I had a few distractions today that kept me from getting into the garage until after lunch.
First, there was the Tuesday morning Bible study. Then breakfast with Rick. After that, I headed home, looking forward to what I thought would be a much-needed nap. Unfortunately, my plans were interrupted by an alarm reminding me that I had a doctor’s appointment across town.
After making a cup of coffee, I headed to the doctor and returned home completely exhausted, in even greater need of a nap than before. Instead of giving in to temptation, I ate lunch and headed straight downstairs to continue the garage cleanup.
Today, I tried to focus on just one worktable. That turned out to be a project all by itself. The table was covered with tools of every description, parts from unfinished projects, wood glue, and enough paint and stain to open a small hardware store.
I gathered up all the paint and stain containers, but before I could put them away, I had to reorganize the paint cabinet. Apparently, I can’t clean one thing without first cleaning something else.
I found an empty box and started filling it with parts and pieces needed to finish various projects. Some of those projects had been sitting there long enough that I barely remembered starting them.
As I worked, I began uncovering tape measures. Every time I turned around, there was another one. I finally decided that whenever I found a tape measure, I would put it in a box. By the time I finished cleaning off that one table, I had collected seven tape measures.
Seven.
I have no idea how one person accumulates seven tape measures on a single workbench. I suspect they reproduce when the lights are off.
After a couple of hours of rearranging—and I can’t honestly call it cleaning because I’m mostly moving things from one location to another—I finally achieved a major milestone.
I can now see the bottom of ONE worktable.
I also found more wood screws that needed to be sorted into their proper trays. At this point, I think wood screws are breeding right alongside the tape measures.
Tomorrow’s mission is to empty one of the large plastic storage tubs and determine what can be thrown away. With any luck, I’ll end up with an empty tub that can be used to organize some of my power tools until I can clear enough space on another workbench.
In other words, I’m still robbing Peter to pay Paul.
It feels like I’m not making much progress because I’m constantly moving things from one pile to another. Still, I suppose some progress is better than no progress.
Using my bucket-of-sand analogy from yesterday, I think I’ve managed to remove about half a spoonful today. Between the distractions and the endless rearranging, that’s about all I can claim.
Hopefully, I’ll be able to get started a little earlier tomorrow and maybe remove a whole spoonful.
Imagine, if you will, a large container filled with sand. (Insert the Twilight Zone Music) You come along with a spoon and remove a single spoonful. You and I both know that you’ve removed that spoonful, but to everyone else, the container looks exactly the same.
That’s the same scenario I’m facing in my garage.
I spent all day today throwing things in the trash, moving items around in the shed so I could move other things into it, and generally trying to bring some order to the chaos. Somewhere along the way, I stepped on a few Sweetgum balls (For those that live in the South, you know what I’m talking about), rolled my ankle, and landed face-first on the ground. If there had been judges present, I doubt they would have scored the dismount very highly.
I knew when I started this project that it wasn’t going to be a one-day event. It’s going to take several days, if not weeks, to get this garage looking the way it should. Years of “I’ll put that there for now” have finally caught up with me.
I took the time to cut usable pieces from my scrap wood pile so I could minimize waste. I also found several containers filled with wood screws of various sizes. I sorted them into separate containers and even labeled them. That’s a small victory, but at least now I won’t have to dig through a coffee can full of random screws every time I need one or, God forbid, go purchase more.
This morning, I took some before pictures of the garage. In fact, I had even posted a few of them on yesterday’s blog. Later, I took them down because I was honestly a little ashamed that I had let the garage get into the condition it’s in. Maybe once everything is cleaned up and organized, I’ll share the before-and-after photos. If nothing else, they’ll serve as proof that all this effort actually accomplished something.
A lot of time and effort went into today’s work, with very little visible evidence to show for it. If someone walked into the garage tonight, they probably wouldn’t notice much difference, kind of like that missing spoonful of sand.
But progress was made. It may not be obvious to anyone else, but I know it’s there. The garage is a little better organized than it was this morning, and that’s enough for today.
Besides, the sore ankle and busted kneecap are all the proof I need that I was working.
After 25 years in the organization formerly known as the Boy Scouts of America, I am calling it quits. Tonight, I said my final farewells — not to the many friends I’ve made over the years — but to the organization itself.
Where do I even start with a post like this? After 25 years, I have so many memories, so many stories to tell, and yet I’m at a loss for words. My emotions are all over the place. On one side, there’s anger and frustration. On the other hand, there’s sadness at stepping away from something that was once a cornerstone for teaching core values to young men.
My scoutmaster when I was in scouts many years ago.
