So yeah, I switched jobs. The "new" job was 50 hours a week in a foundry, until my first day, when they announced it was 60+. 5AM to 5PM in 120 degree temperatures, plus we want volunteers for Saturdays. I was already an hour late my first day, because they failed to let me know the schedule had changed. The guy training me was packing TWO pistols in a freaking foundry! I told them what I thought of all that, and explained that they likely wouldn't be too keen if I announced that I'd be working 10 hours a week less than we agreed. So, I quit. With nowhere to go. However, Covid has made the job market around these parts change drastically, and there was a veritable feeding frenzy when I once again blanketed the area with resumes.
I ended up at a "hi-rise" a half mile away, with a 25% bump in pay (still low, but any improvement is good), and another weird situation. I'm once again, a maintenance man. The building is owned by rich eccentrics who love to see me run. The first several weeks, I was moving furniture. I am by no means a creampuff, but this last year I hit 50, and I'm starting to feel it. Every day, my SOCKS are drenched in sweat. I have taken the place of two, maybe three maintenance men, and they all have a strong disconnect from the reality of how long things take. In short, they are beating me like a rented mule. Still, a month later, I'm building up my endurance, and they are staunchly against overtime (a plus for me, I've got a house and fleet to improve/maintain).
My third week there, I broke a water line at a toilet, flooding the entire first floor. Having received no training, I didn't know where the water shut-off was. Neither did my manager. The Fire Department came. The building was evacuated. Emergency Restoration was called to help squeegee THOUSANDS of gallons of water out the front door. There were insurance claims. There are bare 277V wires up in the ceiling dangerously close to the mystery water shut off valve. Yet somehow, I was not fired. If anything, this made all the powers that be really appreciate my capabilities. Not to the point that they calm down, but at least they seem to think I'm a good guy.
TLDR: I've been busy, and life has been crazy, but that doesn't mean there has been no progress on the house. Proof:
I made shelves. Electricity passes through one of the columns to feed the overhead kitchen fan that will someday get a hood. It will also someday be vented to the outdoors, but it at least works off a wall switch, as intended right now.
Here's a play by play of them going up. Oh yeah, the base also hides the 110V for the fireplace. Even has a junction box.
Also, trim, drywall, blah, blah, blah...