Results 21 to 23 of 23
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04-18-2008, 11:39 PM #21
- Join Date
- Mar 2008
- Location
- NYC
- Posts
- 33
Thanked: 2Slightly off topic.
I'm a professional stage carpenter. I'm also one of the most old school guys in the shop where I work. I almost never use a hammer to hammer in a nail. Tap something into position, yes. Pull nails, sure. Put in a mechanical fastener (read, "staple") pneumatic all the way. Just the way it is. . . . .
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04-20-2008, 07:18 AM #22
- Join Date
- Mar 2008
- Location
- Portland, OR
- Posts
- 44
Thanked: 3
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04-20-2008, 07:43 AM #23
Army Reserve, 97-04. I'll add a vote to your theory. I'll also add a corollary: the military can awaken you to how bad shaving can be. At Basic Training, those found at any time to have an unsatisfactory state of facial smoothness were handed a Bic disposable and observed as they dry-shaved on the spot. And there's nothing like trying to get a close shave with a Mach 3 in the field and "properly dispose" of cream/gel whatever. I got to the point where I just dry-shaved in the field, and lived with the misery of it all. So the Army taught me to hate shaving, and straight razors showed me how if done properly shaving can be thoroughly enjoyed.
On a slightly different note, I'll add another corollary: there seems to be a lot of "self-sufficient/self-reliant" folks around here. People who appreciate the "do it right, do it yourself" mindset. I find that marksmen, craftsmen, hackers (the real kind who solve problems creatively and effectively, not the idiot crackers who cause problems), and other types of folk who appreciate solving a problem or overcoming a challenge (in this case facial hair) in a personalized, highly effective, worthy-of-pride kind of way seem to be well-represented here. It just so happens that these are also traits that seem to be well-represented in soldiers.