I can't stop- do they make a patch?

Joined
Mar 17, 2005
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Several months ago, I bought my first really good knife. I bought a SOG Flash II and since then I can't stop buying them. I now have a CRKT M-16, Benchmade 551 Griptilian, and now I just ordered a Kershaw Scallion. I really don't need them, I just think that I am addicted. I think I need a Spyker to round out the collection but my wife might divorce me soon if I can't stop.

How can I stop? Is there any help for me? Please help me stop!!!!
 
There is no cure! You're SCREWED! :P

My only advice is to take your time when deciding on a knife. Make the purchases count. I bought a lot of knives I wasn't satisfied with and it lead me to buying more. Also these forums make you want to own the popular knives that everyone goes on and on about. Like I know want to get a Spyderco Manix even though I know it will be to big for me to use as an EDC and it will probably just sit in my drawer with my other dozens of knives I don't really use.

Lately my purchases have been more satisfing because I know what I'm looking for and I try not to buy a knife unless it fits the description of what I want.

If people give you crap about buying to many knives just find out what they collect. My wife used to like buying those fancy handmade baskets. They are completely useless for the most part, except the one that holds all our TV remotes. :)

My Dad spends a lot of money on HAM radio equipment and stuff for his Koi ponds. My Mom buys tons of nick nacks, little houses and villages, figurines, etc.

Everyone blows money on stupid crap, so at least our stuff is functional and we can make good use of it and it doesn't just sit there and collect dust.
 
About five years ago I was happy with my Frosts (American) and my Jaguar knockoffs. Then, I graduated to Cold Steel and CRKT. Now, Spyderco and SOG, and I'm saving up for a Sebenza and some customs. I don't think it will ever stop :D!
 
I have a neck knife, several axis locks, a couple fixed blades, ...

The patch that worked for me is made by Chris Reeve. It's a small Sebenza. Haven't bought another knife in well over a year. The only problem is now I think I need a larger patch. Specifically a Large Sebenza.

:D

Bruce
 
You can try buying and selling. Buy a new knife and sell and old one (ebay is your friend). I do that a lot but it doesnt help much. The addiction is still there! Might help with the wife situation though because instead of saying "I bought a new knife" you can say "I traded another knife for this one". This has some (limitted) positive effects on my wife. :):)
 
You might try one of those estrogen patches for post-menopausal women. Women don't seem to suffer from this compulsion.
 
http://www.fieldandstream.com/fieldstream/columnists/article/0,13199,659761,00.html#


Why Men Love Knives
Making hunters feel competent since 2 million B.C.
by Bill Heavey

There’s something about a good knife that speaks to you on a primal level. It’s been this way for about 21/2 million years, ever since David E. Petzal was just a gleam in his papa’s eye and some nameless hunter-gatherer first began pounding rocks together. Anthropologists say we first made tools for two purposes: pounding and cutting. Your pounding tool is simplicity itself; pretty much any rock will serve to crush a mastodon bone to get at the marrow. But you need something very specific—a sharp edge—to butcher an animal or scrape a hide. Imagine that first hominid flaking a piece of rock into a shaped edge that fit his paw. Imagine the delight in his face as he hefted it and discovered its powers. I bet you anything he smiled, elbowed the nearest guy, and showed off his creation. And the message—verbal or not—has remained unchanged from that day to this: Got me a nice little cutting rock here. Check it out.

I understand this feeling in its totality. Not long ago, I picked up a very nice “rock” indeed. Mine was a serious folder, an Emerson CQC-7. It’s more knife than anybody but a Special Operations guy could justify. But it’s not more knife than I wanted. I liked the way it felt in my hand. The Teflon-coated blade is just over 3 inches long and partially serrated for cutting rope or other fibrous material. It has a Tanto point that can punch through steel. Its handle is an epoxy-fiberglass laminate known in the trade as G-10 that almost seems to adhere to your hand. The knife comes with a clip that positions it head-down in your pocket so that it’s in the right position when you draw it, and there’s a little round thumb plate affixed to the blade for one-handed opening. The click of the blade locking into position is authoritative. It’s a sound that says, I can handle this.

The knife is pure function with no concession to appearance. Because of that, it is all the more beautiful. Like the Parthenon, there’s not a truly straight line in it. It cost...let’s just say, enough that you might be tempted to pay cash so your wife doesn’t see the figure on the credit-card bill. You could easily field dress an elephant with this thing. Heck, you could probably build a house. It makes me feel more competent than I actually am. A good knife will do this to you.

The only problem is that it’s sending me into a severe funk because there is nothing in my life that justifies a knife of this seriousness. I am not in the Special Forces. I am a middle-aged bald guy who lives in the suburbs with a wife and two kids, a big mortgage, and a 1991 Honda Civic. Last night, with my new knife in my pocket, my younger daughter and I fell asleep in her bed after reading The Poky Little Puppy. And not long ago, an attractive young woman held the door for me as I entered a store behind her. When I thanked her, she said, “You’re welcome, sir.” That “sir” said things that no man who still has his own teeth and knees should have to hear.

