My father is a mechanic. He did it for a living, repairing helicopters for the Air Force and later diesel engines for various trucking companies. Anything around his house he wants to do, he can make happen. Closet collapse? Get some wood, a saw, hey presto he's got a new shelf. Plumbing go berserk? He'll command the waters to cease with a wave of a wrench, then find the part that has gone to pieces and replace it. He is a man who can make life better with his hands.
I, on the other hand, am a putz. I was never in the least interested in mechanical stuff as a child. I would grow up, go to college, get a nice soft office job, and pay people to do that FOR me. I was the family oddball; a reader, a writer, someone who even as a teenager wanted to go to art museums on vacation. As I start my third decade, however, the childish disinclination against that kind of work has long vanished. I am increasingly interested in self-reliance, and graduating into the middle of a recession with a liberal arts degree has made me well aware of the error of my ways. I'm older, now, wishing I had something more to show for my time on earth, something to prove my worth by. If I had gone to HVAC training, I would not have student loans to worry about! At the very least, I wish I could do things around the house. I wonder, is it too late to learn?
Are some people simply born more mechanically inclined, and able, than others? My interest in being able to do things stems from wanted to be able to DO things, not out of an interest in technology itself. I want to be someone who -- if he can't frame a house -- can at least build a chair out of wooden planks, or figure out what is wrong with a sputtering car. I have studied manuals for things like my bicycle in an attempt to understand the nuances of something like the workings of the sprocket, but then I encounter extended discussion on gear ratios and I back away into a corner like a frightened puppy. I fear that I don't have that instinct for grasping how things fit together, that spatial reckoning. But I don't want to be doomed to understanding life in theory; I want that practical knowledge, that techne.
Is it possible, through practice, to become more mechanically able? What kind of projects are suitable to learn for someone like me, with the abilities of a slightly dazed chimpanzee?
And, for the poll -- how much tinkering and home improvement do you do?
I, on the other hand, am a putz. I was never in the least interested in mechanical stuff as a child. I would grow up, go to college, get a nice soft office job, and pay people to do that FOR me. I was the family oddball; a reader, a writer, someone who even as a teenager wanted to go to art museums on vacation. As I start my third decade, however, the childish disinclination against that kind of work has long vanished. I am increasingly interested in self-reliance, and graduating into the middle of a recession with a liberal arts degree has made me well aware of the error of my ways. I'm older, now, wishing I had something more to show for my time on earth, something to prove my worth by. If I had gone to HVAC training, I would not have student loans to worry about! At the very least, I wish I could do things around the house. I wonder, is it too late to learn?
Are some people simply born more mechanically inclined, and able, than others? My interest in being able to do things stems from wanted to be able to DO things, not out of an interest in technology itself. I want to be someone who -- if he can't frame a house -- can at least build a chair out of wooden planks, or figure out what is wrong with a sputtering car. I have studied manuals for things like my bicycle in an attempt to understand the nuances of something like the workings of the sprocket, but then I encounter extended discussion on gear ratios and I back away into a corner like a frightened puppy. I fear that I don't have that instinct for grasping how things fit together, that spatial reckoning. But I don't want to be doomed to understanding life in theory; I want that practical knowledge, that techne.
Is it possible, through practice, to become more mechanically able? What kind of projects are suitable to learn for someone like me, with the abilities of a slightly dazed chimpanzee?
And, for the poll -- how much tinkering and home improvement do you do?