"If it's provable we can kill it."
Or, wage slavery is still slavery
Published on June 18, 2006 By EmperorofIceCream In Misc
I can't think of anyone more fortunate in all the world than the person who can honestly and sincerely say he or she loves work. The person who can get up Monday morning and honestly and sincerely look forward to spending the next eight or so hours doing what's necessary to pay the bills; keep the kids fed, clothed, and educated; keep a roof overhead. Work. Work....

Starting with the earliest first, here are the three worst jobs I've ever had...

I left school in 1977 at age 17. At the same time, the UK was going through a major economic depression - and my family finally fractured completely and split up. I, my mother and my sister, all went back to Scunthorpe (a hidous little town in the north of England) to take advantage of help offered by my mother's sister and her family. In many ways it was a disastrous move, but that's a tale for another blog. It did, however, lead to what my mother fondly referred to as my first real job. In honor of her let's agree that's so.

I began my life in the workplace as a clerk in the local office of Her Majesty's Inspector of Taxes. At the time I joined this august and ancient body (now known as the Inland Revenue Service) clerks in such offices were creatures so low on the scale of creation that they could stride with ease under the belly of a comatose rattlesnake. We were the least important beings on the face of the earth and we were given the most tedious, the most repetitive, the most miserably boring, work that could be found. Anything that anybody who wasn't a clerk didn't want to do (especially the hated task of dealing with the public) immediately became the responsibility of a clerk - any clerk that could be found.

I don't deal well with boredom even now, finding it horribly stressful, and back then I was far less disciplined as a worker (who isn't, at 17?) It didn't help that I earned a miserable twenty-one pounds a week (about forty three dollars) and paid eighteen of them to my harpy of a landlady - my cousin John having thrown me out of his house on the entirely baseless accusation of his wife (the never-to-be-forgotten and always loathed Norah) that I had illicitly accessed her knickers by going through her drawers while she and John were out one day. Norah's arse was as large as (and less attractive than) a barn door. So large were the knickers belonging to this immense creature that had I actually explored them it would have needed search parties to find and rescue me. I would have been lost for days. John, being both spineless, pussy-whipped and (as it later transpired) a cuckold, put up no resistance and showed me the door - forcing me into securing a shared room elsewhere at an exorbitant price - at least, exorbitant in relation to the miniscule sum I earned.

So there I was in a relentlessly boring job surrounded by relentlessly boring people doing relentlessly boring things for a pittance and at night going back to a room I shared with a bloated laborer who suffered from explosive bowels producing a stream of fetid vapours - especially after an evening on the beer.

Oh joy.

One incident from my time there (which was mercifully short - about two months) comes back with particular clarity. The lower-middle-class drones that sweated their days away in little cubicles calculating other peoples' taxes all suffered from delusions of social standing and for their lunches frequented what they thought of as a 'refined eatery', the name of which I've long since forgotten - however I have a vague memory of it being something like 'The buccaneer's platter', or something equally ridiculous - there being very few buccaneers in Scunthorpe.

I however, living as I was at the desperate edge of poverty, couldn't afford such wonders - and for my lunch went to the pub across the road where I invariably consumed a pint and a pie (a pint of bitter and a 'meat' pie of dubious origin and content). I returned one day to find the coat-rack occupied by one of the odder inhabitants of the office - a creature invariably addressed as 'Mr.' and therefore nominally male, but the hips of which were far wider than its shoulders while it appeared to be possessed of pendulous breasts. This oddity wore, when out of the office, a tiny brown velvet cap and an odious-looking (and oddly stained) raincoat - which it was in the process of hanging on the rack. I had to stand quite close to this ambulatory hulk with its immense hips and teeny shoulders, and I remember distinctly that it looked at me and in a kind of falsetto whisper of horror it said "MY GOD... He... he... smells of BEER..."

C'est la vie, c'est la guerre...

The job I was most frequently required to do, of course, was filing. This was long, long before the days of universal computerization and all filing was done by hand. Thousands upon thosands of records were stored in manila folders of different colors, all of which folders were kept in order on 'The Wall' - which was exactly as it sounds, a wall running the length of the entire building. A small mobile ladder let you access the upper reaches while to get at the bottommost records you had to bend yourself double.

