And I have to say, I'm getting really tired of people looking down on manual labor and food service jobs. There is absolutely nothing wrong with working in the McDonald's drive thru.
It's not a question of looking down on a job, but rather a question of whether it's actually what someone wants to do with their life. It's perfectly possible to be dismissive of doing a food service job, without being dismissive of a person doing a food service job, or indeed, without being dismissive of the role in itself. All three are conceptually entirely separate. That's how I read
CindyLouWho's post, anyway, but I'm sure she can clarify for herself.
Thanks,
Holdfast. I appreciate the clarity in my absence.
Nothing wrong with working food service. I grew up in the restaurant business, in fact - my father owned a very successful restaurant and I worked there all through high school and summers in college. So I know exactly what it's about, and that it is very hard work.
Same goes for any manual labor job, no doubt.
The question, however, is whether you want to be working the McDonald's drive thru at age 50. It might be okay at 17 or 22...but at a certain point, it really blows standing on one's feet all day getting greasy and sticky and tired and hot. And I'd imagine it would also blow to be working McDonald's at age 50, when nearly all of your co-workers are teens...and when the wages made there will not support a family.
If someone really liked the work, I think it's fine - an honest day's work is an honest day's work. But to be working a drive thru...or putting a roof on a house in the blistering heat of a 95 degree summer...or the the frigid temperatures of a snowy, windy, damp winter's day...well, I just don't know many older guys who want to be doing that.
It's fine at 20...but trust me...at age 45 and above, it begins to sound less and less appealing every nanosecond. And if you have no skills but that, you also have no choices but that.
Because just try going back to school at age 45 when you have 2 or 3 kids, a wife, a mortgage, and a job that doesn't pay all that well, like a lot of these jobs pay. There will be no time for school, because every waking hour will be spent working the manual job to keep the bills paid. You become trapped.
It's not a matter of these manual jobs being less honorable - they are not. But if you do not get an education, you end up limiting your possibilities to ONLY those kinds of jobs. For the rest of your life.
And I just don't think that is very wise, knowing what I know about the human body, and the aches and pains you develop as you grow older.
I was a runner for a lot of years, and still run. I got out of shape for a while, but have been in good shape the greater part of my life. And let me tell you - standing on my feet, throwing sacks of flour around, cooking, waiting on tables, working fryers, etc for 8 hours a day sounds a LOT less appealing now than it did at age 17 when I was working for my dad and doing that. You can make book on that.
And it has absolutely NOTHING to do with whether or not the work is 'honorable'. It has EVERYTHING to do with the aging process, to which none of us is immune.
At 25, you think that if you are in good shape, you will always feel great and will be immune from aches and pains. And I'm here to tell you that if you believe that, you are wrong.
