.
Out of work once again, so I've been putting in a lot of time around the house -- mostly trying not to go crazy.
I hit a great streak working for my cousin Pepe. He owns a General Contracting company out of Highland Park, and I called him looking for a carpenter's gig last March. Timing was perfect, cause he said he had a few weeks work for me starting the next week. Turned into more than seven months! Things slowed down, and I got laid off. Good run, anyway.
That stint reactivated my Carpenter's Union health insurance, which gave Robin a chance to have her long-delayed shoulder surgery. She needed three months off work for her recovery, and, as luck would have it, that came right when I got laid off. Ironic? Or just a bummer? Either way it worked out well.
Meanwhile, my Dad had a knee-replacement surgery, and Robin and I tag-teamed to keep him on the mend. So we were pretty busy, despite being "out of work."
But the last month has been spent pretty much staying out of each others' hair. She's back to work now, so I have to step up my efforts to look productive around here. It's Hell on the self-image to see your wife bringing home the bacon when all you're doing is the dishes and walking the dog. Plus watching People's Court twice a day.
Anyway, to get to the point of this blog, I was at Sam's Club this Monday getting oil for my smoky little Honda Civic. After getting some culinary delights (Bagel Bites) I headed to the check-out counter, the worst part of the Sam's Club experience -- motto "Where Customer Service Goes To Die." En route I saw a mountain of "Oxy-Clean Concentrate" boxes. I stopped and stared.
Now for God knows how long, I've watched Billy Mays and later other hucksters, as they shouted all about this crap. At one point, when it was pretty new, I was in a hardware store when a woman breathlessly asked the older clerk when she could find Oxy-Clean. "We're all out -- won't have any until Friday." The woman was crushed.
When she left, I asked the guy what's so special about Oxy-Clean. "Nothing. But when someone shouts about a product on TV, people flock in here to buy it up." So my opinion was cast: Oxy-Clean is a bunch of hype. I jeered at the commercials for years.
This all went through my head as I looked at the huge pile of Oxy-Clean boxes. This shit's been around a while -- maybe it really does work.
Our laundry has been plagued with a mystery for the past 10 years or so. Virtually every shirt we own eventually comes down with spots. They look like grease spots, but there's no rhyme or reason to their location. Not food spills (on the shoulder?) Not auto grease (on the back?) Not crayons (no kids in the house at this time.) We thought at one time it could be pine tar -- when I mow the lawn, pine cones and little pine shoots would occasionally get in my clothes. We thought they may leach their tar into the clothes in the wash.
So I worked up a lawn-mowing outfit -- some overalls and a couple of old shirts, and never washed them with our other clothes, or even in our own laundry. But the stains keep showing up.
Flash forward to Monday. There I am in Sam's Club with my cart and my Pennzoil and my Bagel Bites, slack jawed in awe in front of a display of Oxy-Clean. The Heavens open, a choir of Angels burst forth in song... and some lady breaks the reverie by bumping my cart out of her way. My bad. I grabbed a box of Oxy-Clean and went to the check out.
I got home and read the directions. One gallon of hot water, fill the scoop to between line 2 and line 4, mix it up, put in the stained clothes, stir, soak six hours. Wash normally. Simple.
Now because of these stains that appear, Robin and I have triaged our shirts. One group we can wear in public, one group I can wear to work (carpenters are almost expected to look like slobs anyway,) and one group we can wear at home when no one is coming over to visit. I selected four of the worst offenders and tried out the Oxy-Clean. Filled the scoop to line 3, poured it into hot water, added the clothes and set the timer. Six hours later, I threw them in the washer and let her rip...
And I'll be damned, it worked. All but one shirt was perfect. The forth had a shadow of a stain remaining.
Robin was so impressed she went and got her favorite Blackhawks Jersey. It had two stains that looked like rust or spaghetti sauce, but were neither. And they'd been set in that Jersey for several years. I tried it again, this time filling the scoop to line 4. In went the jersey, two more stained shirts, and the 4th shirt from the first attempt. Away I went.
When Robin saw her Blackhawks jersey, the Heavens once again opened and a choir of Angels burst into song... I had rescued her favorite Hawks jersey! Me and Billy Mays!
So a belated thank you to Billy -- thank you and Rest in Peace.
Now let me at those other shirts!
Thursday, January 8, 2015
Saturday, November 8, 2014
Holy Shit! How Many Socks Do You Need?
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OK, so there are three piles. T-shirts that I can wear in public. T-shirts that have stains or glue marks that I can only wear to work. And T-shirts that are so ratty or horribly stained that I shouldn't even wear them to a construction site.
