Like a lot of men of a certain age, I am prone to exaggerate. Particularly when I’m mentioning my childhood, I do have a tendency to suggest a harsh upbringing akin to that of a Dickensian waif. Nothing could be further from the truth. So don’t give me any sympathy for what I am about to write even if you do by any chance happen to feel any.
I have just read a Facebook post by my best mate from University, in
which he responds to the news that children are not having the opportunities
people of our generation had to experience paid work in their most formative
years. Me, I had a choice. Get jobs or have no money. Not strictly true. Get
jobs or make do with your meagre pocket money would be more accurate.
Looking back, I started with delivering a local advertising
paper called The London Market. You had a number of local streets to cover and
had 500 copies to deliver once a week. It took two weekday evenings and after
you’d given a cut to your Mum, then there wasn’t a great deal of money left. To
be fair she did fold all of the papers for ease of delivery. From there, when I
was 11 or 12 I progressed to a milk round. I was fortunate that at the end of
Leighton Road, the street adjoining ours, was the Ealing branch of Jobs Dairy,
and you could usually find a milkman to help on weekends. When I started with
Stan, we would work from 6:30am until about 4pm on Saturday, because that was
his day for collecting most of the money. Then on Sunday we would work from about
6:30am until about 10:30 am. Would you like to guess what I was paid? £2 for
Saturday and £1 for Sunday. Now, admittedly this was the mid-late 70s and money
went a lot further, but even so! This was the whole year round, too, and if you
have never spent a winter in London let me tell you it can be a lot colder than
you might think. Essentially the only thing that Stan did on a Saturday that I
didn’t was driving the milk float. I would have done that too if he’d let me,
but he was, thankfully too sensible for that. By about 1979 I was working for
Paul, who collected money all week, so we’d be finished by midday on Saturday.
He paid me £5 for the weekend. If we finished at noon, it also meant that I
could go out and help another milkman for the afternoon and get anything up to
another £5.
I turned 16 in 1980, and after my birthday I started to
work a couple of evenings a week and all day Saturday in the local Budgen
supermarket, while I was doing my A levels. I transferred to the Coop after
about a year. I can’t remember how much I earned, but it had to be more than
the milk round(s) or I’d never have done it. In the summer holidays after
securing a place at the University of London Goldsmiths College I joined a temp
agency in Ealing Broadway for whom I worked every holiday until graduation. The
money really wasn’t great or even good, for that matter. But occasionally the
jobs you got were quite interesting. My first was working in Hoover in Perivale
putting together repair manuals. I also had a stint on the delivery vans for
Harvey Nichols, where a woman in Kensington called in a glazier to take out
then replace her front window so we could get a huge sofa bed into her front
room. For the most part I ended up washing up in the kitchens of various BBC
canteens across West London. Looking back, the temp agency were actually pretty
terrible people. They used to hold off paying you and then joke that this was
all a way of helping you save. We finally fell out for good when they told me to go to a
hotel kitchen to do a spell as an under-chef. I’m not a brilliant cook now but
back then I was worse. I point blank refused to be part of what was so
obviously an act of deception on their part.
They never offered me another job again.
I‘m going to end this with a recollection of my old Nan.
This was my mum’s mum and it was her house that I grew up in. I loved her
dearly, but I have to admit lying to her on one occasion. After I qualified as
a teacher and was appointed to my first teaching post, her reaction was – Oh,
lovely, you’ll be able to pick up some temping work during the long summer
holidays!- My head said – I should cocoa!- but my mouth said, “Oh, Nan, didn’t
you know? I’m paid a 12 month salary in 12 installments so I’m not allowed to
work in August even though I’m not in school.” Did she buy it? Well, she didn’t
argue and that was good enough for me.
