We hear the phrase often— working man —usually tossed around in country songs, union halls, or eulogies. But what does it actually mean to be one in a world that is rapidly shifting toward remote work, side hustles, and the gig economy? For my grandfather, the “working man” was a linear equation. You left school, you found a mill or a plant, you worked 40 years, you got a watch, you retired. His hands told the story: calloused palms, cracked knuckles, a missing fingernail from an accident in ’72. He never complained. To him, work wasn’t identity—it was duty .
Not the pain. Not the early mornings. But the utility . Working Man
He didn’t change the world today. But he held it together for 24 more hours. We hear the phrase often— working man —usually