Why Do It Yourself?
自己动手为哪般?
By Martin Carvey ■玫文
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找专业人士帮忙,不如享受自己动手的乐趣
The reasons why people engage in DIY have
always been numerous and complex. For some, DIY has provided a rare
opportunity for creativity and self expression. For others it has been
an unwelcome necessity, driven purely by economic considerations. Then
there has been a group which feels that a building can never be a home
unless it has been altered and modified to reflect a change of occupancy.1
A final group has traditionally taken the line2
that if you want a job done well, you must do it yourself.
DIY as necessity
There is a significant number of young homemakers
for whom there is no option but DIY. Their new home, whether bought
on a mortgage which consumes a major slice of their income,3
or rented at similarly challenging rates, will often require essential
refurbishment and even structural repair.
Some of these people are reluctant first-time
DIYers. They would much prefer to hire professionals, but can't afford
to do so. The majority, however, welcome the opportunity that need has
forced upon them to get involved for the first time in the real business
of creating a home4—with
all of its unfamiliar physical labour and the learning from scratch5
of new techniques. In time, many will migrate to one of the other categories
of DIYer,6
continuing to exercise their new found talents and enthusiasm when no
longer forced by financial constraints to do so.
DIY as territorial marking
Even those who have bought a brand new 'starter
home', the type which increasingly proliferates around the edges of
our towns and cities, will feel compelled to add personal touches of
a less dramatic kind to disguise its otherwise bland and expressionless
nature.7 Putting
a 'personal stamp8
on the place' was one of the most frequently reported motives for DIY.
DIY as self-expression
Many young people today are frustrated artists
— their latent creative talents just waiting for the chance to reveal
themselves. There are also those seeking opportunities for a sense of
achievement and personal fulfilment. DIY provided just such opportunities
for the overwhelming majority of young people. They spoke at length
of their sense of pride after completing their very first DIY task,9
and about how this experience gave them the drive to tackle more ambitious
projects.
This sense of creative achievement comes
both from the choices made by the first-time DIYer—the selection of
colours, textures and components to apply to the 'canvas' of the home
— and from the application of specific skills and techniques. The manufacturers
of DIY materials clearly understand this and now provide a wide range
of 'arty'10
products to fuel creative urges.11
At the same time, they make the materials themselves much easier to
use—the DIY equivalent of painting by numbers. Special paint effects,
which once required the specialist knowledge and training of the true
professional, can now be achieved straight out of the can with a simple
brush.12
DIY as perfection-seeking
A large proportion of first-time DIYers distrust
builders and decorators. They feel that most are 'cowboys' and that
even the more reputable ones are very unlikely to have the same loving
attention to detail and care as the DIYer. Within this group there were
those who were content for builders to perform basic or structural work,
and to undertake tasks such as plastering which are beyond the competence
of most DIYers, particularly the younger novices.13
The finishing work, however, was something these people kept for themselves—the
final 'perfecting' of what otherwise would be just a mediocre14
result.
The problem perfectionists face is that progress
can be very slow. One young female partner of a such a perfectionist
said: "My boyfriend spent so long decorating the bedroom that I
had to hire in someone to do the living room." The living room
was finished first. When perfectionists are obliged, by nagging or circumstance,
to speed things up, other problems can result:15
"The only time I rushed a job was when we had friends coming for
the weekend. I was so unhappy with it that I painted it again after
they had gone."
DIY as leisure activity
For a significant minority of first-timers,
DIY is seen as a novel and entertaining pastime. It is not really work,
but something akin to16
entertainment, shared by both partners and even the children in the
case of young families.
The idea that DIYing is akin to a trip to
the lions of Longleat17
may seem strange. But for these people home-making was sufficiently
different from, and infinitely preferable to, the dull routines of weekday
work to constitute a weekend break.18
The results of such activity were rewarding, but probably less so than
engaging in the activity itself.
DIY as therapy
"It's therapeutic isn't it? I'm always
in my own little world when I'm doing DIY—it's great." So said
a young man of 27. For him it was his way of getting rid of stress after
a long day at work—a way of switching off19
and using the repetitive nature of
many DIY tasks as a way of relaxing. Others hinted at a similar process,
where DIY was almost an end in itself, rather than just a means to achieving
a better home.20
While people in this group might sound like
sad anoraks,21
lacking the basic social skills to get a life outside of the home, they
were quite the opposite. DIY provided a transitional stage between work
and play— something which allowed them to unwind22
and rid themselves of tensions, becoming more sociable in the process.
1. reflect a change of occupancy:
反映居住的变化。
2. take the(a) line: 采取……政策(或措施)。
3. on a mortgage: 用抵押贷款的方式。slice:
部分。
4. 然而多数人欢迎这样的机会来迫使他们第一次参加真正建造一个家的活动。
5. from scratch: 从头开始。
6. 随着时间的推移,许多人将转换成另一种类型的DIY者。
7. 甚至那些买了全新的 "一手房"——在城镇边缘激增的那种类型——的人会感到有必要加一点不太明显的个人风格来遮盖其原本枯燥而呆板的本来面目。
8. personal stamp: 个人的痕迹。
9. 在完成第一桩DIY 任务后,他们喋喋不休地表达着自豪感。at length:
长久地,罗嗦地。
10. arty: <口> 装作爱好艺术的,附庸风雅的。
11. fuel creative urges: 刺激创作的冲动。
12. 现在用一把简单的刷子就可以直接从颜料罐中调出来。
13. novice: 新手,初学者。
14. mediocre/;mi:di#2%k2(r)/:
普通的,平庸的。
15. 当完美主义者被唠叨或环境所迫加快速度,其他问题就可能接踵而至。
16. akin to: 与……相似。
17. Longleat: 英国著名的游猎公园,允许游客自己开车观赏狮子。
18. 但对这些人来说,把操持家务作为周末休息的一部分,与枯燥的平日工作非常不同,而且感觉好得多。
19. switch off: (用开关)关掉(电灯、收音机等),这里指停下来休息。
20. 其他人暗示了一个相似的过程,DIY本身就是他们的目的,而不仅仅是获得一个更好的家的途径。
21. anorak: (北方严寒地带穿的)带风帽的厚茄克,英国人把有独特喜好、有轻度自我中心主义的人称为“anorak"。
22. unwind: 放松,松弛。