All day long, apart from stints dealing with the public (whom we were encouraged to keep at bay by any means short of criminal acts) I walked up and down that bloody wall... up and down, down and up, pushing a trolley full of multicolored manila folders containing hundred and hundreds of documents absolutely vital to the proper regulation of Her Majesty's taxes upon the peasantry.

And at some point I finally abandoned any attempt to file these damnable things according to the numerical system I was supposed to use, and instead decided to file them according to where, in my opinion, each color of folder would look best on the shelves - either to contrast with or complement the colors that surrounded them. I did this for the last month of my tenure there, and by the time what I was doing was discovered I had single-handedly destroyed any sense of logical order in the sections of the Wall for which I was responsible. Naturally, Her Majesty's Inspector of Taxes was not that happy with me, so unhappy was he that I was given the choice of resigning or being fired. Naturally, being the hopeless Romantic that I then was, I chose to resign (I thought it sounded better than being fired).

My last memory of the place is the look of anguished horror on the face of the clerk who was given the task of restoring order to the chaos I had caused; and the glance of furious resentment she threw my way as I walked out the office door for the last time, smiling. I faced a most uncertain future from then on, which took me to some very odd places (including the first attempt on my life) but again, that's a blog for another day.

The second of the three lasted only a week, thankfully - but at the time it's loss seemed like a disaster of the worst possible magnitude. I had been married to my first wife for twelve years, my marriage was a wreck, I lived where I lived on the sufferance of my about-to-be-ex-wfe. Actually, losing that job was the prelude to a remarkable upswing in my fortunes that saw me settled for several years in a place that I liked and with means enough to lead a relatively (for me, extraordinarily) comfortable life. I remained in that condition until shortly before the events that saw me leave England forever and begin the process of immigrating to America. At the time, of course, I knew none of that and thought I was staring utter ruin in the face - again, lol.

One of the causes of my divorce was deep-seated (but circumstantial rather than organic) depression, that kept me in a kind of mental paralysis for three years. What cured me was the shock of my wife's infidelity, of which I'd had not the least suspicion. It cured me and, once I'd accepted that that part of my life was well and truly over, propelled me rapidly out the door in a desperate search for work - since that was the only place I could think of to start rebuilding my life.

I found a job, working for a strange little company. Its business involved getting people in certain industries to accept free subscriptions to industry magazines - and then promoting these magazines as good places in which to place appropriate advertisements. As I was a newbie I got the job of touting for subscriptions to Airline Magazine... in Ethiopia. Ethiopia?

Yes, Ethiopia. Oh joy.

You can count on one finger of one hand how many airlines fly out of Ethiopia.... And how many pilots could they have...? But however few the actual number might have been, I still couldn't generate sufficient subscriptions. Partly that was due to the inconsistent functioning of telephone lines between the UK and Ethiopia. And partly it was due to the fact that the 'English' spoken by Ethiopian airline pilots, their wives, children, and assorted hangers-on, bears as much relationship to the English I know and speak as does Akkadian script to binary. In other words, none at all. They didn't speak English. I didn't speak Ethiopian: all was set for a stunning career in sales...

In helpless dismay I'd go down the list of names I'd been given on my first day. Each time I dialled a number I didn't know whether to hope for an answer at the other end (which in all probability would mean a deluge of incomprehensible gibberish) or none at all. In which case I'd be back to square one.

On one never to be forgotten occasion I did finally manage to get a line that wasn't saturated in static, that was connected to a phone that worked, which was eventually picked up.

Dead silence at the other end.

Me: may I speak to Captain Oogabooga (or whatever his name was)?
Ethiopian: series of demented wails that I eventually recognised as hysterical laughter...
Me: Please may I speak to Captain Oogabooga?
Ethiopian: series of bizarre ululations, combined with a sound like puppies being strangled - also eventually to be recognized as yet more demented laughter.
Me: Ummmm.... May I speak to Captain Oogabooga, please....
Ethiopian: sounds as of small creatures being done violently to death while wailing plaintively, extending over a considerable period and followed by...
A click. End of 'conversation', end of my patience, followed by a violent argument with my supervisor, followed by the precipitate and unlamented end to my career in advertising sales....

