I will do anything I can to avoid it. Sometimes I don't know how to ask or what to ask for, especially when it comes to help finding a job. Other times it is plain and simple stubbornness. Here are a few humorous examples:
1) Last November my water heater developed a leak. I had replaced my water heater once before and was confident I could do it again. Getting the new one home was another matter. I do know a few people with trucks who probably would have been happy to help, but I didn't want to bother them. My plan was to rent a truck from Home Depot, but all of their trucks were out, and I didn't want to delay my project waiting for one to return. I thought about going to U-Haul to rent one, but then it occurred to me that it would take about the same amount of time to walk to Home Depot (about 1/2 mile) with my piano dolly and roll the water heater home. It really wasn't very hard, but I got some funny looks, and a couple of offers to help, which I declined.
2) Last fall when I took my window air conditioners in for the winter, I was having trouble with the window sticking. I just couldn't move it with one hand while I held the air conditioner with the other, so I decided to nudge the window up a little with both hands. Of course it moved too far, and the air conditioner fell from the second floor to the concrete driveway. It was damaged beyond repair.
3) A few years ago I tried to paint my house. (That in itself proved to be too hard to do myself; I spent the whole summer scraping and painting one side. The next year I gave in and hired someone to paint the rest.) Reaching the top of my house takes a 40-foot ladder. Putting the ladder up and taking it down is really a two-person job, but I just couldn't bring myself to ask anyone to help. Aside from being just plain heavy, the problem with a 40-footer is that, unlike shorter ladders, it gets top-heavy. There is a point where there is more ladder above your hands than below them. Like a see-saw, the top comes down and the bottom goes up, unless you have someone or something to hold the bottom down. So, one day I was trying to take the ladder down and I lost control. I was able to slow its fall by pushing it against the side of the house, but it continued to slide down, shearing off the water spigot as it fell. I had to spend the rest of the evening replacing the spigot and the pipe leading to it.
1) Last November my water heater developed a leak. I had replaced my water heater once before and was confident I could do it again. Getting the new one home was another matter. I do know a few people with trucks who probably would have been happy to help, but I didn't want to bother them. My plan was to rent a truck from Home Depot, but all of their trucks were out, and I didn't want to delay my project waiting for one to return. I thought about going to U-Haul to rent one, but then it occurred to me that it would take about the same amount of time to walk to Home Depot (about 1/2 mile) with my piano dolly and roll the water heater home. It really wasn't very hard, but I got some funny looks, and a couple of offers to help, which I declined.
2) Last fall when I took my window air conditioners in for the winter, I was having trouble with the window sticking. I just couldn't move it with one hand while I held the air conditioner with the other, so I decided to nudge the window up a little with both hands. Of course it moved too far, and the air conditioner fell from the second floor to the concrete driveway. It was damaged beyond repair.
3) A few years ago I tried to paint my house. (That in itself proved to be too hard to do myself; I spent the whole summer scraping and painting one side. The next year I gave in and hired someone to paint the rest.) Reaching the top of my house takes a 40-foot ladder. Putting the ladder up and taking it down is really a two-person job, but I just couldn't bring myself to ask anyone to help. Aside from being just plain heavy, the problem with a 40-footer is that, unlike shorter ladders, it gets top-heavy. There is a point where there is more ladder above your hands than below them. Like a see-saw, the top comes down and the bottom goes up, unless you have someone or something to hold the bottom down. So, one day I was trying to take the ladder down and I lost control. I was able to slow its fall by pushing it against the side of the house, but it continued to slide down, shearing off the water spigot as it fell. I had to spend the rest of the evening replacing the spigot and the pipe leading to it.