Robin went on a laundry frenzy this weekend, and presented me with two options: I can sort these out and find a proper place for them in my drawers, or she could sort them for me... by donating them to the YWCA or by putting them in the garbage.
And don't even get her started on the socks.
I went to the store this afternoon, and when I returned there was a pile of socks literally three feet high on the couch. All nicely paired and freshly laundered.
"You can pick your favorite ten pairs, the rest are getting donated," she informed me.
Aw, Hell no! There are at least 24 pair of almost-new socks in that mess, plus another twenty or thirty pair that are only a few months old. I kinda went nuts over the last few months, when I had a steady job. Being only sporadically employed over the past three years, when I got to month four of a steady job this summer, I kinda went on a spending frenzy. Not on stupid shit, but on stuff I know that I'd need if and when I got laid off again. Like Seagram's 7 Whiskey and about a dozen boxes of Kraft Deluxe Macaroni & Cheese (on sale at Mariano's for only $1.89!!)
And socks. And underoos.
In June I bought me a dozen pair of socks. But they were a bit small -- uncomfortable in my work boots. But OK for my Converse All-Stars after work. So I kept them and bought another dozen of another brand for work. They fit great, so I bought another dozen the next day -- it was right on my way home from work. This all after I had already purchased six pair of high-priced work socks from Rogan's Shoes in May -- but they made my feet too hot.
So I spent the month of August living like a Rock God (Joe Walsh, specifically...) New socks and new underwear every day for 24 days in a row. SWEET! Joe Walsh wears brand new underwear and socks every day of his life. Then his people launder them and donate them to a shelter. I don't have that luxury, so five or six at a time, my new laundered socks started to fill up my dresser. I didn't care, since I was pulling a new pair out of their original plastic every day anyway.
And since Robin recently had shoulder surgery, I was able to keep the laundry scam working perfectly... about a third of all our stuff was in the dirty laundry, a third in the clean laundry pile on the back-room couch, (waiting for me to get off my dead ass and sort and fold them), and about a third tucked neatly away in the drawers -- (which I didn't need because I was picking clothes off the "waiting" pile every day. Why bother putting them away when you can just put them on?)
Well, that shit only went so far, and Robin's on the way to a full recovery. So much so that she began a scorched-earth policy of cleaning this place up, God bless her. After a lifetime of working full time, she's now had a full month off, and she's tired of looking at the same four walls. A clean-up was in order. And away she went.
Which is what brought me face to face with a three-foot-high pile of clean socks. I tried to negotiate... I paid good money for these socks, and some of them have only been worn a few times!
"Pick your favorite ten. The rest go to the YWCA," she said, holding fast.
I argued that was wasting good socks -- I'll bag them up and keep them until the top ten wear out...
"So the mice can chew them up and make a nest, like they do with everything else around here? Ten pairs. Pick 'em."
Aw come on, let me keep 20.
"You won't even fit 10 in your drawer -- it's packed with underwear. Ten pairs. And go through those T-shirts, too. Your drawer won't close."
Well I know for a fact that there are two ways to argue with your wife, and neither of them work. So I sucked it up and picked the newest looking 10 pairs of socks, and stuffed the rest into a Mariano's shopping bag. Then she brought out another laundry basket -- filled with socks that she hadn't matched.
"You haven't looked in here in two years. These are going too."
Sheesh, I've never seen this many socks in my life. So I started filling donation bags. Three shopping bags full. But when Robin wasn't looking, I sneaked the Mariano's bag full of my other new socks into our closet and put it on a shelf. I may have gotten away with it, but I don't know...
Fido saw what I did.
And that little bastard will sell me out for a Milk-Bone, I know it...
OK, so there are three piles. T-shirts that I can wear in public. T-shirts that have stains or glue marks that I can only wear to work. And T-shirts that are so ratty or horribly stained that I shouldn't even wear them to a construction site.
Robin went on a laundry frenzy this weekend, and presented me with two options: I can sort these out and find a proper place for them in my drawers, or she could sort them for me... by donating them to the YWCA or by putting them in the garbage.
And don't even get her started on the socks.
I went to the store this afternoon, and when I returned there was a pile of socks literally three feet high on the couch. All nicely paired and freshly laundered.
"You can pick your favorite ten pairs, the rest are getting donated," she informed me.
Aw, Hell no! There are at least 24 pair of almost-new socks in that mess, plus another twenty or thirty pair that are only a few months old. I kinda went nuts over the last few months, when I had a steady job. Being only sporadically employed over the past three years, when I got to month four of a steady job this summer, I kinda went on a spending frenzy. Not on stupid shit, but on stuff I know that I'd need if and when I got laid off again. Like Seagram's 7 Whiskey and about a dozen boxes of Kraft Deluxe Macaroni & Cheese (on sale at Mariano's for only $1.89!!)
