The Carefree Lives Of Slackers
Not All Americans Are Working Hard To Get Ahead
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Slacker!
As Labor Day rolls around the corner and the summer season comes to an end, Cynthia Bowers reports on one of the country's favorite pastimes - slacking.
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Jen Raynes and her sister, Kelli Williams, have loaded up their van, so they can drive the California coast and look for the tastiest waves.
"I haven't had a real job for 14 years," Raynes says.
Only after surfing do Raynes and Williams worry about earning a living, which they're trying to combine with, what else, surfing. Jen paints surfboards and surfers, and Kelli photographs them.
"Now some of the jobs I've had have caused more stress in my life than not having money," Williams says. "So I'd almost rather not have money and—and enjoy myself than to have money and not like where I am or what I'm doing."
"There are many days like that that I get up and I say, 'I'm gonna still surf for an hour and then I'll come back and work,'" Raynes says. "Uh-uh. It's like four o'clock and I'm finally comin' home and I think, 'You are a slacker.'"
Jen and Kelli actually come from a long and honorable — or dishonorable, depending on your point of view — tradition. Two hundred-fifty years ago, Samuel Johnson wrote, "Every man is, or hopes to be, an Idler."
Tom Lutz hasn't been idle. He's just written "Doing Nothing: A History of Loafers, Loungers, Slackers, and Bums in America."
"Before the Industrial Revolution, it was very clear to everybody that work was to be avoided at all costs," Lutz says.
He got the idea when his son Cody graduated from high school and spent a fair amount of time on the couch. Cody did nothing but lie there watching TV, and it drove his dad nuts.
"I would come up from my study and I would end up — I'd show up in that doorway completely surprised to find him there, and that's when the anger would come up," Lutz says.
So several years ago Tom Lutz started looking into slacking, tracing it back hundreds of years. He found even Benjamin Franklin — the "Early to bed, early to rise" guy — could be a bit of a slacker.
"He was also a lifelong fan of the air bath," Lutz says of Franklin. "You take off all your clothes, you lie in your bed, you open your windows, and you just let the air waft over you — that's the air bath. He thought this was the royal road to health."
Lutz found a long literary slacking tradition. From Henry David Thoreau hanging around the pond, to Herman Melville, whose main character in "Bartleby the Scrivener" said he would "prefer not to" do his job to the beat writers and Jack Kerouac, who in "The Dharma Bums" said "I practice do-nothing."
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Plenty of prefessionals in the workplace take time off for both spontaneous and planned golf outings. This seems to be generally perceived as completely acceptable behavior in the professional world. However, if someone such as myself takes a half-day to enjoy a morning or afternoon of wave riding, they are categorized, either directly or backhandely, as slackers.
Surfing is a physical activity that requires skill, stamina, coordination, and a reasonable level of physical fitness, not to mention dedication. For it to be perpetually linked with laziness is not only an unfair categorization, it is also highly inaccurate.
Sincerely,
Michael Sobota
Newark, DE
Plenty of prefessionals in the workplace take time off for both spontaneous and planned golf outings. This seems to be generally perceived as completely acceptable behavior in the professional world. However, if someone such as myself takes a half-day to enjoy a morning or afternoon of wave riding, they are categorized, either directly or backhandely, as slackers.
Surfing is a physical activity that requires skill, stamina, coordination, and a reasonable level of physical fitness, not to mention dedication. For it to be perpetually linked with laziness is not only an unfair categorization, it is also highly inaccurate.
Sincerely,
Michael Sobota
Newark, DE
get what you ordered & could be out hundreds or thousands of dollars.
Michele Garland
Oceanside, Ca.