From Job to Craft
#craftsmanship #quality #caring
In "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance," Robert Pirsig observes mechanics working while listening to the radio—revealing a fundamental absence of deep engagement. Unlike craftspeople, these workers showed no identification with their profession: "There was no saying, 'I am a mechanic.'" What separates mere employment from meaningful craft is caring—a quality missing in both these mechanics and in the technical manuals Pirsig edited. "Caring about what you are doing," he emphasizes, "is considered either unimportant or taken for granted." This conscious investment transforms routine tasks into craftsmanship, and might be the antidote to what's "gone wrong in this twentieth century." When we rush through work simply to finish it, we surrender the opportunity to transform ordinary labor into something personally meaningful and well-executed.