And socks. And underoos.
In June I bought me a dozen pair of socks. But they were a bit small -- uncomfortable in my work boots. But OK for my Converse All-Stars after work. So I kept them and bought another dozen of another brand for work. They fit great, so I bought another dozen the next day -- it was right on my way home from work. This all after I had already purchased six pair of high-priced work socks from Rogan's Shoes in May -- but they made my feet too hot.
So I spent the month of August living like a Rock God (Joe Walsh, specifically...) New socks and new underwear every day for 24 days in a row. SWEET! Joe Walsh wears brand new underwear and socks every day of his life. Then his people launder them and donate them to a shelter. I don't have that luxury, so five or six at a time, my new laundered socks started to fill up my dresser. I didn't care, since I was pulling a new pair out of their original plastic every day anyway.
And since Robin recently had shoulder surgery, I was able to keep the laundry scam working perfectly... about a third of all our stuff was in the dirty laundry, a third in the clean laundry pile on the back-room couch, (waiting for me to get off my dead ass and sort and fold them), and about a third tucked neatly away in the drawers -- (which I didn't need because I was picking clothes off the "waiting" pile every day. Why bother putting them away when you can just put them on?)
Well, that shit only went so far, and Robin's on the way to a full recovery. So much so that she began a scorched-earth policy of cleaning this place up, God bless her. After a lifetime of working full time, she's now had a full month off, and she's tired of looking at the same four walls. A clean-up was in order. And away she went.
Which is what brought me face to face with a three-foot-high pile of clean socks. I tried to negotiate... I paid good money for these socks, and some of them have only been worn a few times!
"Pick your favorite ten. The rest go to the YWCA," she said, holding fast.
I argued that was wasting good socks -- I'll bag them up and keep them until the top ten wear out...
"So the mice can chew them up and make a nest, like they do with everything else around here? Ten pairs. Pick 'em."
Aw come on, let me keep 20.
"You won't even fit 10 in your drawer -- it's packed with underwear. Ten pairs. And go through those T-shirts, too. Your drawer won't close."
Well I know for a fact that there are two ways to argue with your wife, and neither of them work. So I sucked it up and picked the newest looking 10 pairs of socks, and stuffed the rest into a Mariano's shopping bag. Then she brought out another laundry basket -- filled with socks that she hadn't matched.
"You haven't looked in here in two years. These are going too."
Sheesh, I've never seen this many socks in my life. So I started filling donation bags. Three shopping bags full. But when Robin wasn't looking, I sneaked the Mariano's bag full of my other new socks into our closet and put it on a shelf. I may have gotten away with it, but I don't know...
Fido saw what I did.
And that little bastard will sell me out for a Milk-Bone, I know it...
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Glorious boredom? Or just bored to tears?
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Ennui. Pronounced "On wee," it can mean "glorious boredom," like when you're hanging out on the beach in Aruba.
Well, I'm bored, but there's nothing fucking glorious about it. So I meet the other definition -- "utter desperate boredom."
Hockey season's over for the Hawks. And the Bulls' playoff hopes may have been dashed by Rose's knee injury. The Cubs suck, and I don't give a shit about the White Sox. I guess that leaves only the Food Network to brighten my life lately.
Oh sure, there's the family. They're fun. And there's Facebook -- a major time suck for the entire planet. But I run the risk of being too ever-present, and alienating my fan-base. All eight of you. So I figure I need to write another blog entry to justify my existence.
The job scene still sucks. Construction on the whole is still depressed. I've visited a hundred job sites in the past five months looking for a gig as a carpenter, and sent out a hundred resumes looking for work as a superintendent. The union hasn't helped a bit, other than funding some skills-improvement classes that I've taken. But until the general economy picks up, it's still side jobs -- and Robin's job -- that are getting us through.
On the good side, we have a robin family nesting in our trellis over the walkout of our back deck. There are four eggs, and Miss Robin is a doting parent, giving us all kinds of Hell when we walk out accidentally -- we generally use the front entrances, to keep her stress level down. The eggs should hatch this weekend or the early part on next week. That'll be nice, as long as they don't get eaten by crows, which happened last year. Major bummer.
And also on the good side, my maniac neighbor is finally taking their garbage cans back to their house within a few days of the garbage pick up. They still don't mow their lawn, but any improvement is a good thing, right?
And also, tomorrow AT&T comes by to upgrade my internet modem to fiberoptics. I called to bitch about the price of my ISP service, and the bastards succeeded in upselling me on the service. But my bill will be $6 a month less. So that's something. Plus faster downloads, so we can utilize Sarah's Netflix account more expediently.
