Superpowers, Sharecroppers, and Planers
By Bobby Neal Winters
I tell people that my superpower is my willingness to do something badly. Not everybody understands what I mean. Let me try to explain.
We all value excellence, of course. There are best practices in every discipline, in every human activity. My dad taught me how to dig a ditch with a shovel: There are right ways and wrong ways; there are different aspects of the activity and different shovels you are to use in each of those aspects.
He took it seriously.
There’s one shovel to use in breaking through the ground from someone who’s standing to the side of the ditch; there’s another for the guy who is standing in the bottom of the ditch. There is a rhythm to how they work together. It’s been almost forty years since Dad died and almost fifty since he last tried teaching me the “best practices” of ditch digging, but it’s still there.
As I said, he took it seriously, and the man could dig a handsome ditch. He sometimes did it after work to relieve the stresses of the day. So he taught me the right way.
But he also taught me that if you only had one kind of shovel and the ditch had to be dug that you could make do with that one no matter how awkward it was.
Looking back on that, it comes from the sharecropper heritage of which my family sprung. Others who had the ability to reorder or delay tasks might do something else until they could get the right shovel. That’s a different way of living and it definitely has its advantages.
But that wasn’t where my family came from, and I kept the lesson all my life: Work with what you have.
Here’s the thing: I’m not a sharecropper anymore and am becoming farther removed from that heritage on a daily basis. While I can still suppress my ego and do something badly if it has to be done, I am developing other abilities.
As hinted at above, one of the major constraints causing the “sharecropper” outlook on life is the lack of appropriate tools. To fully understand that, you need to have a correct understanding of tools.
I am tempted to say a tool is more than a tool, and I think most of you would know what I mean, but let me be a little more precise. A tool consists of a physical device--”the tool”--and the knowledge of how to use that physical device. I’ve talked about this before, and when I have done so, I’ve used “the chisel” as an example. Let me be a little more sophisticated this time and use “the planer” as an example.
I had never even heard about planers before I got into woodworking. I only bought one because I had obtained a large quantity of rough cut wood and absolutely had to have it if I was going to utilize that wood. Even the “cheap” ones are pretty spendy.
If you know how to use one, you can flatten boards; you can smooth them; you can work toward making them square. There is no comparison between what a board looks like before you start to what it looks like after you are done.
Ugly becomes pretty.
But if you don’t know how to use it--and it’s not all that difficult, safety is the main concern--it might as well be a 100-pound paperweight.
My wife came to me with a request for a favor the other day. This was difficult for her because she is self-reliant, being raised by farmers instead of sharecroppers. She needed me to make a small shelf to put under the sink behind some other stuff.
This is something that no one will ever see. It is going to be purely functional; it does not matter what it looks like.
She brought me a board to use; she told me how wide it needed to be and how tall it needed to be held off of the floor.
I could have made her shelf in 10 minutes. That’s not an exaggeration: Ten minutes.
But it would’ve been ugly.
Now I just said, no one is ever going to see this. If there had been a rush, I would’ve gotten out my impact driver and my wood screws and just screwed four legs to the piece of wood that she had given me and been done.
But there wasn’t a rush. The board she gave me was good wood; it was some her father had left when he died. It was good, but it was slightly cupped. I put it through my planer a few times and took the cupping out of it. Then I did some honest-to-God joinery to put the legs on it. Nothing fancy: it is just going to be under a sink for goodness sake. But it’s built like a brick outhouse. It only took about 24 hours to be done with the vast bulk of that in letting the glue dry.
I made a mistake and let her see it before I’d taken the edges off or oiled it; it would’ve only taken a few minutes. She put it under the sink before I could finish it.
But I’ll not let it worry me too much. It’s one of my superpowers.
Bobby Winters, a native of Harden City, Oklahoma, blogs at redneckmath.blogspot.com and okieinexile.blogspot.com. He invites you to “like” the National Association of Lawn Mowers on Facebook. Search for him by name on YouTube.
