The hardest job is to stay focused on what is in front of you. Don’t worry about what you can’t fix, like your childhood, your mother hating your posture, or your father criticizing your every move. These memories can’t be changed; they can’t be mended. But they can be ignored so that you can get onto your work.
This is a short memoir recounting how woodworking and hiking in the Cascade Mountains of the Pacific Northwest made a good life for the author. He shares life lessons he's drawn from his own journey to mastery of his craft and from the writings of a wide range of others, including Wendell Berry, Victor Frankl, Anne LaMott, Robert Pirsig, and Sonny Rollins. In addition to writing this and other books, Rogowski founded and has taught at the Northwest Woodworking Studio in Portland, Oregon, and throughout the U.S. and Europe.