Showing posts with label Co-Workers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Co-Workers. Show all posts

Sunday, March 9, 2025

DREAMING OF OLD JOBS

 


We still dream of those old jobs, the ones leading only to the next shift, the next break, the next paycheck and day off, to rest and to worry, and start it all over again. Those jobs that we gave so many years to follow us like ghosts, tracking us down in our anxious sleep, as if we had left one detail or another unfinished, forgot to lock up or turn the thermostat down. The waitress balances her tray of trembling water glasses two decades after she has retired, a cacophony of voices still calling out their orders. The bus driver turns his oversized wheel onto a street with neither a name nor discernable stops. Your mother still packs shells at the munitions plant ten hours a day, and your brother tears sheets of steel from the shearing machine into eternity, tiny stars of metal glinting beneath his skin. While you stand on the loading dock of a crumbling factory, ringing the service bell again and again. It's so early the birds are not yet stirring, the winter darkness folding in around you. But you have been here long enough. If no one answers this time, you think, you'll force yourself to wake, and be gone.

Sunday, October 6, 2024

CHARLOTTE

 

Charlotte was well into her ninth decade,
with no plans for retirement, making,
slicing, and packing sandwiches
on the assembly line with the rest of us
poor souls -- perpetually bored teenagers,
dropouts, and functioning addicts trying to survive.
Her face was a wonder of lines intersecting
with lines, of worry and laughter,
one long and detailed story leading
imperceptibly into another; her skin, thin
as parchment, polished and shining
beneath the gray industrial light,
especially when she turned to smile.
Her beloved husband Frank had long since left
this life, while their children, and their children, had
grown and moved away, one to the east
and one far out west, remembering, most years,
to call at Christmas and her birthday.
"What would I do sitting at home alone?,"
she would ask to no one in particular,
answering herself with an exaggerated shrug.
Decades earlier, she had worked
at the ammunition plant not far from here,
alongside my aunt Anna Mae, counting
and packing machine gun shells for the war
six days a week, her hands perpetually
smelling of metal and oil for years.
This work was easier, much easier by far.
"Here I can eat what I make," she once quipped,
"and no one gets hurt, or killed -- just fed."

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