|
Operation Closet
by: Ieuan Dolby
When the wife comes to you one fine day and says, “dear, I think
we need a new closet for the bedroom”, the heart surges in joy.
Immediate thoughts of grabbing the coat and rushing off on a mission
to the nearest DIY center enters the mind before realization dawns
that first must come a shower and then work. Thursday today,
Saturday would be best! A whole day of fun and joy to look forwards
to! “Yes dear”, you say casually, “I will get the car out on
Saturday and look for something nice”.
What a shame it was not Saturday when she had told you this. That
would have meant immediate action. But this way you have two whole
days to plan and work on OPERATION CLOSET. Two days to think about
where to search for the perfect piece in all of the hundreds of
shops surrounding your town. Two whole days to dream about buying
this closet, taking it back home and assembling it and afterwards
proudly displaying the finished product to a proud and satisfied
Wife.
Saturday seems ever so far away. Sleep becomes impossible as the
day draws near and the happy thoughts of OPERATION CLOSET, the fun
and the happiness that goes with building ones own furniture is soon
to become reality. Ah, come on and hurry up Saturday!
Eventually the day arrives and out of bed you jump, eager to be
on the road and out on the Search. Eager to return with your
purchase and to be deeply involved in its construction, eager to be
surrounded by the endless panels and screws and eager to see a
creation come to life. Yep, it is Saturday and “happy” day. The
Wife’s attempt to ruin all by suggesting that you buy an already
assembled closet and using a past occasion as reason for this (when
you had assembled the Kitchen Dining Table and stuck a screwdriver
through your foot) are ignored and you stick by your guns. A DIY
closet must be purchased as a DIY closet can fit in the car and is
cheaper; a pre-assembled closet would cost more and have to be
brought back home by a delivery company. “NO, DIY it will be”, you
say with authority and stamp out the house on the start of your
mission before the wife can lay other obstacles in your path.
As you get into the car the Wife shouts after you, “I’ll be out
all day, try and get it all finished before my parents come this
evening will you”?
Freedom and on the road at last. After much searching around the
various shops and comparing prices you soon have the perfect unit
balanced across the back of the car and are winging your way back
home. Part one complete. Part two coming up.
Back at the house you gleefully bring the whole box of panels and
associated bits into the bedroom, having previously made a space for
it and removed the old closet out of harms way. So you have space
and the various sections to be made into something usable. All that
is required now are some tools and a cup of coffee. Downstairs for
the toolbox, into the kitchen for the hot cup of coffee and back
upstairs it is. NB: Must clean up the coffee spill on the stair
carpet before the family return.
Okay, everything is in order, coffee at hand and you are all
alone to enjoy life at its best. First of all you sit there just
soaking up the atmosphere and considering changing jobs to that of a
Test Engineer at a furniture factory, then you make your first move
of laying out the essential tools in a neat row along the floor by
the door. A screwdriver, a sharp knife, a hammer, a tape measure and
another screwdriver all placed neatly and ready for use. Next you
use the sharp knife to open up the box and smile at the sight of all
that wood! Laying out the panels in order you slowly empty the box
until nothing is left, sitting back and grinning from ear to ear at
the sight around you, now that phase two has been completed.
But wait! Something is missing! You search around desperately for
the assembly diagram, the one that should have been stuck inside the
box, under the wood or in the bag of hinges and screws. It must be
somewhere and you search again, looking in the car, under the wood,
in the box and in the kitchen – anywhere that it might be. Calm
down, you tell yourself, phone the company ask them if they have a
new one or spare one or maybe it fell out at the shop. After a few
phone calls’ you sit back in total despair. The lady at the shop had
kindly said “have you looked in the box”? And the lady at the
factory condescendingly said, “oh no, we don’t include diagrams with
our latest range”.
NO DIAGRAM? What do you mean NO DIAGRAM?
All is not that bad. Gaining second wind and laughing at yourself
for the panic you go back upstairs convincing yourself that it can
not be that difficult. A couple of shelves, a back and a front and
some sides’ that is all there is to building this up. What could be
easier than that? You are now convinced that all will be easy and
back to work you go with gusto and renewed energy! All you have to
do is to arrange the separate pieces into order of place and work
from there. Find the back, the bottom and two sides and then screw
them together. After that, well, just fit the doors and “bobs your
uncle”.
Seven hours it takes you. Seven hours of head scratching,
sweating nervousness that the wife should return early and of
seriously considering running out and buying a pre-assembled unit.
Seven hours of puzzlement about why no panels are of the same size,
why the floor is three inches shorter than the top and why there are
not enough screws for the job. Seven hours of panic and heartburn as
you precariously balance on one foot, holding one side up with your
elbow and attempting to get a screw into place with your mouth.
Seven hours of trying to figure out how you managed to get the door
handles inside instead of out and why you had to open the left door
before the right door would open.
The first hour of all of this was spent trying to work out which
piece was the floor. Deciding that it was the oblong section that
had screw holes in it you had suitably attached it to what you
thought was the right side. Whilst trying to balance on the washing
basket and fix what you thought was the top onto what you thought
was the side, you fell off seriously damaging your ankle and cutting
your finger on the knife that had been lying beside the door. It was
whilst looking upwards and deciding whether to nurse your ankle or
suck on your bleeding finger that you noticed that the top was not
the top after all. And that the bottom was actually an internal
shelf and that the side that you had made so many holes in was after
all, the door.
It was after seven hours that you managed to assemble a closet
into some sort of order. One door did have a few extra holes in it
and the other door did have a rather large coffee stain in the
middle but it was together. Oh, and the back did look a mess as in a
temper you had accidentally punched a hole through the thin plywood
and nailed it crooked to the closet frame. The door handles that you
had broken whilst removing them from the inside of the doors to the
outside looked okay once taped together and the mirror that you had
cracked was not needed anyway – that you had removed outside to the
garage never to be talked about again.
Tools away, cup back in the sink, plaster on the finger and a
soaking hot bath later and you are sitting comfortably with a
newspaper in front of the television. Secretly swearing to yourself
that you would never ever do such a thing again. Pre-assembled
furniture all the way from now on you say to yourself. The wife on
her return complains about the coffee stain on the stairs, makes
some comment about the closet looking like a twenty year-old
disaster and then goes to make dinner. Operation Closet complete and
behind you!
SIX MONTHS LATER
One fine day, there you are eating your cereal in the morning and
the wife comes along and says, “we need a new dresser in the spare
room”. Your heart jumps and without falter you say “yes dear, I will
get the car out on Saturday and look for something nice”.
PART TWO: OPERATION DRESSER – Coming Soon!
About The Author
Ieuan Dolby, from Scotland is an Engineering Officer in the Merchant
Navy. He has been travelling the world for 15yrs on an endless
tour of cultural diversification. Currently based in Singapore
he writes various articles for magazines and newspapers and is
working on a marine glossary.
ieuandolby@lycos.com |
|