Who can take a screwdriver? (Who can take a screwdriver?)And strip a stubborn screw (strip a stubborn screw)Cover it with oil and a swear word or twoThe Handyman (the Handyman)Oh, the Handyman can (the Handyman can)The Handyman can 'cause he patches it with tapeAnd covers it up with glue (covers it up with glue)
--The Handyman, Time Waits
First, under no circumstances would I consider myself a handyman. Over the years of owning houses I have learned that I have very little aptitude for DIY projects and repairs. Oh, I've tried. In my first house I did a valiant attempt of sanding old hardwood floors soaked in pet urine with a rented drum sander. I almost passed out from the heat and smell. And I hid the result under strategically placed throw rugs. I have tried sheet rock, tile, vinyl flooring, painting, and replacing a toilet and bathroom sink. All with marginal if not laughable results. Now I try to hire people to do shit.
But because of Amazon, I am called upon frequently to assemble furniture and put up shelves. I've also assembled crap from IKEA with instructions that have driven me to tears. I do these things without complaining or expecting thanks or even acknowledgment. The job has fallen on me the way taking out garbage, mowing lawn, emptying dishwashers, cleaning cat litter boxes and feeding screaming pets have. I didn't choose to be the furniture assembler, it chose me. The boxes would sit unopened for months, maybe years unless I stepped in dealt with them. I stopped protesting about it. Chores find you. Accept it.
I've grown fairly adept at navigating instructions written in English by non-English speakers. I follow diagrams pretty well. Most times I assemble things with minimal parts left over and they seem sturdy. I don't gloat about it. I don't claim to even be good at it.
My father was DIY kind of guy. He had a workshop with lots of old, dusty, oily and for the most part unused tools. The workshop...more of a shed than a workshop...had been a large chicken coop at one time when my grandparents raised chickens in the early 1930s. My dad converted it as some point. It was functional and had two rooms and tons of crap and scraps. There was an old wood stove in the room off the main workshop. My father also had a band saw and a table saw. I'm not quite sure. He cut things quite a bit but never seemed to build anything with the wood he cut. The things he did build were...how should I say this...rustic. My mother never failed to tell him when something looked like crap. He didn't seem to care. After he died I inherited lots of things he had patched together. I kept them more for sentimental reasons than because they were well made or even functional.
So I learned how to nail things, screw in screws, cut things and other basics. I don't really recall my father teaching me these things other than I picked them up by watching him. It was kind of like YouTube live. When I bought my first house I spend hours at the local hardware store picking up how to flyers designed to make you buy tools that you could never really use correctly like trowels and grout floats, plum line thingys and miter boxes. I never took great joy in DIY home improvements because I could always see the flaws. One time I meticulously installed a home alarm system with window and door sensors wired to the attic where there was a siren. I plugged it all in and turned on the power and the siren went off even though none of the sensors had been tripped. I just never turned it on again.
I write this blog because my son ordered a shit load of furniture for his game room that had been damaged by faulty construction in the adjacent bathroom (built ironically by contractors we paid a ton of money to for their expertise. Apparently they were DIY tile installers, too. Regardless his room was trashed just recently got restored. He had to have all new stuff from Amazon and IKEA. I put together a bookcase, a media center, and a couch. And last night I put up three free standing shelves on the wall that had to be spaced evenly apart and centered. I required major measuring, using a level, drilling, drywall locks and screws. I will be damned if I finished it all and they looked decent, evenly spaced and solid.
Maybe I am a handyman after all. Or maybe even a blind squirrel finds a nut now and then.
Not that I like nuts.

































