Tuesday, January 23, 2024

WORST JOB EVER

 RHYS BOWEN: I was at a college reunion a while ago when a woman I hadn’t seen since college asked me, a haughty look on her face, “So have you ever had a proper job?”

I had told her I’d been a writer all my life.  I replied that no, but my improper job had paid off a house, put four children through college and enabled me to live a very nice lifestyle.

 After that I thought about this. I’d actually gone to work for the BBC right after college, which was a highly proper job. I’d been an announcer for the World Service before I settled in drama where I started writing plays as well as working on the production team. So it was true to say I’d been a professional writer my whole adult life. After that I had done bits of teaching—drama, dance and then ten years teaching English with a writing emphasis at Dominican University, which had been a joy. But never a full time, nine to five sort of job.

 So I’ve been blessed to have time and energy to spend for my craft. Other people have to find time, snatch odd minutes to write. My daughter Clare, now writing Molly Murphy with me, gets up at 5 am to write. I’d also been lucky that I’d never had the sort of job I hated, that bored me. The sort where one looks at the clock to see when it might be lunch time.

 But the more I thought about it, I realized I had had some pretty awful jobs during my early life. I’d worked for the post office at Christmas as a teen. This involved being given an incredibly heavy bag stuffed full of letters and packages. Walking up and down several streets delivering them and then being met by a truck with another full bag halfway through. So if I wasn’t quick enough with the first half I was landed with two bags.

 My other job during high school was working at a nursery—not babies but plants. It was quite backbreaking work: one of my jobs was to scrape the moss growing on the top of pots of heather. I had to work my way down an incredibly long greenhouse picking up one pot, running my fingers over it to scrape off the moss, put it back, pick up next one. Thousands and thousands of pots. Unheated greenhouse. Freezing cold fingers rubbed raw.

 There was a strange old woman who worked with us. She was a spiritualist. She used to say “They are all around us” in a scary voice. Then she went home at four, while I was left to work alone in an unlit greenhouse until five thirty. In winter it got dark at four. I would glance at the distance doorway ready to make a dash for it if any spirits appeared.

 The only thing good about that job was that it sparked my future career:

 I worked with my school friend Mary and together we created a murder mystery involving all the weird and wonderful people who worked there. We created a victim (Gladys, the spiritualist) , a murderer and a motive. Every day we added more to our plot. The murderer was the owner’s rather arrogant son. Gladys had overheard him doing something he shouldn’t, maybe growing some illegal cannabis plants,  and had to go.  It was great fun and I think we made up quite a good story.

 So that wasn’t my worst job. My very worst was between college and the BBC. I finished college in June and my training at Broadcasting House didn’t start until October. So I had to earn some money for the flat I was renting with friends. I got a job with IBM. That sounds pretty slick, doesn’t it? Except it was as the tea lady.  I had to come in early and make enormous urns of tea and coffee. Then I had to push them around all the floors, dispensing beverages to the staff. There was only one problem. That tea trolley was incredibly heavy. I had a hard time controlling it. I would go flying down a hallway and crash through double doors at the end. Not a pretty sight.  I also found out how people at the bottom of the heap are treated.

                “Two cups of coffee, girl. No sugar. Make it snappy. We’re busy.”  Some people talked to me like that. Snapped their fingers. Were rude if I slopped any into a saucer. Of course, being me I got even. “Would you like one lump or two?” I would ask in my most plummy upper class accent, rivaling the queen’s. Then they realized that I was higher up the social scale than they were and they didn’t know what to do. Most satisfying.

                But I didn’t last long in that job. There were supposed to be two of us. The other girl quit after two days. The work was too much for one person. It involved serving in the restaurant during lunch then rushing back to make the afternoon tea. No break for eight hours. I asked when they’d get a replacement. Nothing happened. I gave it a good shot and then I quit.

 But it was a good learning experience for one who’d had a privileged life. It showed me what some people have to go through, and how to treat everyone with respect. It made me realize that some people have to face boring, backbreaking work every day. I’ve been the lucky one.

 So what was your very worst job?

90 comments:

  1. Since I began working when I was sixteen, I've had several different types of jobs . . . but none were of the awful "I can't wait to get out of here" sort. However, one summer I had a job at a blueberry farm. Along with several others, I sat beside a conveyor belt where we were all tasked with snatching out green berries, leaves, and/or twigs as the blueberries rolled by. It wasn't difficult work, but it was incredibly monotonous, which was the worst part of the job. I was truly thankful when summer break was over and it was time to return to school.

