If there is one recurring theme in my column (and I can assure you there is at least one, since recurring themes can save a busy writer like me many hours of tedious work, like research or coming up with new ideas), it would be that I am not real good at fixing things.
Let's put this in perspective. I've often admitted that like most guys, I possess the Cool Tool Gene, that inborn and uniquely male attraction for anything that is metal, makes lots of noise, and has a power cord or a rechargeable battery. And like most guys, I've spent years collecting as many cool tools as I can afford. At this point I have a saw, two drills, and something that looks really interesting, called a "belt sander."
Now I know that a lot of guys use their tools to build stuff, or to fix stuff that is broken. I admire this. I do. I would love to know how to use that belt sander, or at least have some idea what a belt sander is used for.
The bottom line, though, is that if I need something built or fixed, even though I may have in my closet the very tools that would be perfect for the job, I am forced to hire a guy with "Bob" stitched on the pocket of his coverall to come over and bail me out.
The instruction manuals that come in the boxes with the tools are no real help. Instead of any useful information - for instance, what kind of belts a person might want to sand - what you get is a series of vaguely oriental-looking silhouette people doing things like holding the tool while standing in a puddle of water and getting electrocuted, or jamming their silhouette fingers painfully into the business end of the tool.
So the question is, where did Bob learn about using a band saw, beyond keeping his hands out of the blade? I don't think he picked it up in good old "Shop Class" at school. I know I sure didn't. In fact, I'm pretty sure most Shop Classes don't even go so far as to cover those instruction manuals - have you ever met a Shop teacher who had ten fingers?
It could be that Bob learned how to use tools from his father. This would explain a lot in my case, since my dad's concept of a "screwdriver" pretty much started and ended with vodka and orange juice.
I don't know though. My brother-in-law is a skilled electrician, one of those guys who could single-handedly build a four-bedroom bungalow armed with nothing more than a miter saw and a six-pack, while my father-in-law, rest his soul, was in way over his head if he had to change the bulb in a table lamp.
Maybe tool knowledge is one of those "genetic memory" things, like a salmon sensing which stream it's supposed to swim up, or a telemarketer sensing the exact instant your first bite of meatloaf is on the fork. Yes, gazing back through the long evolution of our species, I can just see Oog in his cave teaching little Oog, Jr. how to use a small rock to bash a bigger rock into the shape of a water softener.
Then there would be my ancestor, Mikk, coming to the cave door with his checkrock in hand because the genetic memories would already have passed him by. He would have a cool flint axe and an obsidian belt sander sitting in the garage, but no idea how he might use them to add on that rumpus room for Mrs. Mikk. And so he would have called for someone who could help.
Someone who, of course, would have "Oog" stitched on the pocket of his saber tooth tiger skin.
Copyright © 2007, Michael Ball
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by
Mike Ball
Member since:
March 25, 2006 A Screwdriver Is More Than Just A Drink - Who Knew?
February 23, 2007 12:22 AM EST
(Updated: February 23, 2007 12:25 AM EST)
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comments: 4
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Comments: 4
I appreciate the good words!
- mike