Re: Why are we different from other folks?
I've sometimes wondered the same thing. I think it's genetic.
My grandfather on my mother's side was basically a self-taught "engineer" and machinist, born in England and emigrated to the US at age two and lived here all his life. He enlisted in the army, eventually attained the rank of colonel, and worked in the Army arsenal in Watervliet, NY, making canons in WWII. While there, he invented a device that was able to measure the bore of canons to ensure accuracy and consistency for quality control. I only knew him for 6 years, but he was always inventing little geegaws and gadgets for around the house. He was also an avid photographer, muzzle loader enthusiast, and the local town historian and wrote two books; one a town history, the other on the Naval battles of Lake Champlain. Always curious, a family story tells of how he jumped off a bridge as a boy with an umbrella to see if it would work like a parachute, and broke his nose landing.
My father's fix-it-up mindset was a little less sophisticated, probably spawned from a degree of poverty, but he was rarely seen without a tool or roll of wire or duct tape in his hand, and was always inventing little things for around the house to make his life easier. He was the guy with taped up shoes and work gloves that should have been thrown out months ago. In a way, I'm like that, when I'm done with something, nobody wants it.
So from somewhere in that mix of stew, I come from. I guess it's a combination of curiosity and the challenge that no mechanical thing will get the best of me. But when it does, I admit it, and try to adapt. I love getting something for nothing or near that and making it into something that is useful and will last a lot longer. If you learn from mistakes, I must be getting pretty smart!
BTW, I just found this thread, it's great!