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    1. Joan, I'm having visions of a conveyer belt covered in chocolate bon bons, Lucy and Ethel...

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  2. My worst job was working in a medical lab that was deep down three flights of stairs in the basement. I had to wear a hazmat suit and do some wacko weird stuff. I lasted one day. Too gross to speak of.

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    1. DRU: Ugh, that medical lab job sounds yucky!

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    2. I did that work for a summer. I was on poops and spits - lovely!

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  3. As part of my university co-op program, I had to alternate between 4 month work placements & 4 month academic terms. My first job in 1986 was as a Satellite Data Lab technician at Environment Canada in Toronto. The lab ran 24/7 & we worked rotating 8-hour shifts. It was ok in the daytime, when there were other staff in the lab & other people working on the floor. We recorded infrared and visible images from 2 NOAA satellites, made photo prints, & electronically transmitted the images to other offices across Canada.

    When I worked the SOLO midnight-8:00 am shift, I was TOTALLY ALONE ON THE FLOOR.
    The hallway lights were off so it was pitch black outside the lab. On some shifts, there was little work to do since the satellites did not make a pass over Toronto. So it was a challenge to stay awake & my imagination could run wild. The huge mainframe computers (remember those?) were so noisy you could not hear anything else, including when the lab door opened. I had a prankster colleague who often tried to scare the crap out of me when he arrived to take over on the next shift. Another negative was that my body had a hard time adjusting to those shift changes, working 7 days & 2 days off, then rotating to the next shift for another week.

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    1. Rotating shifts are the worst - my dad did those for several years.

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    2. Yup, shift work is hard on the body. I am glad I only had to do it for 4 months. Another negative I forgot to mention in my original post was that I had to use harsh photo developing chemicals to make the B&W satellite image photos.

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    3. Grace, I would not have lasted one night in that spooky place! And a curse and a pox on the cruel prankster colleague!

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    4. Unlike other commenters who quit their worst job after a few days/weeks, I had to stay the whole 4 months or get kicked out of the co-op program. And I was graded on my performance & had to write a technical report on my work experience.

      Looking back now, it was a heck of a lot of responsibility to put on a junior employee working solo on their first federal government job. If I screwed up and did not capture the satellite data on my shift, there would have been "hell to pay".

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    5. Grace, when you wrote the technical report, did you recommend that it is Not a good idea to have a new person work SOLO in the evening? Just wondering.

      Diana

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    7. DIANA: No, the technical report was submitted to the university. My technical report was about how I could use the satellite images to monitor sea ice and Gulf Stream water temperatures. Environment Canada would not see what I wrote. FYI, Environment Canada had been hiring first-year students to work solo on the 4:00pm-midnight, and midnight-08:00 am shift since the 1970s. I got a full-time position as a climatologist in the same building in 1990. I worked on a different floor but occasionally walked by the data lab...it was still staffed by students working solo on the evenings & overnight shifts.

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    8. He who Harrumphs a lot, often worked solo on the hospital mainframe (he says it had less memory that our first computer, and the huge giant rolls of tape to transport around). It was in the basement of the old mental hospital in Montreal. He often had to traverse the corridors under the hospital, where there were all kinds of creaky pipes, spider webs, no doubt asbestos, and of course ghosts!

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    9. Lots of ghosts, horror movie vibes in both job locations, MARGO! I think the prankster enjoyed "scaring the newbie". The computer terminal was set up so my back was to the lab door entrance, so I often didn't see (or hear) him come in. I was also the sole female employee working there that term. Another reason why I was picked on.

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  4. My worst job ever was working for a brand new convenience store and they would leave me there on a Saturday night with no training all by myself. Then I went back Monday morning the same thing. I turned around and left.

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  5. I was once hired to manage a used book store that had just opened on the second floor of a building in a decidedly low traffic area. When I say I was the manager, I mean I was the only employee. The store did no advertising and the only sign was a small one in the wiondow which could not be seen from the street. The store was opened for less than two months when the owner informed me that I had less than a week to buy the store or be fired. He told me this exactly one week before Thanksgiving. By that Thursday I was both unemployed and thankful at the same time.

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    1. What was the owner thinking?! Hilarious.

