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Ask this old house workbench
Ask this old house workbench





ask this old house workbench

I tried to write some code but honestly I'd rather finish my ethernet project. I think a lot of us are type A, we can't sit still but also know our brains need to recoup and do something else. I've had to make 5 different Home Depot runs in the last two weeks cause I always discover something new. Sure, I could pay someone it would save me time and money but I've learnt a lot about my house and how to fix dry wall :-p. I've been spending my time wiring my house for ethernet. would be another variation of your question about you building sheds. So asking, "why did the home sewer create extra work for themselves to create dresses?". If one asks the home sewer if making that jacket "took a lot of work", the hobbyist will answer "yes" without any irony at all. Same idea as a home sewer that "works" for weeks on their own dresses and jackets while the factory sewer only thinks of needlework as "working at a job". There's a higher goal than any so-called "work" above. It's because the type of "work" above are activities where many people desire to expend the effort. If raising kids is work, why do people have kids? If marriage is work, why do people get married? I thought people hated work?!? If those multiple meanings are not understood, one can twist themselves into rhetorical puzzles such as:

ask this old house workbench

Your question only looks like a puzzle or paradox because the word "work" is overloaded with many meanings and it includes simultaneous connotations of negative "unpleasant chores" and positive "fulfilling efforts". >why does someone create work for themself







Ask this old house workbench