Sweet!
Monday, March 24, 2008
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Stay Classy
On your first day in prison, they say you’re supposed to find and beat up the biggest guy in the yard, as it lets everyone else know that you’re not one to be intimidated or messed with. Well, school is rather similar, and the biggest guy in the yard is always the teacher. The best way to beat him up is to make a good first impression, which is usually accomplished by being the first to raise your hand when he calls for volunteers.
Now, volunteering to speak in front of a bunch of strangers isn’t one of my favorite things to do in the world, but in this case, I had nothing to lose and everything to gain. I am the second oldest “kid” in class (I walked by some guy on campus and he called me “sir” as if I was a professor), but since the “old guy” hardly comes to class, I’ve inherited the title. I’m not interested in impressing a bunch of 18-year-olds but I am interested in getting a good grade. And I've also taken into consideration that this is a small college, so the odds are good I'm going to have this professor again as the semesters roll by.
On our first day of class, we were each given an object of which we needed to sketch a few views and make a presentation in front of the class about our object and our drawing. The professor specifically said to come up with a story about your object, giving it a history, a purpose and a reason why it should be produced. I was given what looked like a bookend, so that’s what I called it, a bookend. I sketched up the three views I needed to accurately describe it and I was ready to present it in front of the 30 or so other students in my class. In fact, I was going to volunteer when he called for it. At the beginning of the exercise, he said that he would ask for volunteers, so why not? My plan was to show him that I am a serious student.
Unfortunately, my moment never arrived because he just went up and down the rows calling on each person in the order as they sat. Before the first person gave his presentation, I was anxious about being a student in college again. I was surrounded mostly by young kids who should be looking to make a mark on the world, fresh from 12 years of education. I thought that I would have to work hard to give them a run for the A+, but frankly, I’m very disappointed in kids these days. No drive, no ambition, no pride, no concentration or appreciation for the chance to get a degree. I was expecting eloquent presentations with details and creativity, perhaps even some humor. I expected my fellow classmates to put some thought in their first assignment, and that they would come up with interesting stories for their objects…and I expected some quality drawing. For God's sake, this is an drafting class...drawing people!
I fretted on my drawing, taking two or three times longer than I probably should, and by the time I set down my pencil, I had a whole spiel prepared and rehearsed in my head. I knew exactly what I was going to say from start to finish. The first guy that got up there said something like this, and I’m not exaggerating: “Um. This is my object. Uh. I don’t know what it is. Um. Here’s my drawing. There’s this view, and I drew this view and then this view. Duh.” He looks a professor to signal that he has nothing further to add, and then goes to sit down. That's it, perhaps all of 10 seconds from the time he lowered his already slack jaw until the time he completely switched off his brain.
I was dumbfounded. This is the product of the American education? “I don’t know what my object is.” The assignment was to come up with a story, make up something, be creative, have the initiative to think, for once. Certainly, he was a fluke. The dumbest guy in all the county was sitting in the front left-hand side and just by luck, he go picked to go first. I was sure that he would soon be taken away by official looking people who would appologize to the rest of us, shrugging their shoulders as to how he managed to wander in to our class and pretend to learn. Yes, certainly the rest would be much better...after all, this is college!
But it wasn't! They were all like that, with only two or three exceptions (one guy called his object a marble holder to hold your most favorite of marbles).
How disappointing, and it was at that moment that I knew I would rule the class. Each of the successive presentations followed this similar format, as the first guy set the bar quite low. Some didn't even say their names, most all didn't have a name for their object, and every single one of them stood up there like their mothers were out in the audience making them do it--hands stuffed in their pockets, awkwardly looking at the professor for approval, mumbling through the presentation and then quickly making an exit like someone tossed a grenade onto the platform.
When I got up there, I told them what I did for a living, about my object being a bookend, and I even suggested that it would be better suited as a CD bookend...and I even added an eight-track joke before I remembered that most all of them weren't yet born when eight-tracks were popular and probably wouldn't know what to do with a record or a cassette tape much less an eight-track. I concluded that my bookend would be machined out of a solid block of aluminum and could be most any color. My presentation time was about a minute and a half, almost two easy minutes talking to a bunch of blank-staring, empty-headed kids who are doing their time because they think they have to.