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  6. I worked for a short while in a mall kiosk, selling cheap jewelry, expensive watches...and piercing ears. The unsavory part was when mothers brought in infants and wanted me to pierce the little ones' ears. I would get the first ear one done, at which point the child started screaming. Now that they knew what was coming, it was impossible to get them to stay still for the second side. Plus, I felt like such a horrible person, bringing such pain down on a baby! Nope, nope, nope. I started telling moms that they would have to come back where there were two of us working so we could pierce both sides at the same time. (There were NEVER two of us working.)

    The kiosk closed down a few weeks later (bankruptcy), and other than never getting my final paycheck, I was happy to walk away.

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    1. I worked in a mall kiosk one summer during college. I sold nuts and candy. Much better than piercing baby’s ears! I don’t think I would be able to do that.

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  7. Those lessons are good, aren't they? My older son worked two summers during college on an overnight shift at a yogurt factory. Toward the end of the second summer, his Hispanic coworker said, "Allan, don't you dare not go back to college." Allan, a brilliant but undermotivated student at the time, assured him he was going back, but it made my son realized how lucky he was.

    I hated hiring on to be a nanny for a month at the beach one time. It had sounded great ahead of time, but the parents weren't nice to me, the kids were brats, and I was lonely. I quit halfway through.

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    1. Edith, so glad your son Allan realized how lucky he was. So sorry about the children being brats to you and the horrid parents. I am sure the parents were not nice to their children either.

      Diana

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  8. I worked one winter at McDonalds. WORST. JOB. EVER.

    The head manager was a complete d-head who I'm pretty sure had everyone working for him plotting ways to kill him.

    If I have to choose between ever working at a fast food joint again or death, send flowers.

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    1. Jay, I have heard horrid stories about how McDonalds treat their employees. I'm so sorry that happened to you.

      Diana

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    2. Diana, I got even don't worry. :D

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    3. And the rest of the story must not be told? A plot arises.

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    4. I'm glad you went on to better things. I think about the people who are stuck in that environment because it's not a step to something better.

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  9. Got it, Jay. Flowers, check. Hope it never comes to that!

    My mother insisted that I attend the Catholic high school, then forced me to pay the tuition. I had to work after school, starting before my 15th birthday, cleaning classrooms. It was really more washing blackboards, which meant carrying buckets of cold water down long hallways, then using a big sponge to clean off that day's scribblings and erasures. It was the worst in the winter, with no gloves, and cracked hands. There were four of us in the building (I was the only girl), and I later learned that two male classmates never had to do that menial stuff. The football coach had them tidying locker rooms and moving tables in the cafeteria, much cushier jobs.

    So in my senior year when I got a job as a diner waitress after school that normally hard job felt like a piece of cake. I actually got to talk to people, for one thing.

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    1. Karen in Ohio, that was not fair that the boys had the cushier jobs. If they played football, then I am sure they have many injuries and high medical bills! Nice that you got to talk to people in your waitressing job.

      At a fundraiser in college, our organization worked at a college eatery off campus? We were to serve salad and ? spaghetti ? I would bring plates and some customers complained! I did bring water and pitches of drinks. Bad idea for me to do this because this was Before I got cochlear implants. Some people mumble. LOL. Perhaps this was the "worst" job for me.

      Diana

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    2. Diana, it was the mid-1960's. Women and girls got the short end of EVERY stick.

      The boys didn't play football. They were just given preferential treatment because they were male.

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    3. In Japan, it was the job of all the students (my cousins) to clean the blackboards and classrooms each day. This was in the 1980s and 1990s.

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  10. The worst job ever? Donkey years ago, I got a job working at a chain bookstore, which went bankrupt within years after I left. I worked there for about a year. Our boss was going through the worst kind of menopause and she often had to miss work. Some of the people in charge did Not know how to organize the schedules. On the days when our boss was not there, these in charge would give confusing requests for us and some of us quit. It is ironic because when they were starting the new branch, we had brilliant trainers from all over the country. I was working on the sales floor then switched to inventory without any explanation. I asked our boss why when she was finally in the office. She said a customer complained about me and I think I know who the customer was. I offered to help and that customer mumbled, refused to write notes and shooed me away.

    The inventory was hell because a co-worker would turn on the radio extremely loud and I was wearing my new cochlear implants. I could not use the speech processors after listening to that loud radio, even if I changed the programs. My brain was exhausted! I stayed for a year until I found another job , this time with a law firm.

    Why did I think I could work at a bookstore with my hearing loss when most of the customers are Not Deaf? I met maybe two customers who were Deaf in the entire year I worked there. Live and learn, right?

