Tragicomic Fiction Author

Tag: renovation

Why I love DIY: A Humorous Reflection on the Joy and Frustration of ‘Doing it Yourself’ when Installing a Brand New Laundry

This past weekend I mostly finished the all-consuming DIY project I’ve been working on over the last couple of months. I wish I could say it was something exciting like a new BBQ area with a swimming pool, jacuzzi, and a wood-fired pizza oven, but the reality is we’ve just redecorated the three least exciting spaces in the house: the toilet, the hallway and the laundry. 

There’s nothing like a good DIY project to test the strength of your relationship with your significant other.

Photo by Roselyn Tirado on Unsplash

Still, despite the everyday mundanity of the spaces, there are few things in life better than that warm, happy feeling of satisfaction you get on completing a substantial DIY project, especially when it all comes together without any major cock-ups along the way. There were a couple of minor cock-ups (more about that later), but I managed to get this project done without losing any of my fingers, electrocuting anyone, falling off any ladders or putting any holes in walls, floors, or ceilings that I didn’t intend on being there.

The new multipurpose front loader from Bosch. It both washes your clothes and stores all your shit.

The bulk of the job was painting, which, although time-consuming, is pretty straightforward, and with most of the house having already been repainted since we moved in, my wife and I are well-practised. Less straightforward was my plan to install a new attic ladder in the hallway, a new cistern in the toilet, and a new tub, bench and cabinetry in the laundry. I can’t say I completed these parts of the project without any profanity, but overall, everything went remarkably smoothly, especially the attic ladder, which I was worried about, having never installed one before. But it went in almost without a hitch, and now we have a space other than our mouse, rat, and possum-infested shed in which to store some of the junk that has accumulated over the years in our household of five.

Stairway to Heaven (or at least a place with fewer rodents).

The most unpleasant part of the job was removing the ‘popcorn’ texture from the ceiling in the hallway. I don’t know why this technique ever became popular in the first place as it’s just a magnet for dirt, grime, and fly-shit and it’s impossible to keep clean. I watched a couple of YouTube videos to see how to do it – spray some water on and it just glides off with a scraper – but our ceiling had at least two coats of paint applied over the texture so there was no gliding. Scraping it off took serious elbow grease and my arms were aching after only a few minutes.

After I’d completed half the job (and taken a break for about a month) someone suggested the bright idea of using an electric sander to take the paint off the highest points of the popcorn. This allowed the water to soak in and made it much easier to scrape the rest of the texture off, but it was still a horrible job. I got covered in pale, plastery goo and looked like an extra-large baby had just thrown up all over me. It’s the kind of job that would be perfect for a teenage child who’s going through one of those phases which makes them difficult to like. You could tell them you’ve given them the job so they can learn responsibility and the value of hard work when really you would be punishing them for being rude and unpleasant. My own children, although perfectly capable of being stroppy and obnoxious when the mood strikes them, aren’t quite old enough to have lost their ‘cuteness factor’ (nor are they yet tall enough to reach the ceiling), so unfortunately it was left up to me. However, we still have to repaint the living room (which has the same textured ceiling) at some stage, so I’m thinking I’ll give it a year or three and then pass on the baton.

My biggest concern of the entire project was cutting the hole out of the bamboo benchtop for the laundry sink. I was optimistic I could do it, having done the same job when we installed a new kitchen several years ago after we first moved in, but being a $500 piece of wood, it wasn’t something I could afford to get wrong. At 35mm thick (that’s about 1 and a 1/2 inches for you imperialists out there), it’s also not the kind of thing my $20 bargain bin jigsaw is designed to cut, and there were several times during the extended process (with my entire body vibrating as I gripped the jigsaw; with coils of smoke curling up from the blade as it slowly burned as much as cut its way through the wood; with spatters of rain falling on my shoulders and one eye on the horizon where a bank of charcoal clouds was rolling in and promising to dump water all over my electricity supply) where I was sorely tempted to give up.

The reason I didn’t was that I wasn’t sure what the alternative was (heading into town to buy a better jigsaw or paying a professional to do the job seemed both time-consuming and unnecessarily expensive options) and because, as painful and slow as the progress I was making was, it was still progress. In the end, it took about forty minutes to make the cut and I was able to finish, get the benchtop in place and pack up my electrical gear just before the rain started pouring down. I also managed to tick a present off my Christmas list – with a bit of work, the piece of wood that came out of the hole will make a great chopping board.

I balanced the success of this part of the project by making a right cock-up of the next thing I attempted. This resulted in an explosion of profanity, directed at myself. When I showed my wife what I’d done I’m sure she wanted to call me names as well, but since I’d already made such a good job of it I think she felt sorry for me and her response was remarkably mild. See if you can pick out my error in the picture below.

Move along
Move along – nothing to see here.

As you can tell, I’ve tried to disguise it, but when my brother came to visit on Saturday and I showed him my handiwork, the first thing he said to me was, “Did you drill the holes for the pantry handle on the wrong side of the door?”

“Yes,” I said, “yes I did.” Bastard, bastard, bastard, I thought.

“Did you do that before you assembled the cabinet?” he added, clearly unable to comprehend how anyone could do something so stupid.

“No,” I said, “I just absent-mindedly drilled them in the wrong place.” I didn’t tell him I was humming to myself with the joy of a job well done while I was doing it.

“Pity,” he ended with, “otherwise it looks good.”

“Thanks,” I said lamely, because what else could I say?

With all that extra storage space, our new washing machine need only serve a single purpose.

The project’s not quite finished. You’ll notice the absence of a washing machine. This is because – Murphy’s Law – our front-loader started making an unholy racket a few days ago and I’ve taken it into the repair shop to see what the problem is. Until it’s either repaired or we purchase a new one, we’re using Nana’s laundry service instead.

