After 10 Years as a Nurse, She Left for an Unexpected New Job. Now She Makes 3 Times as Much as She Used to (Exclusive)
Cami, who goes by @laundromatgirl on TikTok, left nursing after 10 years to run a laundromat
She's found that she makes three times as much as she did when she was a nurse and has been sharing how financially lucrative it's been for her on TikTok
With more than 400,000 followers on TikTok alone, she's also making significant money from her social media and from selling coursesOne woman found trading in her scrubs for dryer sheets to be much more financially lucrative.
Cami, who runs the TikTok account @laundromatgirl, left her career as a nurse to run a laundromat — and as a result, she tells PEOPLE she's making three times more money a year.
'It's not that I hate nursing or anything like that. I think I was just ready for a new track, like that was it. I just was looking for something different that I could do,' Cami, 37, explains. Before purchasing the laundromat she runs, she was an RN in the oncology wing of her hospital, working specifically on bone marrow transplants.
'I had this really good friend and she was going into nursing, and so I thought, okay, I'll do it with you — like, there was no passion behind it,' Cami admits, noting she started completing her nursing pre-requisites in high school. 'There was no dream story. It was just like, 'Oh, a nursing job is a good job for a girl.'"
While working as a nurse, Cami says she was making $41.50 an hour, typically keeping a schedule where she only worked three days a week. Though the money was good and she found the work fulfilling, she notes that it was the COVID-19 pandemic in particular that wore on her and sent her looking for a change of pace.
'I think I just got burnt out. 2020 was hard on nurses,' she says.
Feeling 'bugged by healthcare,' she began looking for something new. Cami says she was determined not to go back to school and says she knew the 'only route out of healthcare was to own my own business.' But instead of building one from the ground up — a route she knew would come with a plethora of risks — she opted to purchase one that was already established.
'I just wanted a very simple business that I felt like I could run,' she says, admitting she'd never owned a business before but was researching the best options for her skill set. 'Originally I was looking at mobile home parks a lot... I was even under escrow at one point for a mobile home park. Luckily it didn't work out.'
Cami also considered storage units as a possible option, but when she noticed a laundromat for sale, she decided to tour it.
'I had never even walked into a laundromat at that point,' she admits. 'I just went and looked at it that night, and I just remember walking into the laundromat that first time and just going, 'I can do this.' It just felt good to me walking in. Probably within two days after that, I put in an offer.'
30 days later the laundromat was hers. The business cost $300,000, she says, and she was able to pay two-thirds of that upfront by selling her house. Through seller financing, the final $100,000 was a loan from the original owner, which Cami paid off over the course of two years. Though few experts would recommend selling your home to purchase a business, it's more than paid off for Cami, who notes that with her current income, she was able to upgrade to a more spacious home after renting for a couple of years while she built her business.
'When I first bought it, I was just like a deer in headlights. I had no experience,' Cami admits. 'I also didn't know anyone personally that owned a laundromat. So I was by myself the entire time, just really kind of winging it — and I definitely made some mistakes in the beginning.'
About six months into her venture as a laundromat owner, Cami began offering a wash-and-dry pickup and delivery service, which she says required hours of work to establish. As she fell into the groove at the laundromat, she also maintained her nursing job, not quite ready to put all her eggs in this new basket.
'I would say probably one full year after starting my pickup and delivery, I was at the laundromat probably four to five times a week,' Cami explains. 'I would come in after working a shift at the hospital to help fold laundry to process orders.'
Now, though, she says she only spends between 10 and 15 hours a week working at her laundromat. She has anywhere from three to seven employees putting in full-time hours at the business, depending on the seasonal demands, which makes running it that much smoother.
It's not just the laundromat that has netted Cami the extra cash — her social media following plays an important role. She notes that it's important to her she doesn't include the name or even the state her laundromat is located in for privacy reasons. While most business owners see social media as a way to promote their specific business, Cami uses it as a way to promote her journey, inspired by another laundromat owner who shared his lucrative social media earnings with her at a conference.
'He said that he was making more money from his social media page than he was from his laundromat,' she shares. 'But I'm like, okay, if I'm gonna do this, I don't want weirdos coming into my laundromat and robbing us. Like, I also have a team of women too that I have to protect. I don't want to put them in danger.'
Even with the anonymity of her page, going online only by the name 'the laundromat girl,' Cami says that she brings in anywhere from $3,000 to $4,000 a month in income from her views — and then she also gets the occasional brand deal on top of that.
'My biggest reason for doing it was just to get paid by TikTok,' she admits while noting that her specific niche (laundromat owners) is one that doesn't have a lot of competition online.
