The right tools for the job
May. 16th, 2021 02:29 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I just cut a foot of length off my hair. It is now down to my waist. When braided. I watched a couple of youtube videos: Haartraum and Bebexo. I debated whether I needed to get special hair-cutting scissors, but Bebexo specified sharp scissors, and I have a pair of sewing scissors I had gotten sharpened shortly before the pandemic, so I used those.
My hair is wavy and floaty when it's dry, so I did this right after washing it. I combed through it, put in ponytail holders, and cut away. I wasn't willing to rip up my hair by moving a tight ponytail holder down it while wet, so I probably lost some accuracy by using scrunchies instead. It's certainly close enough to straight across for the braid I always wear, and see also wavy and floaty when dry. No one will ever know.
I saved $30, and also escaped a migraine from breathing the chemical soup of a hair-cutting place. It's nice to have the uneven ends cut off, and now I can bend over to pull weeds without the end of my braid dragging through the dirt.
Related to this question of hair-cutting scissors, I've been thinking about this article: The Shopping Cure by Anne Helen Petersen. "The one thing that would temporarily calm me down was buying shit. Not in massive quantities, and not clothes. Just things that seemed like they would fix small problems, fill small lacks."
When does it make sense to make do, and when is it worth getting the right tool for the job?
I recently saw that the writing app Scrivener was on sale for $30, and I went ahead and bought it. Like several of my pandemic purchases, it looked like an impulse purchase, but it was a confluence of opportunity and an ongoing problem, in this case trying to rearrange a bunch of articles into a book in InDesign. Absolutely the wrong tool for that job. Not sure if I'll even be writing another book, but I'll try Scrivener for my articles (which I've been writing in Emacs), and have a new tool available for future projects.
That buying decision also had something to do with finally identifying as a writer. Not because I published my third book after over ten years of writing monthly articles, but because I found myself writing up the minutes for festival project planning meetings. Somehow that flipped the switch in my head from "someone who writes things sometimes" to "writer." And Scrivener is for writers.
I don't know if I've been over-buying because of the pandemic, or if I've been pushed more toward a reasonable amount of buying tools after growing up with the idea that buying nothing was the ideal. It is appealing to be able to solve some small problems (and support some tool-makers) with the application of money, since the big problems are so intractable.
My hair is wavy and floaty when it's dry, so I did this right after washing it. I combed through it, put in ponytail holders, and cut away. I wasn't willing to rip up my hair by moving a tight ponytail holder down it while wet, so I probably lost some accuracy by using scrunchies instead. It's certainly close enough to straight across for the braid I always wear, and see also wavy and floaty when dry. No one will ever know.
I saved $30, and also escaped a migraine from breathing the chemical soup of a hair-cutting place. It's nice to have the uneven ends cut off, and now I can bend over to pull weeds without the end of my braid dragging through the dirt.
Related to this question of hair-cutting scissors, I've been thinking about this article: The Shopping Cure by Anne Helen Petersen. "The one thing that would temporarily calm me down was buying shit. Not in massive quantities, and not clothes. Just things that seemed like they would fix small problems, fill small lacks."
When does it make sense to make do, and when is it worth getting the right tool for the job?
I recently saw that the writing app Scrivener was on sale for $30, and I went ahead and bought it. Like several of my pandemic purchases, it looked like an impulse purchase, but it was a confluence of opportunity and an ongoing problem, in this case trying to rearrange a bunch of articles into a book in InDesign. Absolutely the wrong tool for that job. Not sure if I'll even be writing another book, but I'll try Scrivener for my articles (which I've been writing in Emacs), and have a new tool available for future projects.
That buying decision also had something to do with finally identifying as a writer. Not because I published my third book after over ten years of writing monthly articles, but because I found myself writing up the minutes for festival project planning meetings. Somehow that flipped the switch in my head from "someone who writes things sometimes" to "writer." And Scrivener is for writers.
I don't know if I've been over-buying because of the pandemic, or if I've been pushed more toward a reasonable amount of buying tools after growing up with the idea that buying nothing was the ideal. It is appealing to be able to solve some small problems (and support some tool-makers) with the application of money, since the big problems are so intractable.