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Who Finds Trains stress releiving

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  • Member since
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  • From: Canada
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Who Finds Trains stress releiving
Posted by JeremyB on Sunday, November 23, 2003 2:51 PM
Hi Guys

Does anybody find trains a great way to escape the Day to Day troubles, I find that when Im having a bad day at work or bad week for that matter that I go in my train room shut the door and run a few trains. It may not make your day a whole lot better but I feel It helps.

Jeremy
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, November 23, 2003 3:25 PM
How right you are.

I look forward to building something, all day long.

Once all the chores are done, there's nothing better than doing a bit modelling to relieve that stress

[^][^][^]

Jon
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, November 23, 2003 3:27 PM
You're right [:)]. When ever I have a bad day, I go to my basement and watch the trains do a few laps (on the floor) [:(!]. Can't wait to get that plywood..........
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, November 23, 2003 4:26 PM
When I'm done with the electrical aspect of my layout then it will more stress relieving
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, November 23, 2003 6:08 PM
My motto?
A bad day in the basement is better than a good day at work! [:D]
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, November 23, 2003 9:17 PM
that's just one of the few ways I have to relieve stress, particularly during exam season. (the other way is cartoons!)
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Posted by BNSFNUT on Sunday, November 23, 2003 9:24 PM
I find working on or running my railroad to be an easy way to relieve stress unless I am trying to replace a knukle spring in a Kadee #5, darn there when another one!!!!!!

Jerry

There is no such thing as a bad day of railfanning. So many trains, so little time.

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  • From: Southern Minnesota now
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Posted by Hawks05 on Sunday, November 23, 2003 9:37 PM
it helps. i enjoy coming on the forums and just browsing and responding to things. that helps me relieve stress. i can't really run my trains as the pieces of particle board i have is 3x5 feet so i can't even put a 18" radius on it. my dad found 3 pieces of it in our garage and i was just going to set up a loop to just run the trains but nope i can't even do that. all i have is a 5 foot straight section with the locomotive and 3 cars on it and just go forward and back. that is better than nothing. my dad is trying to get wednseday off so we can get plywood and build the bench work so i can start putting down track. once i can actually run a train continuously it'll be a great stress reliever.
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Posted by Puckdropper on Sunday, November 23, 2003 9:50 PM
@flyingscot: how about railroad cartoons? www.toytrunkrailroad.com

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  • From: Whitby, ON
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Posted by CP5415 on Sunday, November 23, 2003 10:44 PM
Total agreement here, nothing takes stress away from me more than model railroading. Too bad my wife doesn't see it this way

Gordon

Brought to you by the letters C.P.R. as well as D&H!

 K1a - all the way

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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, November 23, 2003 11:19 PM
I find them so relaving I became addicted. Its now my hobby, my chosen career (Via my business), a big aspect of the relationship with my girlfirend, and if it gets amy more perfect, I will be able to shrink my self down and see my layout from the perspective of my little pink plastic people.

James.
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, November 24, 2003 12:34 AM
I understand the wife factor, but one of my sons loves trains and if he is helping me or just wants to watch the trains then my wife does not care that I am spending time with the trains and not with her.
I have to agree that this hobby is a great stress relief, but it can be stressful when something does not work right, but what isn't.

Greg
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  • From: Midtown Sacramento
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Posted by Jetrock on Monday, November 24, 2003 9:54 AM
There is such a thing as positive stress--stress from good things, like spending a ton of time to reach some great goal (like an operating model railroad.) But just because it's stress doesn't mean it isn't still positive--and working out challenging problems in an enjoyable hobby teaches strategies to deal with stress that we don't necessarily want to deal with, as well as the art of finding innovative solutions.

In the case of replacing springs on Kadee couplers, the solution is Kadee's Spring-Pic, a two-buck piece of plastic that shrinks half an hour of squinting, cursing, losing and bending springs to ten seconds of fiddling with the coupler. Highly recommended.

Trains are a total release for me. I have other tension-release methods like live performance which are a little more visceral (as odd as it sounds, bouncing around on stage in devil makeup, hitting large metal objects with sledgehammers and power tools and occasionally setting my chest hair on fire with fireworks duct-taped to my body leaves me with a sense of total peace and serenity afterwards) but model railroading is satisfying and engaging for pretty much any period of time. During the years I spent away from the hobby I tried other hand-crafty oriented things, including leatherwork, computer building & upgrading, and a little bit of jewelry making, but none of it was as much fun as playing with the darned trains.
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Posted by bluepuma on Tuesday, November 25, 2003 4:53 PM
When everything is running right (and the Kato UniTrak helped that), I love watching the two trains, one on the inner loop, the other on the outter loop slowly (say 35-45 mh) passing the other. I could run halfway to the Mississippi from Chicago!

