Walking every aisle of Home Depot (2024)

This is Clouds Form Over Land, weekly writing about resilience, imperfection, and our relationship to the earth.

There comes a time in everyone's life to stand cluelessly in an aisle of Home Depot (or your local alternative).

This often begins as a quick jaunt, a way to make progress while also taking a step back from the project at hand. If luck and experience are on my side, I’m in and out. More frequently though, it’s like searching for a needle in a haystack.

In the fall of 2019, we were tucking into the rainy season and spending a lot of time in the Home Depot store located in Emeryville, California. This store holds some sweet memories. In the winters, we roamed the aisles for holiday lights to string up the mast of our sailboat and in the springs we renewed our attempts to grow herbs in the salty air of the marina. Before we took out a loan to buy the boat together, we tested the waters of our relationship by going in on a two-pack Dewalt drill and impact driver.

Plumbing is my most dreaded section. Some fittings have me feeling like Ahab searching for the white whale. I have logged hours pacing these sections, going cross-eyed looking for pieces with the required male and female connections to meet our non-standard marine sizing. Asking for assistance is a mixed bag. The person next to me is just as likely to know the answer as the stockist in uniform.

At the time, I was also managing fifteen solar repair technicians across two warehouses in Northern California. I entered the industry in 2015, moving to San Francisco on a hunch and taking any job I could get. From there I climbed the ladder I was on — operations management. This was my first time directly supervising employees, rather than processes and projects. I drove a branded pickup truck, led safety talks at 7 AM, and visited customers’ homes to de-escalate disappointments, set expectations, and perform quality control. The job was straightforward enough, although my coworkers weren’t used to seeing a 5’2” feminine person leading the huddles. The job itself didn’t require much electrical know-how, but it certainly helped gain some credibility. I spotted that fact years prior and had begun spending weekends on volunteer solar installs with the tremendous non-profit GRID Alternatives. Their model is similar to Habitat for Humanity but focused on solar and industry training. They have offices all over California, as well as Colorado and DC.

All that to say, standing in the plumbing aisle, searching for my coveted fitting wasn’t my first rodeo of feeling out of place in a construction environment. I was used to the occasional drive-by comment, often generated by surprise rather than malice. The pull to be more masculine was matched by my resolve that a little softness could really help how we worked.

Some part of me wanted to take up space in every corner of the store.

Most of our shopping trips were in search of a specialty piece that may not even be stocked in those hallowed halls. This wasn’t Boat Depot, so my application wasn’t standard. I often puzzled associates and began observing that it’s easier to say a part isn’t stocked than to persist toward a solution.

Our project list was growing and I knew it wasn’t sustainable to experience the churn of frustration every time we tried to find something in the store. The idea of walking every aisle started needling at me, and on one trip I suggested taking the extra time to get the lay of the land. My partner joined me one blustery night, grabbed a cart, and eased into things in the plant section. The aisles blend into each other, with occasional big jumps in categories. I built up some level of comfort by browsing items I didn’t need — ceiling fans! paint! lumbar! — and this cushioned the time spent intensely searching for something critical. We found helpful items we didn’t know we needed and restocked consumables like electrical tape, heat shrink, zip ties, and paracord. I added fish tape to the cart to make wire pulls a little easier. I don’t recall if we found everything we came for, but I do know that subsequent trips were made easier by the mental map of the store and low-key practice of searching. I returned many times in my branded work polo to find parts for technicians and in my hand-knit sweaters for personal projects. Before we sailed south of the border, we made one last full walk through the San Diego store to catch anything that might be trickier to get later.

After over a year of sailing and boat maintenance in Central America, the straightforwardness of the Home Depot store layout and access to assistance in English is as striking as the abundance of parts and the scale of those stores. The skills are the same. Any do-it-yourself endeavor requires some gumption and tenacity to start and complete projects. Often it requires asking for help and continuing to puzzle out a solution if none is available. No one knows it all and it requires emotional flexibility to build experience.

Walking every aisle was an important and easy step along the way.

Can Do List:

  1. Make a corner of your home a little cozier for these long nights.

  2. Take a peak at the full moon on Friday.

  3. Diet culture is at its loudest around the new year. Remind yourself that personal worth is not tied to waist size.

  4. Walk every aisle of the hardware store.

Written in the spirit of not letting what we can’t do get in the way of what we can.

Did you try any of these? I’d love to hear about it.

Walking every aisle of Home Depot (2024)

References

Top Articles
Trivago --- How to Find and Compare Cheap Hotel Prices
Peoplesgamezgiftexchange House Of Fun Coins
East Cocalico Police Department
Crocodile Tears - Quest
Steamy Afternoon With Handsome Fernando
360 Training Alcohol Final Exam Answers
Craigslist Pet Phoenix
RuneScape guide: Capsarius soul farming made easy
Select Truck Greensboro
Whitley County Ky Mugshots Busted
What to do if your rotary tiller won't start – Oleomac
Explore Top Free Tattoo Fonts: Style Your Ink Perfectly! 🖌️
Meritas Health Patient Portal
Conan Exiles Thrall Master Build: Best Attributes, Armor, Skills, More
Money blog: Domino's withdraws popular dips; 'we got our dream £30k kitchen for £1,000'
Vermont Craigs List
Water Days For Modesto Ca
Marvon McCray Update: Did He Pass Away Or Is He Still Alive?
Lehmann's Power Equipment
Silive Obituary
Gopher Hockey Forum
Yisd Home Access Center
Reborn Rich Kissasian
Jeffers Funeral Home Obituaries Greeneville Tennessee
Wics News Springfield Il
Soul Eater Resonance Wavelength Tier List
Table To Formula Calculator
30+ useful Dutch apps for new expats in the Netherlands
Isablove
5 Star Rated Nail Salons Near Me
Ugly Daughter From Grown Ups
Siskiyou Co Craigslist
P3P Orthrus With Dodge Slash
Chilangos Hillsborough Nj
Sinai Sdn 2023
Craigslist Boats Eugene Oregon
Puffco Peak 3 Red Flashes
Raisya Crow on LinkedIn: Breckie Hill Shower Video viral Cucumber Leaks VIDEO Click to watch full…
Eastern New Mexico News Obituaries
Planet Fitness Santa Clarita Photos
Tiny Pains When Giving Blood Nyt Crossword
Walgreens Agrees to Pay $106.8M to Resolve Allegations It Billed the Government for Prescriptions Never Dispensed
Sc Pick 4 Evening Archives
About My Father Showtimes Near Amc Rockford 16
Sun Tracker Pontoon Wiring Diagram
Sdn Fertitta 2024
Dying Light Mother's Day Roof
FactoryEye | Enabling data-driven smart manufacturing
Google Flights Missoula
Treatise On Jewelcrafting
Download Twitter Video (X), Photo, GIF - Twitter Downloader
Bob Wright Yukon Accident
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Errol Quitzon

Last Updated:

Views: 6593

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (59 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Errol Quitzon

Birthday: 1993-04-02

Address: 70604 Haley Lane, Port Weldonside, TN 99233-0942

Phone: +9665282866296

Job: Product Retail Agent

Hobby: Computer programming, Horseback riding, Hooping, Dance, Ice skating, Backpacking, Rafting

Introduction: My name is Errol Quitzon, I am a fair, cute, fancy, clean, attractive, sparkling, kind person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.