英语口语高级训练(lesson13)b
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2. What Is the Value of Work?
  Matthew:   Chris, what do you think the value of work is?
  Chris:   Well, I think it…… in our present-day society…… um…… for most people, work has very little value at all um…… Most of us go out to work for about eight to nine hours of our working day. We do things which are either totally futile1 and totally useless or have very little justification2 whatsoever3, and for most of us the only reason for working is that we need to keep ourselves alive, to pay for somewhere to live, to pay to feed our…… our children. Matthew:   But surely people wouldn' t know what to do if they didn't have to go to work?
  Chris:   Well, again this raises the sort of…… two main aspects of work……
  That one, should we think of'work only as…… as a sort of breadwinning process, and this is very much the role it has in current society, or should we take a much wider perspective on work and……and think of all the possible sort of activities that human beings could be doing during the day? I think the sort of distinction um currently is between say, someone who works in a car factory and who produces cars which are just adding to pollution, to overconsumption of vital resources, who is doing something which is…… very harmful, both to our environment and to, probably society…… um, to contrast his work with someone perhaps like a doctor, wbo I think in any society could be jostified as doing a very valuable job and one which incidentally,is……is satisfying to the person who is doing it. Matthew:   What do you do? Is your job just a breadwinning process or do you get some satisfaction out of doing it?
  Chris:   Well, in the job I…… I do I find that most of the satisfaction……is a mental one; it's coming to grips with the problems of my subject and with the problems of teaching in the University. Clearly this is the type of satisfaction that most people doing what we call in England “white-collar” jobs…… um……
  tend to look for and tend to appreciate in theii jobs. This is quite different from the sort of craftsman4, who is either working that his hands or with his skills on a machine, or from people perhaps who are using artistic5 skills which are of a quite different character. Certainly it's becoming a phenomena6 that people who do
  “white-collar?jobs during the day, who work with their  minds to some extent, although many ”white-collar“ jobs now are becomin very mindless, people who work on computers, people who…… um…… are office clerks, um…… bank employees, these people have fairly soul-destroying jobs which nevertheless don't involve much physical effort, that they tend to come home and do”do-it-yourself“ activities at home. They make cupboards…… um…… paint their houses, repair their cars…… which somehow provide the sort of physical job satisfaction…… um that they're denied in their working day.
  3. The Worst Job The worst job I ever had was as a waitress at a rest stop on the New Jersey7 Turnpike the summer I was 18. Everyone who passed through the place wanted their food now, and many of them seemed to think that tipping was a nice idea in theory but not in practice. The' pace was manic, and I had to wear a hairnet and white oxfords: Most of the time I arrived at work crying, and drove hotne crying. The only good thing I can say about the experience is that it left me with the most profound respect for people who wait tables and with a pronounced tendency to overhp.
  I had other jobs, before and after that one. I stuffed jelly doughnuts at a bakery in a bad neighborhood; I called people who were behind on their bills and ordered them to pay up. I was good at doughnuts and bad at threats. After that I bad jobs in the newspaper business only, so I never felt that I had a bad job again. I did not particularly care for working night rewrite on New Year's Eve, but I imagine that makes me just about average.
  4. What Do You Do, Daddy?
  A young boy asks his father, “What do you do, Daddy?” Here is how the father might answer: “I struggle with crowds, traffic jams and parking problems for about an hour. I talk a great deal on the telephone to people I hardly know . I dictate8 to a secretary and then proof-read what she types. I have all sorts of meetings with people I don't know very well or like very much. I eat lunch in a big hurry and can't taste or remember what I've eaten. I hurry, hurry, hurry. I spend my time in very functional9 offices wi~h very functional furniture, and I never look at the weather or sky or`people passing by.
  I talk but I don't sing or dance or touch people. I spend the last hour, all alone, struggling with crowds, traffic and parking.“ Now this same father might also answer: ”I am a lawyer. I help people and businesses to solve their problems. I help everybody to know the rules that we all have to live by, and to get along according to these rules.“
  5. I Can't Stop Working There have clearly been three times in my life when it would have been not only appropriate but reasonable for me to do something other than earn money. Once my father would have supported me while I went to summer school. Once I could have supported myself with savings10 while I was on strike. And once I would have been supported by my husband while I raised small children.