    Diana

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  11. The first job I had other than babysitting was the worst job I ever had. When I was a senior in high school my mother picked me up at school when I finished classes at 12:30. I ate a sandwich in the car on the way to the mall where I worked 1pm-9pm selling shoes at a department store. They had the men’s shoes in the men’s department, the children’s shoes in the children’s dept,, and the women’s shoes separate from those. My main reason for being there was to rotate around to relieve the solitary person working in each dept for their breaks, while rarely getting a meal or bathroom break myself. The male manager told me nearly every shift that I wasn’t dressed up enough, The day I wore my dressiest dress and heels, he made me sweep up his cigarette butts in the back room.
    I was so relieved to quit when a friend told me the plant nursery where he worked was hiring another part-timer. I wore jeans and tennies, played in the dirt and watered plants. I didn’t even mind the sweet elderly lady owner often calling me Linda.

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  12. I would have liked to have seen you with that tea cart Rhys! Worst for me tied between cleaning motel rooms and sewing leather handbags in a factory. I lasted less than 3 days in the latter...

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    1. Really? Those were worse than hand-feeding axolotls by wiggling bits of food for them to snap up in their tank? We've discussed this, and I for one think that sounds like possibly the worst job EVER, or at least once they eliminated the Victorian-era profession of night soil men.

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  13. Rhys, that was not nice of that "lady"? from your college years to ask you if you had a real job. Not a kind thing to do. I am sorry that happened. I am IMPRESSED that you worked for the BBC! A Deaf friend from Norway had an internship with the BBC in the 1990s and she had a wonderful time with them. Way better than our mutual Deaf friend who had an internship with an American news station, which I have mentioned many months ago.

    Diana

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    1. For a number of years I told people I was a Never at Home mom. With all the volunteering at my kids’ schools and church and driving them to their activities, I didn’t stay home all that much.

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    2. Brenda, I agree - I was on the PTA board, did lots of school volunteer work, and there was never a dull moment!

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    3. Being a Mom is a full time job! I read somewhere that if a Stay at Home Mom was paid for her work, the salary would be in six figures! I cannot recall where the article was from and it was a few years ago,

      Brenda, that is perfect! "Never at Home Mom". Volunteering at kids' schools is still work even if you do not get paid in wages.

      Diana
      p.s I was reminded of a tv show with Catherine Hicks as the Mom. Her character was a full time Mom, meaning her husband the Pastor was the breadwinner. There was an episode with stay at home Moms and Moms earning salaries (business, teaching, police, medical, etc) complaining about each other. I remembered this episode because the Pastor's wife came up with an idea of both groups of Mothers helping and supporting each other.

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  14. My first job was babysitting which I loved and was in high demand. I sat for a family with 4 kids under age 5 and I was only around age 12 myself!

    Second job was my favorite - I worked making Orange Julius. I loved the job but got fired when I accidentally gave a customer the wrong change. You had to do the change in your head (no computers in the late 60's.

    Third job was for a real estate developer (I was divorced and had a daughter to support) and I can't begin to tell all the life skills I learned. The 2 owners plus 2 other employees, were all older but treated me like their younger sister.

    The last job I had I spent what seemed like forever in college to get a teaching degree. However, I have to say it was a difficult job, low pay, long hours, and I realized it just wasn't for me. The social work aspect working with kids and families was where I should have focused.

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    1. Anon, my first job after babysitting was working at the local supermarket, again, back when you rang up each item individually and had to calculate the change in your head. And I am SO bad at mental math. I think the only reason they didn't fire me was because I was super cheerful and the customers liked me - or maybe there was a labor shortage in the late 70s I'm unaware of!

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  15. Worst job ever was gas station pump jockey the summer I graduated high school--fired for not being 'nice enough' to the boss's creepy friend.

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  16. Clare: I worked as a popcorn girl at Regency cinema in high school. The boys were ushers and the girls sold popcorn and candy! There was no electronic cash register. We just had to memorize the prices and add them up in our head. The popcorn oil was really bad for teenage skin. I actually had fun writing a play that was a satire of the whole staff with their names lightly changed and passed it around to the staff. So I guess I take after my mother!

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    1. Definitely an early sign you were meant to be a writer, Clare!

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  17. The worst job I had was my work-study at college. I had to work what was called "the slop line" in the dining hall. I took the dirty trays from students and washed off any remaining food before sending them down the line. I worked breakfast before my first class. The boys on the basketball team had competitions to see who could make the grossest slop. I would show up to that class smelling like bad milk and worse, so I sat in the back corner next to an open window. I lasted one semester.

