Home improvement 101

I had to take my car to the garage recently. While a mechanic worked on it, I waited in the waiting room and worked on my laptop. Every few minutes or so, I would tune into a home improvement show that played in the background on a nearby television. I think the garage planned it that way. As I watched, I came away with several conclusions:

—The show made me feel out of my element. When the mechanic told me I needed expensive new tires and a Flux Capacitor, straight out of the movie Back to the Future, I took him at his word. The mechanic got a good laugh from the joke, but I got the last laugh. I told him that since “Where we’re going, we don’t need roads” that must mean that he was wrong and I didn’t need new tires. Oh what a shocker, he didn’t seem to like my response.

—How come every home improvement show has one guy with a New England or New York accent. Is that supposed to make me feel better about the improvement? Can’t the rest of us folks scattered across the U.S. make our own improvements? Remember Bob Vila from This Old House, the guru of home improvement experts. Or even make-believe Tim “The Toolman” Taylor from the sit-com Home Improvement. I don’t remember either of them having an accent?

—The hosts never got dirty. They looked like hipster dudes straight from a Carhartt or Dickies storeroom. Meanwhile, I walk into my garage. I work on the simplest DIY project and end up head-to-toe in dust and dirt.

—In one episode they mixed cement, sand, crushed and graded stone, and water. They made it look like the most complex thing known to mankind. I half expected a scientist with pocket protector and nerdy glasses to come on screen and explain the scientific and engineering principles behind cement. “Yes, Bob, the molecules from the cement bond together over time with the aggregates from the stone to form an impenetrable force.”

—What’s the most manly thing, I’ve done today? I got up and out of bed and made my own coffee. What’s the most manly thing the home improvement guys did? Hmm, pretty much everything.

Oh brother, I’m out of my league. No more DIY projects for me. Anyone have a good, cheap contractor to call?


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40 thoughts on “Home improvement 101

  1. Sometimes, it’s good to acknowledge our strengths and let the pros work on the rest. 😆

    Home improvement projects are out of my league too and I enjoy watching the pros on the show bring these projects to life.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. I’m notoriously terrible at anything even remotely related to home repairs…with the odd exception of electrical work. I can wire up a three-way dimmer or smart thermostat like nobody’s business. Go figure.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’ve done some dimmers but I actually worry about electricity more than anything else! Ha ha, do you housecalls Mark? I’ve got a plane ticket with your name on it. Ha ha. The few electrical projects I’ve done … I have liked because it’s a “see and do” project meaning you have to replicate what’s there to begin with. You do that and you’re generally fine. Or should be anyway. 🤪🤪🤪

      Liked by 1 person

  3. I’m with you on DIY projects. In Palm Springs, I refinished our butcher block counter tops. I was really proud of myself until the turpentine rags I used to strip off the old stain burst into blames in the garage. I almost lost the house.

    Liked by 1 person

      1. I think I wrote bout it after it happened. But maybe worth reposting or reflecting back on it? I rescued the end table in the garage that the turpentine rags caught on fire. There was a black streak up the side of the garage too.

        Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh Nancy, I’m so glad that I’m not the only one. They really are ridiculous. They get me interested in improvements but they take it too far. I especially hate the “house flipping” shows. I know there’s shoddy work being done. My father was a pretty good carpenter but I’m just too much of a novice to know where the show producers have cut corners!!! Ugh!!!!

      Liked by 1 person

  4. I’ve watched those shows too Brian and they probably have “stunt doubles” who are doing all of the hard work behind the scenes. I also notice in the waiting room of the doctor’s office, the TV has on HGTV and indoor décor competitions! Talk about subliminal psychology! 😲🏡🔨

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Shall we call you Dagwood Bumstead? 😉

    When I was sick at home, I found myself watching Zombie flip… lemme tell you: THESE guys get dirty!

    I miss my handyman. He worked well, cleaned up after each day on the job and then took a shower 😉

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