So, it's March 2013. This is an important month for me.
Later this month I'll have another birthday at which time I'll commence the
69th journey of 365 days. I never gave much thought about attaining the age of
68, but here I am. Wow! My mind keeps thinking it's still back in it's 20's and
30's, but alas, the body reminds the mind that it's not quite the way it all
works.
50th Anniversary
This year, my 68th going into my 69th, also is the 50th
anniversary of three extremely important events in my life.
Fifty years ago this
year I attended my high school commencement as I completed my 12th year of
education.
Fifty years ago this year, after working my behind off at a
kosher delicatessen for my summer job, often working 80 hours in a week (and
leaving me little time to conduct my own small business enterprise), I
commenced with my first year of higher education. I learned some of the most
profound, practical and valuable knowledge in my first hour in a college
classroom, thanks to Mr. Reaske, my first college English professor.
And, 50 years ago this year I met Mr. Ted Sheft and Ms. Emma
Fantone, the directors of the Audio-Visual Center at Montclair State College,
where they had granted me a work scholarship. It was there under the mentoring
of Ted Sheft that I discovered what would end up being my lifetime career, the
recording industry, along with numerous tangential opportunities.
It's hard to believe that it's been 50 years since those
pivotal moments and the opportunities they opened to me. But, please, don't
think that was the end of the uncountable opportunities that have crossed my
life journey. I said they were uncountable because there is no way for me to
even recall them all. I've even begun to forget many of the opportunities I took
advantage of and gained some kind of knowledge and experience from. Some it is
was negative, but most was positive and it all became part of the sum total of
who I am today. I've become a very different person, in so many ways, since
that year 50 years ago.
Most of us graduate (complete some course of study or
training) and go through some form of commencement (new beginning or the start
of something new) ceremony. Combining that which we have learned in order to
graduate and then commencing with this new start or journey brings us to the
opportunities.
Never Ending Stream Of Opportunities
I have been blessed with a never-ending stream of
opportunities. Many of them changed my life. Many of them took me in directions
I had never thought about or contemplated. Many of them ended in a failure of
one sort of another. Many have provided me with the interesting and exciting
life that I've lived so far. But, the best part is that I still haven't seen
any end to the ongoing stream of opportunities.
Actually, many years ago I realized there was no way I could
ever take advantage of all the opportunities that were constantly coming my
way, so I started passing them to other people who I felt could benefit from
them. Some of those people found great success in the opportunities I passed
on. Many didn't do all that well, but they, hopefully, learned something from
the opportunities and the experience. And, of course, many of them didn't even
recognize the opportunities as such and did nothing. This is their loss, in
this case, of course.
What's All The Whining About?
Here's what bothers me a lot as I'm turning over this 68th
year milestone in my life. There are more opportunities than there ever have
been in history, yet, I hear so much whining and excuses from every segment of
the human spectrum from the young to the old, from the unskilled to the highly
skilled, from the uneducated to the over-educated. It seems like they must be
teaching courses in both high school and institutions of higher education on whining
and making excuses.
Young people complain they can't find jobs. Okay, so create
your own job. When I was a youngster the big challenges were too much
competition (just like the excuses we hear today). But, we learned to go out
and shovel snow in the winter and mow lawns in the summer. We could mulch
gardens for people. We washed cars. It didn't take a lot of ingenuity to find
ways to earn some money. Some of those small, simple, part-time
"businesses" took root and those youngsters grew them into full-time
businesses that provided a lifestyle for them and their families.
Today, you can't find a youngster with a shovel or a
lawnmower or a pail and sponge if your life depended on it. They are too busy
sitting on their butts, watching crappy TV shows or playing video games or
friending people on Facebook. They expect their parents (who also aren't too
much further down this road than their kids) to provide everything including a
car when they reach the age where they can drive. And while they're doing nothing
and missing all the opportunities, they are also getting fatter and fatter.
And, unfortunately, this goes for both the male and the female of the species.
Opportunity In Complication, Stress And Time Demands
Today's world is more complicated and stressful and time
demanding than at any time in the history of human kind. We're even reaching
and destroying some of the peace and less stressful societies in the rapidly
disappearing aboriginal parts of the world. But, along with all of this
complication and stress and demand on time, comes all kinds of opportunities.
Let's face it and be really honest with ourselves, if we've been around for the
past 30 or so years in the industrialized world, we know it's nothing like it
was growing up in the 40's, 50's and 60's. More and more families are minimally
two career families (husband/father and wife/mother) both working and they need
to both work to make ends meet. But, just in this one area alone, family
services, someone ambitious and creative can make life better for these
families while making their own lives better.
Another fact, if you've been downsized during the last five
or six years, you can pretty much count on the chances of getting rehired in
the same thing you were doing at an equal or better income are far less likely
than you want to believe. Once a business or any organization sheds excess
baggage, they find ways to get the work done far more cost effectively and
efficiently by retraining the remaining labor force and implementing the continually
evolving technology that replaces human labor.
If you're 45 or especially 50 or older, you can pretty much
kiss those higher paying jobs in your chosen career field goodbye. It's so much
more cost effective to hire young people who are anxious to get their lives
started and will do it for far less money than you will with your big mortgage
and multiple car payments and other costs of your position in life. It's not
fair. But, life is not, never has been and never will be fair. Remember the law
of he jungle - survival of the fittest? Well, guess what, we live in a modern
jungle.
Old Ideas Brought Up To Date
When I was a kid we had a man who had a small business
picking up and dropping off dry cleaning. We had milk delivered to our house.
