Get your hands dirty, young man

Published February 2, 2015

by Gina Barreca, The Hartford Courant, published in The Charlotte Observer, February 1, 2015.

“What’s your goal in life?” I asked a cheerful young man at an alumni event. “I want to retire by 35” was his snappy answer.

He smiled, cocked his head as if auditioning to play George Clooney’s kid brother and waited for what he clearly expected to be my delight. The line was rehearsed and he was close to 25; obviously it had played well before other audiences.

I wasn’t impressed.

“Let me put it another way,” I said. “From what kind of work would you like to retire?”

“Something creative. Something where my passions and my talents are showcased. I don’t want some soulless, mind-numbing office job.”

“Ever had an office job? Is that how you know they’re all soulless?”

“I don’t need to do a 9-5 to know it. Do you need to work in a factory or dig ditches to know those are jobs you wouldn’t want?”

He wasn’t necessarily a fool, this young man, but he was either ignorant or innocent – or both. And I thought about how his family, his college and his culture had all failed him.

By encouraging him to believe in his own exceptionalism, the adults who brought him up did him a disservice: By permitting him to believe, as the old expression put it, that the world owed him a living, they might have made it much more difficult for him to earn one.

That’s why, instead of searching for his vocation, he was standing on the world’s platform waiting for the Fame Train to arrive. He thought all he had to do was hail it by waving his arm.

This was not the scion of an aristocratic household, either, brought up by nannies and fawned over by tutors; this was a child of the suburbs, not of the landed gentry.

Yet he made it obvious that he was meant for greater things than everyday work. He made it clear he thought of tedious work as something done by others: by the ungifted, the ordinary and the common.

His mistake about work is what’s common.

My father worked in a small family factory with his brothers, brothers-in-law and a sister. When the place couldn’t compete with larger companies, they went out of business and, at 60, my father started working retail.

When he was very ill at the end of his life, I asked my father if he had any unfulfilled wishes, things he secretly would’ve liked to have done.

“I wish I could’ve been a mechanic,” he shrugged. “I would’ve liked to work with cars.”

His last dreams weren’t about voyages or extravagances. They were about what other kinds of hard work he would’ve done.

Work is a big deal, or it should be. You spend more time at work than doing most anything else.

How can you tell that being able to get a job and going to work is important? For much of history, women and those marginalized by the culture were prohibited from doing it.

Women, people of color, the very poor or those seen as being of the “wrong” religion were barred from being able to walk through the gates and apply for work.

Laws had to be passed so that hard-working people would be permitted the privilege of being able to get these jobs.

There were a lot of things I wanted to say to the graduate but all I said was that getting a job he didn’t like would still be better than hanging around hoping to be discovered. Work is an essential part of life’s conversation. If you sit at the grown-ups’ table, it should be an experience you are able to discuss first hand.

It’s OK if those hands are a little rough.

Gina Barreca is an English professor at the University of Connecticut, a feminist scholar who has written eight books, and a columnist for the Hartford Courant.

February 2, 2015 at 10:03 am
Norm Kelly says:

Goes well with the prior post, from another author, concerning Gen-X parenting & their spoiled brat, selfish, expecting children in adult bodies.

This author is correct when she says 'his family, his college and his culture had all failed him'. His family raised him with expectation that the world actually would take care of him. They spoiled him rotten, probably never expecting him to pay a single dime for ANYTHING he possessed. The parents probably gave him his own computer growing up, a game system or two, cell phone as soon as possible, expensive sneakers, and paid for college or probably went into debt to put him through. In a nutshell, churning out a child in an adult body with unmeetable expectations. His college failed him because they taught that jobs were for others; their students were destined for excellence or at the least a volunteer job paid for by some government agency. His college probably filled him with all kinds of left-wing nutjob expectations of how the world would take care of him. Kinda like his parents did. As for culture failing him, let's blame politicians for this. And some of the blame is shared by pols of both parties. However, the majority of the blame lies squarely at the feet of left-wing, socialist, nutjob pols like the ever senile Harry, the socialist Nancy, and the community organizer racist unqualified occupier. After all, it's the occupier that said if you can't afford your mortgage, let the central planners take care of it for you. The central planners would FORCE the financial institution to lower your mortgage rate, forgive any amount of the loan above what they considered 'fair market value' just in case you were stup1d enough to pay more for the house than it was worth. How about the socialist central planner scheme to pay for people's medical insurance, just in case you can't afford it for yourself the central planners would force someone else to pay for it for you. Just another government handout. How about the idea that not having to pay for your own health insurance would provide you with opportunities that you otherwise would not be able to afford if you had to pay for your own health insurance? You know, the idea floated by demons in DC that now young people could afford to become artists or sculptors if that's what they wanted to do because the burden of paying for health care was removed from them and FORCED onto someone who was not related?!