Other than that, there's nothing fun about being out of steady work. My Mom's been sick lately, and it frees me up to visit her a lot more often, but that's pretty weak sauce in the consolation department, really. I'd rather squeeze in my visits between hurried dinners and long work hours. Instead, we sit and watch People's Court and Judge Judy until my eyeballs droop.
And on that note, is Judge Judy a bitch, or what? You just know that she's gonna end up a prison guard in Hell when it's all over for her... and you know, with my recent luck, she'll be working my section. Shit.
I'll blog again when I can think of something less depressing. Sorry.
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Ennui. Pronounced "On wee," it can mean "glorious boredom," like when you're hanging out on the beach in Aruba.
Well, I'm bored, but there's nothing fucking glorious about it. So I meet the other definition -- "utter desperate boredom."
Hockey season's over for the Hawks. And the Bulls' playoff hopes may have been dashed by Rose's knee injury. The Cubs suck, and I don't give a shit about the White Sox. I guess that leaves only the Food Network to brighten my life lately.
Oh sure, there's the family. They're fun. And there's Facebook -- a major time suck for the entire planet. But I run the risk of being too ever-present, and alienating my fan-base. All eight of you. So I figure I need to write another blog entry to justify my existence.
The job scene still sucks. Construction on the whole is still depressed. I've visited a hundred job sites in the past five months looking for a gig as a carpenter, and sent out a hundred resumes looking for work as a superintendent. The union hasn't helped a bit, other than funding some skills-improvement classes that I've taken. But until the general economy picks up, it's still side jobs -- and Robin's job -- that are getting us through.
On the good side, we have a robin family nesting in our trellis over the walkout of our back deck. There are four eggs, and Miss Robin is a doting parent, giving us all kinds of Hell when we walk out accidentally -- we generally use the front entrances, to keep her stress level down. The eggs should hatch this weekend or the early part on next week. That'll be nice, as long as they don't get eaten by crows, which happened last year. Major bummer.
And also on the good side, my maniac neighbor is finally taking their garbage cans back to their house within a few days of the garbage pick up. They still don't mow their lawn, but any improvement is a good thing, right?
And also, tomorrow AT&T comes by to upgrade my internet modem to fiberoptics. I called to bitch about the price of my ISP service, and the bastards succeeded in upselling me on the service. But my bill will be $6 a month less. So that's something. Plus faster downloads, so we can utilize Sarah's Netflix account more expediently.
Other than that, there's nothing fun about being out of steady work. My Mom's been sick lately, and it frees me up to visit her a lot more often, but that's pretty weak sauce in the consolation department, really. I'd rather squeeze in my visits between hurried dinners and long work hours. Instead, we sit and watch People's Court and Judge Judy until my eyeballs droop.
And on that note, is Judge Judy a bitch, or what? You just know that she's gonna end up a prison guard in Hell when it's all over for her... and you know, with my recent luck, she'll be working my section. Shit.
I'll blog again when I can think of something less depressing. Sorry.
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Saturday, October 22, 2011
Don't Track the Economy into your House
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My wife Robin stepped in dog shit this afternoon, and tracked it in the house. Somehow, that seems to be a perfect metaphor for our lives over the past several weeks.
In my last post, I bragged about how I loved the company I work for... they were paying me Superintendent's money while I was doing laborer's work. That's because the economy is a lot like what Robin stepped in today. Then things picked up and I got a project of my own to run for a few months. Back to being the boss! I like it!
Well, that situation didn't last. It seems that the family-owned company that has employed me for 30+ years had undergone a family feud, and the major partner took all his money out of the bank. The other partner -- who had been doing all the work but taking only a third of the financial "risks," decided to just close the doors and retire.
We had a few jobs still going, but I got leapfrogged in seniority this year by the owner's nephew. So I got laid off on my 29th wedding anniversary. And got told there was no coming back. Sort of put a damper on the mood around here.
At first they said I could keep my truck if I paid my own gas, and just turn it in some time after Christmas, when they company officially closes. But the other partner heard of this kind offer, and he over-ruled it -- made me give back the truck immediately. That's a nice way to treat a guy who's worked for you 30 years.
So I joined the many millions of others who've been bushwhacked by recent economic reality. I got a couple of juicy side jobs, so lately we've done OK. And being off steady work makes it easy to schedule work around the house. On the other hand, it makes it almost impossible to avoid those jobs any longer...
But I have a few months of unemployment benefits to enjoy, and Robin still has a great job. And we have a greater appreciation of just how good we've had it so far.