'I saw my TikTok videos as a journal of my business, and I kind of liked that idea that I could look back on these videos and see how I progress as a business owner,' she says.
Cami now maintains more than 400,000 followers on her TikTok page alone — and her transparency as to her journey to earn the money she flashes in her videos has inspired a lot of feedback from her followers, many asking how they can also get started.
This, Cami says, was just another business opportunity for her to pursue. She now has links on her page to courses detailing how to own and run a laundromat, with a second tailored to a wash-and-dry pickup service. In February alone, she says these courses alone brought in $26,000.
'I think my followers just see me as like, oh, [if] she can do it. I can do it. Which is great — that's what I want people to feel is that trust [in] me,' Cami says. 'I'm no one special. The only difference between me and them is that I did it.'
This laundry empire she's built was done entirely on her own; Cami is currently single — she doesn't have a partner carrying the load with her, and she also notes that she does not have any children to take care of either. The journey to get to where she is has been a long one, and she says that while purchasing the laundromat was ultimately meant as her way to leave nursing behind, it wasn't a career move she made lightly.
'I had so many great experiences as a nurse, especially being in oncology. A little oncology unit is such a special place in the hospital that I never took for granted,' she says. 'I feel like I learned so many life lessons being there, and I'm so grateful for the time that I was a nurse.'
The change also didn't happen overnight. Cami took three years to fully transition into a full-time laundromat owner, 'titrating' her shifts down to part-time, then once every other week. She didn't say goodbye to her job as a nurse until 2023.
'I really eased into the idea because ... when I quit, it was really scary. I cried on my drive home from the hospital. It was so sad,' Cami says, tearing up as she recounts this. 'I didn't take quitting my job as a nurse lightly. It was a very big deal for me.'
Though the transition was tough emotionally, taking the leap opened so many doors for Cami — and she can reflect on it all by looking through her TikTok posts.
'I feel like my journey, [as] cheesy as that sounds… I started with one idea and it's completely evolved to something different.'
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USA Today
39 minutes ago
- USA Today
Is remote work only for the rich? Double standard ignites workplace tension
More remote workers are being called back to the office in the private sector and the federal government. But the new rules don't always apply to everyone. When ride-sharing company Uber increased the number of days employees had to show up in person from two to three, the return-to-office mandate set off a fiery backlash. In an all-hands meeting and then in online forums, the rank-and-file groused they were being summoned back to work while many corner offices sat empty. Soon, another brouhaha erupted at JPMorgan Chase. After thousands of employees at the world's largest bank were ordered back to the office five days a week, word leaked that Filippo Gori would now run business affairs in Europe, the Middle East and Africa from New York, not from Dubai, Johannesburg or London. JPMorgan Chase did not comment. With employers cracking down on how many days a week people can work from home, office workers are calling out what they say is a double standard: Executives who enforce in-person work for their teams but reserve the right to work wherever they please. Salesforce's Marc Benioff is one of those CEOs who self-identifies as a remote worker. "I've always been a remote worker my whole life," Benioff told MSNBC in 2023. "I don't work well in an office. It just doesn't work with my personality. I can't tell you why." His employees often don't have that luxury. In September, they were told to return to the office at least three days a week. Benioff said the message is to 'mix in-person and remote together.' Salesforce did not respond to a request for comment. 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Management experts say it matters far less where key executives log into work each day. After all, they often live out of suitcases while jetting to far-flung offices and calling on customers. But permitting executives to live and work remotely conflicts with the messaging that businesses benefit the most when employees show up in person. Like most sought-after workplace perks, flexibility is largely a function of power and pay, according to Stanford University economics professor Nick Bloom, who studies remote work. Higher-income workers are more likely to have remote work arrangements than those at the lower end of the pay scale, his research shows. Just 5% of workers making $10,000 to $50,000 a year live 50 or more miles from their office, compared to 14% of those earning over $250,000. 'Before the pandemic, working from home was a predictor of low pay. We used to joke about it. Is he working from home or shirking from home?' Bloom said. 