On
The Edge of Common Sense
Generational Differences
© Baxter
Black, DVM
published in The Draft Horse Journal, Winter 2006 - 2007 Yes,
Virginia, things have changed.
A twenty-something couple
I know has occasionally sought my counsel. They are married,
both animal science graduates
and still seeking direction. He is a typical
age boy; strong, honest, has a good work ethic with a background in purebred
cattle,
fitting, showing and can weld. He’s doing graduate school but keeps busy
with his Dodge dually and 20’ Featherlite hauling livestock from purebred
sales.
She grew up running a few gummer cows with
her dad, working at the feedlot processing cattle and weighing
grain trucks,
president of the FFA and won the team penning three years
in a row at the county fair. She wears the ‘Top Cowhand’ buckle
with pride. She’s working at a feed mill and going
to night school getting a master’s degree to get a
teaching certificate.
I have suggested since the time they were married that
they would be the perfect couple to run some ranch or livestock
farm. They are the penultimate production pair É the
absentee owner’s dream. But their standard reply to
me is, “We don’t want to work seven days a week,
24 hours a day!” What is wrong with these kids?! I
tell them I’ve never had an 8 to 5 job! What in the
world would I do with two days off a week? In a row!
I look at the 21st century veterinary profession. New grads
don’t want night calls, weekend duty, investment in
partnership. They want to raise a family; spend quality time
with their children. They don’t want to live 100 miles
from the amenities of good schools, shopping and sophisticated
entertainment. What’s the matter with these kids?!
Don’t they know it’s not supposed to be easy!
You’re supposed to be bone-tired at the end of a day,
then do a C-section on a frozen hillside at two in the morning!
I remind them, “the early bird gets the worm.” They
say, “they’re not working for worms.”
They remind me that, “all work and no play makes
Jack a dull boy.” I say to them, “that dull isn’t
all bad.”
They say, “money isn’t everything.” I
say, “you don’t work for money, you work for
work’s sake.”
Then they say, “work isn’t everything.”
I remember my childhood years visiting relatives in Oklahoma.
My uncles were farmers, carpenters and bricklayers. We would
go by and watch them work. All except Uncle Leonard. He would
take the week off and drive us to pick up bullets at the
firing range, or rose rocks, or arrowheads, or fishing, to
the sale, to the zoo or squirrel hunting.
The other uncles chastised him for not having his priorities
straight. He should be plowing, or putting up hay, or helping
them carry hod. It goes without saying that he was everybody’s
favorite uncle.
I don’t know how I got off on talkin’ about
Uncle Leonard. Now where was I...?
|