When my son crossed over from Cub Scouts into Boy Scouts, there were a lot of uncertainties. Would he enjoy the outdoors? Would he be okay spending his first night in a tent with boys he barely knew — and without his dad right beside him? Suddenly, he was under the supervision of boys — or really, young men — not much older than he was.
During those first meetings, I sat back and watched him interact with the other scouts his age. He had a great time as a Cub Scout, but there he was alongside his mom, working together to earn belt loops and awards. Scouts was different. The parents sat off to the side while the boys were taught the Pledge of Allegiance, the Scout Law, the Scout Oath, and the Outdoor Code — not by adults, but by youth leadership. I was a proud parent the day my son could recite all of them by heart.
As my son grew up in Scouts, so did I.
I was eventually asked to become a leader. At first, I was reluctant, but I quickly realized I could give back by passing on skills I had learned over the years. I taught Plumbing Merit Badge, Photography Merit Badge, and even knots I’d learned working in the HVAC industry. What amazed me most was that, without even realizing it, I was getting to spend time with my son. Maybe not one-on-one, but we were there together, learning and growing at the same time.
My son eventually earned the rank of Eagle Scout — during a time when I was serving as his Scoutmaster, a role I had stepped into years earlier. It was one of the proudest days of my life. Because he hadn’t turned eighteen yet, he stayed active and served as Senior Patrol Leader.
Then came a weeklong campout on the outskirts of the Great Smoky Mountains.
My sons troop while I was the scoutmaster. Can you pick him out?
On the final night, the boys gathered around the campfire for skits and reflections. Then it was my son’s turn to speak. He announced it would be his last campout with the troop. He would turn eighteen in a few weeks and would be aging out. His plan was to go off to college, and Scouts wasn’t part of that plan.
My heart sank.
The building where we met was torn down.
For six years, we camped, hiked, cooked, climbed — you name it. Maybe it wasn’t one-on-one, but we were together. When lights out came and I finished my rounds, I went back to my tent, and I broke down and sobbed.
But the story didn’t end there.
I stayed involved because I had completed a lot of leadership training, and I felt like I still had something to give back to the program.
One of our Cub Scouts is building a birdhouse
There was a need in our district for someone to take over Eagle Board responsibilities. This committee helps guide young men in selecting meaningful Eagle projects and conducts Eagle Boards of Review — sitting down with candidates to talk about their Scouting journey and their Eagle project. I wish I had known how long I would stay in that role, because I would have kept count of how many young men earned Eagle while I was there.
Over the years, I wore many hats in Scouting — none of which I regret.
As the organization changed, though, so did my attitude. There were changes that simply didn’t make sense to me. The main reason I stayed as long as I did was that the core program still worked, regardless of the decisions being made at higher levels.
One of the many awards that I achieved while a leader.
Apparently, I wasn’t alone in my concerns. Membership dropped like a rock. In my district, we went from twelve troops to five during the years of major changes. Tonight, that number dropped from five to three. Our two combined troops folded due to a lack of leadership and membership growth. After tonight, I don’t see how our district survives without eventually merging into another.
I’ve asked myself, “Who’s to blame?” That’s not something I really want to dive into.
Troop 322 and Troop 41 combined to form one troop
But I will say this — it wasn’t because local leaders didn’t try.
Follow the money.
Charging $120 per year just to join, plus around $325 for a week at summer camp, is a lot. Many families simply can’t afford it — especially if they have more than one child in Scouts. And that doesn’t even include troop outings, which can run anywhere from $15 to $45 per trip. Many of these kids are being raised by single parents
Just one of the many young men who achieved the rank of Eagle.
Yes, Scouts can sell popcorn to help offset costs. But it’s hard to sell a $25 box of popcorn with six bags in it when families can buy the same brand at the store for $7 and get twelve bags. And when an adult tells a scout it’s “highway robbery,” what do you say to a seven-year-old who just got scolded by a stranger? It’s not their fault. They’re just trying to raise money to help pay their dues.
The last night at one of our summer camps. The boys always had a blast.
And when only about 32% of the profit gets split among the scouts working that shift, it makes it even harder.
Meanwhile, councils raise tens of thousands of dollars — and districts often see very little of it. I know there’s overhead. But it does make you wonder where the money goes.
Sorry — not sorry — for the tangent.
That’s the angry part of this story. I try not to dwell on it, but it does get under my skin.
Because at the end of the day, the program still works. It’s just becoming a program that fewer families can afford. And if something doesn’t change, Scouting could fade away.
Not to worry, though. The boys in the two troops will be going to one of the two troops still active. With determination, I feel that all the boys will stay in it long enough to earn the rank of Eagle.
And that would be a real shame.
Just a day at Summer CampThe last scout that my team interviewed for the rank of Eagle