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If their employer no longer allowed them that flexibility, nearly half said they would be unlikely to stay on. Pavi Theva was stationed in Texas as a product manager when Amazon began enforcing a new three-day-a-week in-person policy. With none of her teammates located in the Austin office, she'd make the 45-minute commute to sit by herself. She regularly scrambled to find an empty conference room so she could attend virtual meetings uninterrupted. Time spent in the office was pointless, she said. 'It wasn't adding any value from a productivity standpoint or a collaboration standpoint.' After getting flagged a couple of times for not badging into the office often enough, Theva quit in February 2024 to turn a side hustle in career coaching into a full-time gig. She never looked back. 'I have zero commute,' she said. 'Just 20 seconds from my bedroom to my study in my PJs.' 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Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
Woman in $23K Debt Asks ChatGPT for Help—the Result Is Eye-Opening
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A woman desperate to pay off her $23,000 in credit card debt has made a major dent in the money owed, after using AI to help her change her habits. Jennifer Allan, 35, a realtor and content creator living in Delaware, told Newsweek she has "struggled with money my whole adult life." "Not because I don't make enough, but because I was never taught financial literacy. I avoided budgeting and I figured if I just kept working harder, I could out-earn the problem. That worked... until it didn't," she said. Things "unraveled" after her daughter was born, after a traumatic start which involved the NICU along with general postpartum recovery and everything else that comes with becoming a parent to a newborn. "I shut down emotionally, and I used credit cards to keep our life afloat. We weren't living lavishly. We were just surviving. But the debt piled up while I wasn't looking," she said. Eventually, Allan knew she had to make a change—and she used AI to give her the "momentum" she needed. After being inspired by online 30-day challenges, she decided to challenge herself to "use ChatGPT every day for 30 days to help me pay off debt—whether that was brainstorming side hustles or just giving me a little structure." And it paid off. Each day, the bot would suggest one challenge for Allan to save or earn money, from cancelling one subscription, selling items on Facebook Marketplace, filing for any unclaimed money, and even searching for coins in old purses and between couch cushions—which earned Allan over $100. A major win for Allan was the bot suggesting she look through every app and account—and between a brokerage account she wasn't aware she had, and finance apps such as Venmo, Allan discovered more than $10,000. Jennifer Allan speaking in a video about her finance challenge. Jennifer Allan speaking in a video about her finance challenge. TikTok @_jenn.allan In June, Allan shared a clip to her TikTok account @_jenn.allan, revealing she had hit day 30 of her challenge—and over the past month, had paid off $12,078.93 "I'm super, super happy with that. I've essentially paid half of my debt off," she told the camera, revealing one aspect of the challenge was to create a meal plan for the rest of the month based only on the food she had in her pantry. She had saved almost $600 in a month, having previously spent around $800 a month on groceries. TikTok users had a big reaction, one calling it "so impressive," and another writing: "I might need to do this as a single mom, that would be life changing money in savings." Allan is now planning to take up another challenge, this time changing the prompt to pay off the remainder in 30 days. "It wasn't some big financial hack," Allan told Newsweek. "It was the act of facing it every day—of tracking it, talking about it, looking at it every day. I stopped being afraid of my numbers. I built a debt tracker. "I started sharing my journey publicly. And for the first time in my life, I didn't feel ashamed. I felt empowered, like I could conquer anything." Read more 5 unexpected things you should be using ChatGPT for, according to AI expert 5 unexpected things you should be using ChatGPT for, according to AI expert Allan's situation is far from unique: household debt across the United States hit $18.2 trillion dollars in the first quarter of 2025, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. For anyone else struggling with debt and considering making a similar change, Allan advised: "Don't wait until you feel ready or 'smart enough' to start. You don't have to know all the answers—you just have to stop pretending it's not happening." She suggested finding a way to "make it fun," explaining: "For me, using AI gave me a sense of structure without judgment, and TikTok allowed me to hold myself accountable because [the] community I had built was showing up every day waiting for the next task." Do you have a similar monetary dilemma? Let us know via life@ We can ask experts for advice, and your story could be featured on Newsweek.


