Solutions October 2018 | Page 48

Dust & Divine By Luke Norsworthy When I was in grad school, I did a little personal training as a side job. I had a friend and client named David, a successful antiques salesman, interior decorator, and smoker. Often, he would complete a running workout on the track, and before he had even gotten to his Cadillac in the parking lot, he would light up a cigarette. This always made me wonder where he was hiding the cigarettes during the workout. Early on I knew that David wasn’t going to win any marathons, but I got a little work and he burned some calories and Marlboros, making both of us happy with the arrangement. On occasion I would help him with other projects. One time I was helping David with an installation in a customer’s home, which is a nice way of saying I was carrying in really expensive furniture. Having just purchased a 48 • Solutions bookshelf for my home from Target, I was particularly curious about the extremely heavy wooden bookshelf that I carried. Usually, I didn’t care about the price of fine furniture, since only people in a tax bracket I will never inhabit could afford it, but alas I asked the question. “How much is this shelf?” “Five.” “Five hundred?” “No. Thousand.” Having just spent thirty dollars on my bookshelf, I didn’t see with my uneducated eye why someone would pay that much for a bookshelf. The piece actually looked inferior to the perfection of my composite wood bookshelf.