College, it seems, is a natural progression out of high school, and I think that most of the kids that go to college these days do so becasue they think they should, as if high school just got four years longer. There would probably be a good argument against half of those kids even being there, and I've now decided that 18 years old is too young to be responsible enough to value what a college education should be. I say four years in the military first, grow up a little, then let the GI Bill pay your way. Then again, get off my lawn!
I returned to my desk quite proud of myself. Not only was my presentation a step above everyone else’s, but my sketch was even better. I don’t want to pat myself on the back too much, but Gnat has scribbled better stuff with her left hand on a piece of cardboard with a broke open ketchup packet, and it seemed that I was the only one that put some time and thought behind it.
So, that’s how it’s going to be. I see. The class is full of slackers who will only invest in the barest of minimums to get by... and then it is even a gamble that they'll get by. Of course, it helps if you show up to class. When we started the first day, every desk was taken. Now, you're lucky if you see a full row. This is a picture of the Applied Technology Building (called "ATech" by the cool kids.) My class is on the left.
Then a strange phenomenon happened that I had never experienced when I was getting my degree those many moons ago: The room started to empty out. I swear, after his lectures, we start losing people right and left, like the boat is sinking and nobody wants to say anything so they just start jumping overboard to save themselves. We have assignments to do and everyone should be working on them, but they just pack up their stuff and quietly slip out the backdoor. When I was at Cal Poly, a 55-minute class lasted... wait for it… 55 minutes, and it was unheard of for anyone to just get up and leave in the middle of it. At Cal Poly, all of my classes were lecture based and I never had a working lab class that involved independent time management with a list of assignments so maybe I don’t know how it really works, but by 9pm, 50 minutes before class was supposed to officially end, there were only three of us left.
What continues to surprise me is the lack of motivation and ambition these kids have. I understand that there are “better” things to do than sit in class, but where is the drive to succeed and the will to make the effort to at least try for a good grade. I get to class around 5:30, and I’m the first one there, so much so that there are still people doing work from the previous class… and I’m usually the last of two or three people to stay there. Everyone else just drifts away sometime in the night. At the second class, the girl next to me just sat there for two hours, just sat there, doing absolutely nothing. I couldn’t believe it. She just at there staring at the back of the head of the guy in front of her. Oh well. Perhaps in 15 years, they’ll learn their lesson, as there were many classes in college that I skipped out on.
As I’m sitting at my drafting table, working on my first official assignment, the professor came over to me and started to chat about my “day job,” why I was taking classes and how I was liking it so far. We had a drafting equipment rep visit the class to explain all of the tools we would need to complete the class (as it is an intro drafting class), and he came over and joined our conversation.
The three of us talked for about 45 minutes about the world of drafting, architecture and school. I was surprised to make such an impression, but I think of it has a lot to do with my age as I'm closer to his age than I am to any of the other students. Since then, I’ve been the teacher’s pet, so to speak. After one lecture, he came over and asked me, “How was that?” as if I was qualified to judge his lecture, and he usually skips me when he does is walk around to see how everyone is progressing. I'm not exactly sure what experience he thinks I have, but he makes frequent comments to me like, "it's easy if you've done it before," and "I can't imagine you'd have any trouble with this."
But how am I doing? I’m on my 14th assignment (10 points each), and so far, I’ve only lost two points out of the total possible…and those were because I had two lines that weren't dark enough. On the other hand, I’ve made up for those two missed points with 20 points of extra credit assignments. On the first quiz, I scored 100 percent, but the one I just had tonight, I think I missed a point… unless he decides that my answer was just ambiguous enough to be correct, which is one of the reasons I enjoy written tests. If you don't know the correct answer, you can answer the question three or four different ways and hope for the best.
