I will always remember my first job. While I carefully weighed career paths worthy of a promising a fourteen-year old, my father found a job for me. He marched me down to the corner and rang the bell of a nondescript storefront with no identifying sign. A man who looked like a Hobbit straight out of Tolkien's imagination answered the ring and invited us in. He introduced himself to me simply as "Mel". I couldn't help notice that Mel walked with a pronounced limp that gave him a rolling gate.
Mel turned out to be a quiet, decent man who was a very talented
engraver. I did the job for a while, but before long, even the calendars
couldn't overcome the mind numbing boredom of packing glasses every day, so I
gave Mel my notice. He was really nice about it and even gave me some glasses
to take home. They had someone else's initials on them, but still, it was a big
step up the glassware ladder for us since we usually drank out of Welch's jelly
glasses.
No matter how well off a family is, young people should learn the
value of a dollar early in life. Besides teaching me how to pack glasses, that
job helped me understand that when I asked my father for ten dollars, it meant
the family would have to do without something that week. Starting with my next
job, I always gave my mother something out of my earnings for the house. The news
story last week of the New Jersey
brat who was suing her parents to pay her college tuition is the reason why
kids with the entitlement mentality need to learn that there is no money fairy.
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2 comments:
What is it about Brooklyn dads? They put you to work from the get-go, and God help you if you didn't want to work. My Dad found jobs for me as a painter's helper, shipping clerk, and supermarket packer! At least I never asked for money from him. He also taught me to work hard, and people will have a high regard for you. I guess like Mel did.
Joe Del Broccolo
Hey Joe:
I was glad to have any kind of job. I hated asking my folks for money, and to think anyone would pay me a dollar an hour to pack glasses was a kid's dream come true. Somewhere along the line later generations lost that notion.
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