The Difficult, I Can do in 8 Hours

November 11th, 2019

The Impossible Requires 5 Weeks

Yesterday I wrote about a couple of healings I received. It seems obvious to me that if you have a positive testimony about God, and you share it, you are then obligated to post any corrections that come later. God doesn’t want help from fraudulent testimony.

Here is my follow-up.

I had some pain in my left hand. I commanded it to be gone and so on, and it left immediately. I then noticed I had slight pain in my right hand, and it responded to supernatural healing, too.

Later in the day, I felt some pain in my left hand again, so I repeated the healing process, and the pain left again. I did this a number of times.

My hand never got back to the original pain level, but I have had to fight whatever is trying to take the healing away.

What’s the conclusion? Here it is: I got a miracle healing. Pain doesn’t just leave randomly. My pain responded instantly to supernatural healing. If it then tried to come back, it doesn’t prove I was not healed.

If you had an amputated leg, and it grew back instantly and then went back to being amputated later in the day, could you then say you didn’t get healed? Of course not. The miracle still took place.

I don’t know if there is something in my life that gives hand pain power to resist me, or if I just need to persist until I overcome. But pain doesn’t just leave when you tell it to, unless a miracle takes place.

I’ve been honest about what happened, so now it’s not my problem.

In other news, I’m starting to wonder if painting is the hardest thing a human being can do. Yesterday I wrote about the problems I was having, getting my grinder’s mobile base painted. I learned that environmentalist meddling had made paints harder to apply successfully. I had problems with persistent brush marks.

I had the stand sitting on its top, which already had several coats of dry paint on it. I turned it over last night to finish the top, and I found that paint had mysteriously flowed over the edge of the top and onto the surface. The top was resting on a garbage bag I used to cover the floor, and I found big areas where the new paint had glued the top to the bag.

I applied the paint very sparingly, so you can imagine how surprised I was to see that it had found its way around the edge of the top and up to two inches into it.

I removed the damaged paint, applied primer, and quit. Today I painted the top again. Will it work? I don’t know. The paint will stick, but I don’t know if I can get the new paint to level with the old. I may have to strip the entire top.

I’m wondering if I can wet-sand it. It would be less aggravation. I could get some 300-grit paper, sand the paint, paint it again, and then repeat a couple of times. Maybe it would work. It works on car paint.

I also found that the tops of the bottom forks of the base didn’t look as good as the bottoms, which no one will ever see. Frustrating. If you’re going to have a really nice area on a painted project, you want it to be an area everyone sees.

I really dislike painting. Things keep going wrong. Even when the paint seems okay, tiny bits of stuff fall on it while its drying, just to mess with me. I have the base indoors where there should be very little material falling through the air, but it still happens.

It makes me wonder how anyone paints anything successfully without a special clean room no consumer can afford.

I should go get some truck bed coating, strip the top of the base, apply the coating, and tell people I planned to do it that way from the start. Yes…I wanted a green base with a black top. That was my plan. These aren’t the droids you’re looking for.

In any case, to recap, it works like this: time to cut and weld mobile base nearly perfectly: 8 hours. Time to paint mobile base very badly: two weeks, not including the time it actually takes hardware store paint to harden fully, which is another three weeks.

Something is wrong there.

I should find a powder-coating place and let them coat my next project. If it costs 50 bucks, it will be well worth it. I had crazy ideas about making my own projects cheaply. Now I doubt that’s possible, except for people who have been painting for 20 years. I can make projects inexpensively, but only if I don’t mind terrible, blobby paint.

I’m going to move my painting projects to the garage. I think the air there is better than it is in the shop, and my projects will be far from my other tools, so I will be able to use them while I wait for paint to dry. Right now, I’m afraid to do anything in the workshop. I might send crud flying onto my perpetually wet paint.

If I ever figure this out, I will blog it. There must be an answer out there somewhere.

6 Responses to “The Difficult, I Can do in 8 Hours”

  1. Thomas Billups Says:

    I’ve painted and varnished houses and boats that I’ve owned for decades. It’s always an exercise in frustration.

    I follow a few fellows that either make motorcycles or renovate them. They send the work out. That confirms to me you need a very good clean room and other proper equipment. Same with powder coating. A guy can dream can’t he?

    By the way, did you get an Instalanch when Reynolds mentioned Eat What You…………………..

  2. Steve H. Says:

    If he linked to the book, any traffic would go to Amazon’s site.

    I would not be able to detect increased traffic here without checking with my hosting company.

    The days of thinking about traffic are behind me. There is nothing the big bloggers can do for me now, even if they wanted to.

  3. Steve H. Says:

    Out of curiosity, I checked, and my traffic is exactly what it usually is. No change whatsoever over the last month.

  4. Thomas Billups Says:

    He mentioned it 11/10 at 10:47 pm. You should scroll down and read the comments. There are only twenty and there are more than a few complimentary ones.

    I bought it back in the day and mailed two copies to friends. Like one of the commenters, I was not happy when Hog On Ice vanished. It left an empty spot.

    I’m not sure how I reconnected with Tools of Renewal, but after reading for awhile I can see how you wanted to start on a new tangent.

  5. Steve H. Says:

    Thanks for the cash. I’m sure I spent it wisely.

    Hog on Ice didn’t really disappear. I fixed it so links pointed to this site.

    I decided to go and look the comments up. Took quite a bit of digging.

    Reynolds is really angry now! I don’t recall him opening up the way he is now. And he’s actually writing entire paragraphs. It used to be little more than, “Ann Althouse has more.” I wonder if he used to avoid writing because he was afraid he would go off and be de-tenured by his tolerant colleagues.

    It was strange, because he was able to write well and chose not to do anything about it.

  6. Thomas Billups Says:

    Denatured by his colleagues perhaps.

    The truth is hard to find.

Leave a Reply; Comments are Moderated and Not All Are Posted. Keep it Clean.