by Grautr » Mon 13 Jul 2009, 12:33:30
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ayoob', 'I')n many nations, people have personal servants. Egypt, the Philippines, England (back in the day), the wealthy had personal servants. They would polish the silver, do the gardening, cook, do the shopping, etc. I don't think having servants is an American custom, but it's possible.
Consider the relationship between "your boss" at work and you. If your boss asked you to pick up your dry cleaning, that would be an abuse of a work relationship. If your job was picking up the dry cleaning for some wealthy person, then that's not an abuse of a work relationship. We have power and control relationships now. This would just be another change in the American workplace.
If unemployment goes above 20% officially (which means 40% in reality) I bet servants would be cheap. A room in back of the house, food, one day off every other week, and a fairly easy 14 hour day every day. You basically keep an eye on the master of the house and try to anticipate his needs. He lifts his glass, you fill it. He looks bored, you bring a newspaper. He needs paperwork done, like getting his boat re-registered, so you take care of it. He needs his calendar updated, you take care of it. And the laundry, the bedding, maybe a little gardening, maybe a little silver-polishing.
Is that so bad?
You get a clean dry room with a roof that doesn't leak, the master's old bed (including sheets and pillows - so you probably want to make sure his personal stuff is perfect... any imperfect stuff goes to you), maybe his old clothes, whatever booze you can steal, and a job until you die (or he does).
A 14 hour day might seem excessive, but I've worked MORE than my share of 12 hour days... hell, I've worked MORE than my share of 24 hour shifts, even 72 hour shifts. I've swamped out toilets, cleaned up blood and shit, polished shoes, pulled weeds, sold whatever was handy door to door, jumped gates to stick advertising flyers in doorways, etc. I've done it all. Being a servant would be easy compared to that shit. An easy 14 hour day is much more bearable than a brutal six hour day digging ditches in the clay with a pickaxe, I can tell you that for SURE.
It would be kind of a drag to call someone "Master." but you'd probably get over it in a couple years. It's just a job title.
I would imagine that a personal servant that had good taste and an ability to score a good deal would be particularly valuable. If you, as a servant, had the computer skills to shark deals on eBay and Amazon, to invest in one thing or another, or was a particularly good cook... that would elevate you above your simple weed-pulling tonk.
Before anyone gets too uppity on the subject of servants, there are places in the world where people are still chattel slaves. If you eat chocolate, you may well be consuming the product of human child chattel slavery. If you bought your wife a diamond engagement ring, you may possibly be participating in an economic chain that ends with a human being having his/her chocolate starfish violated to look for smuggled diamonds. Don't get too self-righteous.
How would you take it if you ended up being somebody's personal servant? Would you be crushed at the prospect, or would you smile and hold out your bowl for more? Do you think you would end up a servant or a master?
Dont forget for some of that 14 hours you can sit downstairs napping till the bell rings and if your realy interested in such a job then better change your name to Jeeves.