And that was one incident. Earlier in that week I'd (briefly) been placed in charge of an account (I forget the magazine involved) which had me calling numbers in New York. During those eight hours I was scorned, vilified, abused and shat upon from a great height. My paternity was brought into question, as was my mother's good name. When I wasn't being referred to as a 'Limey cocksucker' I was told that I was a faggot, my father was a faggot, and my mother was a 'Limey carpet munching snaggle-toothed dyke whore who sucked dick in alleys for fifty cents - when she could get that much'. That was not a happy day - and I was deemed too 'volatile' to be left in charge of New York and was rapidly returned to Ethiopia....

I lasted a week (well, from Monday to Friday) and was once again shown the door. And again, though it meant (so I thought) being reduced to desperate straits, I was profoundly glad to go. I'm not cut out for sales.... especially in Ethiopia.

Several years later, after working continuously on a long term mapping project (my first such job, but by no means my last) I once again found myself out of work as a consequence of the completion of my contract - which had been to work on the Low Voltage Schematics for East Midlands Electricity Company. Work I respected and thoroughly enjoyed, a 10 hour night shift four nights a week that gave me four day weekends for almost two years, among people whom, for the most part, I liked and which paid the magnificent sum of almost twenty-five dollars per hour. This was in the late nineties and, for where I lived at the time, was a wage beyond the imagination of almost all who lived in that area.

It came to an end, of course. The managers squeezed every last ounce of work out of East Midlands that they could; the Data Capture Centre was closed; and what had, over the previous five years, become a national centre for excellence in the use of GIS for mapping was lost and destroyed without a second thought, and everyone who had worked there was scattered across the country.

C'est la vie, c'est la guerre.

At that time I had no means to travel out of the area and so was forced to look for work in and around Mansfield in Nottinghamshire, in the Midlands, that was and still is the equivalent of America's 'rust belt'. Work was not easy to find: but I eventually gained a job working as an International Inquiries Telephone Directory Operator. On the face of it this seemed like a straightforward and perhaps even pleasant little gig. Sit in front of a computer monitor for eight or so hours on a variable shift, finding phone numbers in other countries for people. Simple, wouldn't you say?

Except that I, like most people in the UK, had no inkling that most of these numbers (at least in the UK) are still held in paper directories, many of which were over twenty years old and long overdue for a major update, generating long searches through filthy phone books and, not infrequenly, either a completely negative result - or a completely erroneous one. Which worked wonders for the tempers of the callers... . The rest of the numbers were (and are) held in a proprietary software system of arcane complexity, that required the most intense and demanding feats of memory if the proper syntax for a particular query was to be entered in the system.

Typically, callers wanted numbers for individuals, businesses, or hotels. If the operator taking the call was lucky, the caller would know the name of the party he wanted, the name of the country involved and and the name of the region of the country, or of the city, in which the party was located. If the operator was unlucky the caller would know none of these things...

Caller: Is that International Inquiries?
Operator: Yes Sir (or Madame).
Caller: I want the number of a hotel.
Operator: Its name please?
Caller: My name? What do you want to know my name for?
Operator: No, Sir. The name of the hotel.
Caller. Oh. It's in Asia.
Operator: What country Sir (always follow the information presented by the caller, they get confused if you do anything else)?
Caller: I was there six months ago - it has a pool.
Operator: What is the name, Sir?
Caller: Of the pool?
Operator: No Sir. Of the hotel?
Caller: If I knew that I wouldn't be calling you, now would I?
Operator (while grinding teeth): In what country is the hotel located, Sir?
Caller: Asia.
Operator: What part of Asia, Sir?
Caller: I don't know. I was there six months ago. It's in Asia and it has a very nice pool. Why don't you give me the number?
Operator: (sinks head upon the desk and sobs gently...)

And so it would go on, until the caller grew so frustrated he demanded to speak to a supervisor; or so abusive the operator could rightfully terminate the call. I had drunken Irishmen calling in to demand the Pope's number so they could confess direct. I had heavy breathers demanding to know what color underwear I had on. I had people demanding the number of the American President, so they could complain direct; or the number of the Russian Premier, for the same reason. One confused old lady called every day - in order to book a cab.

