I’ve got a mobile home (double-wide, to be exact) to fix up and sell.
As some of you know, we recently moved to a new home here in Austin and now I need to prepare the old homestead for sale and move-out. (pics and video are forthcoming, I promise).
Good thing I have the promise of knowing that hardworking, honest people who care are out there. And it’s nice to know they are painfully honest.
I have an appointment with a handyman to come out next week and give me a bid on doing some work here and there – power wash the outside, rebuild a couple sections of flooring that got wet, fix some walls, lay down some vinyl tile - you know… stuff.
Stuff I’d do myself if I had time. Don’t even get me started on the cleaning that has to happen.
You see, the work itself is something I find fun and rewarding, but I just don’t have the time. I’m the type of guy who likes to learn how to do something – just about anything - once. I’ve changed my own oil – once. I’ve rebuilt a carburetor – once. I’ve laid tile, installed carpet, put up a dividing wall, poured concrete, dug a fire pit, changed my tires, installed a garbage disposal, painted a house, replaced heating elements in a water heater, built a computer from as scratch as you can get, installed a level brickstone walkway, resurfaced furniture and raised a couple of kids (well, halfway so far). These are things I’m glad I know how to do, but I don’t want to do them every time, or very often.
Once is enough for most of it.
Now that I think about it, it’s not just about the fact that I don’t have the time. It’s about efficiency, too. Sure, it’s good to know how to do a lot of things… it helps you learn, you become smarter, more self-reliant, and if nothing else, you know how to spot a bad job when you see it. But people who do things for a living are usually better, faster and more efficient than someone who just does it the first couple of times. So while I know how to change my own oil, when *I* do it, it’s a mess and it takes me about 5 times as long as someone who does it every day.
About the only thing left is to figure out how to set up little mini-services for people who A) absolutely have the time to do a specific chore and B) have the money to pay for the chore to be done but C) want no part whatsoever in doing the chore (or) might do a horrible job at it.
The example I’m thinking of right now is puppy dog poop stains. I just want to call someone out to clean it up and clean it up right. Sure, I have the time. Sure, I have some of the right equipment. But I know that there are people who are much better at doing that kind of stuff and won’t leave such a stain. They can go door-to-door with a backpack-steam-vac and make the carpets look like new instead of like mushed up plastic swirlies.
Sigh. I guess it’s the price I pay until we can get a doggy door installed at the new house.
He sure is cute, though.














I love the commercial. I, too, like to do things the first time. I like figuring things out and tinkering, but I’m not so big on repetitiveness. In my work that pretty much works in my favor because every job is at least a little different from every other job. I don’t do more cookie cutter kind of stuff than I have to.
marilyn´s last blog ..Fort Hood on Peace Day
LOVE that dog!!!!
Sybil Law´s last blog ..Please.
“But people who do things for a living are usually better, faster and more efficient than someone who just does it the first couple of times.” That is incredibly intelligent, and it baffles me how many people do not understand that. It’s why I don’t dye my own hair, too.
Congratulations on being the first blog I’ve ever read which included the phrase “puppy dog poop stains”.
Just between you and me, sometimes cat owners have (*ahem*) similar problems.
Good luck.
Janna´s last blog ..Just imagine if he knew about bird poop
hope your old place sells soon!
also? that is one adorable puppy. LOVE!
I love that commercial and I would buy anything that girl wanted to sell to me.
Avitable´s last blog ..The methodology of consolation