About: running from my past, stopping occasionally to create awful things hoping one day at least something will be worse than i am

This Instructable is about doing something very original that has never, ever been done on this site, I swear: Taking a gadget that doesn't support Bluetooth and adding that capability with soldering and wanton screwdriver abuse.

You can thank me later.

Materials:

- A pair of headphones that you'd like to liberate. Mine in particular happened to be these terrifically gaudy AM/FM headphones (with an antenna to accentuate my masculinity) that I found at a yard sale next to an old camera. I decided the headphones would be better for listening to music than the camera so I bought it. The old hag tried to take me for a ride by asking for $3 but I managed to haggle her down to $2. This is New York and I don't take crap from anybody.

- A stereo Bluetooth headset to be your donor. I used a sleazy combination of RyanAir & AirBnB to get myself down to Shenzen, China and buy a couple headsets. It only took four days and I had to hide in a splintery pine box with a baboon in an uncompressed biplane cabin to get over there but it was worth it. In the future though I'm gonna use eBay if I ever get unbanned for trying to sell Michael Jackson's ghost.

- Soldering Iron. Dude just don't touch the end.

- Wire Stripper. And I'm not talking about ol' Bony from the gentlemen's club.

- Screwdriver. Ever notice that two types of screws - Phillips and Alan - are people's names? Stop trying to Anglicize tools, whoever you two are!

- Dremel/Grinder. Cut holes in the headphone case if necessary to loop wires or expose buttons.

- Glue, for my shattered heart. And for attaching circuit boards to the inside case, if you aren't too wracked by guilt & loneliness to do those kinds of things.

- Sense of self-worth (still lookin')