And then there was the endless verbal abuse. I had no idea that the general public of the UK could be so creatively foul-mouthed; nor that women in particular would take such delight in attempting to browbeat, bully and intimidate the hapless sods who took such calls.

Operators had, of course, ways and means of retaliating. Particularly abusive callers would be left on line for twenty minutes at a time (calls to International directories are horribly expensive) while the operator 'searched' for the number required in the paper directories - only to be 'accidentally' disconnected by the operator on his or her return. Which almost inevitably produced a further call in order to complain - the operator receiving it would automatically delay transferring the call to a supervisor (since it was a complaint about a fellow operator) and not infrequently would once again 'accidentally' disconnect the call as it was in the process of being transferred...

It was infrequent, but not unknown, for an operator to receive calls from the same person in series. I once went through this sequence of events three times in a row with one particularly unpleasant man, each time having the satisfaction of hearing the hysteria mount in his voice as he realised that he had once again got the same operator to whom he had originally been abusive ... and that he had no way of breaking the loop except by chance. I calculated, later, that I'd cost the foul-mouthed wretch somewhere in the region of seventy pounds, so utterly, furiously, determined to speak to a supervisor was he. He may eventually have got his wish, but by that time he was so incoherent with rage and frustration that no supervisor would have tolerated him for more than a few seconds... and he would once again have been cut off.

I worked there for three months, until I finally secured another mapping contract, and left to follow a path that, eventually, led me here, to America and a life at once both utterly different and at the same time largely the same as the one I'd known in England. Odd to think that, in less than ten days now, I'll be walking the streets of Manhattan, looking up at the skyscrapers and wondering which of them it was that I used to call...

These are pretty much the three worst jobs of my life to date - though I've had others that, in one way or another, came close to equalling them. Now tell me about yours.

Comments (Page 1)
2 Pages1 2 
on Jun 18, 2006
. appearance dot
on Jun 18, 2006
I can't tell you how much I enjoyed this, Simon. What an entertaining read. I even read parts of it aloud to Adrian (I really enjoyed your description of 'Mr.').

I've been lucky to have primarily enjoyable jobs. Once I was even paid $100 to spend an hour drawing. I've had jobs that I found difficult and extremely challenging and stressful, but I can't think of one I've hated outright (at least not at the beginning anyway, hahaha).
on Jun 18, 2006
"turning pants" in a sewing factory in rural Tennessee. I was in the middle of the production line, and I was the only one doing it. There were 30 or so women sewing the pants half-done on one side of me, and 30 or so who finished them once they were turned right side out. I was the only person standing in the room, having to collect each stack from beside each woman when she called.

These were like Dollar General Store bluejeans, the texture of sandpaper and about as much flexibility before they are washed by the factory. Then, I was to shove my arm into unwashed, raw denim, still saturated with the dye, chemicals, etc., and turn the pants right-side out. After an hour my arm was a nasty shade of blue, and I started getting skinned spots on my knuckles and elbow. They gave me a sock to wear over my arm.

The real problem for me was, they worked on a quota system. The faster the women sewed, the more they got paid. I got paid the same no matter what. If work piled up behind me, though, that meant that the women on the other side of me waiting for the turned pants had nothing to do, and would subsequently get paid less than the women that sent them to me.

So, after a week, a slight case of blood poisoning, and several death threats from rural Tennessee ladies that were completely capable of skinning me alive, I decided to quit. Only then did the owner fess up that they I was the tenth person to have the job in the last couple of months, and I had outlasted them all. The next week they blew the money and bought a big suction machine that did the job, and some guy got paid what I was paid to stand there and feed them onto the nozzle and hit a button.




Reposession for Heilig Meyers, Madisonville Tennessee. They were a furniture store in a very poor area that took credit like mad. Once a year they had a contest between the saleswomen (read: hateful, bored housewives that took the job for spending money) and those that sold the most got prizes. This coincided with the stores in the area also competeing, and the managers getting prizes.

