Fat Guys
Building Boats |
Amateur Hour
by Kevin Walsh
Hey, It's October! Time for
the July Column
And so it came to pass that one morning last week, I looked up and
noticed that it was October and I hadn't yet written my July Duckworks
Magazine column. This was, of course, completely unfair, believing as I do
that time should not be allowed to pass until all of my deadlines have
been successfully met. This is one of my core, defining principles, along
with the bed-rock belief that one cannot get into heaven either with a
tattoo, or with body parts unaccounted for, requiring a sojourn in
Purgatory to earn the price of each limb, appendix or tonsil (as the case
may be) or alternatively, to find a replacement part from whatever source
is handy. I imagine that Purgatory is pretty dog-eat-dog as a consequence.
It turns out that the bureaucracy of Heaven is quite the stickler about
holding folks accountable for all the bits they were issued, but isn't
very picky about exactly whose parts are returned as long as all the sums
work out right. Given that my son is now seventeen, I'm considering adding
a new rule about body piercing, but we'll let events sort that out.
The fact that I hadn't finished (or even started) my column was worrisome
to me, although I wasn't too concerned that Chuck would be upset. Judging
by the sheer volume of stuff that appears regularly in Duckworks, Chuck
ain't hurtin' for material, babe. But how much time would pass, Dear
Readers, before Chuck figured that my prescription for Thorazine had run
out and that I had run off to become a Hari Krishna, or a Homeless
Squeegee Guy, or, horror of horrors, an accountant? If Chuck were to come
to that conclusion, why, my coveted spot in the Pantheon of Honorary
Duckworks Columnists would surely pass on to some up and coming hot-shot,
some nuclear powered kid who could build a skiff a week and type 340 words
a minute to boot, thus condemning yours truly to an ignoble end in the
ash-bin of history.
So I frantically began to cast about for a topic. My mind churned over the
possibilities: Spar-Making Naked? No, everybody makes spars while wearing
no clothes. Making Floorboards While Reciting Tolstoy? No, no. Everybody
knows Tolstoy causes brain aneurisms and I don't want a law suit on my
hands on top of everything else. How about I tell the story about lopping
a large chunk of flesh off the top of my thumb? No, everybody chops
something off from time to time (and hopefully grows a new one or
reattaches the missing whatever-it-is before trying to breech the Gates of
Heaven) and besides, I did that while making a salad. I was fortunate to
find the bit of thumb before dinner, thankfully, so no one was forced to
endure some weird water-chestnut kind of thing on their plate.
In the end I never did come up with a suitable topic. Oh, I'm still
building my boat, and have in fact been working on the spars, although
most of my work sessions are conducted fully clothed out of respect for my
son's visiting friends. And I do have some good stories to tell about my
Dad and me testing the water-tight integrity of the hull, but that's for
future columns. The real problem is much more fundamental, and much more
frightening to me.
The true fodder for this column has been my inept attempts at quality
workmanship and my fumbling attempts at craftsmanship. In the beginning it
was terribly funny to watch me work as I ripped ghastly gouges with dull,
cheap tools in terribly expensive wood, and it seemed during those heady
days of incompetence that I would never run out of things to tell you.
But now I find that, after nearly two years of painstaking stupidity, my
tools are sharp more often than not, my cuts are more or less true and my
glue lines are all but invisible to the naked eye. O, that such treachery
should come to pass! Dear Readers, pray for me, for it seems that I am
becoming - gasp! - semi-skilled! Yes, I'm afraid it's true, my friends.
The hideous shroud of competence has begun to settle upon my unwilling
countenance, and I find myself suddenly fearful that I will soon be bereft
of amusingly foolish anecdotes to share with you.
So I'm forced to conclude that it's time for drastic, even heroic
measures. Perhaps the time has come for me to chop off a thumb so that I
can re-establish my links to that familiar, former clumsiness. That would
certainly set me back a bit on the skill-scale, don't you think? However,
you can rest assured that, should I elect to exercise such extreme tactics
to retain my treasured spot in Chuck's List of Columnists, I will be
careful to preserve it in a nice, big jar of formaldehyde. Heaven's
awaiting! |