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'Bending nails' story one that is remembered for a
lifetime
My grandfather was a craftsman.
Although he operated a lumberyard by day, he
pursued his passion in his spare time, building unique pieces of
furniture that found their way into exalted positions in my
childhood homes. Grandfather clocks -- his specialty, were not
copies of others' designs, but rather his own creative ideas
enshrined in solid black walnut.
Sometimes he would consent to apply his
talents to a neighbor's house that needed attention or repair. As a
boy, my father would help.
Once they built a new set of steps for a
family friend. Per his father's instruction, Dad had driven big
nails to hold the thick lumber in place. But when his father told
him to crawl under the steps and bend the nails up against the
lumber, my father challenged him.
"Nobody will ever see those nails," Dad
argued, not wanting to crawl in the dirt and waste energy on
something that did not show.
"Maybe," his father replied. "But I'll know
they are there."
Dad never forgot that experience and
regularly reminded us of its message. Every time something needed
doing that did not "show" and we could "get by" without doing it, he
would recall the "bending nails" story.
"I have not always bent all the nails," he
once wrote, "but I've never escaped hearing that tape start playing
when I ignored responsibility."
My father was a craftsman, too -- not of wood
but of words. Although he may have struggled to see the value of a
carpentry technique, his ability to translate an everyday experience
into a timeless life lesson was a talent he applied effortlessly and
often.
Stories that stick with you a lifetime -- his
specialty -- were often crafted beyond the boundaries of his
workday, too, finding prominent places beyond his ministry to the
minds of the larger community. "Bending nails" was an instant
classic, one that can still haunt, plague, stimulate or motivate.
What do we do when no one is looking? Do we
bother to bend the nails?
Upon my father's death, one column reader
e-mailed me about a chance encounter with my father before his
hospitalization. She had witnessed Dad leaving the supermarket with
a few bags of groceries. Someone had left a cart in the middle of
the parking lot. It wasn't in my father's way; but it wasn't where
it should be, either. So after tucking his groceries in his car,
with a slow but even pace he fetched the errant cart and patiently
guided it back to its proper place.
No one asked him to do it. No one was
watching him, so he thought. He just saw a job that needed to be
finished and completed it.
Although I've lost that reader's
correspondence, her story still comforts me. Even when life had
slowed him down, my father walked his talk in that parking lot,
continuing to add that extra touch -- the true mark of a craftsman
of wood, word or deed.
I wonder if he was thinking about bending
nails.
This column was co-authored and edited by Rebecca
Faye Smith Galli, daughter of the late Dr. R.F. Smith Jr., a
longtime columnist for The Herald-Dispatch.


03/28/2010
The Herald-Dispatch
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