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5 comments

Comment from: hinermad [Visitor]
hinermad

Diana,

Congratulations on recognizing the tyranny of the urgent over the important. Somehow we’ve come to equate being busy with being successful. But how often do we look back at a busy stretch to see if we’ve accomplished anything meaningful? Do we even know what’s meaningful to us? Like you said, a strong work ethic and achievement are never quite enough. That’s because they don’t tell us what “enough” is. They’re tools for the journey, not necessarily the destination. I envy construction workers for that reason. They know when they’re done with a job. This software stuff that I work on never ends.

Funny you should mention Cheaper by the Dozen. I always loved this little exchange:

Someone once asked Dad: “But what do you want to save time for? What are you going to do with it?”
“For work, if you love that best,” said Dad. “For education, for beauty, for art, for pleasure.” He looked over the top of his pince-nez. “For mumblety-peg, if that’s where your heart lies.”

I think you have an advantage over most people because I think you know where your heart lies. I also think you have the wisdom to tell if a task takes you closer to it and the discipline to say “no” to busywork that doesn’t.

As for the shelves, I can’t help you. My house is still decorated in modern dumpster. (It might be worth looking into having a wood veneer applied that would at least get them to match, though.)

Dave

04/08/08 @ 10:55
Comment from: Blake [Visitor]  
Blake

Something tells me that there’s something beautiful that could be revealed out of that set of barrister’s shelves. Is there some way of treating each individually, with their own stains, that would somehow nonetheless turn them into a pleasing whole?

05/15/08 @ 08:32
Comment from: [Member]

Hi there, Blake! Long time, no see. Dunno. I haven’t stripped them yet. One seems to be cherry, another oak, and a third…hm. Unidentified. I’m tossing around the notion of a delightful color and perhaps some highlighted designs in the corners. Such a procedure is an affront to my wood-loving essence, I admit, but I can’t for the life of me figure out a way to make so many differing grains of wood work together.

d

05/23/08 @ 16:44
Comment from: Daddy [Visitor]  
Daddy

Possibly, it was originally built that way. Possible it was pieced. You fell in love with it as it is. What’s wrong with that?. On the other hand, you might try stripping it to bare wood,staining it with some transparent stain (red, or green comes to mind) then rubbing it with a hard wax, or a finishing oil. There are endless possibilities. Love, me

08/03/08 @ 15:33
Comment from: [Member]

At this point, realizing that I may never have the time to do any of that, I may just clean it up, oil the hinges, use it as is, and call it “retro” if anyone mentions NONE OF THE PIECES MATCH. :)

I need the book space.

d

08/05/08 @ 22:43


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