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- From: jfh@cs.brown.edu (John F. Hughes)
- Newsgroups: rec.boats
- Subject: The Perfected Boat
- Date: 29 Dec 1992 01:04:23 GMT
- Organization: Brown University Department of Computer Science
- Lines: 27
- Distribution: usa
- Message-ID: <1ho86nINNsh6@cat.cis.Brown.EDU>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: euclid.cs.brown.edu
-
- There's an article by Webb Chiles in this month'c Cruising World, describing
- a peculiar moment in his life: he woke up one morning and realized that
- there was nothing left to do on his boat. Everything was done. Sure, the
- main might need replacing in a season or two, but aside from ordinary
- wear and tear items like that, there was nothing more he wanted to do
- to improve his vessel.
-
- I was intrigued, but I didn't have time to finish the article. But it
- did leave me wondering whether I'd like that state of affairs or not.
- I know that my "DO LIST" is a lot logner than I'd like it to be, and
- a lot of the things on it are "must do" items rather than "want to do"
- or "want to do eventually". But suppose I got rid of all the must-do and
- want-to-do, and was left with only the "want-to-do-eventually" items.
- Would I be happy about it, or feel idle?
-
- I know one part of what I'd do: I'd go sailing, of course. But most of
- my maintenance work tends to happen in the early AM, when the winds in my area
- are light, or in the evening, after I've settled at the anchor or the mooring.
- And working on little projects gives me a feeling of satsifaction and
- accomplishment that sitting back and reading would not provide. Maybe it's
- that damned protestant work ethic or something getting to me.
-
- Anyhow, just idle musings. When I described to Gerard Bras what I was planning
- to do this winter/spring, he asked "Are you planning on taking a sabbatical?,"
- so I guess that I'm nowhere near Mr. Chiles's state.
-
- -John
-