This is why I love DIY! Not only do you get that feeling of satisfaction that comes at the completion of a project, you get all the entertainment value it provides along the way.

Do you love DIY? If so, why? Let me know in the comments.


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What Friends Are For, by J.B. Reynolds

A gritty and engaging story of human faults, fears, and frailty, What Friends Are For is the prequel short story to my tragicomic novel, Taking the Plunge. Introduce yourself to the characters from the novel and find out where it all begins for Kate, Tracy, Evan and Lawrence.

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A Place to Store Our Growing Children?

Child Growth

One thing that children seem to be able to do without any assistance from their parents is grow up. It’s the kind of thing that sneaks up on you. Perhaps you’re vaguely aware of it happening on the background, but then the reality hits home when you check your statement after your credit card is unexpectedly declined at the gas station and discover that the reason you have no money is because you’ve given it all to a variety of children’s apparel merchants. Maybe your awareness is focused when you go to sneak a cookie from the jar on a heretofore unreachable shelf in the pantry, only to find it empty bar a few miserable crumbs when you could have sworn it was full to overflowing the previous day. Or perhaps their increase in size is brought to your attention one day when you decide to step outside for a walk in the garden but can’t see your shoes on the porch where you left them last, so you spend ten minutes searching the house for them in vain, only to return to the porch, frustrated and puzzled, to discover that the reason you can’t find them is because they’re bouncing around on the lawn, attached to your child’s feet. Yes, those same feet that only yesterday could be contained in the palm of your hand.

Whatever the evidence, the conclusion is undeniable – children grow.

Houses, on the other hand, don’t. The house we have lived in for the last eight years is diminutive (relatively speaking – I’m constantly aware that there’s plenty of people in the world living in caravans and cars and cardboard boxes under bridges – our house is certainly and thankfully larger than that) but what might have been a cosy space with three small children is rapidly becoming claustrophobic with three large ones. It’s only natural. You can’t bypass the laws of physics, so problems will always arise when there’s only one toilet to accommodate the desires of five bladders wishing to be emptied at the same time. As a consequence, my wife and I have been considering our options.

We’ve thought of moving somewhere with a bigger house, or perhaps buying a section and building, but house-prices in NZ have run rampant in recent years, moving beyond ridiculous into the realm of the nonsensical. We could buy a middling piece of dirt for an exorbitant amount of money but we’re wondering why we would when we already own a piece of dirt, and a very nice one at that, four times as large and with a house already on it.

So our current thinking for a solution to our child growth issues is to build an extension. To that end, we had a chat to the owner of a local building company that specialises in them. I’d drawn a rough plan of what I had in mind, so he took a picture of it on his phone and told me to go home and take some photos of the existing house and email them through to him. Which I duly did, and he replied with an email to say he’d got them.

A place to store our growing children?
This is not the plan I drew. Mine was more…
A place to store our growing children?
…like this.

A week or so later, I received another message from him asking when I was going to send the pictures through. Confused, I told him that I already had and that he’d confirmed he’d received them. His next message was apologetic, reconfirming that yes, I’d sent him some pictures, and yes, he had indeed received them, but had then promptly forgotten all about it. I didn’t think too much about this at the time, being well aware of the symptoms of senility myself. Why, only last week, one of my teaching colleagues was discussing a certain student in the staffroom.

“Who’s that then?” I asked. “I haven’t come across her yet.”

“Sure you have,” she said, “you were her English teacher last year.”

“I was?” I asked, suddenly panicked, aware that the name was familiar but unable to put any kind of face to it. “Are you certain?”

“Of course. That was my daughter’s class.” She narrowed her eyes at me. “You do remember teaching her?”

Fortunately, my colleague’s daughter is blessed with the kind of personality one doesn’t forget. But I was still drawing a mental blank on the friend. Until about thirty minutes later, when I saw her walking past me in a corridor and it all came rushing back. What makes it worse is that not only was I her English teacher last year, but I’m also related to her — distantly — but still. As far as mental blanks go, this was a worrisomely enormous one.

Anyway, I was prepared to forgive the builder’s absent-mindedness until I got another message, another week or so later, asking what we wanted out of the extension. I wasn’t quite sure what to make of it as I thought I’d made this pretty clear in our initial conversation. So I sent him a message saying we wanted more room — a place to store our growing children. A couple of days later I got a reply saying, Oh right, so you need a new chest freezer then?

Hallo, what ‘ave we ‘ere, then?” said the freezer, as clouds of frozen mist rose ominously from its open maw.

Now, I’m partial to a bit of dark and dubious humour myself, but when someone suggests that I might want to put my children in a deep freeze, well, it rankles. There are some lines it’s best not to cross. Alarm bells sounded, and they only got louder as the message went on, asking if we wanted more bedrooms or a bigger kitchen and dining area. It was then that I realised that since that was exactly what I’d indicated on the plan he took a picture of, then he’d forgotten about that as well.

While this was all going on we’d contacted another local building firm that also specialises in extensions. A few days after my initial enquiry, the owner came out to our house for a look and a chat, made some suggestions, asked a couple of questions that we need to find out the answers to, gave a rough, top-of-the-head estimate of costs, explained how he’d go about the job if we decided to go ahead and utterly failed to say anything insulting. We did discuss the purchase of a new refrigerator, but that was purely in the context of storing food, not children.

Now the first builder wants to come out to our house for a look and a chat. We’re not sure we want him to.


FREE BOOK!

What Friends Are For, by J.B. Reynolds

A gritty and engaging story of human faults, fears, and frailty, What Friends Are For is the prequel short story to my tragicomic novel, Taking the Plunge. Introduce yourself to the characters from the novel and find out where it all begins for Kate, Tracy, Evan and Lawrence.

GET YOUR FREE BOOK >>

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