We’ll see, but overall I am thoroughly enjoying myself, and the prospect of furthering my education is still as exciting as when I first started. In fact, this Saturday afternoon, I’m meeting with the professor of the next class I want to take to discuss the textbook and the class structure. It’s called being proactive, as I haven’t even registered for the class yet. The professor I’m meeting with teaches architectural history, and I tried to register for her class for this current semester, but it was full by the time I was able to register. I emailed her and asked how the process of adding a class worked, and of course, I took it as the opportunity to tell her a little bit about me and how I'm a returning student, etc., etc. A couple of weeks ago, she emailed me to ask if I would still like to add her class as she wanted to get a couple people that were for sure going to do well...she emailed me! Unfortunately, I got the email after the last day to add (it was emailed to my student account, which I didn’t check) so I couldn't add it. Instead, she invited me to sit in on her class on Saturday so I could get an idea of what it is like.
So, there you have it. I’m a student again, and this time around, I’m much better at it. It is amazing what a few years will do.
Now, volunteering to speak in front of a bunch of strangers isn’t one of my favorite things to do in the world, but in this case, I had nothing to lose and everything to gain. I am the second oldest “kid” in class (I walked by some guy on campus and he called me “sir” as if I was a professor), but since the “old guy” hardly comes to class, I’ve inherited the title. I’m not interested in impressing a bunch of 18-year-olds but I am interested in getting a good grade. And I've also taken into consideration that this is a small college, so the odds are good I'm going to have this professor again as the semesters roll by.
On our first day of class, we were each given an object of which we needed to sketch a few views and make a presentation in front of the class about our object and our drawing. The professor specifically said to come up with a story about your object, giving it a history, a purpose and a reason why it should be produced. I was given what looked like a bookend, so that’s what I called it, a bookend. I sketched up the three views I needed to accurately describe it and I was ready to present it in front of the 30 or so other students in my class. In fact, I was going to volunteer when he called for it. At the beginning of the exercise, he said that he would ask for volunteers, so why not? My plan was to show him that I am a serious student.
Unfortunately, my moment never arrived because he just went up and down the rows calling on each person in the order as they sat. Before the first person gave his presentation, I was anxious about being a student in college again. I was surrounded mostly by young kids who should be looking to make a mark on the world, fresh from 12 years of education. I thought that I would have to work hard to give them a run for the A+, but frankly, I’m very disappointed in kids these days. No drive, no ambition, no pride, no concentration or appreciation for the chance to get a degree. I was expecting eloquent presentations with details and creativity, perhaps even some humor. I expected my fellow classmates to put some thought in their first assignment, and that they would come up with interesting stories for their objects…and I expected some quality drawing. For God's sake, this is an drafting class...drawing people!
I fretted on my drawing, taking two or three times longer than I probably should, and by the time I set down my pencil, I had a whole spiel prepared and rehearsed in my head. I knew exactly what I was going to say from start to finish. The first guy that got up there said something like this, and I’m not exaggerating: “Um. This is my object. Uh. I don’t know what it is. Um. Here’s my drawing. There’s this view, and I drew this view and then this view. Duh.” He looks a professor to signal that he has nothing further to add, and then goes to sit down. That's it, perhaps all of 10 seconds from the time he lowered his already slack jaw until the time he completely switched off his brain.
I was dumbfounded. This is the product of the American education? “I don’t know what my object is.” The assignment was to come up with a story, make up something, be creative, have the initiative to think, for once. Certainly, he was a fluke. The dumbest guy in all the county was sitting in the front left-hand side and just by luck, he go picked to go first. I was sure that he would soon be taken away by official looking people who would appologize to the rest of us, shrugging their shoulders as to how he managed to wander in to our class and pretend to learn. Yes, certainly the rest would be much better...after all, this is college!
But it wasn't! They were all like that, with only two or three exceptions (one guy called his object a marble holder to hold your most favorite of marbles).
How disappointing, and it was at that moment that I knew I would rule the class. Each of the successive presentations followed this similar format, as the first guy set the bar quite low. Some didn't even say their names, most all didn't have a name for their object, and every single one of them stood up there like their mothers were out in the audience making them do it--hands stuffed in their pockets, awkwardly looking at the professor for approval, mumbling through the presentation and then quickly making an exit like someone tossed a grenade onto the platform.