We had another small business that brought butter, eggs and all kinds of
cheeses and other dairy products to our home. We had a green grocer who brought
fresh produce. And then there was the bake goods truck that came by and
provided those goods. And even for us kids there was the Good Humor man and
usually one or two other independent ice cream trucks who came through the
neighborhood each day during the warmer weather. Of all of those, only the
"ice cream man" still exists.
There have been some attempts, several with some success, in
delivering meals to one's home. Of course, the most notable success at that is
Domino's Pizza. But, there are others. And I've seen instances where an
individual will make arrangements with several restaurants offering different
cuisines. The individual then solicits customers for his restaurant delivery
service, provides the menus, creates a computerized order form and allows the
customers to call in, email the order or order on-line. With the new credit
card merchant services offered by Square-up and Intuit, all you need is a smart
phone to charge the order.
Dog walking services are another growing business. One woman
who was making a pretty handsome living in information technology on Long
Island was downsized and couldn't find any new jobs at all and certainly
nothing paying what she had been earning. She lived in an upscale/wealthy
section of Long Island where she started a business cleaning up dog poop from
the yards of those affluent folks who didn't want to do their own "dirty work."
She ended up with so much business that she hired several more out of work
women and while they made a nice living, she replaced her own salary plus some.
I actually knew a woman about ten years ago who had a business in the Hamptons
serving all those wealthy New Yorkers who had summer mansions there. She took
care of all their "indoor" plants both when the people were there
during the summer and during the off-season when they were back in New York
City. She lived quite comfortably, I might add. Personal services of all kinds
are hot opportunities.
Currently Baby Boomers are turning 60 at the rate of one
every 7 seconds and they comprise about 30% of the American population. They
are the largest population group in the U.S. As each year progresses, these
Baby Boomers, because they will live longer and longer, will require all kinds
of special services from home care, shopping, transportation, etc.
I've really only scratched the surface of the unlimited
number of opportunities that continue to expand exponentially. There is
absolutely no reason for whining or making excuses. Every one of us can choose
to think and live as free as we want to if we'll just use some of the God given
intelligence and creativity we were born with. Okay, so maybe you're not going
to end up doing your first choice dream as a way to put food on the table. But,
here's the thing, IF you are a living free, thinking free individual and
determine what you REALLY want and need to live a free and happy life, with or
without a family, you WILL find an opportunity (actually, many opportunities)
that will fill all your living free requirements. Best of all, you can put it
together in such a way as to make it a family endeavor, thus, enjoying time
together, working as a team and teaching your offspring a positive work ethic
and to be creative in their own future endeavors.
11 comments:
Well said!! Especially the part about no kids to be found anymore and all the opportunities out there for jobs serving the boomers.
Thanks!So much opportunity, so little ambition and creativity. What's happening?
Enjoyed this post!! I wish I had an answer to the lack of ambition and creativity. So sad!!
SandyGrace
Thank you , SandyGrace --
I see the solution as easy, stop entitling everyone. Unfortunately, it all starts at home. It's a sad statement on our society.
Hey Ed. Well, we baby-boomers sure know how to live. Last June was to be my 50 h.s. reunion, I decided not to attend due to my camp hosting job in Colorado. I turn 69 two months after you do. Currently I am in training to become a driver-guide on tour buses out of Juneau, AK. I completed kayaking the lower 48 states in 2012. This year I WILL kayak Alaska, my 49th state. Next year, to celebrate the completion of my Kayaking Quest to kayak all 50 states, I will kayak Hawaii, my 50th state, the 50th U.S. state, and plan to do it on my 70th birthday, May 16, 2013. Guess there is nothing remarkable about any of that unless you know that in 2004 I was shopping for a wheelchair as I could barely walk. The rest of the story - http://swankiewheels.blogspot.com/2011/08/why-why-am-i-kayaking-country.html .
I love your writing and your spirit.
That should have been May 16, 2014. sorry
Ed, another thing to share... I have noticed boondocking out in the AZ desert, that nearly all of the 4x4 ATVs, etc. are driving by baby-boomers and folks even older. I used to think it was a "kid" thing.
Fantastic, Swankie --
I've been following your adventures about the tour bus driving and kayaking the U.S. with Alaska coming up next and then Hawaii in 2014. What a great adventure and inspiring story. I think you've got this "living free" thing figured out. I've yet to get to Alaska, but it's on my list. I've been to Hawaii twice, but only two of the islands and there is so much more to see and experience there. So, it's on my list, too. I guess I have four states that I need to visit yet to at least say I've spent some time in all 50.
So, what's after Hawaii? Have you considered New Zealand? I have a buddy in the Auckland area and another blogger I know (not in person, yet) further north. I'll bet Brian and/or John would be able to set you up for a humdinger of an adventure there - and you'd even have a place to stay before you shoved off with the kayak.
I was just reading some of your blog - I need to go back and read a lot more of your adventures. I'm going to add you to my blog roll so others can be inspired by you as well.
Ain't it great? I can't believe how great life is for us "middle agers." Oh, and it is a "kid" thing - who says we're not kids?
Great article. I walk and sit for dogs but haven't built the business into a comfortable living YET.
Good for you, Maureen. Inch by inch everything is a cinch.
The most important thing is that you overcame inertia and have it started. Now, it's simply a process of building it, a little bit everyday.
A close friend's daughter is an entertainer in New York City (though she performs anywhere she can land a gig in the country) and for a while she lived with a roommate in NYC who was also in the entertainment business. He built a very successful dog walking business and had my friend's daughter and several other entertainers all working dogs with him. When one or more of them picked up a gig, the others would fill in for each other. It was a mutually beneficial small business that suited their non-conforming lifestyles perfectly.
Best wishes in building a successful business.
Post a Comment