There's
a Welder in My Closet!
by
Linda
Schrock Taylor
by Linda Schrock Taylor
Yesterday
my son signed up for a welding class and was explaining that, since
he has his own equipment and has been welding (self-taught) for
some time, the counselor will ask the instructor to provide more
challenging material. It sounded like a good plan. Later, when my
mind returned to ponder our conversation, I found myself thinking,
"Welder? We didn't move any welder!" Of course, I was picturing
the massive welder that my father used to own; the one that took
up a large percentage of the garage, and needed two men and a boy
just to move it a few inches. Carrying it was out of the question!
I began to wonder where my son could have 'tucked' a welder in this
small place.
I
discovered the answer this morning when I went to get something and
found that truly, there is a welder in a closet, as
well as a large red welding helmet covered with wild flames. Out
of shock and curiosity, I simply had to measure that machine: 9"
Wide by 12" High by 17" Deep. Quite a difference from that monstrosity
in Dad's garage!
I
began to consider other ways that technology is bringing so many
useful items down to sizes more manageable by people living in small
quarters, or having more possessions than people used to acquire.
I thought of my first microwave, and compared it to the little inexpensive,
lightweight one that now does everything better and faster than
that large, heavy, counter-hogging, expensive first one. I appreciate
the "down-sizing" of household items.
I
thought about the furnace in my childhood home, and the amount of
space it occupied in a crowded basement, the noises it made, the
dust it spewed. I compared that to the little boiler that heats
our house. Our furnace is not much larger than my first microwave,
and probably weighs less than that countertop appliance did. The
tiny furnace certainly does a better job, and at much less expense,
than the type that frightened small children and fainthearted ladies.
I relived my childhood fears as Kevin reacted to the basement "monster"
in Home
Alone.
Coming
from a home with a deaf sibling, and being a teacher of the deaf
for so many years, has kept me observant of the changes in hearing
aid technology. One of my college professors had a deaf sister and
he explained that her first hearing aid rode around in a wheelbarrow,
which she pushed in front of her as she walked. Many years later
my brother's first hearing aid was about the size of my digital
camera and was worn around the belly in a harness that went up,
over, and around the shoulders, crossing in the back. I remember
the first over-the-ear hearing aid that I saw and thought a marvel!
Now the aids snuggle into the ear and are far less conspicuous than
eyeglasses. The technology is also far superior for the aids can
be chosen, and adjusted, to increase only the frequencies that the
deaf or hard-of-hearing person's audiogram indicates are being missed
by the individual. The old aids lacked flexibility and amplified
every frequency equally. My grandmother refused to wear hers, for
although it greatly helped her in conversation; the slam of a door
somewhere in the house lifted her out of her chair.
Look
at the televisions and radios of today then recall those of the
past. Technology for aural and visual pleasure comes in every size
and gets much better reception for the stations that the average
user will need. Now, I will admit that there are some huge televisions
out there these days, and I would not dare to lift the one that
my teenage son chose and paid for himself (against Mother's wishes,
I might add). But nowadays you at least get more television for
your money. In the past, as I peered into the back of the TV while
Dad removed blown tubes and replaced them with new ones from a local
store, it always seemed to me that we were getting more wood
for our money!
Remember
how heavy cook stoves used to be? When Grandmother needed a new
one, there was an all-call to every uncle, neighbor and grown cousin
who could come help haul the massive appliance to the barn (where
it still resided fifty years later when I had to clear the farm
for the estate sale.) Although the size of most stoves stays at
30", the heft has not stayed the same. I appreciate that my new
stove is lighter and easier to maneuver, but I do find it unsettling
that it has to be anchored at the back to keep it from tipping forward
if something too heavy is put on the oven door say a large turkey
or a small child. Appliance designers should turn their attention
to making safer and more stable stoves without adding too much extra
weight.
My
aunt, who taught school for fifty years, still has one of the old
style refrigerators with the rounded corners and the big, long handle
that one pulls forward to unlatch the door. It is smaller than my
frig, but probably heavier, and mine has many storage areas hiding
inside, using space that was formerly wasted. It has many shelves
in the door, and deep shelves inside the main box. In addition,
mine has wheels that allow it to be rolled forward to enable me
to clean behind the frig and vacuum the coils for better efficiency
and improved (lowered) energy usage. When growing up, we had one
of those huge heavy ones. To move it was to move dead weight.
Cleaning behind the frig was a project to do only when absolutely
necessary. Once the frig was moved from its resting place, Mom would
react very badly at the sight of all the dirt that had been hiding
in her spotless house!
The
list of items shrunken and improved by technological innovation
continues, seemingly without end: fax machines, stereo equipment,
computers, adding machines/calculators, food mixers, phones… Often
these new marvels and new sizes make life easier and safer. Often,
just the very action of shrinking things, especially household items,
leads people to believe that they have room for all of the things
that we used to manage quite nicely without, thank you very much.
I
often think of some storage units in Colorado Springs named, "YOUR
ATTIC." Maybe that is our problem houses are no longer built with
attics. The stuff has to go somewhere, and with the new,
smaller sizes, even more will fit into a storage space. But the
fun is gone for me. I loved digging through the farm attic to come
up with great items for my first apartment; my first home. It just
isn't the same when a welder, for goodness sake, can go undetected
in my small utility room.
August
23, 2004
Linda
Schrock Taylor [send
her mail] is a free-lance
writer and the owner of "The Learning Clinic," where real reading,
and real math, are taught effectively and efficiently.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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