A Quote by Tom Jones

I got married when I was 16 so I had to do shift-work to make ends meet. — © Tom Jones
I got married when I was 16 so I had to do shift-work to make ends meet.

Quote Author

I became married at a young age and had two daughters and divorced at 26. I had to go on welfare to make ends meet. I had no way to support myself.
Of course you've got a low unemployment rate when people have got to work two and three jobs just to make ends meet.
After I left school at 16 I had three jobs: I worked in a ceramics factory, where I made toilet handles, I repaired cars for people and in the evenings and weekends I worked in a bar. I had to do them all to make ends meet.
I had to play arena football for three years. I had to work in a grocery store for a while to make ends meet. I had to go to Amsterdam to play.
My background's working class. My parents had to work to make ends meet. We don't come from any sense of privilege.
I'll be honest. After I got married, I definitely had a shift in emotional devotion.
My parents got married when they were 16, and they never had any money.
I worked at Ruby Foos early on as a host. I was only there for a little bit, but I had several odd jobs to pay the bills before that. And being in New York for the first year, I got here in 2003, and it was a very exciting but very scary time not knowing how you would make ends meet and me trying to meet people.
I tried to become a family man. I got married, but it didn't work out. After 22 months we got an annulment. Then I married an Italian girl, which resulted in an immediate annulment. I had two annulments by the time I was 23.
Both my mother and my father grew up in Asia, in a time of political instability. They'd earned college degrees before setting foot in the States but had to work menial jobs early on in order to make ends meet.
About the time we can make the ends meet, somebody moves the ends.
Each year it grows harder to make ends meet - the ends I refer to are hands and feet.
I was doing a lot of great theatre, but I just couldn't work out how to make ends meet.
I was a bicycle messenger when Alkaline Trio was formed as a way to make ends meet and I've just always been a cyclist and then I got really into - through messengering - I got really into road bikes and fixed gears.
In a packed programme tonight, we will be talking to an out-of-work contortionist who says he can no longer make ends meet.
I was shy and really into my school work and my drama. Then I joined 'EastEnders' at 16, and it was work, work, work. You become very isolated. I rarely went out and so didn't get to meet anyone.
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