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    1. Liz, my oldest had that job, but she was at Smith, and the girls weren't in a competition for "grossest tray," thankfully. That was always the first job for work-study students; after the first year she moved into working for the Grounds office, which she liked a lot, and eventually for the archives, which was her dream position.

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    2. Any "cushy" jobs like working for the archives, or the library, or a secretary in an office was reserved for students who qualified for the Federal work-study program. Which was not me, unfortunately. My parents didn't make a lot of money, but too much for the feds, apparently.

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  18. Rhys, I worked in a greenhouse and loved it. Sure, there was the tedium of manually planting thousands of seeds one at a time, or pricking out the little seedlings in the cold of February, but there was also the smell of the soil and the moisture, and the joy of the little sprouts. Then the immense beauty when the whole greenhouse was a sea of flowers and the soft smell of nectar as the doors were opened in the spring. There were the customers who came in with anticipation in their hearts, still stomping snow off their boots dreaming that they too would grow something. As the owner once told me, “If they are shy of gardening, and look like they need a good support to keep them growing things, sell them a geranium. People don‘t kill geraniums, that is why they are planted on golf courses – they grow in spite of themselves. Then next year, they will be back to dare to try something more difficult and you will make a gardener for life.”
    Worst job – lab work in a scientific institute in a tie with lab work in a children’s hospital with terrible ethics. Actually, ethics were the problem in both places. My first real job was in a Children’s hospital where I loved everything about it. I loved doing the work as we did everything manually in those days, meeting with the kids as we collected our own specimens, the staff in the lab and the hospital, and some days even the drama. The 2nd hospital, after I was married had none of this. We just sat in the lab and waited for specimens to come in, and (here is the crunch) ran the test if there were enough ‘for a run’ – see the economics. That meant that an emergency car crash could not have the tests done until there were enough – meanwhile the kid could die. One time to many and I walked out… In the scientific institute there was not enough work to keep busy, and many a day or even a week was spent doing SFA. You would know that tomorrow was going to be just a boring as today, and all you were going to get was a good paycheck, and a sore back from sitting all day on a stool. Then, sometime tests went missing before the report was written – I know nothing… Glad to quit that one, and never went back to lab work.

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    1. Ugh, Margo. I imagine working for an unethical organization, no matter HOW interesting the job, would be soul-crushing. Glad you got out.

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  19. Rhys, I can fully sympathize with your bad jobs. I too worked in a greenhouse where my job included crawling under the plant tables and pulling weeds by hand -- rows and rows on my knees. My worst job was in a British museum while I was in graduate school in the UK. I wore a gorgeous silk and wool uniform which I loved. But my first duty each day was to clean THE MEN'S URINALS. I felt utterly gross the rest of the shift!

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    1. Lorraine, I can kind of sympathize. I had a job for about a week as a custodian at this company. (They shouldn't have hired me it turns out so I got let go but got 2 weeks pay plus a profit sharing check. So nearly 3 weeks pay and a second small check for 4 days work, not bad). I had to clean the men's and women's bathrooms and it was not fun. Oddly enough, it was the women's bathroom that was the worst. Though I did such a good job cleaning it that they told my boss they'd never had it so clean before. (My response of "Then don't screw it up" was kept to myself).

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  20. I’m trying to think if I ever had a really terrible job… I was a proofreader at a publishing company when I was 19 or so. My job was to proofread the entire Indiana code of laws. I did it with a partner, and we would take turns reading out loud, with punctuation,what the book was supposed to be, while the other would check to make sure that’s what it was. It was incredibly tedious, and boring sometimes, as you can imagine with topics ranging from steam boiler regulations to torts to civil liability. And there were about 25 books, But It was actually kind of fun. My partner in proofreading at the time was named Sharon, and Sharon and I also had to make the indexes for the lawbooks. Which involved organizing about 10 million – – wait for it – – index cards!
    But again, that was actually kind of fun and rewarding.

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  21. Rhys, I listen to the BBC World Service at night when I can't sleep. Now I will think of your dulcet tones. The tea cart job sounds terrible!

