agasfas wrote:I guess I'm just so used to physical labor... How often do you hear people say that?
I could say that about myself. Even before I started working for pay I would always help out with phyiscal labor tasks, mostly for the church or with family.
Before I started working at my current job I had two physical labor jobs. The first was working on a land surveying crew. Since I'm not an actual surveyor I had to do most of the grunt work, like clearing brush (which was fun, since I got to use a machete
), carrying equipment, marking points, etc. The work itself was more tiring that it might have been, because I always had to wear long pants and heavy boots on the jobsites. Clearly not the best way to stay cool in the summer.
My second job was loading trucks in a warehouse. At night. If I had to guess (since we each got a list of the load numbers at the beginning of the night), I would say that I probably loaded an average of 600 boxes an hour. The warehouse supplied a large retail outlet, so in addition to boxes I had to load big stacks of chairs, bags of charcoal, kitty litter, tables, brooms, and anything (minus books and electronics) else that you normally find at a Wal-Mart/Target/K-Mart. The most annoying part was the hours, which were 11:00 PM to 7:00 AM; but thankfully the pay was good.
Now I have a desk job with the (federal) government. I recently had surgery, so I probably couldn't do most physical labor jobs (doctor's orders
).