So, someone actually brought up the ‘sex of oil’ the other day. Seriously. Can you believe that? It made me stop and think, not really about oil itself, you know, the black stuff or the stuff you cook with. Nah, it kicked off a whole different train of thought, about some of the funny, weird situations I’ve found myself in over the years.
I mean, oil is just oil, right? Some is thick, some is thin. Some keeps your engine running, some fries your eggs. But giving it a ‘sex’? That’s a new one on me. It reminded me of this old place I used to work at, a small engine repair shop. Talk about practical, hands-on work. We fixed everything from lawnmowers to ancient tractors.
My Time at Henderson’s Garage
The owner, old Mr. Henderson, he was a character. He wouldn’t say ‘sex of oil’ but he’d come out with some real gems. He’d look at a seized engine and be like, “This one’s just plain stubborn,” or “She’s not giving up her secrets easily.” You kinda got used to his ways. It was his way of describing things, I guess.
Anyway, this one time, we got this massive old diesel engine in from a farm. It had been sitting out in a field for who knows how long. Looked like it had been through a war. The oil in it? More like sludge, thick and black. Henderson, he just peered at it, poked it a bit, and declared, “The life’s gone out of this old fella. We gotta find its will to live again.”
Now, we had this new kid working with us. Fresh from some technical college, all books and theories. He’s standing there with his little notepad, all serious, and he asks Henderson, “Sir, when you say ‘will to live,’ are you referring to a specific mechanical fault, like inadequate compression or perhaps a fuel delivery issue?” Henderson just gave him this long, slow stare. Didn’t say a word. That was Henderson’s way.
So, me and another old hand, Dave, we just got to it. We started by trying to turn it over by hand. Stuck solid. Then we pulled the injectors. Checked the fuel lines – all clogged with gunk. We drained what was left of the old oil, or rather, scraped it out. It was a proper mess, let me tell you. Hours and hours of just grunt work, getting covered head to toe in grease and grime. The new kid, he kept walking around it, tapping things with a wrench, looking at his diagrams, muttering about “systematic diagnostic approaches.” He wasn’t much help with the actual getting dirty part.
We kept digging deeper. Pulled the valve cover. Then we decided to take the intake manifold off. And what do we find? A huge, old mouse nest, packed solid right into the air intake. The poor thing couldn’t have breathed if it wanted to. No amount of fancy talk or diagrams would have found that without just getting in there and taking things apart, piece by piece.
We cleaned it all out, put in fresh oil – just regular, no-nonsense engine oil, no ‘sex’ specified – new filters, and after a lot of cranking and a bit of persuasion, that old engine coughed, sputtered, and then roared back to life. Sounded pretty good, too. Henderson just nodded, a little smile on his face. The new kid looked a bit lost, his notepad still empty of the ‘real’ problem.
That kid didn’t stick around too long after that. I think he preferred problems he could solve on paper. He probably went off to write a thesis on the “psycho-social implications of internal combustion engine failures” or something equally detached from reality.
So yeah, when I hear something like ‘sex of oil,’ I don’t think about the oil. I think about that old tractor engine, about Mr. Henderson, and about how sometimes the most complicated-sounding problems just need you to roll up your sleeves and get stuck into the messy, practical reality. It’s not about fancy labels or weird theories. It’s about understanding the thing itself, how it works, and what it needs. That’s been my experience, anyway. Just a lot of hot air, most of that other stuff.