Genetically unemployable

It's the Pitts
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I can’t stand being told what to do. Been that way all my life. I can’t work for other people and that worked out just fine because no one has ever wanted too desperately to hire me. I’ve never handled people with authority well and that’s why for the past 40 years I’ve been self-employed and believe me, there’s been several times I felt like firing myself.

I haven’t filled out a resumé in 45 years, never taken a day of unemployment and I’ve never run out of work.

I started my career early in life mowing lawns, delivering papers and dusting furniture for my Grandpa in his furniture shop — all before I was 12. By far, my Grandpa was the best boss I ever had. He gave me a shiny silver dollar every Friday, and I sure wish I’d have kept them.

I worked in the oil fields for three summers to help self-finance my college education and I did have a good boss one summer who everyone called Timmy. He was a quiet, elderly gent who was about five and a half feet tall and built like a piece of rebar and just as strong.

Timmy was the only boss in the oil fields who seemed interested in teaching me things. I’d been on similar A-frame trucks with other bosses in other summers but mostly what those bosses did was try to stay out of radio range of the big boss so he wouldn’t know my boss was taking a nap or “reading” a magazine full of scantily clad women.

I also had a fabulous boss on the cattle ranch I worked for during high school, but I never really considered him a boss because he was more like a father. And that’s the sum total of good bosses I’ve had.

One of the worst was my first. I was the only gringo on a Hispanic crew picking lemons and oranges and I learned an early lesson that racism can work both ways. With citrus you had to cut the stem right next to the fruit or the sharp stems would damage the other fruit in the big wooden boxes. You’d stack your boxes at the head of a row, write your number, mine was 13, on the box and fill it from the sack that hung around your neck.

If you didn’t clip your stems, the boss would yell at you to come to your boxes and go through every box looking for any fruit whose stem wasn’t clipped. He did this to me about five times a day just for sport.

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Holyoke Enterprise

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