When I got up there, I told them what I did for a living, about my object being a bookend, and I even suggested that it would be better suited as a CD bookend...and I even added an eight-track joke before I remembered that most all of them weren't yet born when eight-tracks were popular and probably wouldn't know what to do with a record or a cassette tape much less an eight-track. I concluded that my bookend would be machined out of a solid block of aluminum and could be most any color. My presentation time was about a minute and a half, almost two easy minutes talking to a bunch of blank-staring, empty-headed kids who are doing their time because they think they have to.
College, it seems, is a natural progression out of high school, and I think that most of the kids that go to college these days do so becasue they think they should, as if high school just got four years longer. There would probably be a good argument against half of those kids even being there, and I've now decided that 18 years old is too young to be responsible enough to value what a college education should be. I say four years in the military first, grow up a little, then let the GI Bill pay your way. Then again, get off my lawn!
I returned to my desk quite proud of myself. Not only was my presentation a step above everyone else’s, but my sketch was even better. I don’t want to pat myself on the back too much, but Gnat has scribbled better stuff with her left hand on a piece of cardboard with a broke open ketchup packet, and it seemed that I was the only one that put some time and thought behind it.
So, that’s how it’s going to be. I see. The class is full of slackers who will only invest in the barest of minimums to get by... and then it is even a gamble that they'll get by. Of course, it helps if you show up to class. When we started the first day, every desk was taken. Now, you're lucky if you see a full row. This is a picture of the Applied Technology Building (called "ATech" by the cool kids.) My class is on the left.
Then a strange phenomenon happened that I had never experienced when I was getting my degree those many moons ago: The room started to empty out. I swear, after his lectures, we start losing people right and left, like the boat is sinking and nobody wants to say anything so they just start jumping overboard to save themselves. We have assignments to do and everyone should be working on them, but they just pack up their stuff and quietly slip out the backdoor. When I was at Cal Poly, a 55-minute class lasted... wait for it… 55 minutes, and it was unheard of for anyone to just get up and leave in the middle of it. At Cal Poly, all of my classes were lecture based and I never had a working lab class that involved independent time management with a list of assignments so maybe I don’t know how it really works, but by 9pm, 50 minutes before class was supposed to officially end, there were only three of us left.
What continues to surprise me is the lack of motivation and ambition these kids have. I understand that there are “better” things to do than sit in class, but where is the drive to succeed and the will to make the effort to at least try for a good grade. I get to class around 5:30, and I’m the first one there, so much so that there are still people doing work from the previous class… and I’m usually the last of two or three people to stay there. Everyone else just drifts away sometime in the night. At the second class, the girl next to me just sat there for two hours, just sat there, doing absolutely nothing. I couldn’t believe it. She just at there staring at the back of the head of the guy in front of her. Oh well. Perhaps in 15 years, they’ll learn their lesson, as there were many classes in college that I skipped out on.
As I’m sitting at my drafting table, working on my first official assignment, the professor came over to me and started to chat about my “day job,” why I was taking classes and how I was liking it so far. We had a drafting equipment rep visit the class to explain all of the tools we would need to complete the class (as it is an intro drafting class), and he came over and joined our conversation.
The three of us talked for about 45 minutes about the world of drafting, architecture and school. I was surprised to make such an impression, but I think of it has a lot to do with my age as I'm closer to his age than I am to any of the other students. Since then, I’ve been the teacher’s pet, so to speak. After one lecture, he came over and asked me, “How was that?” as if I was qualified to judge his lecture, and he usually skips me when he does is walk around to see how everyone is progressing. I'm not exactly sure what experience he thinks I have, but he makes frequent comments to me like, "it's easy if you've done it before," and "I can't imagine you'd have any trouble with this."
But how am I doing? I’m on my 14th assignment (10 points each), and so far, I’ve only lost two points out of the total possible…and those were because I had two lines that weren't dark enough. On the other hand, I’ve made up for those two missed points with 20 points of extra credit assignments. On the first quiz, I scored 100 percent, but the one I just had tonight, I think I missed a point… unless he decides that my answer was just ambiguous enough to be correct, which is one of the reasons I enjoy written tests. If you don't know the correct answer, you can answer the question three or four different ways and hope for the best.