And the day was beautiful today. Our neighbor's dog got out of his shock-collar and wandered into our yard about an hour age. Fido, our guard-Beagle, went nuts barking, and we let him out to defend our ranch. Of course, all he did was play with Blackjack, and then refused to come back in the house. When Robin went to get a leash for Blackjack, she stepped right into a fresh pile of the economy, and didn't notice until it was too late -- she was in the house.
Yuck!
Thankfully, Pine-Sol saved the day. I wonder if we could dump a couple barrels of that stuff on Washington, D.C.?
.
My wife Robin stepped in dog shit this afternoon, and tracked it in the house. Somehow, that seems to be a perfect metaphor for our lives over the past several weeks.
In my last post, I bragged about how I loved the company I work for... they were paying me Superintendent's money while I was doing laborer's work. That's because the economy is a lot like what Robin stepped in today. Then things picked up and I got a project of my own to run for a few months. Back to being the boss! I like it!
Well, that situation didn't last. It seems that the family-owned company that has employed me for 30+ years had undergone a family feud, and the major partner took all his money out of the bank. The other partner -- who had been doing all the work but taking only a third of the financial "risks," decided to just close the doors and retire.
We had a few jobs still going, but I got leapfrogged in seniority this year by the owner's nephew. So I got laid off on my 29th wedding anniversary. And got told there was no coming back. Sort of put a damper on the mood around here.
At first they said I could keep my truck if I paid my own gas, and just turn it in some time after Christmas, when they company officially closes. But the other partner heard of this kind offer, and he over-ruled it -- made me give back the truck immediately. That's a nice way to treat a guy who's worked for you 30 years.
So I joined the many millions of others who've been bushwhacked by recent economic reality. I got a couple of juicy side jobs, so lately we've done OK. And being off steady work makes it easy to schedule work around the house. On the other hand, it makes it almost impossible to avoid those jobs any longer...
But I have a few months of unemployment benefits to enjoy, and Robin still has a great job. And we have a greater appreciation of just how good we've had it so far.
And the day was beautiful today. Our neighbor's dog got out of his shock-collar and wandered into our yard about an hour age. Fido, our guard-Beagle, went nuts barking, and we let him out to defend our ranch. Of course, all he did was play with Blackjack, and then refused to come back in the house. When Robin went to get a leash for Blackjack, she stepped right into a fresh pile of the economy, and didn't notice until it was too late -- she was in the house.
Yuck!
Thankfully, Pine-Sol saved the day. I wonder if we could dump a couple barrels of that stuff on Washington, D.C.?
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Sunday, June 19, 2011
One Hand Washes the Other -- Unless it's Trying to Kill You
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I'm beginning to think my left hand is possessed. I'm right handed, and throughout my life I suppose I've favored my right hand to some degree (insert your sex joke here), but over the last eight months, I think my left hand has been trying to exact a measure of revenge for my favoritism. It's trying to kill me.
In the last eight months, I have managed to smash, cut or otherwise mangle my left hand -- or integral parts thereof -- on six different occasions. Two times the damage has involved crushing or damaging my wedding ring. But that ain't no thang, right?
Oh sure, I'm a tough Construction Dude... cuts and scrapes are nothing -- they're a dime a dozen. We Construction Dudes laugh at scrapes, scoff at minor burns, put on a Band-Aid when most other suburbanites or "FHO's" (Fucking Home Owners) would run to the local ER for a stitch or a shot...
At least we'd have you believe that.
In reality, sometimes it's just that we don't have time. Like last year, when I shot a nail through my finger. I was in the middle of a very important cash side job. The nail was very new -- not rusty. And I needed to stay through the finish -- no time for a three-hour ER break. So I stayed, and I got a tetnaus shot later.
Or the month before, when I was trying to hang a HUGE steel door, and it slipped. Not a HUGE slip -- just a gentle slip to the left, about three inches. Unfortunately, there were only two inches between the door and the concrete structure. My wedding ring kept the door from crushing my finger. But nothing kept the door from crushing my wedding ring. I had to use pliers to get the ring off my finger, which was rapidly turning blue. I used a jeweler to repair my ring. Let's call that a break-even kinda day...
But there came a period of relative calm -- nothing more ominous than the occasional hang nail or hitting the base of my thumb with a hammer while striking (at) a chisel... somewhat painful but no biggee... Then things got seriously bad.
My son Jimmy bought a boat, or rather, his wife Vicky bought him a boat for his birthday. They both invited Robin and I on a shakedown cruise on the Fox River. At the dock, Jimmy backed the trailer into the water, and I had the honor of releasing the winch for the inaugural launch. But when I attempted a release, it sort of exploded in my hands -- grabbing my left hand, by the wedding ring, and pulling it into the winch. In a microsecond, my hand was flipped over my head, and the winch was spinning -- the boat heading out into the river.
