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  1. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by chambezio View Post
    Another damned annying thing I do repeatedly is, I will be making something that needs to be welded then drilled then another operation.....between apparatus I will lose what I am working on. Just can not see it....in really bad cases I have gone to the house dragged out wifey to find the article that I can't find after I describe it to her she says "this thing?". It was right under my nose the whole time but I was blind to it.
    That happens to me a lot. The best thing I find is to stop looking and switch to another project and 15-20-45-100 mins or days later I usually stumble across what I was looking for. Not always though, somewhere there's a green Bosch driver with a small Tek screw bit in it. Fortunately I have multiple spares of these bits as I have lost these many times and ended up buying and the of course finding them again. Not the Bosch driver though. DANG!

  2. #17
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    Oct 2013
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    Perth, Australia
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    I'm probably pretty well qualified to talk about this as I'm bi-polar as well.

    It's hard. When you're manic you can work for days on end with no sleep, no food and feel like a million bucks. Everything flows so well that it makes really hard to put things down and dedicate time to real life. I used to really feed off this routine when I was younger, I'd pick something that interested me and throw myself into it 100% to the point where eventually I'd burn out completely. Learned to play bass guitar, wound up doing 50+ gigs in my first year with a band and then quit 5 years later never to touch a bass again. After that I got into gig photography, shot 2-3 gigs a week until I burned out on that 2 years later and never touched it again.

    Its all about balance for me, I'm much better at finishing projects when I come back to them for an hour or so every few days instead of spending all weekend on something. I find the best way to manage it these days is trying to think about everything and have a list of tasks on my phone that lets me break everything down into small chunks. This helps me get over the initial hurdle of feeling like the task is insurmountable or running into issues where I need something I don't have.

    I try not to beat myself up over things that don't get done too, I've been working on a bandsaw project for the last 4 months but large swathes of that were periods of no activity where I'd just sit around staring at the parts. There were times as recently as a week ago when I thought it would never get finished but I kept chipping away at it and got it all reassembled yesterday.

    Edit: Basically Google Keep is my life, here's the bandsaw card.


  3. #18
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    Feb 2009
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    moonbi nsw Aus
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    70
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    Thanks Bueller for your frank details about your Bipolar.
    I can empthise with your words. In my case I cycle every 6 weeks, roughly, I fall into a heap and cannot do anything but sit for hours in front of the TV and be bored! Then I slowly can get going but its all tentative.

    I make a lot of lists too. I try to put all of what's in my head whirling around in a list to try and make some order of things. Some things on the list will appear a lot of times on subsequent lists.

    I am always amased just how many Forumites have varying degrees of Depression but it does give some comfort to know I am not alone
    Just do it!

    Kind regards Rod

  4. #19
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    Feb 2006
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    Perth
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    Quote Originally Posted by BobL View Post
    That happens to me a lot. The best thing I find is to stop looking and switch to another project and 15-20-45-100 mins or days later I usually stumble across what I was looking for. Not always though, somewhere there's a green Bosch driver with a small Tek screw bit in it. Fortunately I have multiple spares of these bits as I have lost these many times and ended up buying and the of course finding them again. Not the Bosch driver though. DANG!
    YAY! found the Bosch Driver. It was in the study under a pile of paper. It didn't have the Tek Screw bit in it though, it had my long Phillips bit in it - I wonder where that had got to.

  5. #20
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    Feb 2009
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    moonbi nsw Aus
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    Your story about your Bosch Driver reminded me that this "can't find anything" type of syndrome started with me a long time ago.

    My 21 st birthday was in June. (No not this year). At my parents house there was a porch open to the heavens. Dad borrowed a truck tarp to close it in for the party. I worked off a step ladder to attach the tarp to the house. It worked a treat for the night.

    Years later Dad was painting the house. He was painting the gutter above the porch and found my 2 ft pinch bar sitting in the gutter. It had been there for probably 10 years. And you know what, I really didn't miss the pinch bar in that time. Since then I now have a certain affinity with the pinch bar.
    Just do it!

    Kind regards Rod

  6. #21
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    Post

    Just how many isms are there and need they be confined to what has so far been discussed about
    and confessed to here?

