Man, I hate too hear about that accident.   How ever we can learn something 
from it.
Best of luck too you.  Regards 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: David Sexton 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Tuesday, February 05, 2008 3:52 PM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] That little voice


  I've known for years that when the little voice in my head warns me
  that I'm in an unsafe situation I need to take action. Some times that
  means using a tool differently or building a jig to make the task safer.

  I was injured recently (not in my wood shop) and I think the story
  might be useful to someone so here it is.

  I was removing a tree in my front yard because it dropped balls of sap
  on my cars and driveway. I got it down to the stump and was digging
  and cutting roots to remove the stump. My neighbor from a few houses
  down said he removes a lot of trees and offered to come help me dig out
  the stump. I could tell right away that this guy was trying way too
  hard to show how fast and hard he could work. My little voice was
  screaming at me to either go in the house and let him do it alone or
  just thank him and say I would do it alone. I was not comfortable
  having a volunteer work in my yard while I sat in the house, and I did
  not want to be rude and tell him to go home. I increased my distance
  from him to around 7 feet, but it wasn't enough.

  He was swinging my axe trying to remove a root and lost his grip on the
  axe handle. The axe flew out of his hands and the head of it hit me in
  the face. The dull end hit and broke my nose into three pieces. The
  hospital staff rushed me into a CT scan which showed, contrary to their
  expectations, that I did not have a skull fracture. I was wearing
  heavy safety glasses that are likely the reason I did not lose an eye.
  This was three weeks ago. The bone and flesh are not yet healed to the
  point that I can return to my woodshop. I missed a lot of days at work
  and I haven't received the big medical bill yet.

  My point is that you should not let your desire to be polite to someone
  override the little voice that tells you how to avoid injury. If
  someone around you is doing something dangerous, it is better to be
  thought rude than allow someone to put you in danger. I have listened
  to the little voice for years as a guide to what I should not do. Now
  I know that I have to make it clear to people around me what the voice
  warns they should not do.

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