|
The Worst Job I Ever Had by Bob Wallace I
had a lot of jobs in high school and college.
I was a carpenter for my father when I was a teen, one who bashed
his thumb with a hammer, used a crowbar to unstick boots from plywood
decks when the boot's owners nail-gunned their own feet, and put a lot of
band-aids on, including on people who ran power saws over their own hands. I
drove a school bus in college, one of the duties of which was breaking up
fights between junior high kids and kicking others off of the bus when
they thought they could throw things at the back of my head (they never
realized I could drive while keeping one eye on the mirror above my head,
the one with the panoramic view of the bus). I
pumped gas, cooked and delivered pizzas, worked in a nursing home, was an
apartment manager, drove a taxi. But
the absolutely worst job I ever had, one that was a quantum leap above the
rest in terms of Lovecraftian horribleness, was detassling corn.
I still cringe inwardly whenever I think about it, and this is from
a guy who used to put diapers on old folks. Corn
has to be detassled so it doesn't pollinate itself.
If it does, you get weaker corn that isn't so sweet.
The detassling itself consists of walking up and down rows of corn
for eight hours a day, doing nothing but popping the tassels out of the
corn and dropping them on the ground.
If you've ever seen a row of corn, you'll find some of them are
half a mile long and five to eight feet tall. Imagine eight hours a day,
pop, pop, pop, in the heat and humidity of a Midwestern summer, sweating
and sneezing and twitching and getting "corn rash" from brushing
against the leaves, for about three weeks. The
pay was pretty good -- a few dollars more than minimum wage, and
time-and-a-half on Sunday. Not
bad for high school or even college. If
you could handle the work, you could easily make three or four thousand
dollars. But it was horrible work. I
estimated I detassled 15 to 20 rows a day, or between eight and 10 miles.
That's about 45,000 to 80,000 plants! One
time, hitchhiking home, I was picked up by a curly-haired grandpa who was
a farmer in the I
was reminded of my hellish journey through those Stephen King Children of the Corn rows while reading Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little
House in the Big Woods, specifically
Chapter 12, "The Wonderful Machine." Now
when was the last time anyone called a machine wonderful?
Lots of people today take them for granted or else vaguely think
they're not such good things, which is why you get adults riding bicycles,
because they think they're "saving the environment."
You know, global warning and all the rest of that "let's
protect the goddess Gaia" silliness. I
certainly think machines are wonderful.
They're examples of Cooper's Law: "Machines are
amplifiers." They amplify
our natural abilities. One of
the things they do is make things a whole
lot easier for us. But
anyway, in the book, Pa and the other farmers encounter a machine called a
separator because it separated the straw from the wheat.
They were ecstatic over it. "That's
a great invention," Pa says. "It
would have taken Henry and Peterson and Pa and me couple of weeks apiece
to thresh as much grain with flails as that machine threshed today.
We wouldn't have got as much wheat either, and it wouldn't have
been as clean. Other folks can
stick to old-fashioned ways if they want to, but I'm all for progress.
It's a great age we're living in." Detassling
may be on its way out, to which I say, thank
God! I was hoping someday
a semi-intelligent robot would be invented that would do the work, but
instead it appears that seed companies have come up with corn breeds whose
tassels don't produce pollen -- and the pollen is why all of us were
sneezing and twitching and swelling up all the time.
Since it turns out detassling is the second-highest cost in growing
corn, we should get cheaper corn. Others
may think excruciatingly hard work builds character.
I don't know about that, unless if they mean "character"
includes being grateful. Which
in my case, it does. It made
me grateful for machines, the free market, liberty, and human ingenuity,
all of which I consider almost miraculous because they create things like
refrigerators, air-conditioning, dentistry, washing machines and driers,
clothes, and food I can buy in the store instead of having to produce
myself. If
modern-day Luddites (aka Pa's "old folks," no matter what the
age) want to con themselves they're saving the environment, like those
deluded bike riders who don't realize their bikes were created by advanced
technology and thousands of years of work by the human brain, I suggest,
if they want to return what they think is the Garden of Eden, that they
spend one day detassling corn. That'll
open their eyes to what technology and machines have done for us. Either
that, or the next time they need dental work, they can take a few shots of
whiskey and have some friends hold them down while the local sawbones
whips out his pair of pliers, just as was done a little over 100 years
ago. Myself,
I agree with Especially since I still dream about corn rows at night. discuss this column in the forum Bob Wallace is the author of I Write What I See. Please visit his Shameless Book Promotion Page. And here is his Page Full o' Fun. And this is where he blogs. |