What is the Right Word?
By Bobby Neal Winters
I am trying to find the right word for something.
It would be a word that would describe a situation or a mindset. It strikes me as something that is basic to dealing effectively in and/or happily with the world. Because of this, there must be some word in Latin, Greek, or Hebrew for what I am talking about. Likely as not, I’ve heard it, but I didn’t recognize its importance.
Since I don’t have the One Word, let me now use a lot of them.
When I tell students how to study their math, I tell them to pick a spot and prepare it. Get their paper, their calculator, their pen, their pencil, their protract, that is to say get everything that they are going to need and gather it around them. Turn OFF the flipping TV (and I don’t mean flipping), music, social media. Urinate--maybe on the social media. Take a deep breath. Let it out slowly, and then get started, doing what they are going to do. To those who’ve had jobs, I tell them to go at it like a job.
This is one example of the situation/mindset I am talking about.
This was my only example for many, many years. As I’ve gotten into woodworking, I’ve noticed that you need the same mindset to do good woodworking.
Consider how you cut dovetails. Get your workbench cleared off. That means you need to actually have a workbench. Have your chisels, saws, marking implements, squares, and dovetail jigs close at hand. Make sure that your wood is square and properly sized. Make sure you have a clamp at your workbench so that you can clamp your board to the bench when it comes time to chisel out your dovetails. Maybe I should have begun with the notion that you should have thought the entire process through from beginning to end before you sat down to cut the dovetails, but it (almost) goes without saying. That might mean it should be said more often.
I am now learning how to use a lathe. As with every other powertool I’ve learned about, a lathe is kind of scary. I think that fear is left over from childhood. Our parents didn’t want us to get hurt, so that created a general fear in us.
The cure to that fear is knowledge. You can hurt yourself with a lathe. You can kill yourself with a lathe. But you gain knowledge of how to deal with a lathe so as to minimize that possibility.
You could say to just stay away from the lathe and you won’t get hurt. The same philosophy will keep you safe from cars, dogs, cats, and the opposite sex.
While there are things that we leave alone because the learning curve of dealing with them safely overrides any benefit from dealing with them, we try to keep that set small. I’ve got bungee jumping and skydiving in that set, but I know others who’ve crossed that line.
Somewhere within this notion is the idea that we become the despots of a small piece of spacetime. We set aside a place where we are the absolute rulers of our environment for a carefully prescribed interval of time. For that time, in that space, whatever we say goes.
Many, many years ago--more than twenty--I had a class where one of the students thought he was smarter than me. That doesn’t bother me. It happens all the time, and I enjoy it. His thinking he was smarter wasn’t the problem. The problem was that one day he tried to take over. I came to class, and my desk at the front of the room was covered with boxes of donuts, a jug of milk, a jug of orange juice etc.
He’d decided that we were going to have a party.
I didn’t say a word.
I sat down my books and began removing the accoutrements from the desk. After they were gone, I began to teach as if nothing had happened.
When you are the teacher, you are in charge. You decide what will be done that day. Good teachers will read the room and take input from the students. But if you let them take charge, why exactly are you getting a paycheck?
The student didn’t like me after that.
However agreeable you are, you must learn to draw the line, to be in charge, to take control:
“Hey, Eve, God told us not to eat that, and I won’t.”
“No, taking bribes is wrong, and I won’t do it.”
“No, I don’t think main-lining cocaine is a good idea, and I won’t do it.”
So, anyway, I’m trying to come up with the right word to describe this. I know I will feel stupid when someone tells me, but I would like to know.
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.