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Though nowadays we have too many people who can't cook, sew, type, etc, who DIDN'T have a maid. :doh:
Though nowadays we have people who can't cook, sew, type, etc, who DIDN'T have a maid. :doh:
My thoughts exactly. Useless no matter what you do with them.
Well, we were definitely a working class family and, like I said, we had a maid that came in two days per week. Now this was in the 1960s and '70s, and my parents didn't pay her a great deal. About $30 per week, cash, as I recall. Adjusted for inflation that's about like $150 today. I believe she worked for other families the rest of the week too, so assuming they paid her about the same, she probably earned the equivalent of around $375 per week in today's money.
Same here.
Apropos this discussion, I was talking recently with a friend who had an upbringing the opposite of mine in just about every possible way -- she was raised the upper-middle-class daughter of a well-off professional-oriented family, had maids and nannies and such, went to private schools, etc, etc, etc. I was watching her type and commented on how, here she was with a PhD, and she was two-finger-pecking her way across the keyboard. "You don't understand," she said. "We were taught that learning how to type, learning how to cook or sew or clean or any of that stuff was unnecessary. There would always be people to do those things for us."
I cannot begin to fathom what it must've been like to grow up like that. And I can't help but feel sorry for anyone who did.
"Sorry" isn't the first word to come to mind, at least not in the sense you mean. "Disgust" or "revulsion" would come close.
Maybe because people like me were the ones who were always doing her work and picking up after her.
I also find it interesting that she has a good education and good job in spite of her obvious incompetence. How could anyone "earn" a PhD and hold down a white collar job without knowing how to type?
Social class has less to do with income than it does with the whole social environment one is raised in and the expectations that one is raised with. You can be a millionaire and still be working-class down to your very soles, and you can be dead broke and still be upper-class. It all depends on how you were raised to look at the world.
I also find it interesting that she has a good education and good job in spite of her obvious incompetence. How could anyone "earn" a PhD and hold down a white collar job without knowing how to type?
Not to be a trouble-maker, but when I did mine, I had a research assistant who did all my typing. She much preferred it to working in MacD's at minimum wage.
If it's any consolation, my friend feels great shame at her unearned class privilege, and has become even more of a pinko than I am. She still can't sew a button, but I'm working on getting her into the remedial class I run for the kids.
I paid my sister to type for me. I don't think it cheapened my academic accomplishments in any way.