Almost every day these past few months, I have gone to a Home Depot or a Lowes and stood around with working men, big of bone and hand and forearm. I watch as small Mexican men move great things I can't with little apparent effort. These are not gymroids. They are men who have been thickened and strengthened by doing physical labor. I try to read their faces. They are not as expressive as mine. Those are poker faces for the most part, some marked by anger, others by disappointment, but all stoic by and large.
Doing what I have been doing these past two months, I have become acutely aware of how many such men there are, and I've begun to wonder at the actual number of people employed in the construction trades. Road workers, landscapers, roofers, carpenters, masons, general laborers--they must comprise the country's largest army.
Mr. Fixit wants out. He wants to travel. He wants to paint. He wants to be a cafe sitter or an avenue walker. That is what he believes.
But a fellow has got to make a living.
Each day, driving down the highway in the work truck, I observethe businesses that line the road. I wonder about the people who work there every day, invisibly but certainly. Most of the jobs require no specialized skill that can't be learned on the job. How many people work in restaurants? As bank workers? How many people are receptionists or working in retail? Wages without benefits, irregular schedules, insane or stupid supervisors. This is the second American Army.
I've been paying greater attention to this than usual. Mr. Fixit's daughter is a baker in a French bakery. I wonder how long the gig can last.
One can only ponder why they love the capitalist system so very much. Why would they not embrace some form of socialism? But they don't. These are, in the main, Trumpsters, conspiracy theorists, the backbone of QAnon.
They seem to work against their own best interests.
My own life has been so very different. Unwittingly, I became part of the career class. Not an elite, but a job with benefits.
Every job should have tenure. Every job should have benefits. I abhor the capitalist conditions that oppress the working class. It thrives by keeping people insecure and at one another's throats. It is how an elite class survives.
That is what I've had to think about as I work with Mr. Fixit who is making more each month than I ever did in my best years. Now of the retired class, I tremulously watch my savings dwindle. I can tell they won't last quite long enough.
Insecurity sucks.
I am tired, however, and not capable of the work that needs to be done. Still, next week, when Mr. Fixit is gone, I have much work to complete. There is a dozen yards (at least) of mulch to order and spread. Ili and I were able to do it in less than a day. It will take me at least two. I have yard work to which I must attend again.
With Christmas less than two weeks away, I will use some of my free time to try to connect with a few friends. Outdoor lunches, patio drinks. Mostly, though, I simply want to rest. I am full of the weariness and worry of the aged.
ReplyDeleteThis Working Girl is on her prescribed lunch hour.
I agree with everything you say. I have always been a “sales girl” of some sort. Not a chosen career, more one that seemed to suit my natural skill set.
I should have been a teacher. Or a librarian.
I’ve never been money motivated - more it has always been sort of a game I have played with myself while doing that “W” thing.
I give away way more than I keep. And I like it that way. It’s all wrong and I will surely suffer somewhere (ask the IRS). But I’m always hopeful that if I ever was utterly down and out - someone who is in my small sacred universe would take me in. I’d cook, walk the dogs, babysit. Garden. 😊.
I’m an ass but it is too late really to change that part of me.
As my friend Cc used to say - “I’m a pinkie” all the way.
Bring back the WPA. Put artist to work making these now empty buildings beautiful. Etc.
I watched Mexican workers last time I was at my brothers in your state - haul roof tiles like they weighed that of a feather - in the boiling heat of day. Mostly laughing and joking too.
Hope you get to see your friends. Hope you get to rest. 2020 is coming to a close. Let’s believe in the goodness . Even if it can only be experienced intimately - with those in our circles far and wide.
The time clock awaits.
ReplyDeleteIt came to me. The Professor's name was Dan and he had hair like Mark Twain. Which is a good thing, I think. But he had definitely been too much with the Bonobo and all he could think of was (you know what).
Just wanted to make a note of it.
:).