On pages 88 and 89, we are given the description of the
competition between the pickers. They constant fight each, struggling to pick
more, eat more, and earn more money. The description Barrio gives of Manuel,
one of the pickers, and his experience is “total immersion, the endless,
ceaseless, total use of all his energies and spirit and mind and being” (88).
They have little time for enjoyment, and do not even have spare time to eat
their plates or clean the house. The pickers gulp down their food and use paper
and plastic plates. The pickers bring their lunches with them in pails because
they cannot afford to buy food, let alone the time to go and get it. Barrio
describes how the competition is so fierce between them, that they are their
own slave drivers. No foremen were needed, because the pickers kept their own
pace, constantly pushing themselves, worried that they would be out of a job
and not be able to support themselves and their families. “That was the
cleverest part of the whole thing” (89). The bookkeepers paid the pickers very
little, so they would work faster and continue the vicious cycle.
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