We’ll see, but overall I am thoroughly enjoying myself, and the prospect of furthering my education is still as exciting as when I first started. In fact, this Saturday afternoon, I’m meeting with the professor of the next class I want to take to discuss the textbook and the class structure. It’s called being proactive, as I haven’t even registered for the class yet. The professor I’m meeting with teaches architectural history, and I tried to register for her class for this current semester, but it was full by the time I was able to register. I emailed her and asked how the process of adding a class worked, and of course, I took it as the opportunity to tell her a little bit about me and how I'm a returning student, etc., etc. A couple of weeks ago, she emailed me to ask if I would still like to add her class as she wanted to get a couple people that were for sure going to do well...she emailed me! Unfortunately, I got the email after the last day to add (it was emailed to my student account, which I didn’t check) so I couldn't add it. Instead, she invited me to sit in on her class on Saturday so I could get an idea of what it is like.
So, there you have it. I’m a student again, and this time around, I’m much better at it. It is amazing what a few years will do.
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Tuesday, March 04, 2008
Give Him a Hand, Folks
I was lying in bed last night after my drafting class (more on that in another post) feeling my heartbeat pulse in my finger tips while considering the turn of events that had transpired that day, events that resulted in the most blood to come out of me since I broke my nose in 1994 (ah, good times). As with most everything, the outcome was the results of a series of step, some innocent and others ill-fated: If I wasn't hosting a Monopoly party, I wouldn’t have invited the people. If I hadn’t of invited the people, I wouldn’t have to build a new table to accommodate everyone. If I didn't have to build a new table, I wouldn’t have put on a felt top to make it look nice. If I hadn’t of put on a felt top, I wouldn’t have needed staples to hold it down so the glue could dry. If I didn’t need staples, I wouldn’t have cut my fingers.
Logical, right? As you can see by the picture, logic had nothing to do with it.
The facts are these:
This Friday, March 7, is the 75th anniversary of the invention of Monopoly, one of my all-time favorite board games, and I thought it would be a perfect opportunity to host a Monopoly party and play it the way I have always dreamed of: with real money. My guest list includes six of my closest friends and family members, and after I clicked send on the e-vites, I realized that the table we normally use for poker, a circa-1960s octagon poker table from my grandparents (complete with several decks of cards from the now defunct and imploded Mint Hotel and Casino…yes, the one Hunter S. Thompson went to in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas)…anyways, the table is designed for eight people with each person allotted approximately a foot-wide space on the table. It might have worked well for eight people from the 1960s, but like on “It’s a Small World,” 21st Century people just won’t fit any longer. Because I'm all about hospitality and comfort, I thought I would build a new table to accommodate all of us comfortably.
As usual, I gave it a couple of weeks of thought, did up some drawings and plotted out various designs for the top, in felt, of course. I intended it to be four-feet square, allowing for two feet of table space for each of the seven players (including an extra place for the banker). The top would be made out of MDF (medium-density fiberboard), a strong but really heavy material. It would be just as tall as the poker table (30 inches total) and the legs would be made out of simple 2x4s that I could take apart for future storage.
Yesterday, I cut a sheet of MDF in half and screwed the pieces together to make the inch-and-a-half-tall top. I glued on the felt top in a four-square checkerboard pattern in alternating red and black, which surprised me that it came out so nice. I had the whole thing sitting on a pair of sawhorses on the patio where I could work while watching the kids play in the backyard.
A full sheet of ¾-inch MDF weighs about 80 pounds, which means my table top weighs that much as well since I used the whole sheet. I suppose that was my first fault. While I was gluing on the felt top, I had the whole thing sitting on a pair of sawhorses, and I knew that one of the sawhorses was slightly broken but would function perfectly as long as this center support piece was clicked in place. That was my second fault.
When I came home from my drafting class last night, I felt that the table on the patio was too close to the grass, and since the sprinklers come on the next morning, I didn’t want all that effort to get wet. Simple enough, grab the sawhorses and slide the table top closer to the house and away from the grass and the possible sprinklers.
