I had to chuckle at that, because when I come home and relate the
day's
events and jibberish to my husband, that's exactly what we say.
I'm afraid at this point, that if I finish helping them, then they are
not
going to be happy with ANYTHING, and if I don't finish helping them,
then
I'm a jerk...so, I feel like I'm in a lose/lose situation..
Perry
Hi Perry,
Sounds like a no-win situation and I would try to back out gracefully
now before the plot thickens; these sorts of things don't normally get
better, only worse, and unless you enjoy the constant stress and
abuse, you really need to blow Dodge. Be honest and respectful and
tell them you value their friendship and that you're worried working
with them might might put that at risk. Hopefully they'll be
flattered and you'll be able to escape without causing any hard
feelings. Good luck!
Cheers,
Paul
> I'm afraid at this point, that if I finish helping them, then they are
> not
> going to be happy with ANYTHING, and if I don't finish helping them,
> then
> I'm a jerk...so, I feel like I'm in a lose/lose situation..
> Perry
on top of all that because they are not paying going rate they obviously
don't see the true value in what you are doing for them. I'd try to
find a good ending place where the job doesn't look half done and back
out gracefully if possible.
I agree with Paul. It sounds like a no-win situation. I think that you
should step back from the project and let everyone take a breather. Maybe
they are not happy with your work, your taste, your pay, or something else,
but because of the friendship cannot come right out and say it. Maybe
they're just idiots who have no idea what is involved in the remodeling
process. If everything that you posted is true it sounds as though they
have a gem of a carpenter. Tell them you have other projects that you need
to tend to and when they are truly ready you will be happy to do the work if
they want. That will give them an out and they can see for themselves what
it is like to try and hire good people to do good work if they decide to
look elsewhere.
PS: You probably should start charging for consultations on all of your jobs
or raise your rates to cover your time spent in the planning stage.
You shouldnt work a job that big for free, id leave till they get
their act together and you are treated with respect.
>I am a carpenter. Not a contractor. I've offered to help a friend re-
> do her living room floors and kitchen.
Maybe the husband is suspicious of the friendship.
I don't think that's it. I think the husband is just a nitpicker by habit,
just for the sport of it. Being in someone's house for a couple of weeks
working, you see the inner workings of the "couple" dynamics..I've been in
houses where there is good karma and things go smooth. I've been in houses,
that seemingly look like Mayberry RFD and it's hellish...
I usually try to *train* my clients, because I almost get called back for
more work, and once they know the ropes..decision making, linear thinking,
etc..they feel like they have a hand in the process. All my usual and
customary teachings have gone unheeded in this case. They are friends and
what I offered was to "help" the wife do the work herself. She's energetic
and is a motivated worker. But cannot, cannot make a decision, so comes to
ask me "what do I think?". I tell her, a couple of suggestions...then she
analyzes to death her possible decision. At first she wanted to be a
"neutral, and have nothing bold"..and of course, inexpensive. But now
because I'm not charging for labor, the budget has tripled for the kitchen
floor.
The husband, I almost had to wrestle, because he wanted to take out a load
bearing member. We cut a 30 sq ft hole in the wall between the kitchen and
tv room and he claims the remaining load bearing members are "a blind spot".
Duh...what about the big hole where there was none?
I am away from there for a couple of days, so I will use my time to think of
a way to detach, dis-entangle and not encourage further decision
debacles...but I will hopefully finish the work, and hopefully, my goal was
the woman to feel good about doing a lot of it herself, hands on, with some
guidance...what the man thinks, I could care less.
Perry
> I'm a jerk...so, I feel like I'm in a lose/lose situation..
> Perry
You are in a lose / lose situation. Get out NOW you are not appreciated!
They are taking advantage of your good nature. DON'T LET IT HAPPEN AGAIN,
YOUR WORTH MORE!
--
"You can lead them to LINUX
but you can't make them THINK"
Running Mandriva release 2008.0 free-i586 using KDE on i586
>I am away from there for a couple of days, so I will use my time to think of
>a way to detach, dis-entangle and not encourage further decision
>debacles...but I will hopefully finish the work, and hopefully, my goal was
>the woman to feel good about doing a lot of it herself, hands on, with some
>guidance...what the man thinks, I could care less.
Invite the couple to your home for dinner. That's your turf. When I
deal with difficult people I prefer to be in my "lions den" / turf.
They seem to be more open minded and to listen. You could even meet in
public, so you can tell them your exact feelings and thoughts. In
public they are less likely to "go off" and make a scene.
When you are in their home, you become the timid one so to speak.
I think it would be best to have "sit down talk" and tell them exactly
what you've said here in the group.
You will have a better chance of getting things across on your turf.
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.
On Thu, 15 May 2008 12:43:42 -0700 (PDT), cajunpaisley
<cajunp...@gmail.com> wrote:
>I am dealing with my friend mostly, but lately the husband has gotten
>involved in the process.
No decision has been made on tile or
>countertop materials...
then not
>to spend too much money,
..only to waffle on design,
>product, you name it. (remember, I am doing this free, so money or
>pay is not the issue)
The wife's usual comment has been "you have
>good taste, just do something and i'll like it". Now the husband has
>stuck his nose in it...and has NO clue what he wants, but pontificates
>forever about what he thinks he wants. He nitpicks every decision,
.he says "well, it don't matter to me
>anyway". But then five minutes later, here he starts up with the
>nitpicking
>I am getting quite frustrated..as I don't have time to dick around
>with them forever,
Every "committee" has at least one member singularly devoted to
queering the deal.
The trick is, staying out of it and getting the the remainder of the
committee to deal with the deal queerer, without pissing off that
segment of the committee.
Working for free basically makes you impotent.
If you had the option of charging for each change order, then you have
some influence. All you have is the option to quit, and I suggest you
mention it.
-----
- gpsman