Turns out the winch "keeper" had failed. My wedding ring was now oblong, no longer a circle. With a nice divot. But no blood and no missing fingers. We had a nice boat ride, and an exciting afternoon of securing the boat, and all was well.
Instead of a Jeweler, this time I slipped my wedding ring down the shaft of a "spud wrench" -- a steel wrench with a tapered handle -- and used a trim hammer to beat it into round. Then I used my carpenter's trim files to make it right.
The next day, I was called back to work after a long layoff. Back in the "day" I was a superintendent, but with the economy in the pits, we don't have enough work. But my company is gracious enough to call me back to do even the lowly laborers work -- at my old superintendent's pay -- so I LOVE them.
This week, we were clearing out the old ceiling of a school lobby, along with two exit vestibules. I removed sixteen large fire doors from their frames, and they needed to be loaded onto a skid. Like a can-do kind of boss, I helped the guys load them on to a pallet, which is when a stray piece of metal cut my left ring finger, leaving a cut almost two inches long. I managed to get my paw out in the nick of time -- in fact, if I had been wearing my wedding ring, it would have been REALLY ugly.
It was a three-Band-Aid cut. On my left hand. But still, No Big Deal.
But on Saturday it got even better. We were removing a steel-and-glass window wall. It was erected in 5-foot wide by 14-feet-tall segments. We had removed three sections, but the fourth was being difficult -- the section containing the door frame wouldn't come down. I decided to show my crew how it's done... and I would have succeeded uneventfully if the welds along the top hadn't failed.
But they did. The door frame, all 400 pounds of it, twisted as it fell, knocking me ass-over-teakettle, and I cut my hand on something I landed on. Which hand? My left hand, of course. So I had to go to the ER to get fixed up -- nasty abrasions and some shoulder X-rays. I "scalped" my left palm, taking a couple of square inches of skin off -- and there wasn't enough skin left to stitch it together. So they planted some artificial skin/turf on my palm. Sort of a skin-farm growing on my palm.
Didn't even make it eight hours until I drew blood again. The glass door on the medicine cabinet mysteriously fell out of its frame just as we were sitting down for dinner. When I picked up the pivot to examine the wreckage, I cut my left middle finger. You can imagine the look on my face -- sort of a combination of "Duh" and "WTF."
So I'm heading over to the Catholic Church up town. Maybe if I dip my left hand in Holy Water it'll lay off for a while. It can't hurt.
I'm beginning to think my left hand is possessed. I'm right handed, and throughout my life I suppose I've favored my right hand to some degree (insert your sex joke here), but over the last eight months, I think my left hand has been trying to exact a measure of revenge for my favoritism. It's trying to kill me.
In the last eight months, I have managed to smash, cut or otherwise mangle my left hand -- or integral parts thereof -- on six different occasions. Two times the damage has involved crushing or damaging my wedding ring. But that ain't no thang, right?
Oh sure, I'm a tough Construction Dude... cuts and scrapes are nothing -- they're a dime a dozen. We Construction Dudes laugh at scrapes, scoff at minor burns, put on a Band-Aid when most other suburbanites or "FHO's" (Fucking Home Owners) would run to the local ER for a stitch or a shot...
At least we'd have you believe that.
In reality, sometimes it's just that we don't have time. Like last year, when I shot a nail through my finger. I was in the middle of a very important cash side job. The nail was very new -- not rusty. And I needed to stay through the finish -- no time for a three-hour ER break. So I stayed, and I got a tetnaus shot later.
Or the month before, when I was trying to hang a HUGE steel door, and it slipped. Not a HUGE slip -- just a gentle slip to the left, about three inches. Unfortunately, there were only two inches between the door and the concrete structure. My wedding ring kept the door from crushing my finger. But nothing kept the door from crushing my wedding ring. I had to use pliers to get the ring off my finger, which was rapidly turning blue. I used a jeweler to repair my ring. Let's call that a break-even kinda day...
But there came a period of relative calm -- nothing more ominous than the occasional hang nail or hitting the base of my thumb with a hammer while striking (at) a chisel... somewhat painful but no biggee... Then things got seriously bad.
My son Jimmy bought a boat, or rather, his wife Vicky bought him a boat for his birthday. They both invited Robin and I on a shakedown cruise on the Fox River. At the dock, Jimmy backed the trailer into the water, and I had the honor of releasing the winch for the inaugural launch. But when I attempted a release, it sort of exploded in my hands -- grabbing my left hand, by the wedding ring, and pulling it into the winch. In a microsecond, my hand was flipped over my head, and the winch was spinning -- the boat heading out into the river.