The sawhorses were sliding nicely for a few inches before I heard a sharp crack. Before me, the surface of the table started to dip to the left as the sawhorse did the splits like a figure skater on ice. The left side of the table hit the ground and its weight pushed away the sawhorse on the right and started to slide down its legs. There was nothing stopping the table from hitting the ground, a fact that I didn’t realize until I tried to stop it. Since I was crouching down to reach the legs of the sawhorse under the table, I was in no position to stop the effects of gravity on 80 pounds of wood, especially since only my left hand was actually holding the table with any decent grip. I didn’t have enough time to turn my right hand over to catch the table, so instead, it slid over the back of my wrist and back of my hand on its way to the ground.
Did I mention that it was studded with staples on the underside? No? Well it was. I was using them to hold the felt tight while the glue dried, but our staple gun isn't strong enough to drive in the whole staple so they stuck out the wood about a quarter of an inch each.
I don’t know which one it was, but an especially sharp staple caught the skin on the first two fingers of my right hand and sliced a surprisingly deep gash in them both, from the knuckles to the side of the nails. At first, I thought I had merely broken them or smashed them between the ground and the table. When I pulled out my hand and danced around a little while muttering a slurry of swear words, the sides of my fingers were bone-white, which looked especially foreboding. Then the blood came, lots of it.
I went upstairs to wash them off and to inspect the damage. I had to painfully peel back the skin on each one to clean out some flakes of dirt and a couple of strands of felt. Then a weird sensation swept over me. I felt nauseous and dizzy and the room started to get fuzzy. Honestly, I had to lay down on the bathroom floor or I felt as though I would throw up. What a wimp. I lose a little blood and it makes me sick!?! My hands were shaking and that cold sweat oozed from my pallid face. After a few minutes, the sensation left me and Kara had returned with some Band-Aides.
As prepared as I always think I am for such situations, the only thing we had in the house were Band-Aides with the characters from “The Backyardigans” on them. You know, for the kids. On top of which, they were hardly big enough to do the job properly, so I dragged the kids with me to Target (how I make them suffer!) to buy some real bandages and tape. And now I look like Les Nessman.
As you can tell, my fingers are well enough to type, as long as I hit the keys gingerly, but holding a pencil is a challenge because the pencil rests right on top of the slices. I just have to hold it in an even-more funky way than I usually do (I never was comfortable holding a pencil properly), and I'm happy that for my drafting class, I have to hold the pencil completely different than normal anyway. However, I’m always surprised how many times through the course of the day you are able to smack the wounds exactly at the right spot, enough to see stars anyway.
Now for the moral of the story and a bit of irony: The moral is that if an 80-pound object is overcome by gravity and you think you can stop it, you really can’t; just let it go. And the irony is that I don’t even need to build the table anymore as one of our seven players can’t make the game on Friday, and six fits around the old poker table nicely.
For the sake of my fingers, I’m still going to finish it.
I'll just be more careful moving.
*Gnarly picture, huh? I guess it could have been worse. It could have been out of focus. Haha. No really, I feel fortunately that I can still use them, especially considering that I use a keyboard for a living (of course, feeling for that little bump on the J-key to line up my fingers is now impossible, at least I can still type the J-key).
Logical, right? As you can see by the picture, logic had nothing to do with it.
The facts are these:
This Friday, March 7, is the 75th anniversary of the invention of Monopoly, one of my all-time favorite board games, and I thought it would be a perfect opportunity to host a Monopoly party and play it the way I have always dreamed of: with real money. My guest list includes six of my closest friends and family members, and after I clicked send on the e-vites, I realized that the table we normally use for poker, a circa-1960s octagon poker table from my grandparents (complete with several decks of cards from the now defunct and imploded Mint Hotel and Casino…yes, the one Hunter S. Thompson went to in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas)…anyways, the table is designed for eight people with each person allotted approximately a foot-wide space on the table. It might have worked well for eight people from the 1960s, but like on “It’s a Small World,” 21st Century people just won’t fit any longer. Because I'm all about hospitality and comfort, I thought I would build a new table to accommodate all of us comfortably.
As usual, I gave it a couple of weeks of thought, did up some drawings and plotted out various designs for the top, in felt, of course. I intended it to be four-feet square, allowing for two feet of table space for each of the seven players (including an extra place for the banker). The top would be made out of MDF (medium-density fiberboard), a strong but really heavy material. It would be just as tall as the poker table (30 inches total) and the legs would be made out of simple 2x4s that I could take apart for future storage.
