tld
a story and conversation repository (est. 2000)
 
 
MONORAIL: Post Spotlight
< PREV Load Random NEXT > trans

MONORAIL / BLOG
Current
Random
Site Archives
Site Tags
Site Search

BIOGRAPHICAL
What I'm remembering
Who I'm looking like
What I'm reading
What I'm eating
trans
ENTERTAINMENT, FAMILY 2015-06-30
uncertainty settled
i was making some new benches for our front porch (in part due to a new, totally sweet, dowling jig i recently bought). i was modeling them after a bench i made several years ago. between my superior skills (compared to several years back) and improved tools (uhhh, dowling jig), i considered upgrading to a higher grade of of wood. the problem point here is that it would add a fair bit of cost to the project so i wanted to make sure i could pull the benches off without any issues.

while getting things organized, i stepped out to the porch to take measurements on my existing bench. while crouched down and measuring the various parts and pieces, i noticed how the top slabs of wood, where you sit, had deep divots and mars in them from the kids various projects. the most damning of the marks came from our meat tenderizer hammer where, i recalled this day specifically, the kids went through a multi-day period of busting open acorns for sport using the medieval looking meat hammer as the pounder and my hand-made bench as the worktop. i imagined my reaction to them doing this, or any other number of their child-divined games, on high-dollar pieces of lumber versus the simple treated wood i've historically used.

then, from my crouched position, i recalled one of the first and most meaningful parental lessons i ever learned: you can love your things or you can love your children, but you can't love both.

after completing my notes, i, with nary a reservation, went and bought my low-grade planks of wood.
< PREV
Family Scrapbook: mancation (2015)
Load
Random
NEXT >
magical meadow
trans
Home Troy Notes Monorail TroyScripts Photo Gallery