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Let me be upfront: I have never fixed anything in my life. I once called a professional to change a lightbulb. Not literally, but close enough that I’m not comfortable getting into specifics. My entire relationship with home repair begins and ends with staring at the problem for a few minutes, sighing deeply, and opening my phone to find someone whose job it is to deal with this so I don’t have to.
So I want to be very clear that what follows is not me punching down.
And yet, here we are.
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Because today, more than ever, the DIY spirit isn’t just a hobby, it’s practically a political stance. We live in an era where companies engineer their own products to fail. Not milk, not things that are supposed to expire. We’re talking about cabinets. Lawnmowers. Microwaves. Appliances that somehow can’t survive past their warranty date without staging a dramatic, expensive breakdown. Planned obsolescence is corporate gaslighting, and the correct response, apparently, is to grab a drill and refuse to participate.
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I respect that. I admire it, even. Mostly because I could never.
The people in this compilation looked at a problem and said, “I’ll handle it.” That already puts them infinitely ahead of me on the competence scale. They had a vision. They had initiative. They had, presumably, some kind of tool. What they did with all of that is, well, documented below.
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And here’s the thing: the DIY fail isn’t really about failure. It’s about ambition colliding with reality at high speed and producing something so committed, so creative, so magnificently off-brief, that it becomes its own kind of art. These are people who refused to wait three weeks for a repairman. They took fate into their own hands. The outcome was not always what they planned. It was sometimes better.
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So yes, I am a person with zero practical skills laughing at people who are already miles ahead of me in life. I own that. But this laughter is warm, communal, and deeply respectful.
Now scroll down and enjoy watching other people’s confidence exceed their abilities, which is more than I’ve ever had the courage to do.
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