Yesterday, I cut a sheet of MDF in half and screwed the pieces together to make the inch-and-a-half-tall top. I glued on the felt top in a four-square checkerboard pattern in alternating red and black, which surprised me that it came out so nice. I had the whole thing sitting on a pair of sawhorses on the patio where I could work while watching the kids play in the backyard.
A full sheet of ¾-inch MDF weighs about 80 pounds, which means my table top weighs that much as well since I used the whole sheet. I suppose that was my first fault. While I was gluing on the felt top, I had the whole thing sitting on a pair of sawhorses, and I knew that one of the sawhorses was slightly broken but would function perfectly as long as this center support piece was clicked in place. That was my second fault.
When I came home from my drafting class last night, I felt that the table on the patio was too close to the grass, and since the sprinklers come on the next morning, I didn’t want all that effort to get wet. Simple enough, grab the sawhorses and slide the table top closer to the house and away from the grass and the possible sprinklers.
The sawhorses were sliding nicely for a few inches before I heard a sharp crack. Before me, the surface of the table started to dip to the left as the sawhorse did the splits like a figure skater on ice. The left side of the table hit the ground and its weight pushed away the sawhorse on the right and started to slide down its legs. There was nothing stopping the table from hitting the ground, a fact that I didn’t realize until I tried to stop it. Since I was crouching down to reach the legs of the sawhorse under the table, I was in no position to stop the effects of gravity on 80 pounds of wood, especially since only my left hand was actually holding the table with any decent grip. I didn’t have enough time to turn my right hand over to catch the table, so instead, it slid over the back of my wrist and back of my hand on its way to the ground.
Did I mention that it was studded with staples on the underside? No? Well it was. I was using them to hold the felt tight while the glue dried, but our staple gun isn't strong enough to drive in the whole staple so they stuck out the wood about a quarter of an inch each.
I don’t know which one it was, but an especially sharp staple caught the skin on the first two fingers of my right hand and sliced a surprisingly deep gash in them both, from the knuckles to the side of the nails. At first, I thought I had merely broken them or smashed them between the ground and the table. When I pulled out my hand and danced around a little while muttering a slurry of swear words, the sides of my fingers were bone-white, which looked especially foreboding. Then the blood came, lots of it.
I went upstairs to wash them off and to inspect the damage. I had to painfully peel back the skin on each one to clean out some flakes of dirt and a couple of strands of felt. Then a weird sensation swept over me. I felt nauseous and dizzy and the room started to get fuzzy. Honestly, I had to lay down on the bathroom floor or I felt as though I would throw up. What a wimp. I lose a little blood and it makes me sick!?! My hands were shaking and that cold sweat oozed from my pallid face. After a few minutes, the sensation left me and Kara had returned with some Band-Aides.
As prepared as I always think I am for such situations, the only thing we had in the house were Band-Aides with the characters from “The Backyardigans” on them. You know, for the kids. On top of which, they were hardly big enough to do the job properly, so I dragged the kids with me to Target (how I make them suffer!) to buy some real bandages and tape. And now I look like Les Nessman.
As you can tell, my fingers are well enough to type, as long as I hit the keys gingerly, but holding a pencil is a challenge because the pencil rests right on top of the slices. I just have to hold it in an even-more funky way than I usually do (I never was comfortable holding a pencil properly), and I'm happy that for my drafting class, I have to hold the pencil completely different than normal anyway. However, I’m always surprised how many times through the course of the day you are able to smack the wounds exactly at the right spot, enough to see stars anyway.
Now for the moral of the story and a bit of irony: The moral is that if an 80-pound object is overcome by gravity and you think you can stop it, you really can’t; just let it go. And the irony is that I don’t even need to build the table anymore as one of our seven players can’t make the game on Friday, and six fits around the old poker table nicely.
For the sake of my fingers, I’m still going to finish it.
I'll just be more careful moving.
*Gnarly picture, huh? I guess it could have been worse. It could have been out of focus. Haha. No really, I feel fortunately that I can still use them, especially considering that I use a keyboard for a living (of course, feeling for that little bump on the J-key to line up my fingers is now impossible, at least I can still type the J-key).
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