The last lines of the poem “The Summer Day” by Mary Oliver go: “Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?”. I’m honestly not one for poetry most times, but that one hit me like a brick the first time I read it. The phrase has lived in the back of my mind since.
I’ve been thinking about the poem the past few days as I’ve been reading through various remembrances of Om Malik, the writer, photographer, entrepreneur, investor, and for many years, the inner voice of Silicon Valley. I didn’t know Om personally, my connection to him came from my early years of writing at the now defunct “The Apple Blog”. Om passed away from heart issues at 60, far too young. John Gruber knew him well, because of course John knows everyone, and when referencing Matt Mullenweg’s mention of Om’s appreciation of care and attention to detail he said:
If you’re going to get into something, you ought to pursue it to its full extent. If you’re not interested enough to do that, don’t bother getting into it. Find the few things you love; don’t waste your time on the many things you merely like.
I try to remind younger folks, especially those going through tough times that life is long, and when you’re young there’s so much time ahead of you that it’s important not to get too wound up about the immediate future. School, college, that summer job you don’t like… these things are all temporary and will be just a blip on the long timeline of life. But time is relative of course, and it goes faster the older you get. Life is long when you are young, but it’s far too short when you get old. What will you spend those precious seconds on?
What I’ve found, and what I think John is referencing here, is that a person will get far more satisfaction out of their work or their hobby if they can put their entire self in and get lost in it. Think about the last time you were so focused on a task that you had no recollection of the time passing. This is where the best work is done, and this is where a person can be the best version of themselves. From the outside it can look like obsession, maybe it is. Maybe it becomes that. Absolute focus is the demand of craft. That focus on the task is what makes paying for it with the time required worth it.
It really doesn’t matter what the task is. It only matters that you put your entire mind to work doing it. You could be a developer, a blacksmith, or a janitor. A mechanic, a systems administrator, a barista, an accountant, or a project manager… doesn’t matter. I once read about a company in Japan that made brooms, and that company employed a person who attached every bristle into the broom head by hand. To do that, day after day, sounds like obsession, but it’s also a person perfecting their craft.
I’m not saying that everything a person does should be perfect. On the path to expertise one will do many, many, many things wrong. Mistakes are made, things are forgotten, that plan you thought would work out great went poorly. Perfection for every task is not the goal, the goal is to complete every task with intention. Sometimes the best of what we can do right now isn’t good enough. That’s ok. Learn from it, remember it, and keep going.
What I am saying is that everyone’s life will be improved if more of us take the time to care. I began writing this thinking I’d agree entirely with John’s quote above, but that’s only part of it. John is talking about pursuing a hobby, and in that I do completely agree. But I also want to go farther, and say that whatever tasks you have in your life do them with care and attention to detail.
I’m currently in the middle of several projects, both at home and at work. My garage has been a mess for weeks as I’ve been doing some landscaping around the house. I finally started cleaning it up yesterday, but it’s got a long ways to go till I’m actually happy with it. Cleaning a garage doesn’t sound like the kind of thing where care and attention to detail would be required, but I’d argue that it’s exactly the kind of ordinary work where craftsmanship becomes a habit. Like mowing the lawn and then blowing the cut grass off the sidewalk and driveway. Little details matter.
Finding a home for everything worth keeping in my garage is difficult, and requires thinking through if the object is still good, if it still serves a purpose for me, and the manner in which I will use it in the future. Sometimes though, when I’m not paying attention, things just get swept into a plastic tote or some drawer. The next time I open that drawer and see a hodgepodge of junk, I’m reminded that there’s still work to do. Cleaning my garage can take hours, but it’s time well spent because it will be easier to work on other projects later, and it feels good to have spent the time on something worthwhile. Better than staring mindlessly at the TV, or doom scrolling through Instagram.
We live in a world of things and software, how many of those things are built by people committed to craftsmanship? I’d like to see more people care about more of the things they do. What we spend our precious time on matters, and while we may not always be able to define what occupies our day, we can always define how we will approach the work that needs done.