  I couldn't do it. I went to summer school at 9 a.m. and to work at il a.m. During the strike I did a radio show and magazine work. And during my maternity11 leave, after the checks ran out, I started to get nervous. Very nervous. I was having a wonderful time with my children, but there was this little flutter in my stomach that said, “You haven,t got a dime12.” For whatever reason, I am not good at joint13 assets unless my assets are making some substantial contribution.
  It's hard to figure out why I can,t be more relaxed about this, why I never backpacked through Europe like my friends because I had to be at work. I grew up in a comfortable middle-class home. My father worked very hard-too hard, I always thought -to fill the role of working man and the role of Dad, which probably made him just about average for his time. My mother never worked outside her home. It,s hard for me to figure out how a little girl in such an environment wound up thi.nking of herself as a breadwinner before current fashion dictated14 that she should do so.
  It probably has a great deal to do with independence, with feeling beholden to no man-and i suppose I do mean man. Mothers worry now about raising daughters who are willing and able to support themselves and their children if their marriages go crash. But I worry about being a woman who is not quite able to relax about her own self-worth and the incalculable value of the domestic functions she performs, not quite able to let the household run for a time driven only by her husband , s paycheck. It would make sense for me to do that, when my next child is born. For a time, as I did with the other two, I will not work. But the flutter will begin and I will want to have earning power again-not to buy anything in part.icular, just to know I am still a player.
  6. When Taking Home a Paycheck Means More Than Dollars and Cents I have worked for money since I was 16 and went to the principal's office to ask for working papers. My problem is that I don't know how to stop, even when it would make sense and be possible to:do so for a time. Working for money has always meant something more to me than a bank balance. I suppose I have felt that at?some level I am my paycheck. Not how much I take home; if quantity were a real issue I wouldn't be in journalism15. Just that, like Everest, the money is there. I need to be on a payroll16 to affirm myself. It doesn't seem like a healthy need; if I were male, of course, it would seem like second nature.
  It's an interesting concept, money, sort of the way respiration17 is an interesting concept. We're not supposed to care about it too much, especially now, when the bad rap on baby boomers is that they've forsworn drugs because they can get high from their cash management accounts. To say it's.central to who and where we are may be verboten; it also happens to be true. If you haven't got any, you're on the streets or on welfare. If you've got a whole lot, you're on the best-seller list and you don' t have to play Monopoly anymore because in real life the entire boardwalk bears your name.
  Most of us fall somewhere in the middle. Most of us need to work to pay the rent, make the mortgage payments. I.ots of us convince ourselves that we need to work 60-hour weeks to do that, but that's of ten because we've let the size of our toys get. out of control. We've got a gender18 gap on the issue, too. A man who is not interested in earning money is a ne'er-do-well or a freeloader; a man who is supremely19 successful is a captain of industry. But society is still more comfortable with women who see earning power in terms of selfprotection, not self-promotion.
  While it has been fashionable during my lifetime for professional women, plagued by guilt20 over conflicts between their roles as mothers and as workers, to say that they work because it fulfills21 them, that's only haif the story for me. I also like it because it pays. That makes me feel guilty. I should have better priorites. The new saw about not mimicking22 male behavior turns out to be an old saw in disguise: we should not be prey23 to the baser impulses.
  7. Work Brings Social and Personal Esteem24 For these men, work is seen, not so much as a necessary evil, but as an opportunity to use one's skills in a way that gains money and esteem and is quite pleasant in itself. Work is a way of life, a mental challenge, an emotional involvement. The rat race is described as being exciting, and, when high status is combined with high financial rewards, it brings both social and personal esteem, Work can also give scope for male assertiveness;being in a position of command and control is a satisfaction on which several men proudly commented.
  8. Work for High Financial Rewards“I've got happier as I've got richer in direct proportion . For me money buys happiness.”For some men the business of making money through work is gratifying and exciting in itself. Their lives are geared towards this and they have chosen their jobs principally for their high financial rewards. For them money is important, not just for what it will buy, but as a badge of success: money and status are inextricably linked. Sometimes the whole family is involved in the quest to “get on”, sometimes wife and children have to take second place, but they all have a common aim. They are the competitors, the self-made men, many of them with a well-conceived plan of self-betterment over a five- or ten-year span. Most of them left school without any academic distinction and started in business without any capital resources; rhey took courses where necessary, worked hard and made their own chances.

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