    My personal most prominent ism is CYNICISM. I confess to an excess of this, especially around election times.

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Camden, NSW
    Age
    75
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    192

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    I have very few self imposed rules but these few do include NOT discussing other people's religion, politics, how they bring/brought up their children nor their placement, if any, on THE SPECTRUM. However, due to Mrs Fletty's chosen career and my work history that has required quick and accurate assessments of people's abilities, strengths and weaknesses, I have had a lot of informed exposure to people who are on the spectrum or different in other ways and how to help those people to use the strengths that come with their ability.
    In this thread, some of my favourite people on the whole forum are baring their souls and I feel the need to add my tuppence. Firstly it also seems to me that our hobby attracts a disproportionate number of people with bi-polar, Aspergers and depression? I have previously reasoned that this is because it is an activity that is done on our own, values quality, is not time driven and therefore can be left and taken up again usually without an impact on anyone other than US? IF we turn that hobby into anything more then we do impose time pressures and do have an impact on others if we take a break. However, if it is a hobby then I personally don't see any problem with stopping for a while nor not even starting? I am quite sure that our relevant families know us better than we know ourselves and really aren't surprised if jobs take a long time or if we can't find anything after a 'boy look'? They just seem happy with us if we are happy with ourselves.
    I am not aware of my own ISMs but I do know that I drive my nearest to distraction with my absolute need to complete projects to a self-imposed deadline or even to create a situation that imposes such a deadline such as this year's sharpening gtg that was my way of creating an otherwise unnecessary deadline to get my shed finished!
    My asthma meds , especially the steroids, result in my case in poor sleep, an inability to shut down and doing every complex job in my head many times before I actually do it? I even make mistakes in these 'dreams' and, when I actually do the job and make a real mistake, I have already solved it in a previous dream that is completely and immediately recalled!
    I have conversed with many of you on the forum and have also met a surprisingly large proportion. I value ALL of those relationships and have never found any of the issues that worry YOU to be issues that in any way demean you, your skill, nature nor value to this World of ours.
    If I have stepped over any lines I apologise. We are all amazing creations of Nature who naturally and statistically fall into a spectrum and thank Heavens for that, BUT someone, probably in the late 19th Century, decreed that some part of this fabulous spectrum is 'normal' and therefore all other parts are not normal? I say "phooey" to that and use this forum as an example that it takes all "ISMs" to make this World go round and, like this forum, it goes around pretty bloody well!

    fletty
    a rock is an obsolete tool ......... until you don’t have a hammer!

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
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    moonbi nsw Aus
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    Alan... thank you for your overview of this thread. From what you have said high lighting the fact that IT DOESN'T MATTER that we have times where we can't be as efficient as we would like!! We are taught at an early age to work but we are not taught to retire. I for one will be trying to get a better mind set on activities that I do.

    The frankness of people's personal matters has always been a comfort to me. To know that others are going through similar stuff is a real comfort and a reassurance that it is "normal"
    Just do it!

    Kind regards Rod

  9. #24
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    Thumbs up

    Well spoken Fletty!!

    I think most of us have lived long enough and had enough experiences in life to basically accept wht happens
    or comes our way.I find it best to accept things and people for what they are, look for the positives and try
    not to dwell on the negatives. Life has been so much better since I came to this way of thinking.

  10. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by fletty View Post
    We are all amazing creations of Nature who naturally and statistically fall into a spectrum and thank Heavens for that, BUT someone, probably in the late 19th Century, decreed that some part of this fabulous spectrum is 'normal' and therefore all other parts are not normal? I say "phooey" to that and use this forum as an example that it takes all "ISMs" to make this World go round and, like this forum, it goes around pretty bloody well!
    Excellent sentiments but this "rejection of outside normal" happened well before the 19th century,
    Persecution or ostracism of individuals with different beliefs, ways of living or outlook etc, happened in prehistoric times.
    Witch burnings, institutionalisation or banishment of mentally ill family members, and current/ongoing racist and cult behaviour are all examples of the same thing.
    It is after all (after sex) directly related to humans favourite pastime ie to tell others what/how/why to do what they do?
    Politics and religion are often used as covers for shoehorning every one into the same box sometimes with disastrous outcomes.
    Provided it's not harming anyone else I don't see any difference between accepting the strange (to us) eating behaviour of an Inuit, the cross dressing behaviour of the next door neighbour, or the expressions emitted by someone with Tourettes.
    Think of how boring life would be if every one was "normal".
    As one of my mates puts it about one of his extremely self centred BP mates, "All part of life's rich tapestry" .

