By Stephen C. Schultz
The banging on my bedroom door was sudden and loud. I was
jolted out of my sleep, eyes wide open but seeing nothing. My head turned from
side to side in an effort to make sense of the thunderous noise. No, this was
not one of those slow, groggy wake ups. This was a fight or flight, increased
heart rate, and covers flung off type of wake up!
Still dazed with confusion and now sitting on the edge of
my bed, the door knob started to turn. Then my dad poked his head in the door
and said,
“Steve, get up! Get up now! You’re going down to Oregon
Rubber Company to work today!”
I thought I was going to spend the day in the back pasture cutting up fallen trees with my dad. I turned to look at the clock next to my bed and I had to
wipe the sleep from my eyes before it came into focus.
Thoughts raced through my head,
“5:30am! 5:30am on a Saturday no less! Doesn’t my dad
know that a sixteen year old adolescent boy needs his rest? Apparently not!”
As my dad stepped in the room he said,
“Dave called me and they need some help down at the shop.
He asked if you would be willing to come in this morning and help out.”
Dave Lowe was the founder and owner of Oregon Rubber Company. He
and his wife Shirley and their daughter Julie were our neighbors and good
friends. Oregon Rubber Company manufactured rubber to make retreads for truck
tires. They would actually mix the ingredients, extrude the rubber into long
sections and then press out the tire treads on large hydraulic type presses.
These presses were essentially large waffle irons with customizable tread
patterns. They took orders and shipped tire treads to tire shops all across the
country including Alaska and Hawaii.
A week or so prior, Shirley had asked me to come down to
the shop and do some weeding. It was the beginning of summer break and I
certainly had the time. So, I would drive each day down to the shop and weed
the flower beds and rake the bark mulch so it looked nice. Shirley told me to
simply put my hours on a time card in the office.
It was a two or three day job so I brought a lunch with
me. Each day, the guys would come out beside the shop to eat their lunch. I sat
there with them and got to know Carl, the shop foreman and Smitty, the beloved,
good natured, always smiling gentleman who ran the mixer. Smitty had the
distinguished mantle of being the first employee with Oregon Rubber Company. There
were others who came out to eat as well.
Evidently, the short time I spent eating with Carl is
what lead to my father bursting in my bedroom door that particular morning.
You see, Carl approached Dave and said they were getting behind on filling the
orders. While business was good, they needed to hire someone else. In the
course of the conversation, Carl said to Dave,
“Why don’t you call that neighbor kid of yours and have
him come down. He can trim up these treads as they come off the press.”
So began my work at Oregon Rubber Company. I came down
that day and stood trimming tire treads for 12 hours. For the next few weeks I
would start at 6:00am and work until 6:00pm. They were long, dirty, laborious
days. However, it wasn’t long before I was being trained on the buffer and
learning how to bag, weigh and stack the treads on pallets, preparing them to
be loaded on a truck for transport. I learned to drive a fork lift and found
myself enjoying my time at work.
I was able to continue part time after school started
again in the fall. I would work from about 4:30pm to 10:00pm. At 5:00pm, the
rest of the crew would go home and I was there with one other guy. He would
work the presses and I would run the buffer and fill orders. Even at 16 &
17 years old, I always knew there was a level of trust from Dave and Shirley
and I didn’t want to damage that trust in any way.
I will always be grateful for the opportunity to learn
the skills of working hard, being trusted, customer service and managing
co-worker interactions and communication. I learned problem solving and
developed critical thinking skills. The job that started out as a job weeding
for my neighbor turned into a part time work opportunity throughout High School
and full time work during the summers. There were even a couple of summers
between semesters at college that I was able to help out at Oregon Rubber
Company. I will forever be grateful!
So, why do I share this experience? Because, there is an
aspect of work that is good for the soul. Well, what does that mean? It means
that as we work through difficult situations in life, we are simultaneously learning.
While the work may be hard, we actually feel good about ourselves. For example, the first day I was there
trimming tire treads, I thought I was going to die. It wasn’t the most intellectually
stimulating work and it was physically tiring to stand up all day for twelve
hours. However, I exhibited the skills of persistence and determination, skills
that hadn’t really been tested until that day. I gained competency in my
ability to actually do the work. I was able to develop a sense of
accomplishment over time and when I was trained on new aspects of the operation
I developed confidence in my ability to learn new skills.
Did I know this was happening at the time…no. But, I know
now, in hindsight, that this was a very important aspect of my adolescent
development. It taught me the value of work. It taught me the value of earning
money. It provided perspective on the realities of everyday life and I walked a
little taller and I interacted with others in a more confident and competent manner. It is something I realize as a parent, I need to pay attention to with my own kids.
Are teens today able to have these same experiences? Do
parents provide the opportunities for kids to work? What effect is technology
having on adolescent physical and emotional development?
I am interested in some of your experiences with work. What
did you learn? Was it a good experience or bad? What have you done with your
own kids to help them learn about this principle called work?
Check out my other posts entitled “The
Stinky Side of Summer Jobs” and “Opportunity
looks a lot like work”
Comments
Thank you for your service...and thank you for your comment! It is true that work helps us with perspective, determination, focus and courage. It contributes to our self esteem and our compassion for others. Thanks again! Much appreciated!