by hhomebrewer » Sat Mar 12, 2011 9:31 pm
I was, too, at a point in the distant past. I created my own. I put my name in the local paper as a handyman who would do just about anything. I was 21 and it was the summer of 1979. The phone rang off the hook. You see, many people want someone to do small jobs. Companies with shingles out very often want to do just the "home run" jobs-- quick jobs that pay a lot. You know: Bust it out, collect the cash and race to the next one. I was different. I did small stuff that wouldn't pay an organized company to do. I washed windows, split wood, painted, washed cars, cut grass, raked leaves, removed trash, cleaned out attics and basements, and did just about anything that came over the phone. I was so busy, I considered taking on another kid. Then in April 1980, I got a call that kept me busy all through that summer. I was the ground man for a crop duster. That was fun. We worked only during the day. My job was to mix the chemicals and pump them into the plane while it set there, engine running, blowing massive quantities of air over me. Occasionally I would jump up on the wing and dump a five-gallon bucket of super-juice into the hopper-- while that big, black blade spun invisibly just four feet from me. One time, I had to slide along the wing, my back to it, as the engine ran and do something with the little propeller under the fuselage. I think it froze up or something. Maybe there was some valve that needed opening or closing. I don't remember. It was over 30 years ago. Let me tell you, that's a sitch that will put the fear of God into you. Knowing that blade was just feet from me-- and would slice me like salami if I forgot its presence for even a second-- made me forever aware of what's going on around me. It's a lesson I have never let slip my mind. Today, I'm a trucker with about 1.5 million miles. Driving a large truck is like flying a fighter jet: You have to see everything in milliseconds and be ready to react even faster if some idiot in a four-wheeler (passenger vehicle) gets stupid. I have driven in Los Angeles, Seattle, Boston, Philadelphia, New York City, Miami, Houston, Dallas, San Diego, Portland, Phoenix-- you name it. I've probably been there.
America is a great country in that if you can't find a good job, you create one. Think outside the box, son. You are young, strong and motivated. You have all the equipment you need right there...
I am homebrewer. I had 633 posts when for some unknown reason, my account disappeared...
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