Turns out the winch "keeper" had failed. My wedding ring was now oblong, no longer a circle. With a nice divot. But no blood and no missing fingers. We had a nice boat ride, and an exciting afternoon of securing the boat, and all was well.
Instead of a Jeweler, this time I slipped my wedding ring down the shaft of a "spud wrench" -- a steel wrench with a tapered handle -- and used a trim hammer to beat it into round. Then I used my carpenter's trim files to make it right.
The next day, I was called back to work after a long layoff. Back in the "day" I was a superintendent, but with the economy in the pits, we don't have enough work. But my company is gracious enough to call me back to do even the lowly laborers work -- at my old superintendent's pay -- so I LOVE them.
This week, we were clearing out the old ceiling of a school lobby, along with two exit vestibules. I removed sixteen large fire doors from their frames, and they needed to be loaded onto a skid. Like a can-do kind of boss, I helped the guys load them on to a pallet, which is when a stray piece of metal cut my left ring finger, leaving a cut almost two inches long. I managed to get my paw out in the nick of time -- in fact, if I had been wearing my wedding ring, it would have been REALLY ugly.
It was a three-Band-Aid cut. On my left hand. But still, No Big Deal.
But on Saturday it got even better. We were removing a steel-and-glass window wall. It was erected in 5-foot wide by 14-feet-tall segments. We had removed three sections, but the fourth was being difficult -- the section containing the door frame wouldn't come down. I decided to show my crew how it's done... and I would have succeeded uneventfully if the welds along the top hadn't failed.
But they did. The door frame, all 400 pounds of it, twisted as it fell, knocking me ass-over-teakettle, and I cut my hand on something I landed on. Which hand? My left hand, of course. So I had to go to the ER to get fixed up -- nasty abrasions and some shoulder X-rays. I "scalped" my left palm, taking a couple of square inches of skin off -- and there wasn't enough skin left to stitch it together. So they planted some artificial skin/turf on my palm. Sort of a skin-farm growing on my palm.
Didn't even make it eight hours until I drew blood again. The glass door on the medicine cabinet mysteriously fell out of its frame just as we were sitting down for dinner. When I picked up the pivot to examine the wreckage, I cut my left middle finger. You can imagine the look on my face -- sort of a combination of "Duh" and "WTF."
So I'm heading over to the Catholic Church up town. Maybe if I dip my left hand in Holy Water it'll lay off for a while. It can't hurt.
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Spring is in the Air -- and on the edges of the Roads
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Gosh, it seems like winter's almost over and spring is just around the coroner. Can't wait. The snow's melting, and the entire winter's worth of frozen dog shit is revealing itself day by day along the quiet suburban streets. How grand. But anyway, the weather's getting better. So I've got that going for me. Which is nice.
Daylight Savings Time starts after this weekend, which should give everyone one extra hour of daylight to do whatever it is people do during daylight. In my case, that would be nothing. I've been unemployed since late October, which is my longest personal streak of ass-sittin' since 1987. Still waiting for the economy to rebound.
I saw the layoff coming, and lined up a nice bunch of side jobs, but they've all wrapped up. And I've caught up on most of the fix-it projects around the house -- those that don't involve huge wads of money -- and now I'm in damage-control-only mode.
So I have a lot of loafing time. If you're my friend on Facebook, you already know this. I've found a wealth of semi-amusing crap on the web, and I repost several times a day on FB. I'm mainly stealing from theChive, theBrigade, theOnion, throttle.com, and a few others. Believe me, those sites can suck your day DRY with their nonsense, and links to other nonsense. So my days are full.
Plus, every Wednesday, I get to drag my neighbor's empty garbage cans from the street into their driveway, to remind them that, hey, MONDAY was garbage day, and everyone else on the street has already taken their cans out of the public way.
As far as looking for work, I sent out a load of resumes and made the rounds, but construction work is very down. I took a chance on a career change by applying for a spot as Carpenter Foreperson at the Art Institute of Chicago, but that didn't pay off either. It was a great-sounding gig -- modifying the galleries and building the displays for multi-million dollar art exhibits. Inside work, paid holidays & vacations.
While I was interviewing and waiting for the results, I had to back off my nuttier postings on the web and on Facebook, but it was worth the risk. I bought a new suit, got a haircut, shined up my teeth and got new contacts... here goes!
I actually got pretty close -- made the second interview, got down to the final three choices, but no luck. So now I feel like the bronze/silver medal winning doofuses (doofi?) at the Olympics -- everyone says we should be proud to finish as high up as we did! I am proud -- but there's still no fucking paychecks for second or third place in the Employment Olympics.