    I had a lot of marginal jobs over the years, but the worst was as a youth "counselor" at a half way house for delinquent girls. I was a college student and had just gotten back from overseas study and was looking to work full time for awhile before returning to school. This job was 12 hour shifts, day and night, 6 to 6. I was the resident adult in charge of 4-6 troubled youth. I had to drive a big van to take them places. At first it went okay and the other staff liked me. A few weeks in, two girls had a dispute and one grabbed a kitchen knife to threaten the other. Luckily, another staff was with me. She grabbed the girl and disarmed her. That's when I decided to give notice. I just knew I couldn't have handled that situation by myself. A few days later, I was working the night shift by myself and we were having an ice storm (kind of like the one we just experienced here in Portland). The power was out at the companion boys' program a few blocks away. The boys and their counselor came over to get some wood from our wood pile. One of the girls sat on top of the pile and was teasing that the boys couldn't have our wood. They took the wood and left. The girl immediately punched me a few times in the face and then ran away with another girl. To my shame, I didn't call anyone, just waited for hours for my relief to come and then left and never went back.

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    1. God lord, Gillian. It's amazing the sort of jobs people will put inexperienced college students in! "Counselor" sounds like it needs a combination of an LSCW and a stint as a prison matron.

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    2. Julia you are right and your response totally cracked me up.

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  22. In high school and college I worked some retail jobs that were physically challenging (especially dipping ice cream at Baskin Robbins) but honestly, I didn't hate them and I still have many fond memories from those days. But I did have two jobs right after college that were pretty horrible. ( graduated in the recession of 1980.)

    Immediately after graduating, I worked in accounts receivable at an inner city hospital. The job consisted of two things: processing payments received in the mail, and handling people at the walk-up window of the business office. There were only two kinds of customers at the walk-up window: pathetic neighborhood residents coming in to put a $20 payment on the huge medical bill they would never be able to pay off, and white men in suits. The latter came to complain about something, and in general to act like bullies. It didn't take me long to learn to stop them at the first sign of aggression and get my manager, to whom I bluntly said, "You don't pay me enough to take this."

    The other worst job was at a mortgage company that specialized in mortgages for mobile homes, so had mortgages all over the country. I worked in the department responsible for ensuring that mortgaged properties were properly insured. It was just mind-numbing, boring, routine work, for the most part. It had the saving grace of interesting co-workers. I hated the actual work, but at least I enjoyed the company of the people around me. The majority were underemployed, well-educated women. We all generated letters all day, and we came up with a plan whereby we all saved out outgoing correspondence all day and then about 30 minutes before the final mail pickup, we all stopped other work to fold and stuff, giving us the opportunity to chat like a coffee klatch without getting into trouble.

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    1. Susan, that last sounds like a genius idea for camaraderie without bringing down the ire of the boss!

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  23. My worst job was the first I took after I moved to Florida. It was as secretary to the president and vice president. Sounds pretty good, right? Nope - The president had a "thing" about germs. I had to glove up to bring in his mail, or to take him letters for signature. I had to place everything, perfectly aligned in a corner of his desk. He would wait with his back turned until I BACKED out the door (he had a mirror strategically placed at his eye level so he could watch). He was a micromanager who once had me circulate a memo to the factory workers that they were to use no more than four sheets of toilet paper "per occurrence." You can bet I prayed I wasn't the one who had to police that directive. Turned out he would only release the rolls based on an estimated usage. Yep, that nuts. The coup de grace was during the Miami riots. He had a yacht and he sent me to a specific hardware store to buy something for it. The fires and smoke got heavier as I got closer to the location of the store. I made it to the police cordon where I was turned back. When I returned to work empty handed, I was fired. He also told me he would have sent his son, but it was too dangerous. Oddly enough, I never regretted losing that job! In fact, it was a huge relief.

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    1. Oh, Kait, and I thought the worst micromanaging boss was the one in the Registrar’s Office who would straighten our desk drawers and re-ink our stamp pads. We were all women in our 20s, just remembering the interesting “female needs” we arranged for him to straighten! LOL Elisabeth

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    2. KAIT: Ugh, working for a germophobe & micromanager would be horrible enough but your experience during the Miami riots is crazy! Glad you got fired!!

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    3. Elisabeth, that is awful! I think I'd have bought mouse traps and left them sprung!

      Grace, I was definitely happy to lose that job!

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    4. That is the weirdest and craziest, and most upsetting thing I have ever heard! Poor thing!

