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My first job kindled heartache – and hard lessons

One evening, many years ago, when I was a boy, my father suggested that I look for a job, to dissipate some of my misdirected energy.

After a long search, going from business to business along the main street, offering to sweep, deliver, clean – anything for a few bucks – Mr. Timmerman, owner of a small pet store, finally agreed.

Why We Wrote This

As our essayist discovered at the tender age of 12, the old adage is true: Experience really is the best teacher.

I was ecstatic. A job! 

The next day after school, Mr. Timmerman pointed me toward a mountain of shoeboxes in the backroom and handed me a penknife. “Cut a slit in every box for the chicks,” he said.

I worked apace, nonstop, cutting slit after slit until my fingers were cramped. With every box I cut, my mind raced. What would I buy with my pay? Sneakers? A BB gun? A skateboard? The possibilities were endless!

After two hours of diligent labor, I returned, glowing, to Mr. Timmerman, making sure to display my sorely taxed hands. He thanked me and reached into his shirt pocket. Then he handed me my pay: a pen inscribed with the name of the pet store.

I was shattered. But what could I do?

In my childhood, the working-class homes on my New Jersey street were wedged pretty close together. This meant that the free-standing, flat-roofed garages behind these houses were also lined up in inviting fashion, with just enough space between them for an energetic, long-legged boy like me to bound from roof to roof.

One late afternoon, when I was 12 years old, I took a great leap onto the next-door neighbor’s garage. Mrs. Strenger, her hair in curlers, came out with a broom and tried to swat me as I crested the gap onto the next roof. She complained to my father, who sat me down that evening and suggested that I look for a job, in the interest of dissipating some of my misdirected energy.

Truth to tell, I had long wanted to be a working adult so that I could have some disposable income of my own.

Why We Wrote This

As our essayist discovered at the tender age of 12, the old adage is true: Experience really is the best teacher.

And so I began the search, going from business to business along the main shopping street, offering to sweep, deliver, clean – anything to earn a few bucks. But it was a no-go.

“Too young” was the repeated refrain.

My last hope was a small pet store run by the no-nonsense Mr. Timmerman. Mustering my courage, I begged him for a job, any job. It was near Easter, and he had just obtained a large number of baby chicks, which were chirping nonstop in the background. Surely he needed help with those. Mr. Timmerman looked me over. “You’re young,” he said with a hint of disapproval in his voice. But my pleading expression must have won him over, because he sighed and nodded. “Come back after school tomorrow.” I was ecstatic. A job! I ran home and told my father the good news.

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