Stylish descended the companionway,
muttering to herself. “Lanacote, small
brush, Lanacote, small brush…”
“Everything okay?”
She glanced up at me as she started
rooting through the drawers in the nav desk.
“I had to pass Dad to get up the ladder.”
There are many obvious skills one needs
to cultivate to live aboard. Good
seamanship. Knots. Basic weather analysis. But a successful crewmember must also learn secret
talents you will never find mentioned in any manual on seafaring. And primary among these are Ninja Skills.
It is impossible to pass Erik without
being asked for something. A tool, a
glass of water, a hand. More
irritatingly, these are usually reasonable requests. You are passing that way anyway, or the top
two-thirds of him is stuck in the bilge.
So you do it. But by the
seventeenth request, you get a little grumpy.
No, let’s be clear. I. I get a little grumpy. I get a lot grumpy. I like to help as much as the next person,
but there are times when I’d just like to get on with my own work
uninterrupted, and getting up to find a rubber mallet or similar every ninety
seconds can put me on edge.
But there is a good alternative to
snapping, “Get it your own &$@# self!”
And it is this: be one with the wallpaper.
It isn’t easy. This is high-level Jedi-style ninja stuff I
am talking about here. But it’s worth
it.
Let’s break it down.
Situational Awareness
First, you have to cultivate a locational
awareness of your Help-Me Spouse (HMS).
This doesn’t mean tracking their every move, but you do need to notice
where they are, and, more importantly, when they are coming. The HMS can descend on you like a hawk on a
mouse. Learn to look for that tell-tale shadow,
hear that creaking floorboard, smell that engine oil, and make yourself scarce.
Be One With Nature
Ninjas, at least according to my kids’
Magic Treehouse books, are all about mimicking and fading into the environment in
order to hide. So try to blend in with
the mast. Melt against the engine
room. Merge with the shadows cast by the
wheel. (You can feel less dorky about
trying this yourself by calling it “getting to know your boat” if you
like.) Not as foolproof as out-and-out
hiding, this ninja trick has the advantage of speed. HMS coming?
Bam! Instant camouflage.
Exit strategies
Here on the hard, we have one exit from
the boat: down the ladder. It would be
unkind of me to suggest that my HMS intentionally chooses to work at the bottom
of said ladder, lurking there, Gollum-like, waiting to ask someone for a 9 mm
wrench as they pass by. I’m sure it is
just a convenient place to mix paint. Point
being, for the ninja, this bottleneck is an issue. An ambush waiting to happen.
So get creative. Set up some scaffolding on the other side of
the boat. Learn to scale the anchor
chain. Climb the neighboring boat and
take a flying leap to your own deck. Buy
a hang glider or a trampoline. Grow
gecko pads on your hands and feet. And
those solutions are just off the top of my head.
What Happens as a Ninja Stays as a Ninja
For the love of Mike, whatever you do,
don’t let your HMS catch you in your evasive maneuvers. You can’t have a bad Ninja day. Not only do you look like a jerk, pressed up
against the teak and pretending to be a floorboard, but it puts on you HMS’s
radar. They know you know. The hawk will be extra vigilant, and that
doesn’t mean anything good for you.
Returning to Papillon earlier today, I
crunched across the gravel, lost in thought about what I wanted to write in
this post.
Erik popped up like a jack-in-the-box
from behind the stern. “Ame, you going
up? Could you grab me my grinder? I’m filthy.”
3 comments:
I assuming that Stylish was successful finding the Lanacote & small brush: I know what the later is but alas have no idea as to the former.
A Ninja has many talents which I am sure that the other 3 of you employ to the fullest.
Currently Dad is battling with his computer, so I, like Erik who both have the electronic evil spirits am safe from being asked to help in any way.
Mom
Ha ha ha. Hilarious. Good luck being one with the wallpaper.
Love Kate
Amen Sister,
I have one just like that.
I love reading this stuff. I can sooo relate.
Aeon
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