    We are taught at an early age to work but we are not taught to retire. I for one will be trying to get a better mind set on activities that I do.
    I like the bit about "not taught to retire". For the first year or so of retirement I ran around like a headless chook and it took me some time to realise I could 9 out of 10 times put off what I was doing until another time.

  11. #26
    Join Date
    May 2010
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    Reading this thread is somewhat like looking in a mirror, but not quite an exact reflection.

    I have a way of completing the project "in my mind" at some point along the progress. Once I can see the completed item in my mind it is often very difficult to then get the motivation to complete it in real life.

    If the project is essential, well the motivation is there, but if it is something I was doing just to see if it could be done or to test out a theory, as soon as that is done in my mind, I lose the incentive to do the last little bits, regardless if it is only half an hour's work to finish off what could be a useful item.

    I also get some "circular logic" problems involving such things as - to complete Task A, I need to get Items B, C and D. I want to make Item B for myself but making Item B will be a lot easier after I have completed Task E. But I can't start Task E until I have completed Task A, and around we go.

    I do not believe I am bipolar, but I think I have been suffering PTSD since part way through my time in the Army and had this condition exacerbated about 18 months ago due to a serious incident.

    In recent times my back pain has been a lot worse, as a direct result of the incident I referred to in then paragraph above. The pain and mental health challenges do make it difficult to attain and maintain motivation, not just in woodwork but all aspects of life.

    Cheers

    Doug
    I got sick of sitting around doing nothing - so I took up meditation.

  12. #27
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    Exclamation

    Just realized that I suffer from oughtism. I ought to...., I ought to......

    Also suffer from schism.. the gap between oughtism and achievement.

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Mar 2013
    Location
    Qld Australia
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    You know that old saying..."It won't happen overnight but it will happen" at least that is what I say to my missus when she keeps reminding me that is a pallet load of paving bricks in the front yard that we bought several years ago to do garden edge borders that still have to be laid. But in my defence I did have some medical issues that developed but I still just don't quite have the enthusiasm to get stuck into them yet. Or the pile of planks in the shed for the patio she wants me to build. They are still drying I keep telling her.

    Trouble is there are too many jobs/projects that keep coming up that get in the way, and if you do get stuck doing something, a solution usually pops up when you are in a totally different project. So my theory is that the universe is telling me do something else until that moment presents itself and extra time is required for completion! That is the story I tell the missus and I'm sticking to it.

  14. #29
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    When I get swamped with the "guilts" about list of jobs that doesn't seem to be deminishing, I make a list. I then go through the list and prioritse the jobs as best I can then try to knock them over. Sometimes it works some times it doesn't.

    After reading Fletty's take on the whole ISM issue with him saying "it doesn't matter" (not doing a full om assault) I feel a lot better about my own list.

    On Saturday I made up my mind to make a steering wheel for my brother's 1928 Chev Truck. It would have to be at least 3 years ago that he asked me to do it for him. I have made it many times in my head in that 3 years but it got to the point that it was beginning to "haunt" me (guilt I think). Ant way I hooked in Saturday and cut the mitres and used epoxy to glue the segments together. On Monday I set the timber ring on the bench and used the router to cut the circle then round it over and finished off the round over inside and out side on the router table. The timber was a very hard Eucalypt which was hard to sand smooth. By late Monday arv the whole thing was done. It made me quite happy too. I will add a photo
    Just do it!

    Kind regards Rod

  15. #30
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ed.. View Post
    Trouble is there are too many jobs/projects that keep coming up that get in the way, and if you do get stuck doing something, a solution usually pops up when you are in a totally different project. So my theory is that the universe is telling me do something else until that moment presents itself and extra time is required for completion! That is the story I tell the missus and I'm sticking to it.
    Sounds like a good one.

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