Too Busy To Go Fishing

Opinion by Tony Orman


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Labour Day is a public holiday in late October to celebrate the 40 hour working week. Recentlyr, I chanced to independently meet three local recreational fishing chaps, younger than myself and working. As such types are inclined, we stopped to swap fishing fibs. You see, fishermen are born honest but they soon get over it.

The conversations followed a similar pattern.

“ Get out fishing on the long weekend?” I asked.

The replies followed a common lament, “Too busy during the week doing 50 and 60 hours a week. Comes the weekend there’s the family and besides I’m just stuffed.”

It has become a not uncommon situation particularly for today’s young parents with young families. For many, the 40 hour working week now doesn’t happen – it’s been eroded – it’s now history.

Autumn of Years

Yet I recall back about 1970, politicians said to prepare for earlier retirement and more leisure time in the Autumn of our years. However something has reversed that and it probably began in 1984 with Rogernomics.

And because of the burgeoning cost to government of superannuation, the talk now is to extend the retirement age to 67 or even 70.  But it’s a double edged sword. At the other edge, for school leavers and teenagers, job opportunities will diminish because older people will be forced to carry on working.

Most politicians  seem not to have comprehended that the State will have to pay unemployment benefits to youngsters unable to get jobs.

And its not good news for youngsters. The social impact can be devastating with the self-esteem of many youths plummeting. That then manifests itself in a disgruntled youth sector and sometimes aggressive behaviour and crime – at great cost to the country. And tragically even suicide as shown by NZ’s abnormally high youth suicide rates.


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Successive New Zealand governments have slyly eroded our standard of living in economic terms so that a household can no longer exist on one average income but needs at least two average incomes to sustain a living for two adults and two children. The situation is aggravated by a rampant consumer-driven economy spawned under the free market neo-liberal Rogernomics mantra.

Liberated?

And also have the new wave of “liberated” mothers got it wrong? As a youngster my father worked, my mother was at home.  Should today’s liberated mothers mock their mothers for being the vital home manager. The trouble is while the modern woman may delude herself she’s alive and active being “busy”, the reality is she (and her husband) are in danger of being exhausted from being workaholics with inevitable burnout. Weekends can become recuperation rather than leisure.

I’m not against someone working if they want to, but if they put themselves under severe stress and have no leisure time and particular for the young family, what’s life really about?  And severe stress undermines health – down the track – more cost to the State.

Similarly the right to retire at age 65 (or 60 as it used to be in New Zealand) should be an option. Perhaps we need a massive culture shift not only collectively but individually??

Death bed?

One day when I admitted to a friend I hadn’t been snapper fishing because I had been too busy, he said, “Well Tony, just remember this, when you’re on your death bed, you won’t wish you’d spent more time at the office!”

Good advice. The late Ted Trueblood, superb writer for “Field and Stream” in the US,  penned his “Rule of Tomorrow” Never say I’ll go tomorrow. When you get a chance to go fishing, go. If you wait until tomorrow, tomorrow will drag into next week and next week and next week will drag into next month and next month into next year and some day it will be too late.”

Ever noticed at the supermarket or petrol station checkout, the tired question often is  “Having a Busy Day?” I often politely reply “I’m trying not to be too busy,” or similar.

On the Button

Some might say a famous American conservationist Henry David Thoreau (1817 – 1862) had the right idea.  In 1837, Henry Thoreau gave a Harvard university commencement address ande advocated that perhaps the order of things should be reversed – the seventh day should be a day of work for sweat and toil, the remaining six days should be free for individuals to fill their souls with “sublime revelations of nature.”

Now there’s a thought, if somewhat extreme. Nevertheless Thoreau makes the point. And as Thoreau asked in  his book “Walden”, “Why should we live with such hurry and waste of life?”

What we need is to restore the 40 hour working week and then with a clear conscience, celebrate it honestly – and go fishing.



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4 Responses to Too Busy To Go Fishing

  1. "Johnny" says:

    Sadly so true. No thanks to the neo-liberal politicians.

  2. Sally Forth says:

    Oh for a few David Thoreaus in Parliament.
    The Ardern/Hipkins Labour government talked of a well-being government. It was just a smokescreen and a diversion from the real policy of worshipping GDP and increasing NZ’s debt. In reality nothing changed.
    The coalition government has done no better. The Key government will be looked back by principled historians as a disaster too. Quality of life should be paramount.

  3. Peter Trolove says:

    As a Cantabrian, I will state with conviction that it is the decline of local freshwater recreational fisheries, (and resulting pressured High Country fisheries) that has prompted this loyalty license holder to consider giving up a sport that has been my passion. Perhaps I am of a generation that was spoilt for choice. Intensive farming, irrigation and water pollution has put paid to that.
    Lengthy (and costly) travel for a two trout limit or one sea run salmon per season is making freshwater angling a questionable proposition.
    F&G take note.

  4. Reki Kipihana says:

    The outdoors is still there waiting for us. Unfortunately the imitation digital world has a greater addictive attraction for the young, and many of the not so young. It is also easier to access. Conclusion = To many people have lost the will to explore the real world of Papatuanuku, Tane, Tangaroa, and so on. The planners of algorithms are currently winning the battle over the ‘call of the wild’. Only “kidnapping” digital addicts and taking them “outside” is left as an option if we want to change that.

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