Heterosexual Eye For The Married Guy

[Editor’s Note: Of course the topic of today’s lesson has already happened. It’s set in the future tense to add excitement. We promise not to lie about the timetable. We likewise promise to exaggerate about everything else]
{Author’s note:There is no editor}

Sorry about yesterday. Commenter Pastor Jeff wrote: “You. Are. Evil.”

Well, I’m glad you’re paying attention. Yes; yes I am. But never mind that, when it comes to making things domestic on a shoestring budget, I’m not just evil; I’m the veritable Prince of Darkness.

Look, I’ve been making a cozy silk purse out of a domestic sow’s ear for three decades or so now. And I used to watch those shows where you were instructed how to use felt to make your home look like Park Avenue, or how to get a gallon of metallic paint and a rag and make your home into a veritable Studio 54, or get a pile of wooden pallets and make a Chippendale coffee table, and all the other iterations of How-To programming which are like a walk in a barnyard in bare feet for merde. And I’ve come up with a saying for it all: “You can’t do it; they can’t help.”

I’m joshing, but just a little. But I’ve been asked my opinion of amateur do-it-yourself marvels so many times, and turned to my wife in the car ride home and muttered “Home Depot blew up, and Walt Disney vomited on it” so many times, that I’m losing my perspective on the whole “let’s spruce the joint up” vibe. I needed to get my groove back.

I cast my mind back to a lovely bedroom addition an acquaintance (long dead) showed me. He had painted it himself.

It was magnificent. He was retired, and wanted to make this new bedroom sparkle. He succeeded. The room was a perfect Adam interior. Dentillated crown, chair rail, multipane windows, paneled doors, tall scotia capped baseboard. He had decorated and painted and wallpapered it. The wall paper was an exquisite delft blue toile print, and expertly applied. The trim was a strong and rich, dark, bluish-green. The cutting-in lines were straight as a ruler, the finish everywhere smooth and without blemish or stroke; nary a run or drip anywhere. It was the rarest of things: amateur work of the highest quality, and of the most appropriate design.

How long did this take you?

“Three or four months, working seven days a week. I took a Sunday off because I had a cold.”

I’ve told you before, I work all the time. Cry me a river, you typed into your Blackberry with your thumbs, dragging your suitcase through TSA security on your way to your third city in a week. I know, I’m not complaining, I’m explaining.

My wife is the exemplar of: “The cobbler’s children have no shoes.” Our house has no furniture in it, more or less, because I sell all that I make, and I generally only give her the stuff that’s broken or something. Perhaps the experimental designs that look like Dr Cagliari designed them. That sort of thing. And we moved into our Master Bedroom a decade ago before it was finished. And she’s suffered along with it all this time, and now it’s time… well: Attention Must Be Paid. And I’ve sorta promised her not to work on Sunday anymore. Maybe just in the morning. Alright, a little in the evening. Anyhow, after close of business Saturday, I’ll pay attention to her plight for one day.

OK. Look, here’s what we’re gonna do. I’m going to redecorate my bedroom. And I’m going to do it between sunset on Saturday afternoon and sunrise on Monday morning. But that’s too easy. We’ve got to make it inneresting. I’m going to lay points on this. Call your bookie now.

I’m not going to leave the house to purchase anything to accomplish it.

Heads up Martha Stewart and Norm and Effeminate Furniture Arrangers and that dork with the soul patch and the screw gun. This is me taunting you.

So, what do you think, can I do it?

It’s Over (Reprised from 2006)


It’s over.

My wife and I finally looked at each other, and there was nothing left to say. We’d been living a lie all these many years. The thing we thought we had was a chimera. It existed only because we never examined it; to inspect it was to instantly disabuse ourselves of the illusion. We needed a clean break.

We went through the motions for a decade now, pretending everything was okay, but always knowing in our heart of hearts that it had started out defective — and then become shabby; tawdry even. The years had not diminished that suspicion; it only grew. The calendar was the enemy, inexorably pushing us toward our awful, cataclysmic decision. Some barren things become picturesque with time; the most austere patch of ground can adumbrate the most marvelous jumble of life in the garden, for instance; just a little attention and the riffling of the calendar can bring forth a bounty. All the time in the world couldn’t save us. We know that now.

And so, despite the two children that sleep blissfully unaware down the hall, and the huge dislocation it would cause them, and all the time and effort we had sunk into the thing, trying to make what was wrong right- trying to cobble together the happiness of wedded bliss in the squalor of the situation we had conjured, we made our fateful decision:

Our bedroom would have to be painted. There was no way around it.

I Just Read A Comic Book So I Think We Should All Live In A Railroad Freightcar With A Lot Of Windows

My friend the Instapundit is interested in interesting things. But he’s got a blind spot:

I remember reading a Robert Heinlein essay from the 1940s on how absurd it would be to have your car hand-built in your driveway by a collection of artisans, and how homebuilding as practiced was equally absurd. I think he was right.I suppose that’s better than the script-kiddies who think Gene Roddenberry is John the Baptist for our generation; but just.He’s linked to the most tired old trope in architecture: Let’s build houses in a factory! You know, instead of letting cavemen make it out in the landscape! It will be all gadgety and glittery and you’ll be able to plug your iPod into the toilet or the wallpaper or the driveway without a dongle!