USA Today
6 hours ago
- USA Today
Trump agenda survives key Senate vote but final outcome still uncertain
The GOP-led Senate has agreed to begin a marathon floor debate that's expected to go overnight and culminate with a final roll call - where the outcome still remains uncertain. WASHINGTON – The Senate voted to begin a marathon debate about President Donald Trump's package of legislative priorities − stuffed with tax cuts, Medicaid reforms and border security funding – despite lingering Republican concerns about the legislation. Majority Leader John Thune, R-South Dakota, has said he is uncertain whether enough Republicans will support their version to send it back to the House. "We'll find out," Thune said. But the 51-49 vote to proceed signals that there is enough GOP support to at least begin the hours-long debate and expected voting on dozens of amendments. GOP Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Thom Tillis of North Carolina each voted against debating the bill as written. The vote that began at 7:30 p.m. EDT was held open for more than three hours as Thune scrambled to find a majority of votes to kickstart the debate. If the Senate is ultimately successful, the House would have to vote on the upper chamber's changes in order to reach Trump's desk by his self-imposed deadline of July 4. The Senate has trimmed the House version from about 1,100 pages to 940 − and still faces votes on what are expected to be dozens of amendments. The success of Trump's domestic agenda for tax cuts and border security hangs in the balance. Republican approval of the spending blueprint would allow a majority of the 100-member Senate to approve all of Trump's priorities included in it through legislation later in the year, rather than needing 60 votes to overcome a filibuster for each measure. Here's what we know about the legislative package: Senate voting on whether to debate Trump's bill A long wait, then a vote to begin debate With little fanfare, the Senate began voting at about 7:30 p.m. EDT on whether to begin the debate on Trump's legislative package. Majority Leader John Thune, R-South Dakota, simply asked the Senate to vote on a motion to begin debating the bill. The move came after hours of inaction – interrupted by the occasional speech – since the Senate gaveled into action at 2 p.m. - Bart Jansen Nevada senator votes despite COVID-19 The vote was close enough and important enough that a Nevada senator voted despite testing positive for COVID-19. 'After experiencing mild symptoms, I have tested positive for COVID,' Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nevada, said in a social media post. 'I'll continue to follow my doctor's guidelines and wear a mask while voting this weekend.'- Bart Jansen Lee drops provision for public land sales from bill Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, agreed to drop a contentious provision for public land sales from the legislative package. Environmental groups had criticized the provision for opening lands to logging and oil, gas and coal production. A fellow Republican, Sen. Tim Sheehy of Montana, threatened to vote against the bill unless the provision was removed, which could have scuttled the entire bill. Lee announced on social media that he wasn't able to secure safeguards that the land must be sold to Americans rather than the Chinese or investors. 'I continue to believe the federal government owns far too much land – land it is mismanaging and in many cases ruining for the next generation,' Lee said. - Bart Jansen Trump blasts Tillis over opposition to legislation Trump criticized Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, one of three Republicans to vote against debating the legislation, as 'making a BIG MISTAKE.' 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Trump said he is 'looking for someone who will properly represent the Great people of North Carolina.' - Bart Jansen Democrats force Senate to read entire Trump bill Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-New York, forced Senate clerks to read the entire bill out loud, further delaying the start of debate on the bill. While typically a formality, Schumer objected to waiving the reading of the bill. His objection forced clerks to read the 940-page document. Then senators will begin hours of debate followed by hours of voting. A vote on final passage could come June 30. - Bart Jansen 'No cause for alarm' on vote delay: Sen. Mike Rounds South Dakota GOP Sen. Mike Rounds told CNN that he thinks Republicans will ultimately have the votes to begin the floor debate but were working on ensuring commitments for concerned GOP lawmakers that they'll get the chance to offer amendments to address their issues. 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Only then would the Senate begin to hold what's known as a "vote-a-rama" where they consider scores of amendments."We've got a long couple of days ahead of us yet," Rounds said. - Darren Samuelsohn Business Roundtable endorses Trump bill Business groups endorsed Trump's legislative package for its anticipated economic benefits as the Senate prepared to debate it. 'This critical legislation would protect and enhance the transformative economic benefits that President Trump's historic 2017 tax reform delivered for American businesses, workers and families,' Business Roundtable President Kristen Silverberg said. 'We urge the Senate to swiftly pass this measure.' - Bart Jansen Democrats to force reading aloud of the entire Senate bill Senate Democrats unified in opposition to the legislation plan to force the chamber's clerk to read the entire 990-page GOP tax, policy and spending bill aloud if Republicans vote to open the floor debate. 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Musk had quieted his harsh criticism of Trump and the legislation the week after his departure from government May 30. But he blasted the bill again as the Senate prepared to debate it. 'The latest Senate draft bill will destroy millions of jobs in America and cause immense strategic harm to our country!' Musk said June 28 on social media. 'Utterly insane and destructive. It gives handouts to industries of the past while severely damaging industries of the future.' As the Senate vote remained in limbo, Musk added another post warning the GOP of the electoral risks if they vote for the Trump-backed legislation that is not polling well with Republicans. Polls show that this bill is political suicide for the Republican Party - Bart Jansen Paging Vice President JD Vance: The Senate might need a tie-breaker Coming out of a GOP lunch June 28, Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Missouri, said he's 'under the impression' Senate leadership has the buy-in to advance Trump's bill. 