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  24. I worked at a cemetery typing names to identify cremains. I got one of the names and the outside of the box mixed up. I went home crying every day as it was incredibly sad as the workers would bring in the cremains which were warm and say. Here’s your hot lunch

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  25. In the 1960s while I was in high school I worked on Friday nights and all day Saturday at the Hudson’s Bay Company in Winnipeg in the cosmetics department. It was a great job especially just before Christmas when men came in at the last minute to buy their wives perfume. The regular staff in this department were older women who worked from 9 to 5 during the week. At that time we also fitted people for false eyelashes. I couldn’t help but wonder why so many men were asking for me to fit their false eyelashes on Friday nights and Saturdays. One man said when I asked him why he asked for me by name that he had been told by the day staff that I was the only person who fitted eyelashes and to ask for me on Friday night or Saturday. When I heard that I was shocked. After hearing that I happened to get a day shift the next week. I called a meeting with the women in the department that day and said that men were valued customers and if they wanted false eyelashes fitted anyone could do them. They won’t bite you!!! A bit much for a teenager to say, but the women stopped their behaviour and I didn’t get as many referrals.
    I have worked on weekends in a friend’s flower shop on weekends too and loved it. I was an educator for 40 years and loved that. I haven’t had a bad job!

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    1. That's wonderful to be able to say, Dorothy! Have you seen Ladies in Black, the movie about a department store in Sydney in 1959? You might enjoy it. The central character is also a high schooler (if I recall correctly) who is introduced to life by the older women working there.

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    2. No Julia I haven’t. I will have to look it up. Thanks for the suggestion.

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  26. I did quite a few part-time jobs over four years at college, including house-cleaning, washing dishes in a restaurant that had no dishwasher (and was closed down by the health authorities a year after I stopped working there!), making take-out pizzas, and typing addresses on envelopes. But none of them was too bad at the time since they were only part-time, and there was lots of camaraderie at the crummy restaurant. My worst job was very boring and very lonely. I worked for one summer between my college years at a car parts distributor. I was alone in a big warehouse all day, lifting heavy boxes of widgets (don't ask me what they actually were) off shelves that were too high for me, making up hundreds of small boxes, taking six widgets at a time out of the big box and packing them into each small box, and moving all the small boxes to another part of the warehouse when they were full. I did that every day, eight hours a day, with a packed sandwich for lunch that I ate all by myself in a corner of the warehouse. But I earned money, which was the point! And as I think most people have already said, it's important for EVERYONE to do these kinds of jobs at least once so they understand what some people have to do all their lives.

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    1. Kim, after my son dropped out of college, he took a job working as for a moving company. Long days hauling heavy boxes, dealing with dust, mouse poop (please, people, when you move, clean up!!) It really drove home the point that even if he wasn't sure college was for him, he needed high-level technical skills, thus, the navy.

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  27. Rhys, in the present hectic times, the BBC World Service as broadcast on PBS lets me keep up with the news without a critical rise in blood pressure. Now I will think of each presenter, “Will you create wonderful mysteries with beautiful words?” Elisabeth

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  28. I have tried to post twice. The comment is not lasting. Will give it another go eventually.

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  29. I’m not answering your comments as I’m in the OR waiting for knee surgery. Send good thoughts

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    1. Healing energy for you, Rhys. May you recover quickly and enjoy your new knee.

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    2. Praying for a positive outcome!

      DebRo

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    3. thank you Rhys; lighting a candle/ may the surgery go well. I think it is a language bot blocking me.

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    4. Sending positive healing thoughts your way, RHYS!!

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    5. Diana here: Sending good thoughts / healing thoughts to you, Rhys!

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    6. Sending good thoughts to you, Rhys!

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    7. Keeping you in my prayers for a good outcome, Rhys. 🙏🏻

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  30. So many worst jobs on this thread! Like Rhys, one Christmas vacation I worked in the P.O. but sorting mail, by hand, on long trays. I was inept. Summer between freshman and sophomore year in college I worked on Cape Cod, first for a few weeks as a waitress at a breakfast place where I served one long U-shaped counter. I had people begging for the coffee they'd ordered ten minutes earlier as I ran, totally exposed, from one end of my space to another. I was again, inept. To this day, I am awed by what a good wait staff person can do and tip appropriately!

