I was in need of shelving in my storage room. Having a healthy aversion to spending money, I looked for a way to build these shelves “on the cheap.” I found a discarded metal frame of a set of shelves that, sadly, did not include the shelves themselves. I also found some odds and ends pieces of wood at my home and from some discarded furniture at the church. The question was, “How will I cut the wood into the size needed to fit in the frame and form the shelves?” I ran through a list of crafty friends in my mind, but decided I didn’t want to ask anyone to enlist in my home improvement project. Then, I remembered. Stuck back in the corner of my storage room, covered in black plastic, was the disassembled table saw from my father’s workshop. I knew this saw had been on a long sabbatical. To the best of my memory, it had sat idle for more than forty years. I removed the plastic, laid out the pieces, and found, to my amazement, that everything needed to make a table saw work was there. Nothing was missing. Most of this table saw, purchased in the 1960s, was solid steel, a Sears Craftsman last-a-lifetime kind of tool. I wondered if the belt that connected the electric motor to the pulley that turned the saw blade had rotted in nearly half a century of storage. Again, to my delight and surprise, the belt seemed solid enough to resume its long-neglected labor. I put all the pieces together, then, very gingerly, plugged the saw into an extension cord to see if it would work. The motor cranked up, the belt made laps around the pulleys, and the saw blade began whirring as it spun at high speed.
As I heard the sound of the saw, a kind of hardware instrumental ensemble of a motor, a belt, and a blade, I was suddenly taken back across decades of time and a hundred miles to my dad’s basement workshop. The last time I’d heard that distinctive saw sound was in his shop on one of the occasions I’d been summoned to be his table saw assistant. If dad were cutting a long or large piece of wood, he needed a helper to hold up the overhang that wouldn’t fit atop the saw. By keeping the wood level as dad moved it across the blade, I would prevent the wood from binding against the blade, messing up the cut, or damaging the saw. Most of my woodworking assistance probably left Dad wondering why good help is so hard to find. But I learned the sound of the saw, the distinctive sound of dad’s table saw, and hearing it again made me feel as close to him as I’ve been in a long time.
The sweet sound of that saw so delighted and inspired me that, though it was late Saturday afternoon and I was tired from a full day of cleaning out and organizing my storage room, I stayed on the job for another hour or two, cutting all the boards I needed to complete my shelving project. The last thing I thought about as I drifted off to sleep that night was how a simple sound, reprised after so many years, took me on such a heart-warming journey.
As I count my blessings this Thanksgiving season, I’ll name a number of things I have in common with most people I know. I’m grateful for family and friends who love me and brighten my journey. I’m thankful for good health and a good home. I praise God for the opportunity to play a part in His kingdom’s work. But this year, they’ll be an entry on my blessings list that few people would understand. I’m thankful for the sweet sound of a table saw, mechanical music that took me back to a place and a person I so tenderly cherish. God gave me a precious gift by playing my song. May you hear God playing your song soon and often.
I, too, spent a lot of time in my dad's workshop. Sometimes holding boards, sometimes sweeping up sawdust, and sometimes sanding by hand as this step was required before being allowed to use the power sander. Yes, the sounds and smells of that workshop bring back powerful, wonderful memories of time spent together working on various projects - some his, some mine.
My dad hasn't been gone as long as yours, but the memories still bring back both smiles and tears. Thank you for sharing your sweet memories. I'm sure there are several SABC folks who have these same memories with their dads. They were a busy bunch of men.
Carol Bowman Wyndham