Nothing breaks that like track coming apart or a derailment, having a car break loose and emergency stop.

When I tire, I swap the train on the outer loop with inner, nearly like a saw by, since I often have to remove some cars to get them to fit both on the outer loop.

Other times I get in the car and ride the old highways along the rail towns.
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, November 25, 2003 7:28 PM
[:)] Tinkering with the trains greatly relieves my stress levels. When the evil outside world really starts to get to me ([}:)]), I REALLY enjoy escaping the hassles by doing something, anything, relating to trains. Gimme an hour with my trains and somehow the world seems okay again--until the next wave of lunacy hits....
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, November 25, 2003 7:47 PM
there is only one better!
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  • From: Southern Minnesota now
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Posted by Hawks05 on Tuesday, November 25, 2003 10:10 PM
trains right now is still competeing with playing baseball. nothing to me is better than playing baseball on a hot July night. nothing is better than that. baseball is in my blood. i live to play that game. hopefully come college i'll be able to keep playing then after that fall back on trains for a hobby. that and bowling.

just being at my friends house and watching his trains was the best thing i could have done last friday. just being able to watch the trains go was a blast.
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, November 25, 2003 10:53 PM
I don't have a layout , my enjoyment comes from kitbashing or detailing and painting HO loco's , it keeps the hand eye coordination going and this helps me with playing guitar which is my ultimate stress reliever , but working on a model is very stress relieving and makes no noise so it works for me late in the evening and the final finished loco is a achievement that is there to see .
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Posted by eastcoast on Wednesday, November 26, 2003 12:25 AM
Anything is better for me than watching a fence for 8 hours.
I feel that modeling a railroad is a little stress in itself but is
a good learning experience when I get the hang of a new
way to model. My relief is knowing I have something to show for
at the end of a day. I am not a smoker, drinker,etc. and praise god
for good health right now.I love and enjoy my trains everyday, and
can escape for a few moments when I am with them.
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, November 26, 2003 5:36 AM

Slow down and smell the roses deisel.


I have used model building as a stress releiver for years and enjoy it immensely. Only recently have I gotten back into MRR. Yes, I use trains to emerse myself into a fantasy world and leave my troubles behind.

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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, November 26, 2003 10:53 AM
MEEE!!!!!!

Trains are my way of getting away from life. I'm 17 and I'm sure many of you know the troubles of the average teenager. Now if only I can get my father in the same state of mind when we werk on our table. He finds in stress inducing. lol. He's impatient just like me... can't wait for the table to be finished. It's in early early construction... just started laying track. 4 sectioned L shaped table. It's my pride and joy cause I designed the layout myself. [:D] I'm so proud of it.
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, November 26, 2003 2:13 PM
Model railroads aren't my ultimate stress reliever (since something usually goes wrong with them when I run them). But the full size things sure can take your mind off of life. When I really am feeling bad, I put "Double Headed Freight on the Cumbres and Toltec" (Gandy Dancer Productions) into the VCR. If seeing 2 K-36s attack Cumbres pass doesn't make me feel better, then I go run my full size 4-8-8-4 on my personal 75 mile main line[;)] (sorry-started day dreaming there[:D]). There's just something stress relieving about steamers, but diesels can do the trick to, particularly when you're 15 feet away from 6 Dash-9s pulling up a 2.2% grade[8D].

Not that stressed right now[:)],
Daniel
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, November 26, 2003 8:34 PM
I do but most usually on days that i can not go out shootin with the boys due to bad weather or extra B.S. at work or most frequently the "honey do s" list
i find that after a real bad frustating day at work nothing relives stress better than goin out and blowin S**t up!! whether its 12 gauge at 20 feet or the 308 at 100 yrds maybe the 8mm Mauser or my personal favorite, the Kalishnikov, A.K.A AK 47 Assault Rifle!! nothing better than to feel that very satisfying THUMP against your shoulder!!
and then see stuff blow apart i love it usually it is car parts or full soda cans or whatever we find out there when i cannot go do this then i go run my trains
two old pieces were executed after they repeatly failed to properly

Regards

Larry

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