So maybe my acquiring this knife is a reminder to myself that beneath this veneer of normalcy there still lives a hunter-gatherer whose every day is a struggle against a world filled with sudden and unforeseen dangers. True, saber-toothed cats no longer tread in the night, waiting to pounce, but there are challenges nonetheless. Just last week, for example, I was setting out the garbage cans at the end of the driveway when I ran into my neighbor, Dave, who was doing the same. Dave is about my age and is suffering from the effects of having recently traded in a sweet little pocket-rocket convertible for a green minivan. There we were, two housebroken hominids with lawns full of dandelions, wrangling our garbage cans. Then Dave began stomping the cardboard box from a new baby gate, as the trash guys won’t pick up any container that hasn’t been flattened to under 6 inches. He was kicking it harder and harder, to little effect, when I said, “Let me give you a hand.” I slid my knife out of my pants pocket, and the blade clicked into place. With four quick strokes, I slit the cardboard seams. The box collapsed.

“Whoa,” said Dave. “That is one serious little blade.” “Yeah,” I said proudly, offering it handle-first. “Check it out.”
 
I've had your 'disease' for most of my life. Some friendly advice:
- don't waste your money on junk
- don't buy every single latest fad knife that gets mentioned on these forums
- bargain shop
- find a safe place to keep your growing accumulation
- start cataloging your knives from the start. where, when, how much...
- don't jump headfirst into exlusively collecting only kind of knives; variety is the spice of life
- do not let wife know the severity of your affliction

-Bob
 
After many years I decided to catalog and tally how much I spent on knives in my collection. I have some customs but mostly good manufacturers knives. Spyderco, Cold Steel, Buck,CRKT, Benchmade, Camillus, etc. Well, it nearly knocked me off the chair when the total showed $12,000. Of course that's in Canadian dollars and I paid for shipping and our dreaded GST. But it may surprise you how quickly the value of your collection can accumulate. By the way, I have a Busse on the way... I can't stop!
 
Akwacko said:
\ The only problem is now I think I need a larger patch. Specifically a Large Sebenza.
Bruce

How about a Sebenza with wood inlays? :P I think a small Sebenza with wood inlays is in my future.
 
I'd like to dispell the myth about the Sebenza patch... I bought a decorated Small Sebbie last year. I figured that my knife spending would finally be over... then I stumbled on Bark River :grumpy: I instantly fell in love with the Northstar. Then I saw a picture of the upcoming Spyderco Kumo... Finally, I noticed that Benchmade discontinued the 770 series (if I don't act soon, I'll never get one).

If I restrain myself, I might buy only 3 knives this year. There is no cure :grumpy: :D

Guy
 
I'm with ya, Minnesota.....48 yrs. old, never had a knife until 1 month ago. Now I have SIX! I'm learning and getting pickier now, so at least I'm getting better ones, lol :D ...last ones were a Kershaw Bump and a Benchmade 635 Mini-Skirmish. I might have to sell a couple to...well, you know ;) .
 
Only 6 knives? :rolleyes:

Pfff.

You're complaining to a bunch of heroine addicts that you've got a caffiene addiction. You're in the ER with a paper cut surrounded by dismembered gunshot victems.

You're not addicted until you keep signing up for new credit cards with 0% introductary balance transfers so you can transfer the thousands of dollars from one card to the other and never actually pay them off.

:p
 
But 1 knife for the different catagorys, A knife for EDC, a Comping knife, a knife you can abuse. A big knife

You need to make ur own catagorys,

Just buy a knife and dont buy a new one for that catagory, untill the knife is such bad shape you need a new one
 
Planterz said:
Only 6 knives? :rolleyes:

Pfff.

You're complaining to a bunch of heroine addicts that you've got a caffiene addiction. You're in the ER with a paper cut surrounded by dismembered gunshot victems.

You're not addicted until you keep signing up for new credit cards with 0% introductary balance transfers so you can transfer the thousands of dollars from one card to the other and never actually pay them off.

:p

Well, hell, six knives in 30 days seems kinda odd to ME, lol. Certainly not a briefcase-full collection like many of you, but it's a start. And yes, I've been in the Strider forums, where I shouldn't be.....all of a sudden $400 pocket knives don't seem so crazy. :eek:
 
silenthunterstudios said:
About five years ago I was happy with my Frosts (American) and my Jaguar knockoffs. Then, I graduated to Cold Steel and CRKT. Now, Spyderco and SOG, and I'm saving up for a Sebenza and some customs. I don't think it will ever stop :D!

Frosts or Frost? Frosts is the good studd from Sweden or somewhere around there. Frost is the stuff you see at gas stations.
 
minnesotashooter said:
I can't stop- do they make a patch?

No patch that I know of, but have you tried bloodletting? Of course, then you would need to buy a proper lancet. Spyderco used to make some kind of folding surgeon's knife I think. Probably very rare and expensive, so start saving your money.
 
Bloodletting is no good, I've tried it numerous times! :D

I got it real bad, I started with a Buck, them a Cold Steel, then Benchmade, Spyderco, and now Busse!
 
Larry, that almost brought a tear to my eye. Poor little box. *sniffs and hugs his knife/sword collection*
 
i can't believe you're complaining about those knives.

my crack addiction:

cold steel ti-lite
benchmade 551 grip
camillus cuda maxx 5.5 stiletto
cs voyager XL
BM42HS
Microtech Dragonfly
Spyderco Karambit
BM710
CS Vaquero grande
Protech godfather
Spyderco Native
Microtech mini-Socom elite
 
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