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Labor Journey, By: Steven Mcdonald

July 8, 2025 by Steven Mcdonald

Labor Journey, By: Steven Mcdonald

As a boy I picked tobacco leaf
With hands so stained and sore
The leaves were endless, one by one
My fingers cut and tore

Loading wood in the shed
With my Dad by my side
Stacking the logs very neat
A site we viewed with pride

I worked in kitchens, pots and pans,
Bandana soaked up my sweat
Waited tables here and there
Tables I’d bus and set

On tuna boats, the seas did roar
And sloshing waves would break
A screaming captain I still hear
But I would not forsake.

On oyster boats, the wind did freeze
The ice would crack and sting
I pushed through sloppy seas
And joined the gulls that sing.

I walked the tracks, the rails so long
In rain, in heat, at night
The weight of work would make me strong
Though sleep was out of sight.

In yards so hot, I dug and hauled
Landscaping in the sun
Days were long and thirsty
Always more work to be done

Through frostbite’s bite and aching bone
I pushed through all the pain
Hernias pulled, but I had grown
Tougher through the strain.

In construction I lifted bricks and stone
Building foundations for a house
Not much of a carpenter
But laziness I would denounce

With shovel in hand, I cleared the way
Through snow that fell so deep
The cold bit sharp, but I refused to sway
As the homeowner’s laid in sleep

I carried bundles, heavy and high
Stripped the roofs with aching back
Shingles tossed beneath the sky
Thousands of pounds in the stack

With knees banged up
And muscles that would burn
None of that mattered
I still had to work and earn

But now I stand in a comfy room
Classroom warm, no winter gloom
No winds that bite, no rain that falls
I teach within a prison’s walls

Each job has shaped me in its way,
And taught me how to strive,
Now in peace, I teach and say
“I’m thankful I’m alive.”

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