workaphobia

I hear folks say all the time how the country no longer makes anything, everything’s outsourced, manufactured in China, then imported.  Course, they’re running up to Wal-Mart for all this cheap junk, save them a few bucks, half of it going back into gasoline on their SUV.  Here on the self-sufficient South End, we still make stuff.  Okay, mostly because we couldn’t afford to buy that stuff new.  But partly because there’s still a vestige of pioneer pride.  You make something yourself, you maybe understand how much work goes into it, you maybe understand the real worth of it, you maybe become a part of it and it becomes a part of you.

We got about 2 million artists down here who paint and sculpt and carve and you name it.  They make stuff.  That’s what art is.  Creation.  If they could sell it, they’d be ‘job creators’.  Always that damn ‘if’.  I admit, half of artistic inspiration is job avoidance, or, in my case, about 100% is.  Workaphobia, almost a crippling malady.  I’ve had friends, who fancy themselves psychotherapists, suggest that if I spent half as much time employed as I do avoiding work, I’d be rich.  Course I explain that then I’d have to do taxes or hire an accountant, set up wills, keep records.  I’m just a little too busy for that kind of complexity.

The thing is, see, if you do your own car repair, fix your own leaky pipes, dig your own garden, catch your own food, prune your own fruit trees, cook your dinners, play your own musical instrument, sing your own songs —- you don’t have time to work some silly crappy job.  No way.  You’d fall behind, the chores would gang up, the shack would rot, the whole she-bang would come undone, entropy would rule, chaos would ensue.  Down here, you do not have the luxury of a job!  What you got, as consolation, is making your own life yours.  Not buying it on credit, piece by piece, from a factory filled with people paid next to nothing in a country that makes stuff for all of us who don’t have time to do it ourselves.

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