MAXimizing Life
with Maxine McQueen

Read the Directions

[May 02, 2026]

"I can fix anything except the break of dawn and I’m working on that.” My husband, Mac, loved reciting that quote. He was an absolute wizard at repairing anything and everything.

As in life, opposites attract and I have trouble using a pencil sharpener. I totally relied on him to restore anything that broke. The responsibility for fixing what has broken now rests with me.

I love to sew. It’s therapy for me. I’m not good at it, but I love it. Grampa Moore always told me to be a jack of all trades and master of none, and it would serve me well. I took his advice.

My sewing machine wouldn’t work. The feed dog or the dog feed or whatever wouldn’t pull the fabric through. I was proud of myself for diagnosing the problem. I was proud of myself for finding my instruction manual to fix the issue. That self-pride disappeared after 20 minutes of intent studying and matching pictures from the pages to my actual machine. Things were just not adding up. I discovered I had the handbook for my old Janome machine. I was presently looking at my broken Singer sewing machine. Dang! No wonder things weren’t computing in this befuddled head. Idiots can be so stupid.
 


Then the search was on for the Singer booklet. It took a lot of self-control to bypass through my patterns and fabrics to stay on track for the goal of securing the correct guidebook. Eureka! I found it!

Centering my mind to make sure I had the proper guide to the proper machine I took a deep breath and determined to fix this conundrum. My machine was on sale when I bought it. One of the inconveniences with that fact was no guidebook came with it. I had downloaded the guide from online. I quickly went to the index and found it was not feed dog but feed teeth and to turn to page 16. When I triumphally turned to page 16….it wasn’t there. I had to go back to my computer, plug in my sewing machine model and number, go to directions and download page 16. Sheesh!

Accomplishing that, I printed out the appropriate page, punched holes in the paper and inserted it in my 3-ring binder. Yay me! The directions read, “The feed teeth lever is found at the back of the free arm.” What the heck is the free arm? There was no such free arm in the index. There seemed to be no such free arm on my machine. I roared my impatience to the unfairness of life in general.

“Begin at the beginning and go on till you come to the end; then stop.” Lewis Carroll, author.

Mother and Mac had always told me the trick to keeping machinery working was to have proper tools and to keep things clean. I busily went about cleaning my machine. I took off the needle plate…yep…proud of me again….and brushed out lint. I slid off the bobbin cover and removed the bobbin. For good measure, I blew the lint I could see but could not reach. Then I read, “Note: Do not blow air into the bobbin case area. The dust and lint will be blown into your machine.” Drat. There’s that stupid idiot thing again.

[to top of second column]

More screws removed with an impractical screwdriver for someone with arthritis. I dug out the above explained lint. I then theatrically guided the forked end of the bobbin case under the bobbin case holder and under the feed teeth and moved the bobbin case slightly from right to left until it slipped correctly into the hook race. The directions and the directee were constantly at odds with one another. Finally, I had my machine clean.

While searching for the brush and screwdriver I realized the accessory tray lifted off and could be removed to reveal….Tah! Dah! FREE ARM!

The teeny tiny feed teeth lever is on the back… “ 1. Lower the feed teeth by moving the lever to the feed teeth down position. 2. Raise the feed teeth by moving the lever to the feed teeth up position.” Well, lah dee dah. With my head upside down and trifocals dangling how in the world was I to decipher that? Another note (Singer is good at notes) “The feed teeth will not raise immediately when the lever is switched. Turn the hand wheel toward you one full turn or start sewing to re-engage the feed teeth.”

Through stifling exasperation, I tested until I got everything working. I celebrated with a mighty shout, a cup of coffee, and a chocolate chip cookie.

Writer Johann Wolfganv von Goethe said, “Instruction does much, but encouragement does everything.” Mac was so good at encouraging me and congratulating me. I miss that. I missed it so much, I called a friend and he congratulated me. Thanks, Bill.

Mac would often get annoyed as he worked on Bosch products. The instructions were originally written in German and then translated to English. Many times, the translation read….”put doohickey into the whatchamacallit. Do not.” It took him a few errors on the test stand to realize the instructions must be read through entirely before going to work on his project.

“Instructions for living life. Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.” Mary Oliver, poet.

I have a son that can put together or repair things so quickly it seems magical. I always say he is like Linus with his blanket….he could make anything do…..well, anything. He was putting those cardboard banker boxes together when he was four years old. He can do origami like I can make a peanut butter sandwich. He does all those wooden puzzle boxes in no time at all. My mind doesn’t work that way. Sometimes I have difficulty finding the exit of a store.

I love this quote by author, Simon Sinek, “Directions are instructions give to explain how. Direction is a vision offered to explain why.”

L. Maxine McQueen may be contacted at maxmac.1@juno.com

< Recent features

Back to top