A Story On Being Resourceful

2009 September 30
by Grace Boyle

My roommate and I have now been in our new apartment downtown, for almost two months. Our decision to move in and sign the lease was all a whirlwind.

Because we both moved to Boulder and basically sold everything we owned to move across the country and fit everything into our cars (we moved then met each other through work, after moving to Boulder) we lacked a lot of furniture. Our apartment has been a ‘work in progress’ and pieced together from classic IKEA pieces and Craiglist wonders.

The last thing we really needed was an entertainment set for our large television. We found one light blond wood piece, Erica bartered and had the owner deliver it to us. On Friday at 2:00 PM, we quickly scampered from work (our commute is 5 minutes, awesome), paid, then carried the set up to our apartment. I originally worried if the T.V. would fit in the set, but Erica said “Of course it will,” (we call her Amelia Badelia, she doesn’t plan a lot) so I went along with it because she found the timepiece, anyway.

We struggle, hold, lift, grunt and begin to rearrange everything as the sweat perspires on our brows.

Finally we’re ready. We lift the T.V., I’m teetering on my new Chinese Laundry stiletto boots holding an 80 pound T.V. and…

it won’t fit in the entertainment set. All we can do is explode in laughter at the situation. Erica yells, “I’m an asshole!” Because she knew she should have known better and I’m wedged in the corner, not able to move, head thrown back, laughing in disbelief.

Then the point of this story: We decide to not give up and become resourceful.

We get my handy 5-in-1 screwdriver tool, attempt to unscrew one of the top screws to see if we can take the top off the set. Luckily, it’s the right screw connected to the top (and not the screw that holds the frame together) and we begin to make headway while giggling at our absurdity. The top is lifted off, we fit the T.V. in and high-five each other triumphantly. As for the top of the entertainment set, we’ll probably do a joint, abstract painting and hang it on our living room wall.

That’s the thing with life. You improvise and seek resources. Even if means taking apart your entertainment set and using the rest of it for handmade art.

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  • Haha, this is such a great story! I do stuff like that all the time (and um, by the way, kudos on the Amelia Badelia reference...awesome!) Recently my sister and I had a similar problem with a massive 54" TV I inherited. It fits (I planned all THAT out...I'm crazy with detail planning...) but I somehow thought I had the strength of an Olympic weightlifter and my sister and I would totally just be able to lift and load it ourselves.

    This also ended with us breaking into fits of laughter and hysteria at the whole situation. :)
  • @Elisa I usually guesstimate that I can handle anything haha. This happened when I tried to move my new couch even with the help of my strong and tall cousin (I wasn't even considering bringing him until the last minute).

    I really like being resourceful and accomplishing things on my own. Sometimes it turns out to be funny and sometimes really frustrating but always a good life lesson right?

    I also took out a piece of this post about how I don't have a boyfriend and Erica's is long distance, so we NEVER have someone to do the heavy lifting or grunt work (but I wanted to avoid a gender debate and sexism talk, because that wasn't my intent) but anyway...I think you know what I'm saying.

    I love having my independence and I wouldn't change it. Glad you liked the post and kudos to you and the sis!
  • Haha this story is sooo cute and funny!

    Imperfect action is better than none.


  • @Susan I know, it was! I am glad you enjoyed it. I really like this, "Imperfect action is better than none."
  • Good for you! This is a GREAT lesson. I try to be a resourceful person...I hate quitting. But I know if that were me, I probably would've had my boyfriend do it for me instead of embarking on the adventure myself. Thanks for the reminder that my resourcefulness can extend even to handiwork.
  • @Akirah I know, funny you should say that. I used to have a few sentences at the beginning of this how I don't have a boyfriend and my roommate's boyfriend is long-distance so we end up doing a lot of resourceful things (that boyfriend' s nicely do;)

    I'm glad you liked the story, I thought it was really funny!
  • Way to go! Make do with what you have. Hook it up. Find another angle.

    I am trying to be resourceful with my professional life - stop relying on clients and other people' ideas - and be bolder and more action with inventing my own kinds of income.
  • @Brett Being resourceful, professionally for your career is a fantastic way to think. Your mind is always open and you're a step ahead of each person. It becomes hard when you rely on everything else to find success.
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