THE JOY OF DOING IT YOURSELF
Magazine: Popular Mechanics
Issue: ?
Date: April 1993
Cover: HOME IMPROVEMENT GUIDE (photograph of Tim Allen on cover)
Page: 68-69
Author: Tim Allen
"Doing it yourself is an act of creation."
I've always loved POPULAR MECHANICS. Ever since I was a kid I've often dreamed
of the predictions promised for the future, though I must confess to a few
disappointments. Where are those backyard monorails in tubes? All we have is
Amtrak. Or cars that can fly? I guess the American Automobile Association
squelched that one. Or how about cities in bubbles? Is Biosphere II the best we
can do?
But enough about the future. We're talking about do-it-yourself. I'm a nut about
building things. I've always loved the before-and-after process. I'm also a
sucker for the makeovers you see on "Home Again With Bob Vila" and "This Old
House." Or even the ones you see on "Sally Jesse Raphael," some of those beauty
makeovers qualify as home improvements if you ask me.
I think what attracted me to tools in the first place was their possibilities. I
mean, they are, in effect, weapons for pacifists. You can't help but get pumped
up at the thought of nail guns, ripping routers, pneumatic drills, acetylene
torches gouging tips and dado-head buzz saws. Arrgh, arrgh, arrgh!
Experts in psychology and sociology claim that men enjoy building things because
they can't have babies. I think that's a pretty good analogy. For the
do-it-yourselfer, it's almost a parent-child bond that develops over the course
of a project. The difference is that a baby will wake you at 3 am, a
do-it-yourself project will keep you awake until 3 am.
Half the fun of building a do-it-yourself project is in the planning and
preparation. Drawing up sketches and blueprints, going to the hardware store and
the lumberyard -- the twin states of nirvana for D-I-Yers--picking out all the
supplies and the raw materials and finally strapping on the toolbelt, the
holster of home repair.
As much as I love doing it myself, sometimes the job calls for the big guns --
the guys with the heavy-duty equipment. Still, it's fun to watch them using all
that heavy artillery -- cement mixers, back hoes, trenchers, earthmovers,
steamrollers. Arrgh!
Just watching these guys in action gives me such a vicarious thrill that I want
to jump in and help. But I've learned from personal experience that this can be
both dangerous and costly. Besides, professionals usually frown on that sort of
thing: "Please take off the drywall stilts, Mr. Allen." "Turn off the
steamroller, Mr. Allen." "You're gonna pay for that, buddy!"
All in all, doing it yourself is, in effect, an act of creation, an the phrase
"do-it-yourself" has one magic word in it: you. What you build becomes your
creation, your baby. Something to think about when you're contemplating using
the cheap nails.
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