I was thinking I was done with this thread, but am genuinely curious. I certainly appreciate you love your job, that's the dream. However, when you are staying at a dive resort or hotel, do you think the person that comes in to clean your room does it because they love their job, and they get pleasure in doing it well? Or do they do it for the money? I would argue most people, work in jobs they don't love, or even particularly like, but do it for the money. Especially wait staff, and doing a good job, is a way of increasing your pay. Getting money for doing stuff you don't like, gives you the ability to do stuff you do like. Like dive, or go to the theater with friends.
People's value shouldn't be measured financially, I know people in ministry who make little, yet I think have incalculable value. However, the value of the goods and services you provide are measured monetary by the people consuming those goods and services, and it impacts how much they will pay for them. If you want to increase that value, you do a better job.