BurnsWhenIPee
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2011
- Messages
- 3,279
Saw this story yesterday about a sports writer dying after 38 years at the same paper, and it really struck me as heartbreaking.
Not the death itself, though that obviously was sad. But parts of the story hit me with a "was it worth it?" question. Guy had no spouse, no kids, clearly was married to the job.
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"He was supposed to work a standard 40-hour week but supervisors often struggled to keep him from doubling that number."
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Batterson seemingly never stopped working or at least thinking about work.
"We would be at some family event and he would be on the phone, getting leads on whichever Iowa football player had just been arrested,'' said Jeff Batterson, Steve's younger brother. "He just never stopped working.''
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Looked on his Twitter account, and one of his last tweets was about being appreciative of the level of care he was getting in the hospital, and how he's ready to start getting better, and mentioned offhand how he has a week of furlough coming up.
I think we all have come to terms with the "this job will never love us back" approach, and that is far from exclusive to newspapers, but this story really hit that home, and what he sacrificed for his non-stop working, both monetarily (I'm betting him working double a 40-hour week was rarely compensated) and personally.
Also had me reflecting on my own newspaper days, and what I neglected and sacrificed as I gave everything I had to a paper and a profession that rarely gave the same in return.
Community mourns death of Quad-City Times sports reporter Steve Batterson
Not the death itself, though that obviously was sad. But parts of the story hit me with a "was it worth it?" question. Guy had no spouse, no kids, clearly was married to the job.
---------
"He was supposed to work a standard 40-hour week but supervisors often struggled to keep him from doubling that number."
---------
Batterson seemingly never stopped working or at least thinking about work.
"We would be at some family event and he would be on the phone, getting leads on whichever Iowa football player had just been arrested,'' said Jeff Batterson, Steve's younger brother. "He just never stopped working.''
---------
Looked on his Twitter account, and one of his last tweets was about being appreciative of the level of care he was getting in the hospital, and how he's ready to start getting better, and mentioned offhand how he has a week of furlough coming up.
I think we all have come to terms with the "this job will never love us back" approach, and that is far from exclusive to newspapers, but this story really hit that home, and what he sacrificed for his non-stop working, both monetarily (I'm betting him working double a 40-hour week was rarely compensated) and personally.
Also had me reflecting on my own newspaper days, and what I neglected and sacrificed as I gave everything I had to a paper and a profession that rarely gave the same in return.
Community mourns death of Quad-City Times sports reporter Steve Batterson