Tag: projects

  • The Reverse-Engineering Optimist: Finding Joy in the Fix

    My house is less a home and more a low-stakes escape room of maintenance problems. But lately, I’ve realized the fun isn’t just in fixing the leaky faucet; it’s in the self-reflective mini-game that comes with it. Whether it’s a bit of minor plumbing, installing a security camera, or swapping out a light switch, these small projects have become my form of focused, productive meditation. I get to act as a Reverse-Engineering Optimist: I look at the existing chaos, decide on the perfect, tidy end-state, and then figure out the ridiculously specific steps to bridge the gap.

    This process gives me a tangible sense of control. Take my collection of UPS batteries. I knew they were aging, but I had no simple indicator of their remaining life. The end goal was reliable battery backup, but the path was murky, requiring a specific electrical procedure. It took a few days of research, wrestling with confusing instructions, and buying a specialized load tester. That small journey—the learning, the successful testing, and the ability to say, with certainty, “These batteries are good for another year”—was intensely gratifying. It wasn’t just a fix; it was a solved mystery that I, and only I, took the time to unravel and codify.

    I could certainly hire a contractor to wave a magic, expensive wand and fix everything. But the real goal is the internal one: to feel good about accomplishing things and to build a sense of personal competence. I aim for maybe one small win a day. The trick is managing the project list without letting it become a source of stress. When a project stalls—and they always do—I simply pivot to another one and don’t constantly worry about the stall. The point isn’t to achieve zero deferred maintenance; it’s the personal victory. It’s like skipping the store-bought art, grabbing the paint-by-numbers, and being able to point to it and say, “I made that.”