Showing posts with label home repair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label home repair. Show all posts
Friday, July 15, 2011

Women and Home Repairs

    by Caren Crane

    A few weeks ago, my best friend confessed that she had no water running from her kitchen faucet, although the side sprayer worked fine. Her husband has been dealing with a mother in very poor health, who lives 4-1/2 hours away from them. He has been trying to work his full-time job while also running her to dialysis, therapy, doctor's appointments and the hospital (which is 3 hours from where she lives). Bad situation and not one that is conducive to DIY plumbing repairs. They don't have money to call a plumber, so the faucet is still not working.

    My friend has friends from out of town coming to stay in a little over a week, so the plumbing issue is making her anxious. After listening to her lament about it this week, I finally said the words I had been carefully holding back behind my bitten tongue ever since I first heard about the faucet. "Why don't you fix it yourself?"

    As most women know, those words can put a strain on a friendship if not said with lots of love and every intention of pitching in to help. I said them with love and promptly began to offer help – from my desk at work, with links to articles and videos on the Internet. Every suggestion was met with stumbling blocks as to why it wouldn't work in her case. Finally, I realized the real issue was the same one I knew existed all along: my BFF, whom I love so dearly, is a Damsel In Distress.

    Now, there is nothing wrong with being a Damsel In Distress. Most of the time, the Damsel flings her soft white hands in the air and rushes off to inform the closest male (significant other, relative, friend or co-worker) of her plight. He rushes in (or moseys over, or rolls his eyes) and fixes it (or promises to...someday or calls someone). I confess, I am not a Damsel In Distress, but I have played one on occasion, especially when it's computer-related and my techno-nerd husband is just upstairs. Or, you know, when I just don't feel like cleaning the dead bird off the porch or mucking out the gutters or whatever.


    Damsels are very clever women, well-versed in the art of getting men (or other women) to do distasteful things for them. But they need lots of patience and I simply don't have enough! I tend to be more of a Rosie the Riveter. The kind of woman who rolls up her sleeves and gets things done, by gum. I come from a long line of Rosies and my mother and oldest sister were (and are) amazing DIY role models.


    After my lovingly offered advice was dispensed, I took what was, perhaps, a rather unhealthy interest in my BFF's faucet with the stuck diverter (my diagnosis). I learned more about kitchen faucets this week than I ever wanted to know! I was determined we would fix it this weekend while her husband was out of town. I also figured if the Allen screw was corroded in place or something, I could always call my husband, Damsel-style, to come lend us his muscle. :P Then we found out it is impossible to get replacement parts for this particular faucet, so my poor BFF will have to get by with the sprayer alone until they can afford a new faucet. So much for me playing Rosie and getting things done! :(

    So, are you a Damsel in Distress, willing and able to coax men (or other women) into riding to your rescue? Or are you a Rosie the Riveter, hitting the home improvement store for parts and the Internet (or even a man) for advice? And what is the toughest home repair you have either tackled yourself or convinced someone to tackle for you? I can't wait to hear your stories!Source URL: http://plasticsurgerycelebrities.blogspot.com/search/label/home%20repair
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Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Pass Me a Hammer...

    My name is Joanie T and I am home repair challenged.

    Yup, can’t do hardly anything when it comes to fixing the things I need repaired around my house. It isn’t laziness….all the time…but a lack of skill and understanding how things work. And I hate it, I really do.

    But my house is now 18 years old and starting to look a bit raggedy. Ok, so hurricane damage might not count as day to day wear and tear but it did get me to taking a look at some things.

    Not that I have an overwhelming need to whip out my trusty “Do It Herself” tool kit (A present from my ever optimistic Daddy on the advent of moving to my own place. Hey! I’ve used the screwdrivers….a few times…in eighteen years.) and fix things. But I do wish I had a better understanding of what DOES need to be done, how it IS done and how much it should COST to get done.

    I’ve had a couple of instances of lack of knowledge impacting getting things taken care of. As many of you know, in September Hurricane Ike blew through my Old Kentucky Home. It stripped some siding off and lifted a boatload of shingles free of their seal.

    I had a reputable roofer come out and give me an estimate. I dutifully waited for the insurance company to send an assessor. I was home when a contracted assessment company came to look at the damage. It was a sixteen year old boy! He was up on my roof for THREE minutes! He sent in a claim for less than 2 pkgs of shingles to replace “the few” that were loose.

    So who do I believe? The roofer who demonstrates how the seal of the roof was compromised, the grit blown off the surface of the shingles into my gutter, the negative impact on the warranty with a patched roof or the main insurance assessor who told me he was “too busy” to re-assess.

    I believed the roofer and got my settlement.

    Even then, I had to deal with a very condescending agent who implied in more than one way that I was being taken. Grrrrr….

    Onto the next home repair. I need the rear door of my garage replaced with a more solid one that doesn’t hang at an angle and actually has a deadbolt that will hold. Thinking I’d go ahead and have the kitchen/garage and basement door replaced I arranged for the home improvement guy to come and measure. Final cost? Over $1,000!!!!! AND that does not include the doorknobs/deadbolts. I dropped the two interior doors.

    Countless friends with busy, handy husbands with lives of their own gasped at my agreement to the rear door anyway. “That’s ridiculous! Call my cousin’s second son’s sister in law’s brother. He’ll do it way cheaper.”

    Yeah? But then if things don’t go right or are done shabbily you might lose friends.

    I’ve tried the Handyman services too and most are just as expensive. Had a guy come by and had to pay a flat rate for 1 ½ hours AND charged for any items used. Very expensive just to get some vents fixed and who knew a simple nail cost almost $3?
    (Of course if my handyman's toolbelt had looked like this guy's it would have been worth it :-)

    So I wish I knew more about home “stuff” like my critique partner who re-did her bathroom…by herself!! I wish I knew how to put down a hardwood floor like I want for my kitchen, hang new cabinets too. Heck, I’d like to know how to hammer a nail straight!

    Guess the closest I’ll come is baking cookies like these :-)


    What about you? Who do you rely on for home repairs? How many have handy husbands/fathers/boyfriends? Do you know how to do “stuff”? Who taught you and what is your favorite tool?Source URL: http://plasticsurgerycelebrities.blogspot.com/search/label/home%20repair
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