roadking wrote:
you'll never work a day in your life.
With sharpening and polishing, that's true. However, I've come to the calm realization that I am a "resolute but reluctant gunfighter" in life. I am often good at things I hate.
Being a good credit manager was my 'adult job' skill-set. Too much pressure, the jobs of hundreds of people teetering on decisions I made, and clueless CEOs who thought my vocal cords were a genie's ATM. And for many years I wondered how people can excel at disgusting jobs. I never found an answer, I simply quit early.
My wife and I have a humorous saying we chant between ourselves on issues like this. We smirk and say, "See the chameleon, laying there in the sun." If you're familiar with the song, then you know that the next lyrics are, "All things to everyone," which of course is impossible.
For me, hard work never unlocked that riddle. For the purposes of this thread, I cannot give fellow members advice on woodworking, redheads, why drunken townies molest peaceful bikers or how politicians discern on how we can spend ourselves rich.
Knives I know. My doctor's wife, a native Japanese immigrant, does not know I am Caucasian. I surprise sushi chef's with better edges. Other than a Japanese history book and a wet rock, I have no formal credentials. I do sleep better and laugh more, however.