And then let's not forget the occupier's plan, along with demon pols in DC, to allow illegal immigrants to become 'citizens' eligible for 'out of the shadows' employment to do the jobs that the spoiled brats coming out of left-wing households weren't willing to do. Kinda like that 'soulless, mind-numbing office job'. Or digging ditches. Or working in a factory. You know, jobs that are 'beneath' spoiled brat children in adult bodies. The kind of kids that get jobs where the employer finds they need to put playstations in to keep the kids 'working', where the pool table is central in the office, where afternoon nap-time is allowed/encouraged because these spoiled brat children in adult bodies were raised wrong by their Gen-X parents!

What part of their 'culture' encourages this attitude, the desire to get without working for it? Think real hard now! I can almost guarantee that not a single left-wing nut job will get this one right! Cuz it's those left-wing socialists that are creating these brats! People like me did what we could to raise our kids right. And RIGHT! When my oldest wanted a $120 pair of sneakers cuz they were the cool ones, and he couldn't afford to buy them, he expected me to pay for them, I showed him the pair of $65 sneakers that I was willing to pay for. If he truly loved, desired those $120 sneakers he would have to come up with the difference. Suddenly those sneakers didn't appeal to him quite so much. And we're talking over 15 years ago, so at the time those sneakers were just too darn expensive for me to buy. I was stretching when I told him I was willing to buy the $65 sneakers! But he settled for the cheaper sneakers because he didn't think the extra $60'ish was worth it. He learned an important lesson about money at that point. I know it's only 1 case, 1 example, but it's an important one cuz it taught my son the value of money. How many Gen X parents do this? How many of these parents protect their kids from EVERY aspect of real life, so the kids grow up not knowing anything about being an adult. I know a family that was paying for auto insurance for their son well after he was married. Don't remember if it was after the first grandkid was born or the second, but it wasn't until this point that their son paid for his own auto insurance. Married with children and still supported by parents. And there were many times that the parents paid to put gasoline in the sons car as well. So well into adulthood and the parents refused to let their 'special little someone' experience the real world for himself. Spoiled brat child in adult body. With no concept of how to do life on his own. Lack of expense for necessities of life led him, naturally, to believe that he could spend the money he did earn on foolish things like having 2 different gaming systems connected to his large flat screen TV. Cuz, you know, some games on this system are better than games on that system. And some on-line games are just more fun on that system than this, so it was important for spoiled brat child in adult body to have BOTH systems. Which he couldn't have done if he truly supported himself. But because his parents paid for necessities of life like auto insurance and auto fuel, this kid had no concept of what real life was like. Needless to say, this caused friction between that kid and my son when I allowed my son to live his own life when he became an adult. Cuz I believe in raising adults into adulthood, not children in adult bodies.

And I'm getting tired of supporting children in adult bodies because their parents convinced them that the world would take care of them, that the world owed them something just because they exist. It's the parents fault. No doubt. Yet, it's also left-wing nut jobs to blame cuz they also convince people that someone else will take care of them, usually the government. It's called central planners! And the demon party is the source of this belief system. It is their religion. And they wish for me to shut my mouth about my religious beliefs because they want to spread their religious beliefs. And we all know government despises competition. And kills competition. My religion must be quiet in order for the central planner religion to flourish.

February 2, 2015 at 11:19 am
Richard Bunce says:

Right message... wrong messenger.

Is that a tenured English professor at the University of Connecticut?

Nobody owes anyone a living but themselves.