CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC
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CityViewNC.com | 63 Can We Be Facebook Official ? Facebook.com/CityOfFayettevilleGovernment FayettevilleNC.gov Also Follow Us On: vibradrda@aol.com ~ www.vibrasgifts.com 2nd location at 7390 Plain View Hwy. in Dunn 910.897.4004 1110 Hay Street in Historic Haymount 910.920.1590 ViBRa's OF FAYETTEVILLE Clothing and Jewelry Boutique ~ Home Goods and Accessories Antique Furniture with Chalk Paint® by Annie Sloan! Four generations ~ Mrs. Vibra Herring, Mrs. Megan Barefoot Steward, Mrs. Donna Barefoot and Miss Mary Adaline Stewart be tested on your personality and prior drug use … and if you pass your interview, you get called in for five days of training." For those who've never set foot on the green, a golf caddy is a person who carries the player's bags or clubs and offers advice on strategy. For Chambers, who had always been a player up until this point, the job was far more physically demanding than he had anticipated. "At that point, at 55 years old, I weighed about 200 pounds, which at 6 feet tall, wasn't that bad. I might have been a little overweight. Now that I look back on it, I was quite a bit overweight. I thought I was in pretty good shape, but not really, so I barely made it through the physical requirements," Chambers said. "ere is a lot of dexterity involved. A lot of stamina involved. I barely made it through that, but they took a chance on me." Chambers braved his first season at the Pinehurst course, but upon its completion, he said, he realized that he needed to be in better shape if he was going to keep up with his much younger co-workers. "I created a fitness program for myself. I lost 30 pounds pretty quickly, just being a caddy," Chambers said. "It is an effective weight loss program, though I realize that it's not for everyone. I am in the gym two hours a day, five days a week, in addition to the caddy work." e caddy work is nothing to scoff at either. According to Chambers, during his first five years as a caddy, on a typical day he would travel up to 36 holes a day, all the while "double bagging," which means car- rying two golf bags. "You'll be traveling seven to eight miles, carrying an extra 60 pounds," Chambers said. "It is very physically challenging, but it's a lot of fun. I love the people that I meet, and I do love golf. I knew when I retired that I didn't want to play golf every day, but that I wanted to be around it every day, so becoming a caddy sounded perfect." e caddy job is one typically done by younger people, just starting out in their careers and looking to make some extra money, not financially secure retired doc- tors. Chambers says that the experience of working with younger people, struggling to pay their rent and sharing stories of their overactive social lives, has been an eye-opening one, as it has helped him see