K.D. Lightner
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,354
- Location
- Des Moines, IA
There were a number of boys I knew who had paper routes, most needed the money because they were from lower income families, some just had parents who had a strict work ethic and sent the boys out to deliver papers at 3:30 in the morning.
Most of them were never able to get involved in sports or school activities, some of them would fall asleep at their desks during school hours. And they had to go to sleep at 8 at night, so no evening activities, either.
It was grueling work because of the hours and the weather -- those little guys would be out in blizzards trying to deliver the papers. Sometimes their parents had to get up and help them if it was really bad.
My father had a paper route when he was a kid and refused to let my brother do it. Instead, brother was able to get a summer job at a local golf course caddying. To this day, he is an avid golfer.
Very few people now in my area suscribe to the papers. Mother still does, likes her a.m. paper to read with her coffee. I think it is a dying industry, soon to be as "vintage" as Burma Shave signs.
karol
karol
Most of them were never able to get involved in sports or school activities, some of them would fall asleep at their desks during school hours. And they had to go to sleep at 8 at night, so no evening activities, either.
It was grueling work because of the hours and the weather -- those little guys would be out in blizzards trying to deliver the papers. Sometimes their parents had to get up and help them if it was really bad.
My father had a paper route when he was a kid and refused to let my brother do it. Instead, brother was able to get a summer job at a local golf course caddying. To this day, he is an avid golfer.
Very few people now in my area suscribe to the papers. Mother still does, likes her a.m. paper to read with her coffee. I think it is a dying industry, soon to be as "vintage" as Burma Shave signs.
karol
karol