Scottish Daily Mail

To the young chap who says ‘work’s not in my psyche’... me neither! But 40 years’ labour has given me a life to be proud of

- By Tom Utley

WHEN Matt Allen says that fulltime work is ‘just not in my psyche’, he speaks like a man after my own lazy heart.

I know this will sound ungrateful, since I’ve been blessed throughout my adult life with a job that thousands would envy, paid a decent wage first to report on the events of the day and more recently to sound off in print about almost any subject of my choosing.

But although Mrs U will hotly deny it (I’ve long lost count of the number of times she’s told me, ‘Oh, you love it really’) the truth is that I’ve never enjoyed work. Like countless others, I’ve always longed for holidays and weekends off, and I’ve never been happier than since my sixdays-a-week retirement when I reached 65 last November.

So, no, full-time work has never been i n my psyche, either. Yet in spite of this, I worked full-time for more than 40 years – and there lies one of t he many diff erences between Mr Allen and people like you and me.

Eccentric

He is the part-time yoga teacher, aged 36, who was featured on Wednesday night in a documentar­y series called Stacey Dooley Sleeps Over, aired on the pay TV channel W – of which I confess I’d never heard until I read the story in yesterday’s Mail.

Apparently he lives ‘mostly on benefits’ with his wife Adele, 35, in a council house in Brighton where they bring up their three children – Ulysses, eight, Ostara, four, and baby Kai.

Among the couple’s eccentrici­ties, they shun mainstream medicine, haven’t had their children vaccinated and don’t send them to school.

By the sound of it, home schooling doesn’t seem to be going too well, since young Ulysses is still unable to write his name at the age of eight (it’s ‘absolutely fine’, says his mother, for her son to ‘ take his time’ picking up literacy skills).

Meanwhile, Ostara is still in nappies at four. In the documentar­y, she is filmed making herself a meal of Monster Munch corn snacks and broccoli, while Ulysses helps himself to r aw mushrooms, Brussels sprouts and crisps. Not your average family, then.

Mr Allen also appears to have eccentric ideas about accountanc­y, arguing that though he lives mostly off the state, he saves us all money by shunning the NHS and the education system.

‘So in our own unique, weird, wonderful way, we balance the books,’ he says.

As for why he doesn’t get a full-time job, well, his psyche won’t allow it – and, anyway, he believes it’s more important for him to be at home with his children than providing for them by working fulltime. But he’s not abusing the system, he says, oh no. ‘I really don’t think we are, because we have a minimalist impact on society in many respects.’

Mercifully for the health of society and the economy at large, most of the rest of us still believe we have other responsibi­lities beyond following our own inclinatio­ns and the diktats of our psyches. Indeed, even I – as lazy a man as ever whiled away a morning off, staring out of the kitchen window at an unmown lawn, ignoring the pile of dirty plates i n the sink – have always shrunk from the idea of living at others’ expense.

I discovered this more than ten years ago, when I was offered a job by another paper. In a flattering bid to keep me at the Mail, my then boss made me the most generous offer of my life.

I could give up my full-time job writing daily comment articles, he said, and produce just one column a week for the same money as before.

I leapt at the offer — and for my first few days of liberation, I revelled in my new-found idleness. There I was, not yet 55, being generously paid to do not very much. But as the weeks went by, I was tormented by a growing unease.

It just felt wrong to be doing so little, living on the fruits of my colleagues’ labours as they toiled in the office from morning to late at night.

And though I told myself I was still the family’s main bread- winner, I f ound it increasing­ly hard to look Mrs U in the eye when she came home from work.

By week three, I could bear it no longer. Finding myself in the lift with the boss, I told him I felt I wasn’t earning my keep. The following week I was back i n my old j ob, working all hours for the same money as before.

Call it Catholic guilt or the Protestant work ethic, but whatever it was it had won the battle against my idle nature.

No such feelings appear to trouble Mr Allen, as he picks up his benefits while the neighbours go to work and pay their taxes to finance his ‘unique, weird and wonderful’ way of life.

Leeches

All right, this eccentric family comes a very long way down the l eague table of parasites on the public purse, a million miles behind such overpaid leeches as university vice- chancellor­s and serial quangocrat­s.

It is also true that since the birth of the welfare state, a work- shy few have lived on benefits by choice, rather than necessity.

Indeed, a friend told me yesterday that someone he knew in the mid-70s had solemnly declared: ‘With so much unemployme­nt around, it would be unfair of me even to think about looking for a job!’

But what worries me is that the Allens’ attitude i s an extreme example of a more widespread malaise among a ‘ me, me, me’ generation, brought up to believe their own inclinatio­ns matter most, that the state owes them a living and never mind about anyone else.

As for the work ethic, it appears to be withering on the vine, along with the older generation’s sense that we all have a duty to be self-reliant and to support our own families if we can possibly manage it.

You see this in employers’ reports of the extraordin­ary demands made by job-seekers straight out of university, who insist on working hours to suit them or time off for travelling to Peru.

Victims

I’ve also noticed myself a tendency among the healthy young (by no means all of them, I admit) to take sickleave at the first hint of a sniffle or a hangover, while older, frailer colleagues battle to the office half-dead, rather than let their workmates down.

Meanwhile, welfare benefits have come increasing­ly to be seen as an inalienabl­e human right, to be claimed by the able-bodied without a hint of regret or shame, rather than a safety net for those who are unable to support themselves through no fault of their own.

Claimants are almost always portrayed on TV as virtuous victims of callous Government cuts, while those who pay the highest taxes are dismissed as selfish fat cats to be milked for every hard-earned penny that can be extorted from them. Isn’t this the road to national ruin?

Yes, I know I’ve been lucky in that I’ve never been out of work, and never had to rely on the state to support my family. Nor have I ever been luckier than today, drawing my state pension and working just one day a week, in perfect tune with my psyche.

But perhaps the happiest thought f or oldies i n my position, who have been net taxpayers all our lives, is the feeling that we’ve reached the finishing post of full-time work and have earned our retirement.

Will the likes of the Allens ever know the s a me satisfacti­on?

JONATHAN BROCKLEBAN­K IS AWAY

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