I suppose
this post could be the sequel to "If You Teach a Girl to Fish." The
guy pictured above wearing safety glasses and using a circular saw is my buddy
Doug, literally the aider of damsels in distress (because that day when I
called him, his response was, "Any time I have the opportunity to aid a
damsel in distress, I'll take it").
Four years
ago I bought a beautiful, custom built drafting table on craigslist.com. I'd
been looking for just the right drafting table for years, and when I saw this
one, I fell in love. I drove to Apple Valley, plunked down $200, and carted it
away in my truck. The following winter I wrote The Dogs Who Saved Me while
sitting at that table every afternoon. Problem was, though, it was just a few
inches too tall, so I could never quite get comfortable sitting on a stool or
standing up.
Two weeks ago
when I had a new floor put in the family room, I called Doug and asked if he
would come over and help me move furniture back in place so I could function in
my house again. This prompted his damsel in distress response, and he appeared
an hour or so later, helping me not only with the furniture but the TV and
computer as well.
The drafting
table had been moved to the patio during the flooring job, and when Doug asked
if I wanted to bring it in, I explained my issue with the height and asked him
if he thought it would be feasible to just chop a few inches off the legs. This
time his response was "Get a taller stool."
In the end,
though, he went home and returned with a saw, a router, a fancy ruler and some
other fascinating stuff, and went to work.
I will
confess here how envious I was as I watched him. When I mentioned something
about the "boy skills" he possessed, he referenced his experience
with Wood Shop in junior high, and that hurt just a little. I had asked
counselors in both junior high and high school to put me in wood shop or auto
shop classes but was told those were "all boy" classes. Times are
different now, of course, and girls are certainly not discouraged from taking
vocational education classes at the high school where I teach, and I'm glad for
that. I love wood, and the idea of having both the skill and tools to build
something lasting is a very compelling one to me. Alas, I'm relegated now to
standing on the sidelines and watching.
Hmm. Perhaps a wood working class might be placed on the agenda as an
activity after retirement.
Less than an
hour after Doug began, we were carrying the drafting table back to its spot by
the window in the family room. We set it down, and I shook it. Absolutely
amazingly stable. No wobble. Ahhhh, the perfect workspace.
When I'm
writing, I often do so with a notebook open and also the internet open as well,
especially if I'm working on a blog post. (In this post already, I've
double-checked my accuracy on "circular saw" and "router,"
and I grabbed the link to the previous post.) The drafting table gives me lots
of space for all that plus room to stick a lamp and a few pencils and a cup of
tea. And a cat, on occasion. I have illustrated some of this in the photo below
(sans cat). A removable sheet of glass covers the surface of the table, so I
can place things under it—such as the outline of the children's book series I'm
currently working on.
Having the
table just right is a small thing in the larger scheme of my life. But...
workspace to a writer is much like a classroom is to a teacher; you kinda need
a place for all your books and pencils and stuff.
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