Me and Donald Fagen have heard all this crap before:

I’ve taken issue with what passes for architectural analysis at Wired before, and I’m not going to stop now.

Prefab is “modernism’s oldest dream,” curator Barry Bergdoll says. Since the industrial revolution, architects have been in thrall of the idea that houses could be built in factories, like any kind of widget. But reality hasn’t been extremely cooperative. Whether because of conservative public tastes, unachievable economies of scale, or designers’ less-than-stellar business acumen, their utopian visions have mostly remained fantasies.

Don’t you just hate it when reality is uncooperative? Their “utopian visions” have remained fantasies because that’s exactly what they are. Unmoored from the real world in real-time or the future, they identify a problem that does not exist, suggest solutions that are worse than the imaginary problem and have internal inconsistencies that make them null anyway, and then try to ram their goofy ideas into the public sphere over and over. Normal people don’t want to live in an expensive, desolate, cramped, bleak, lifeless terrarium. Film at eleven.

Mass production of houses is an ancient idea, and has already been accomplished to death:

Levitt was able to offer these houses so cheaply because he was applying construction methods perfected in the deployment of prefab housing in the armed services during World War II. Bill Levitt had served as a Seabee during the war, and he learned the techniques of rapid construction using standardized parts, tightly controlled suppliers of goods and services, and a workforce with highly specialized skills. Like the Army’s builders, like the Seabees, Levitt took the mass-production assembly line and converted it so that workers moved from site to site doing their specific targeted tasks. Life, Newsweek, Time, and many other magazines delighted in the story of the painter whose sole job was to paint the window sills of each house; but the example was an apt one, for by moving crews of workers sequentially from house to house, Levitt avoided the necessity of craft workers, unions, and the rest. In addition, his program could tolerate high labor turnover, a dreaded feature of the new prosperity after the end of the war. If one worker left, another could be quickly hired and trained as a replacement.

Economies of scale for cookie-cutter housing were roped and branded the better part of a century ago. There is no more mechanized, technologically astute, nimble, large-project process in America than single-family home building. Why don’t you call up Apple and tell them you want a big black rotary knob on your iPod? You tell your general contractor you want to move bearing walls in your house when it’s half built. Who would take longer and charge more money to accomplish your request? Only Bill Gates can afford to order an iPod with a rotary dial. I see pregnant women in flip-flops moving bearing walls in their own homes on HGTV every night.

The Levittown houses are the very houses that the factory housing apparatchiks sneer at while they try one more time to round us all up and force us to live, alternately roasting and freezing, in the terrarium daytime and fluorescently lit darkness of their glorified stackable FEMA trailers.

Look at the video linked to the article.

At least Lawrence Sass from MIT knew enough to choose a New Orleans Shotgun House to make, which is an essentially humane place to live. But where’s the value added? He plops a CNC router at the jobsite and routs the panels. Whoopty. That house could be made by a framing foreman and a handful of willing grunts in less time and for less money than any prefab deal. The spindlework on a shotgun house was pre-fabbed in factories and shipped to the job way back in the 1800s. Where’s the value added, Lawrence? You’re not bringing much.

The rest of the video is just have the same tired old the house is a machine nonsense we’ve been hearing since 1910, and it ends up looking like the galley kitchen in a 747. Please note that the houses these people make never have anything that looks like humans or their possessions about. I’m sick of people with Martin Bormann accents talking about how ve mussht maik howsays dat ahr masheens fvar livink und the yoomans musht be made to leev in tem fuhr zehr own gut!

People watch high-school dropouts portray businessmen in Wall Street and think that’s how the economy is run. People join PETA because they saw Bambi and think animals can do long division. People read glorified comic books like Heinlein’s and think it would be good public policy if you were required to kill big alien bugs before you could vote, and we should make a 124,000 pound thing in a factory and then drag it to your houselot.

I know exactly how a house was built in the 1940s. I know exactly how a house is built now. Robert Heinlein had no idea what he was talking about then. He has absolutely nothing to offer about the topic now.

Ever read any Heinlein? I have. Here’s a part of a plot synopsis from Wikipedia of one of his:

Their alien kidnapper is nicknamed “Wormface” by Kip, who refers to the species as “Wormfaces”. They are horrible-looking, vaguely anthropomorphic creatures who do not recognize other species as equals, referring to all others as “animals”. Wormface has two human flunkies who had assisted him in capturing the Mother Thing and Peewee, a preteen genius and the daughter of one of Earth’s most eminent scientists. The Mother Thing speaks in what sounds to Kip like birdsong, with a few musical notations in the text giving a flavor of her language. However, Kip and Peewee have no trouble understanding her.

Kip, Peewee, and the Mother Thing try to escape to the human lunar base by hiking cross-country, but they are recaptured and taken to a more remote base on Pluto. Kip is thrown into a cell, later to be joined by the two human traitors, who have apparently outlived their usefulness. Before they later disappear, one mentions to Kip that his former employers eat humans.

You know, you read that, and think: that’s the guy I want picking out tile with me and my wife.

Month: October 2008

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