trumbology
"Shift Your Mental Gears" by Donald R. Brann
"Building a bar may seem like a trivial way to shift gears....[but] an enormous percentage, by their own admission, have no desire to shift gears..."
Please, dear reader, don't become a withered flower, with you life spent and all but over by your mid-30s...build that subterranean bar and become a lonely basement alcoholic!
* * * * *
From a series of circa-1960s D.I.Y. books called "Easi-Bild" that were published by a fellow named Donald Brann. In the beginning of each one, he wrote a little homily that tried to link up his own Confucius-like wisdom with whatever Easy Bild project was at hand.
So there would be a couple of paragraphs where he waxed poetic about some general concept essential to the good life, and then there would be a paragraph where he'd try to make you think you'd never done better by yourself than you did the moment you decided, say, to purchase the Easy Bild book on building a plywood bar in your basement.
A tragically overlooked 20th-century Thoreau was Mr. Brann.
"Shift Your Mental Gears" by Donald R. Brann
"Building a bar may seem like a trivial way to shift gears....[but] an enormous percentage, by their own admission, have no desire to shift gears..."
Please, dear reader, don't become a withered flower, with you life spent and all but over by your mid-30s...build that subterranean bar and become a lonely basement alcoholic!
* * * * *
From a series of circa-1960s D.I.Y. books called "Easi-Bild" that were published by a fellow named Donald Brann. In the beginning of each one, he wrote a little homily that tried to link up his own Confucius-like wisdom with whatever Easy Bild project was at hand.
So there would be a couple of paragraphs where he waxed poetic about some general concept essential to the good life, and then there would be a paragraph where he'd try to make you think you'd never done better by yourself than you did the moment you decided, say, to purchase the Easy Bild book on building a plywood bar in your basement.
A tragically overlooked 20th-century Thoreau was Mr. Brann.