The funny part was, the prizes were handed out like a week or two after the contest was over. That meant that anything you sold on credit counted, and if it came back a month later, you already had your prize. So, my smart asshole manager decided once a year to send a truckload of cheap mattresses, baby beds, etc., to the projects, and the women there set up a table and offered people credit.

No, I'm not making this up. Of course, 6 months later when they had missed, oh, 6 payments, guess who had to go back and reposess mattresses from the projects? Me and a really nice, but critically-rednecked guy. After a month of loading up urine soaked mattresses to take back to the store, I was about ready to quit.

Then, they sent me by myself back to my own hometown about 30 miles away. I look at the address and realize that it is 20 miles down a dirt road in a place that mail doesn't even run. I tuck my pistol into the seat cushion, and I go to get a $2000 waterbed from a place that I *know* doesn't have electricity.

I knock on the door, and there's no answer. I knock on the back door, and there is no answer. I go around, get into my truck, and hear a gun go off. It scares the crap out of me, I slide the pistol out of the cusion, I look up, and there's a guy standing right next to the passenger-side door, in his tidy whities, in february, with a shotgun pointed up into the air.

He starts ranting about his rights, about how if people like me knew what was good for them they'd stay on the pavement and not risk getting killed. Then he asks me what papers I was there to serve, and I tell him I didn't know shit about papers and that I was there to either get a payment for the waterbed or arrange for it to be picked up.

He started laughing his ass off, obviously relieved, and told me that not only could I take the waterbed, he'd have his 'boys' load it up for me. He said he didn't know how anyone slept on the damn things, because he had almost frozen to death trying to. He didn't have the heating pads that went under the mattress, and all I can figure is that he hadn't bought them.

I stayed on another month or so, and then I was sent to a highschool friend's house to take her kids' bunkbeds because her husband (they's sep'rated) was refusing to obey the court order to pay for them. I didn't, my boss bitched me out about being a puss, and I told him where he could stick the job.

That was also the job where I had to reposess furniture from a drug dealer turned rotweiler breeder's house. That's another story, and I'll spare you. I think LW remembers my feelings toward the breed, though, and most of it stems from that.




It's hard to pick a third. I guess it would have to be returning to work security at the college I had been asked to leave a couple of years earlier. Or working the desk at a motel in the same town after I had left school, where all the Methodist kids showed up to party off campus and smugly made note that I was doing so well after leaving school.

There's been so many, lol. I dunno.
on Jun 18, 2006
To Texas Wahine:

Thank you, and I'm glad you enjoyed it. It was fun writing it too... kinda lol.
on Jun 18, 2006
To BakerStreet:

Dayum... and I thought I'd had some miserable jobs...

Or working the desk at a motel in the same town after I had left school, where all the Methodist kids showed up to party off campus and smugly made note that I was doing so well after leaving school.


Don't you just hate Methodists....
on Jun 18, 2006
Nah, I don't hate Methodists in general. Given your demand that people have well-defined beliefs, I would imagine they drive you nuts.

We have a particular strain of them in this part of the country, believe it or not, that look a lot like Pentacostals. If you want to see strange conflicts, take a religion class at a Methodist school where you have "city" Methodists who might as well be unitarians, sitting alongside Methodists who speak in tongues and fall on the ground and flop around when the mood hits them. Needless to say they each seemed to have different ideas about Methodism...
on Jun 18, 2006

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this.  It helps, I think, that I've got some first hand knowledge of the places and things you're talking about; it lets me visualize much better.

My worst three would have to be clerking in a solicitor's office.  I had to file everything by hand (much like yourself) and then there was the lacing of the official documents.  In the good ol' british legal system, certain documents have to be laced certain ways with different colored laces.  Some are laced with pink, some with red, and there's a very precise way of doing it.  It's a pain in the arse.  And the filing....gawd, there were thousands of bits of paper, especially with conveyancing where you've got contracts and documents out the wazoo.....they all have to be filed in the same manila folders you spoke of, and they all have to be in date order.  It wasn't fun.

The next worst one was cleaning shotgun and rifle moulds.  I had to scrape all the crap out of them, clean them with acetone and then wax them so they were ready for the next use.  It was hot, boring, physical work and I hated it.  I didn't last long; I got promoted to actually putting the stuff in the moulds to make the shotguns and rifles.  That was MUCH better.

