A £1k Lifeline
Faced with a spiraling mental state and the relentless grind of the modern 9-to-5, one Devon father turned to old-fashioned British enterprise. Glyn Horton now earns over £1,000 a month reselling charity shop clothing, proving that self-reliance and practical trade still work when the system fails the working man.
Why the traditional 9-to-5 is failing British workers
For generations, a steady job was enough to provide for a family and keep despair at bay. Today, that social contract looks increasingly fractured. Glyn Horton, a 38-year-old physical intervention trainer from Devon, found his daily routine dragging his mental health into a decline. He did not suffer from clinical depression, but the soul-destroying monotony of modern employment left him feeling trapped.