Most of the appliances in our house are old. They are old and broken to some degree. They’re not completely broken, just mostly broken. They still kinda work though.
It’s not just the expense that keeps us from buying new appliances, although, with three growing boys at home, there is not much money left to put into savings after the kids have been fed.
It’s also a reluctance to throw out things that still work, marginally. I must have struggled through the Great Depression in a previous life, because I don’t like to replace machines if I can trick them into thinking they still work. My previous life was likely a short one, ending with me pushing an old Model T down a very steep hill to get ‘er goin’ again.
A third reason for my hesitance to buy new appliances is the delivery nightmare I can’t get out of my head. Every time I contemplate a new appliance, I am haunted by visions of the delivery/installation men running away at first sight of our narrow doorways and corroded plumbing fixtures.
Sure, I could install the appliances myself, but I don’t like the looks of our narrow doorways and corroded fixtures either. I want to be able to blame someone else for the floodwaters.
After years of coaxing our washer and dryer into living life one day at a time, we finally broke down and bought a new set. I sweated out the days until delivery, wondering at what point the delivery men would abandon the project and how far from our laundry room the new machines would be left. Also, the 20-year-old collection of random stuff piled up in the laundry room would need to be temporarily relocated.
It went better than I’d feared, and the new machines got to where they belong, but it took a toll on my nerves. That’s why I’m still tinkering with the old dishwasher.
I had to switch out the door latch on the dishwasher last summer. That helped, but in the process, I learned that most of the connectors holding the inner door to the outer door are busted. The two doors cling to each other with the tenuous embrace of star-crossed lovers.
Consequently, the machine stops mid-cycle until pressure is applied to the top of the door. Then, it chugs away again, for a while. I could keep pushing on the door every few minutes, or I could come up with a brilliant solution involving a dowel and barstool cushions.

It’s not a long-term brilliant solution, mind you. It was just until I could determine the weak points on the door, so I could apply the true long-term solution: duct tape.
Now that I’ve got my tape applied at the crucial spots, the machine has been completing its cycles unaided, and will, no doubt, continue to do so for days to come.
Cross your fingers. And let’s not even talk about the frozen milk in the fridge right now.