I think the absolute worst one I had was cashiering in a local supermarket when I was 14.  It was part time, and I had the absolute worst supervisor in the entire world.  If you screwed up, she berated you in front of the customers.  It sucked, truly.  I remember one time I was on the rag and she wouldn't let me take a bathroom break, so I ended up with blood all over the back of my skirt.  That's when my mum went and told her I wasn't coming back.....and I was eternally grateful to her for that.

 

 

 

on Jun 18, 2006
To BakerStreet:

Given your demand that people have well-defined beliefs, I would imagine they drive you nuts.


It's not so much that I require well-defined beliefs; more that I require well-defined people who live according to what they themselves profess. If you (for example) are happiest living in a State of Confusion - then well and good. But if there are well-defined tenets to living in such a State (or even ill-defined tenets which you, for example, profess by openly accepting the name of a Confusee) then yes, I don't think it's being egregiously demanding to expect such Confusees to live up to the tenets of the name that they have taken for themselves.
on Jun 18, 2006
To dharmagirl:

I like the signs I see around here.... No Solicitors....
on Jun 18, 2006
Nice read!

I once worked in a lefse factory. For two hours. I was at the end of the line, bagging the finished product and somewhere up the line they kept burning the lefse. The entire place was filled with acrid smoke. I had contacts in. Mid-morning break I left without telling anyone and never went back. Not even sure if I got paid for those two hours.

on Jun 18, 2006
intresting read. I never know \how to respond to anything you write simon, you write so far over my head most of the time, I do not wish to appear like a moron trying to reply with something as deep and profound as you have written.

Just know that I have started reading you and do enjoy what I can understand.
on Jun 18, 2006
To Xtine:

I once worked in a lefse factory.


What are lfse's and how are they made...?
on Jun 18, 2006
To Moderateman:

Just know that I have started reading you and do enjoy what I can understand.


If people have trouble understanding what I write, then that's my responsibility as author not yours as a reader. I still write in the style suited to an academic paper (except for the odd times I write fiction) which is the consequence of working for six years straight on my detested and never-to-be-completed Doctorate... Which means I tend to bloviate, rather... Sabrina points this out to me regularly and I am working on it, but I still find myself slipping back into it.

So, let me make it plain to All and Sundry; if I've written something that's interesting but difficult to grasp at first due to my use of language - ask me about it. All serious questions will be treated with respect.
on Jun 19, 2006
Simon, now that you mention that you've been working on academic language, it pinpoints the difference I've noticed in your last couple articles. I couldn't quite put my finger on it, but that's it right there. I do read most of your writings and enjoy them, even if I don't necessarily agree with you.

As for my worst jobs, that's a little more difficult. It's hard to come up with really horrible jobs when you're still working for the same company that you start with 12 years ago. I still enjoy what I'm doing, so there's nothing to complain about (yet).

Hmm.... I'd have to say that it was bagging groceries at the AAFES Commisary at Leighton Barracks, Wuerzburg, Germany. During the summer it was great. Decent weather and the rain wasn't too bad. They hadn't built the new commissary yet (that went in oh, about a year after we left), so the commissary was in a converted airplane hanger. The parking lot was lines drawn on the taxi area. In the winter ... have you tried to drag two 125 pound wheeled sledges across ice (and even worse, slush) while trying not the freeze yourself (even in gloves) to the metal of the carts? Not a pleasant experience. Since we worked for tips, we'd bust our asses making sure everything got to the car okay. Then, after wrestling two full carts of groceries across the icy hell of the parking lot, they'd tip us ... $0.25. Yep. A farking quarter. And they wondered why their groceries kept falling on the ground their next trip in ...

Sad to say, that's the worst one I've had to suffer through so far, to date. Go figure.
on Jun 19, 2006
What are lfse's and how are they made...?


Link

The first paragraph has the gist. It even mentions Minnesota!


If people have trouble understanding what I write, then that's my responsibility as author not yours as a reader.


The thing is, Simon, there are so many different types of reader. You have to decide what kind of reader you're most comfortable writing for. I think you do just fine!
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