Sunday, June 10, 2012

Patience Really Is A Virtue





I have a job that demands that you attempt to do five things at once.  That you hurry up and get everything done yesterday.  A job that requires a great deal of focus and a great lack of patience.  Unrealistic deadlines are promised to appease the client and then we burn the midnight oil to meet that deadline.  Unfortunately this impatience has spilled into the rest of my life.  I get pissed off if I have to wait more than a minute for a red light, or if the ATM machine is not giving me my money fast enough.  I get snappy if my daughter is walking to slow.  I scream at my computer if it's not downloading something fast enough.  I rush into work super early, stay late, sit in traffic and listen to the redundant news reports making observations of our impatient society. This garage project however is slowly eroding that impatience and making me aware that a more normal time line requires the virtue of patience.  When I started I knew the digging was going to take some time.   The demo had to be carefully done, so that would also take some time.  Once I was past that I figured things were going to fly.  But when your goal is to spend as little money as possible and acquire most of the materials for free, things have a way of taking much more time than you expect.  Trying to compact and level the ground where your footing is going to go when you still have a "floating" garage wall in the way takes time.  Building forms when your scrounging wood takes time.  Finding free rebar requires incredible patience! (No one gives that stuff away!) Tying rebar is insanely slow.  Of course there's always that "job" situation that gets in the way.  The weather also took its toll on my timeline.  How easy it is to spend a raining day on the couch with a good book than to be sloshing around in the mud.  This late winter and spring in Seattle have been pretty wet.  But the sun is breaking out of the clouds for longer periods, the days are extending and my motivation to get this damn thing onto a foundation is in high gear.  It survived the winter storms (although the tent is almost toast) but I can't push my luck.  Not to mention I don't want to raise the curiosity of to many neighbors as my garage continues to mysteriously hover eight inches off the ground. But... as I implied, "Patience is not only a virtue in this situation, by completely necessary.


I've had a few small victories over the past months.  I did hunt down some re-bar for virtually free.  Sitting in someone's back yard that he sold me for a third of the going price.  (I will have to calculate how much will go into the garage foundation as I am also building the footing for my kitchen at the same time.)  I have hunted down a couple of salvaged skylights and a window.  I acted to slow on a great daylight door that would have been perfect so that didn't end up in my collection.  (a little to much patience) I also pain stakenly moved over 100 pieces of salvaged limestone pavers to my yard that will eventually be a patio where the tent is currently sitting.


With every victory though, I have had setbacks.  I spent three days tying re-bar into place.  I had to lay it out into the correct location so that it will fit eventually fit within the cinder blocks I plan to make the wall with.  I took my time to measure out and mark the location of where every piece needed to go, only to discover that I was off by 2" each!  I had to cut them all out and start over… Patience!  In order to bend the re-bar, I had to get a hold of a re-bar bender.  I had to keep borrowing one from work and could only use it when they were not using it... Patience!  When I had the money to buy the concrete, the weather was bad.  When the weather was good I didn't have the money... Patience!  

Currently I only have enough forming material to do one side of the garage foundation at a time as.  Once that concrete is poured, I will have to pull apart the forms and reuse them on the other side... Patience!  Of course the big rock I have to form around is not helping either... Patience!

Finally the stars where align!  I had the money, I had the good weather, and I had a truck with a trailer hitch, the rebar in place, I WAS GOOD TO GO.  I got up early with great anticipation to go get my concrete!  What a way to start my three-day holiday.   Pouring at least one footing was going to be a milestone.  I got to the concrete yard ready for action.  I was then told that the power was down and they couldn't mix concrete that day.  "You'll have to reschedule,” the concrete man said to my disappointed face... Patience.  

Oh well.  I guess I'll weed the garden.

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