“Them that don’t work, don’t eat.” We must have looked like a hungry bunch because Daddy made sure we worked. Farm work was a regular thing, but when Daddy had invited folks in for a holiday, he kicked it into high gear. The place had to be groomed; brush cut, fence rows cleaned out, fields bush hogged. It was always good to have something new lined up to show progress; another few acres cleared, some pecan trees planted, a new field fenced. It wouldn’t do to have folks thinking we’d been just lying about.
Work was divided into “Man’s Work” and “Woman’s Work.” Women were lucky. As far as “Man’s Work,” Daddy believed in equal opportunity. Womenfolk were expected to work right alongside the men, just as hard and long. Due to our lesser strength and inferior expertise, however, we couldn’t be expected to handle complex tasks involving tractor driving, bush hogging, and equipment use, when there was lesser manual work to be relegated to peons. We were, however, excellent candidates for piling brush, chopping bushes, and wielding simple tools such as hoes, post-hole diggers, shovels, and wheelbarrows. Fetching and carrying were our forte!
Fortunately for the girls, once we had labored long and hard with Daddy, we were free to pursue “Woman’s Work”; that would be cooking dinner after a long day’s work. As often as not, Mother worked alongside us, so “Woman’s Work” started after “Man’s Work” was complete. “Man’s Work” was over at the end of daylight. Men couldn’t cook, clean, do laundry, or milk cows. Fortunately for men, according to Daddy, there was some obscure Bible verse I never heard quoted or referenced anywhere else, that said, “Thou canst not take what thou cannot give.” He also hinted at possible hormone issues. How’s that for rustication? I often felt sorry for Daddy and Billy as they collapsed at the end of a long day while we were cooking and cleaning. They must have felt just awful.
Anyway, back to the holiday. Once we’d worked like fiends preparing, the long-awaited guests arrived, amid compliments on the resort-like beauty of the farm. “I wish I lived here. It looked so restful.” (You should have been here the last week!) Daddy’s mood was effusive. He was a wonderful host. “Get Aunt Lou some more coffee and cake!” “We’re running low on iced tea out here.” He’d charm my cousins. They’d be riding horses, riding the zip-line running from a tall elm to way past the pond, and swimming in the pond. It must have looked like a theme park to poor, deprived children who had to lie about watching cartoons, riding bicycles, playing with friends, and drinking Kool Aid all the time. I felt so badly for them when they’d say, “I wish he was my daddy!” So did I!
Farming is bloody hard work from what I have heard, never done it so don’t really know, what I do know is us poor weak females often did and still do “men’s work” and “women’s work” at the same time which is why we are often just exhausted
LikeLiked by 1 person
I do believe it all ends up being women’s work, especially childcare. My hubby never, ever took care of a baby. He always made it worse!
LikeLike
We daddy’s never stop cracking the whip!
LikeLike
Yep! I was glad to escape!
LikeLike
Old-time thinking, so glad we’ve come a long way as women.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Me too. I think the fact that women work now changes things. My dad was THE MAN. I hated that.
LikeLiked by 1 person
There were some of those creeps out there when I was a the top of my career. I had to ignore them.
LikeLike
Aren’t they lovely?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Wow
LikeLike
This is so well done. I just hope it is exaggerated, but I fear it isn’t. Can you give us some hint of a happy ending later in life? Your excellent story at least exacts some small iota of revenge, but I want another story where Dad gets his “comeuppance.”
LikeLike
Thanks for your question. It was true. My dad bought 124 acres when he was about 40. He was obsessed with getting it cleared and fenced for cows. He put us all to work on his plan. Every day we weren’t in school, we worked. He totally dominated Mother. When he worked and we were out of school, he left work for us. It was miserable. The good news is, I never worked for a harder boss. The good news was, I was motivated to be independent. I put myself through college and made good decisions. I married a kind, nurturing man. My dad died at 57. My mother is healthy and happy at 97.
LikeLike
So she has had the chance to have her own life! I hope it has been a happy one.
LikeLike
She is the happiest person I know.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Her reward. And I hope you have had yours.
LikeLike
I have a wonderful life. I was motivated to educate myself so I didn’t have to put up with a bullying mysogynist.
LikeLike
I admire your response to a negative aspect of your childhood. I think it is often as much the negative things that happen to us as the positive ones that form us. It would be an interesting prompt and you will already have written the winning entry!
LikeLike
I am an optimist. I knew I was smart and tough enough to make a good life.
LikeLike
Oops.. I replied to you but it went in a different section. Have a look for it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Wonder where I’d look. I appreciate your comment. We had some hard years. Mother had no control over hers or our lives. I knew I never wanted her life. She was a good mother or we would have felt much worse. I am grateful.
LikeLike