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  31. One summer during college. I worked in a nearly abandoned warehouse with a few other college students. The company was a hair-care company. At that time all their bottles were glass. Our job was to go through boxes of empty bottles to make sure none were cracked or broken. The bottles would eventually be sent to their factory. We worked on top of a rectangular table that you might find in a cafeteria. All broken bottles were to be disposed of. We were not given gloves or any other kind of protective equipment. There were lots of broken bottles! The only other two people in the warehouse were the manager, who was very kind to us, and an employee who brought us boxes of bottles throughout the day. The manager was recovering from a broken ankle or leg, and had to get around on a scooter. He came to visit once or twice a day, and he complimented us on how quickly we were working. It was a temp job that we were told would last about three weeks. We got through all the boxes pretty quickly, and spent a lot of time waiting for the warehouse employee to bring more boxes of bottles. As we got near the two week point, we were done. But the manager liked us and apparently wanted to give us three full weeks of work. He told that he thought there were more boxes of bottles. He had them sent to us. We recognized that they were boxes of good bottles we had already been through! The warehouse employee slammed the boxes down on the table, and we could hear glass breaking inside the boxes. It seems that the manager liked us and didn’t want to let us go prematurely, so he had the warehouse person “accidentally” break bottles! It’s the only thing we could come up with as an explanation. At the end of three weeks the manager thanked us for doing the job well, and wished us well in the upcoming school year!

    DebRo

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    1. Ohhhhhhh that is heartbreaking! Xxxx

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  32. I have been pretty lucky in the worst job category. My first job was at Jack in the Box when I was 16. It was a summer job that I happily quit when I was hired to work at the neighborhood branch library as a page. I loved that job because my coworkers (the librarians) were very nice to me. My sister had worked there before me for two years and my mom was friends with the librarians so I was treated like family. And it was a library!!
    My worst job was probably the summer temp job when I was in college. I worked in a factory, testing the buttons on LCD watches to be sure the various functions displayed correctly. My hand was cramping by lunch time (from using the “tweezers” to squeeze the buttons) and then, a la Lucy and Ethel, the manager said she was increasing the volume of watches we had to check in an hour. I lasted one day. I didn’t have to clean bathrooms or deal with bodily fluids, but it made me realize that I really needed to complete my college education! — Pat S

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  33. I lasted one day working at one of these membership stores where you could save money shopping there. This was before Sam's and Costco. I don't remember what the job was I was hired for but we "girls" were instructed to check customers' credit by calling their family and neighbors, using a fake name, and asking questions to determine if they were good credit risks. This was in the early seventies and I guess the major credit bureaus weren't available. Just the idea of lying to people was repugnant. To make it worse, I had to take a lie detector test before they would hire me. I swore I would never, ever take a lie detector test again. - Pat D

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  34. I had a variety of jobs working my way through school, and usually I found something interesting about each one, bot the only job I truly disliked was working at J C.Penneys in the shoe department. It was beyond tedious, with customers asking for box after box, but so undecided. I get wanting what you want in shoes, but they could be so demanding, and then just walk off not choosing anything. And in those days, taking them all back to shelve them was really tiring, because they weren't necessarily shelved near each other.

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  35. OMG, everyone else has me beaten on this one. My worst job was selling encyclopedias door to door. I lasted exactly 2 days. I had a ton of temp jobs, fortunately TEMP was what they were. A week in an Asian import company typing invoices for pipe fittings... the day started with a 1.5 hour bus ride (2 changes) that I had to take to get to the office. But i another era, I'd have been a very happy secretary. LOVE the smell of paper and ink, the sounds of a stapler, and especially operating a switchboard.

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  36. Good thoughts for your knee surgery, Rhys. Surgery is never fun, but I understand from friends who have had it that the healing up is pretty quick. Best wishes.

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  37. Yes, Rhys, hope your surgery went well and that your recovery is (at least relatively) painless and swift. — Pat S

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  38. After college, I immediately landed in a great job being trained as a telecommunications engineer. This was really exciting as this opportunity was partly the result of a consent decree levied against AT&T to encourage the hiring of more women into engineering positions. It was a great learning experience including an accelerated semester at Iowa State University. Unfortunately, the economy took a nosedive and I was laid off the following February, 1975. Remember that era in USA history?
    Eventually, I found a job at a major Boston hospital working on NIH grants. The doctor in charge was a nightmare who arrived daily with complaints related to his house in Weston and immediately started drinking lukewarm plain water. This was early in the days of computer work and every day the requirements changed. I won't share more of the horror stories, but needless to stay, we parted company. Needless to say, I was burnt out and spent my days on the tennis courts or sunbathing at the pool of my apartment complex. Later that summer with the prodding of friends and family, I took a state examination and became one of the first female bank examiners in MA. It was OK, but I won't go into the negative parts of this job as that would put my life in jeopardy. About a year later, I was recalled to my original post college corporation and lasted there for many years in many different positions eventually ending up in marketing as a product manager after I completed my MBA. Life is even better now that I am retired!

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