Recently a dear
friend of mine let me know she had to put down her old dog. I grieved
with her and as a token of sympathy, I looked up and sent her the
post I did a number of years ago when I had to say goodbye to my dog.
The post made me cry; I could remember the event clearly. Just to
distract myself, I read some of my other posts, and wondered what on
earth had happened to make me stop writing.
I have recently
started blogging again at my other site, Raven’s Cruise Log,
because David and I are finally seeing the end of our land-based
exile. But that’s the first writing I have done in almost four
years, and it’s mostly just sharing what we are doing on the boat,
mostly to keep me motivated. I know every month I must post progress,
so I’m more inclined to slog on and make some.
After several years
of working to have a successful business (I tried several), my high
point earnings were about $17,000 and David gave me
the Look and said, you have to get a real job. So I got one. It
required I spend all day on a computer basically doing data entry. My
days turned gray with the boring work and I had little enthusiasm for
looking at a computer screen when I got home in the evening. We moved from the boat to an RV to have more space and life didn't seem very exotic at all. Time for writing also took a back seat to a Tuesday night Bible study and Thursday night choir practice.
About the same time,
I got really, really sick. I knew something was going on because
I was just exhausted all the time. I was losing my hair, I caught
every cold that wandered by, I had shingles, and I was a total
insomniac. I was finally diagnosed as having Hashimoto’s
thyroiditis. I am treating it with thyroid meds, but also with a very
strict diet (Google “autoimmune protocol” for details – it does
work!). I monitor my nutrition, I cook 98% of all my meals. I
investigate root causes and side issues (digestion, inflammation,
nutrition, stress reduction, etc.) What energy I had was completely
absorbed in finding out about and dealing with this disease and in
slogging to work every day. That left very little time and no
enthusiasm for writing.
The good news is, at
this point I am almost symptom free and have no antibodies attacking
my thyroid, we have moved back onto the boat, and – Holy Toledo! I
am retired! All of those things are very good news!
Although it was quite painful, the whole experience
at work was an eye-opener, both in terms of knowing myself better and
in terms of understanding the life experience of the vast majority of
people who have not had my advantages. I discovered I was being
ham-strung by pride on both ends of the spectrum. On the high end, it
was “You are bright and experienced and way too good for this job.”
On the low end, it was “You are pathetic, this is the only thing
you can do to earn a living.” Both ends were equally unlovely.
There was absolutely
nothing wrong with my job except that it hurt my feelings. It didn’t
feed my vanity in any way. I was never consulted (even about
procedures having to do with my own job!), I was never thanked or
recognized, I was not rewarded financially, and my input and insight
were neither desired nor valued. My business sense was ignored. I was
a cog. Pretty deflating, right?
And yet, I am grateful for this
experience for it has been very good for showing me my pride in all
its glory and for allowing me to cultivate the virtue of humility.
Humility is just the quality of accepting things (and yourself) as
you are, neither more nor less. That’s not to say we don’t strive
to be our best, but it’s a striving that has to do with quality and
satisfaction with one’s performance, not the esteem of others. Good
practice for someone who has always been overly motivated by others’
opinions.
Another valuable
insight from this experience is seeing how working people (the
working class we pretend we don’t have in America) live and think,
how they are routinely ignored, devalued, exploited, and shamed. It
isn’t pretty. I see this in the remarks made in the media that show
that the people making them have no idea that people of value can be
poor, uneducated, ignorant and also generous, humorous, wise, and
honest. No, not everyone has those virtues, either in the working
class or anywhere else. But those virtues are at least as apparent in
the men and women who strive to earn a living working with their
hands. They seem to have a better grasp of reality. The reality of
struggling between customers and suppliers, of juggling government
regulations, taxes, lack of health care, and the weather. The weather
shuts down lots of our customers (and guts our sales). Heavy rain for
a week? No income for the boat painters and maintenance folk and no
income for their suppliers.
I hear their worries
about charging their usually well-heeled customers full price for
supplies. They underbid each other all the time for work, and that
cuts them out of a decent income. The next time someone is doing work
you cannot do, don’t begrudge them their wage. You can’t fix your
own car? Then pay someone to do it, and realize that your hourly wage
is probably six to ten times more than the person you have just
hired. They are saving you that amount of work and income by doing
the work you would otherwise have to do yourself.
I’ve spent the
last year stripping and varnishing the teak below decks on our
sailboat/home, Raven, and believe me, whatever you are charged
for that sort of job, you need to pay and then some. When you don’t
work with your hands, you don’t realize the time involved. It takes
time to do things properly, and that means the hourly labor cost is
going to be higher than you expect. So if you suspect foul play, go
and watch the process. Honest folks don’t mind, and you might get
an education.
These are the folks
who are solidly behind Donald Trump. They are the left behind, the
ignored, the forgotten, the dismissed, the demeaned. And they are
some kind of angry. They don’t care what Donald has done or will
do, as long as the folks who have left them behind, ignored them,
forgotten them, dismissed them, and demeaned them are booted out of
power. Now. So what if Donald Trump is a moral degenerate? They
(politicians) all are. At least he’s different. That’s what I
would hear from the front counter when I walked by. And no matter
what he does, he’s not One of Them.
It’s not a mindset
that is amenable to reason or facts or deeds or analysis, because the
root is too deep and too emotional and too long endured.
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