09-28-2015, 10:12 PM
Some years ago, when I was still setting up my first "serious" woodworking shop, somebody posted a note on Woodnet about Woodworkers Attention Deficit Disorder (WADD). His point was that he kept getting distracted from what he was trying to do by some other task, for example, trying to plane something being interrupted by the need to sharpen the plane iron, and then being interrupted by having to dress the stone. Then, back to the planing, being interrupted by finding a way to hold the workpiece, being interrupted by having to drill another dog hole in the workbench. These are my examples, I hope you get the idea.
The guy was a psychological genius and WADD deserves to be in the diagnostic manual. I recognized that i had it at the time. Even though I had put a lot of thought into setting up my shop I had many episodes of WADD. As the years rolled by, the frequency of my WADD episodes gradually lessened.
Now I have downsized, gotten rid of a few stationary tools (jointer, table saw, etc.) and moved to a one-car garage shop. The WADD has returned. It seems that every operation has to be interrupted for some preliminary that I took care of years ago but which now has to be done again. My normally slow work now requires time lapse photography to be detectable. A three-toed sloth asked me to hurry up yesterday.
That would be pretty much OK except now I tend to forget what it was I was originally trying to do before I remembered that my medium shoulder plane is still packed away in a box somewhere.
Let's see -- I know I had a point to make when I started this note . . . Oh, yeah, having to learn how to do basic operations (eg tenons, box joints) without a table saw is actually fun. This, along with the WADD, reminds me of the joy I took, many years ago, in learning this wonderful craft.
Doug
The guy was a psychological genius and WADD deserves to be in the diagnostic manual. I recognized that i had it at the time. Even though I had put a lot of thought into setting up my shop I had many episodes of WADD. As the years rolled by, the frequency of my WADD episodes gradually lessened.
Now I have downsized, gotten rid of a few stationary tools (jointer, table saw, etc.) and moved to a one-car garage shop. The WADD has returned. It seems that every operation has to be interrupted for some preliminary that I took care of years ago but which now has to be done again. My normally slow work now requires time lapse photography to be detectable. A three-toed sloth asked me to hurry up yesterday.
That would be pretty much OK except now I tend to forget what it was I was originally trying to do before I remembered that my medium shoulder plane is still packed away in a box somewhere.
Let's see -- I know I had a point to make when I started this note . . . Oh, yeah, having to learn how to do basic operations (eg tenons, box joints) without a table saw is actually fun. This, along with the WADD, reminds me of the joy I took, many years ago, in learning this wonderful craft.
Doug