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Big Beautiful Bill on the way.". - Bart Jansen Saying 'no' and voting 'no' two different things: Sen. Markwayne Mullin Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Oklahoma, a supporter of Trump's legislative package, told reporters at the Capitol that lawmakers warning about voting against it and actually voting 'no' are two different things. Sens. Ron Johnson, R-Wisconsin; Thom Tillis, R-North Carolina; and Rand Paul, R-Kentucky, have each said they were opposed to the bill that is still changing. Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, have voiced concerns about it. 'Everybody's got concerns, but saying you're voting 'no' and when you get to the floor and voting 'no' is two totally different things,' Mullin said. 'I don't believe in losing and we're going to get the votes.' - Bart Jansen Budget blueprint debate could be 30 hours of 'nonsense': Sen. Brian Moreno Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, a supporter of Trump's legislative package, said a final vote would likely come after 30 hours of 'nonsense' from Democrats voting on proposals to change the contentious bill. 'It's an absolutely historic and transformative piece of legislation that reverses four years of an assault on American workers,' Moreno said. 'I want everybody watching this to remember this as you listen to probably what's going to be 30-plus hours of complete nonsense from the other side.' - Bart Jansen Senate meets before debating Trump legislative package The Senate gaveled in at 2 p.m., in anticipation of beginning debate on President Trump's legislative priorities, but lawmakers haven't yet voted to begin talking about the measure. A majority of senators must agree to begin debate, which can sometimes kill legislation before it begins. With 53 Republicans and 47 Democratic caucus members, just a few GOP lawmakers could prevent a debate. But the hurdle appears a mere technicality because wavering GOP members such as Sen. Susan Collins of Maine have said she would support the debate even if not necessarily the final bill. -Bart Jansen Sen. Josh Hawley says Republicans have 'soul searching' to do Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Missouri, had been one of the leading voices among Senate Republicans raising concerns about proposed cuts to Medicaid and how that would impact his largely rural state. But after studying the latest, finalized bill text — which delays pushing costs onto states and establishes a $25 billion rural hospital fund — Hawley said he's a yes on passing the bill. Beyond this weekend's vote, though, Hawley said he intends to keep pushing back in effort to prevent the delayed federal spending cuts from ever going into effect. 'This has been an unhappy episode, here in Congress, this effort to cut to Medicaid,' he said. 'And I think, frankly, my party needs to do some soul searching.' — Savannah Kuchar Sen. Susan Collins remains a wildcard Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said she'll support Senate leadership bringing the mega bill to the floor and kicking off presumably hours of debate. But she cautioned reporters that she remains uncertain how she'll side when a final vote gets called. 'That does not, in any way, predict how I'm going to vote on the final passage,' Collins told reporters while walking into the Capitol for the start of the day's events. Collins said her final vote ultimately will depend on what the bill looks like after lawmakers — including herself — introduce and potentially tack on further amendments. 'There's some very good changes that have been made in the latest version, but I want to see further changes,' Collins said. - Savannah Kuchar What is in the Senate bill? The largest provisions in the legislation would extend expiring tax cuts and create a few new ones, and a dramatic increasing in spending on border security. Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, a Republican holdout on the bill, said he wouldn't vote for the bill unless the debt limit gets a separate vote. But Republican leaders want to keep the unpopular vote within the overall package. −Bart Jansen What's not in the Senate version of the bill? Republican support in the Senate waned after Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough ruled several significant provisions would have to be removed to avoid a filibuster. Republicans removed provisions to curb environmental regulations; restrict federal judges' powers; bulk up immigration enforcement; and cut funding from a consumer protection agency. MacDonough also ruled against provisions that aimed to reduce Medicaid spending on health care programs for undocumented immigrants. −Bart Jansen What does Trump say about the Senate version of the bill? The Trump administration 'strongly supports' the Senate version of the bill, in a White House Office of Management and Budget statement June 28. The statement isn't intended to favor the Senate version over the House version on any particular provision, but to signal Trump would sign it if approved by Congress. The two-page statement highlighted provisions for tax cuts, border security, energy and defense. 'President Trump is committed to keeping his promises, and failure to pass this bill would be the ultimate betrayal," the statement said. −Bart Jansen Is there really a July 4 deadline? Trump has told congressional Republicans he's want this thing wrapped up by Independence Day. But the due date is less procedural than it is political. The sooner the president can tout legislation that makes good on several of his 2024 campaign promises, including a tax limit on tips and overtime wages, plus extends his 2017 tax cuts for high-income earners, the better. The more impending deadlines are sometime in August, when Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said the federal government is at risk of hitting its debt ceiling, and the end of the year, when Trump's first-term tax cuts are set to expire. The legislation up for a vote in the Senate currently contains a provision to raise the debt limit.− Savannah Kuchar