Taking that job would have meant a major pay cut, quitting the Carpenter's Union, losing my insurance -- a whole lot of major changes. But it would have meant a paycheck and a potential end-game to this working-for-a-living thing we all seem to be trying to wrap up as early as possible. Plus I wouldn't be at the whim of every economic downturn that comes along... But it was not to be. So back to Plan A -- hoping my old employer comes up with some jobs, and soon! And hoping like Hell that the economic upturn will hit my sector sooner than later...
But rather than sulk and feel sorry for myself, I choose to rejoice in my blessings. I have a wife with a great job; we're not in danger of losing our house; I have three wonderful adult children -- and only two of them still live at home while they're finishing school and/or send out resumes!
I rejoice that I have a dog that rarely bites me, and in fact, only snarls occasionally. I have an entire aquarium full of guppies that absolutely LOVE me! (Hey guys! It's the chubby guy! He's coming over here again! I bet he's gonna throw food at us again! Let's swim back and forth like maniacs!)
And I rejoice that Spring is truly coming. I know this because the sun is warm, the birds are chirping, and the one thing that always tells me that the snow is going to be gone, without question, for another year: State Farm has just sent me a bill for the insurance on my snowmobile.
.
Gosh, it seems like winter's almost over and spring is just around the coroner. Can't wait. The snow's melting, and the entire winter's worth of frozen dog shit is revealing itself day by day along the quiet suburban streets. How grand. But anyway, the weather's getting better. So I've got that going for me. Which is nice.
Daylight Savings Time starts after this weekend, which should give everyone one extra hour of daylight to do whatever it is people do during daylight. In my case, that would be nothing. I've been unemployed since late October, which is my longest personal streak of ass-sittin' since 1987. Still waiting for the economy to rebound.
I saw the layoff coming, and lined up a nice bunch of side jobs, but they've all wrapped up. And I've caught up on most of the fix-it projects around the house -- those that don't involve huge wads of money -- and now I'm in damage-control-only mode.
So I have a lot of loafing time. If you're my friend on Facebook, you already know this. I've found a wealth of semi-amusing crap on the web, and I repost several times a day on FB. I'm mainly stealing from theChive, theBrigade, theOnion, throttle.com, and a few others. Believe me, those sites can suck your day DRY with their nonsense, and links to other nonsense. So my days are full.
Plus, every Wednesday, I get to drag my neighbor's empty garbage cans from the street into their driveway, to remind them that, hey, MONDAY was garbage day, and everyone else on the street has already taken their cans out of the public way.
As far as looking for work, I sent out a load of resumes and made the rounds, but construction work is very down. I took a chance on a career change by applying for a spot as Carpenter Foreperson at the Art Institute of Chicago, but that didn't pay off either. It was a great-sounding gig -- modifying the galleries and building the displays for multi-million dollar art exhibits. Inside work, paid holidays & vacations.
While I was interviewing and waiting for the results, I had to back off my nuttier postings on the web and on Facebook, but it was worth the risk. I bought a new suit, got a haircut, shined up my teeth and got new contacts... here goes!
I actually got pretty close -- made the second interview, got down to the final three choices, but no luck. So now I feel like the bronze/silver medal winning doofuses (doofi?) at the Olympics -- everyone says we should be proud to finish as high up as we did! I am proud -- but there's still no fucking paychecks for second or third place in the Employment Olympics.
Taking that job would have meant a major pay cut, quitting the Carpenter's Union, losing my insurance -- a whole lot of major changes. But it would have meant a paycheck and a potential end-game to this working-for-a-living thing we all seem to be trying to wrap up as early as possible. Plus I wouldn't be at the whim of every economic downturn that comes along... But it was not to be. So back to Plan A -- hoping my old employer comes up with some jobs, and soon! And hoping like Hell that the economic upturn will hit my sector sooner than later...
But rather than sulk and feel sorry for myself, I choose to rejoice in my blessings. I have a wife with a great job; we're not in danger of losing our house; I have three wonderful adult children -- and only two of them still live at home while they're finishing school and/or send out resumes!
I rejoice that I have a dog that rarely bites me, and in fact, only snarls occasionally. I have an entire aquarium full of guppies that absolutely LOVE me! (Hey guys! It's the chubby guy! He's coming over here again! I bet he's gonna throw food at us again! Let's swim back and forth like maniacs!)
And I rejoice that Spring is truly coming. I know this because the sun is warm, the birds are chirping, and the one thing that always tells me that the snow is going to be gone, without question, for another year: State Farm has just sent me a bill for the insurance on my snowmobile.
.
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