The single thing I carry at almost all times is a pocket knife. I started carrying one when I worked around my Dad’s ranch because it was such a useful tool to have.
My first pocket knife wasn’t all that much. It had a tiny handle that had two knives that folded into it. It was given to me as a Christmas gift from my Grandpa. I was about ten.
Grandpa ran a store in Costilla, New Mexico. In it, he had this display case that had over two dozen different kind of knives in it. Most were simple folding knives. Some were what I later learned were Swiss Army knives with corkscrews, scissors, and screw drivers. The case was a source of endless fascination for us kids.
I had the knife well into college. I used it out in the field when feeding cows to cut the string on the bales. I used it to sharpen pencils. I used it as a screwdriver. And I used it to help loosen tight things. Then one day I was trying to pry something loose with it and snapped the blade.
So much for that knife.
I’ve had numerous pocketknives since. Some I still have and are tucked away in a drawer. Some have been damaged by years of use. All have a story.
My current knife is a Gerber folding blade. My son carried it in Iraq and Afghanistan. He gave it to me when he returned from his last deployment.
The stories that knife could tell!
It’s one of my most treasured possessions.
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My sister-in-law carries one. I saw her use it at our son’s wedding when a groomsman’s new jacket still had the back vent basted shut!
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Very useful thing to have. You can make kindling, cut string, even protect yourself with it. I think the most violent thing I’ve used one for in the last thirty years is sharpen a pencil though.
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Yes, a pocketknife can be handy.
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Very useful thing to have.
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Great to carry unless you forget that you have one in your pocket as you go through the TSP line (not based upon a personal experience).
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My knife is one thing I always make sure is packed in my luggage. What surprised me is years ago I had to surrender my handcuff key. I’d carried it for over thirty years, through war zones, through several departments, and yes, aboard dozens of airplanes. Someone finally told me I had to give it up. Personally, I think they lost theirs and needed one. Oh well.,
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Interesting William. I have never heard that keys were on the forbidden list. I think that you theory is probably correct.
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That almost happened to my sister-in-law! She found a nook in the airport to stow it in, and it was still there when she returned from their trip!
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Lucky woman, Joyce. Thanks for sharing this fun story.
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