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Will Work for Pennies |
My DIY reality this week is all about pennies. Not the kind I used to purchase penny candy when I
was a child, or the bright copper ones I put in my penny loafers forty years ago. My pennies these days are
12d’s, 8d’s, 6d’s, and everything in between.
As I pounded in several hundred nails over the past few
days, I had lots of time to think about such things as the medieval system for
classifying nails. This is my brain
hot-dipped, galvanized, common, shanked, ringed, sinkered, and bright box
nailed.
So why are they called 12-penny nails… those three and a
half inch nails that are giving me blisters and hammer elbow? It goes back to how many pennies were needed
to buy 100 nails back in the 1500s. It
turns out that the letter “d” after the number is an abbreviation for the most
commonly used Roman coin (the denarius). The number refers to the length of nail.
If I’m doing the math correctly, which is never a given, twelve
pennies bought 100 nails back in the day.
I paid 445 pennies for 96 ring-shanked nails this past weekend. Kind of made me long for the days of
yore. Can you picture it? Me in a toga, eating figs, tapping in twelve
denarii worth of nails?
In the process of building a studio addition onto my
mountain cabin, I am learning invaluable lessons that go beyond the importance
of purchasing and using the right nails.
It seems each stage of the building process needs a different kind of
fastener. Early in the process I was
tempted to use screws to make parts of the job easier and faster to complete. It turns out that would have been a big mistake. Screws don’t have the sheer strength provided
by 12d nails.
Isn’t that true of building a life also? Finding the strength that matches each phase
of the process of becoming? Just as I
used the right kind of anchor hardware in the foundation stage of this do-it-myself
project, I seek to live a life anchored in ways that ensure the stability
to weather any storm.
Isn’t it amazing that something we often take for granted,
nails and pennies, are essential to building something lasting? I invite you to join me in creating something worth every single blister. As Squidoo's Home Renovator Contributor, I'm looking for a few kindred hammer swingers. Please stop by today. I'll give you a penny (worth at least $4.45 with inflation) for your thoughts.
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