Monday 7 April 2014

Bath plugs and bad language

We've just had the hallway, stairs, banisters etc in our house redecorated - what you'd call the 'common areas' in a shared block of flats, for example - and a very nice job has been done too. We're very pleased with it.

It has not, though, been without its drawbacks. It suddenly looks miles better than the decorative order of the rest of the house, and suddenly other parts of the place look decidedly shoddy in comparison. As a result, small things which I've lived with for years - since we moved in eight years ago, in some cases - are really starting to bug me. Stuff I've barely noticed before.

The crappy light pull in the bathroom, with its two-metres-too-long cord knotted up into a bunch to keep it short enough. The rust on the balcony outside at the back. The small bit of wallpaper missing from the corner of the living room. The come-away-from-its-mooring sink plug in the downstairs bathroom.

Now, when I was born, all the handiness, all the ability to undertake physical work requiring even minor dexterity was held back, and put into my younger brother. And
I mean all of it. While he can refit his entire bathroom, doing the plumbing and electrics and reconditioning his old sash windows in the process, I can turn even the simplest DIY task into a labour of Hercules, ultimately requiring the attention of a specialist to undo any damage I may have done in the futile attempt to take anything
on myself.

That bath plug, though. Surely I could manage that, yeah? You just take off the old one and put in a new one, right? So I ordered a new chain and stay (check out the use of professional language... oh yeah...) and set about replacing the thing on Sunday.
For those of you not 'in the know' as I now am *cough*, the picture below shows you what I ordered.


The metal bit with the screw thread is the stay. At least, that's what I'm calling it. 
On the old plug, that bit had its arse hanging out, so to speak - it had come loose from its fitting, the chain had broken, and it needed replacing. The screw, though, was completely rusted and frozen solid, which is why it wasn't quite the simple task it should have been. No problem, I thought - a liberal spraying of WD40 will get that baby moving.

I therefore started this task by applying a thorough drenching of this magical chemical. To my left hand. I couldn't see what I was doing because the sink was so tight to the wall; I was having to 'hug' the sink and work blind. Right hand round, squeeze the spray-can between the pipes, find the screw with the other hand and... shit. Missed. Cue first batch of swearing. It would not be the last.

Eventually, I was able to coat the thing in the spray, and I sat back for a bit to let it do its work. I was naive enough to assume it'd be plain sailing from there; that a bit of patience to allow the chemical to do its job was all that was necessary. How mistaken 
I was. It still wouldn't budge. What followed was an hour of shouting, cursing, wrestling and general bad humour as I tried, in vain, to get the damn screw moving. I even tried to get hold of it with pliers, but working completely blind, I spent at least 20 minutes trying to get a grip on the nut. I'm not proud of my language during that time - I may, 
I confess, even have pleaded with the thing for a short while.

I got to the point where, no matter how much resistance this recalcitrant bastard thought it was going to put up, I was not going to let it have its way. I had a bright, shiny new chain and stay to put in - I could not be defeated. I'll have to cut it, I thought. Think like a pro - you'll need leverage, I thought. So I hunted down the longest-handled pair of garden shears we've got, and with those applied as much force as I could to the thing. The result of another half-hour's shouting, screaming and grunting - God knows what the neighbours thought was going on - was a small dent on each side of the thing, and some moderate scratching to the rusted screw thread.

By this point I was pretty sure the old stay was starting to look smug. It was mocking me. My eyes then alighted on a hacksaw in our tool box. Ha! So I cut the bastard's head off! Yes! Just twenty further minutes of sweat and swearing, and it dropped to the floor, beaten. Now all I had to do was install the new one and... where the fuck has the new one gone? 

I'd lost the new one. Through constant sorting of tools, moving two cabinets out of the way and generally destroying the bathroom in my efforts, it had gone missing. It took a further fifteen minutes of searching to find it, buried at the bottom of the tool box under all the equipment I'd tried and rejected. Who can blame the thing? It had probably seen the abuse I was meting out to its older cousin and tried to hide, terrified. I can report, though, that after no more than three hours' work, some extremely creative swearing and enough sweat to fill the bloody sink that I was working on, it's done. I have successfully replaced a plug chain and stay.

My brother's coming up to install the new light switches, sockets'n stuff. 

Probably for the best.

2 comments:

  1. Now that's an home improvement show I would watch. -Liz

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  2. Totally know the various emotions involved Jase as whilst I generally do my best to avoid household jobs I am bold enough to attempt to do running repairs on my road bike.

    As a relatively expensive piece of kit (well now it is after a few tasty-costing bike shop patch-ups in the five years I've had it - a bottom bracket, for instance, I'd left too long wearing itself down cost me £185 to replace) I'm a tad apprehensive of going beyond the more basic tasks for fear I'll only end up botching it and creating an even bigger problem that wasn't there before.

    Up there with visits to a bank and a barber's (I don't enjoy gazing at myself in the mirror for that prolonged time as it seems so unnatural) I was loathe to pop along to a bike shop as it felt both like a massive admission of failure and that I was potentially and very likely laying myself wide open to ridicule once I'd given over my contact details and left the premises by sniggering mechanics incredulous amongst themselves that I couldn't even sort out fitting new brake pads without a hint of squealing on the next ride.

    Like overcoming a phobia by confronting it I've gradually gotten over this hang-up by handing over my money to several different ones with each new visit ... this way I'm forgotten about (in my own mind anyhow) by the time I'm next at any given shop whose turn has come round again and so I present myself like an innocent new customer.

    It really is daft at heart but hey the quirks of the human mind eh??

    Recently I've had a bad run of punctures on my back wheel (the harder one to sort as it's trickier to release and then get back on one you are done - one time I bent the jockey wheels so badly out of line trying to force the chain back on them the replacements cost me £20) with three in three weeks after two around the New Year too.

    Actually I don't mind punctures as I know what I need to do having gained a fair amount of practice now but whether it's the feel of the rubber or maybe just my cackhandedness I dunno you can pretty much guarantee as April follows March that getting the tyre back on will not be straightforward. In the slightest.

    Literally the veins in my neck will stand out and sweat is soon oozing out of me everywhere with me steadily working my way through tea towels Lee Evans-like to mop up the flow ... apparently the best thing to do I've learnt now is to push the inner tube valve back up into the tyre and then ease in the beading around it but this pearl of wisdom only came my way when, not feeling that a repeated tiny bump every few seconds as I rode was the best way to go on, I took it back yet again to yet another bike shop where the mechanic instantly got to the source of the problem.

    Anyway it's sorted now (£6 later although my peace of mind is priceless) but a plan to go on a long-distance ride as I like to do during a school break kind of feels me with dread deep-down as this image of me thirty miles from home and then hearing this low hissing sound keeps entering my head ... in the dark and up a hill.

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