Blood, Sweat and Years August 13, 2015 12:21 56 Comments
When I started making knives I was 28 years old. I had a new baby girl, a new little house...life was simple. I bought some tools and set up a little shop in my 2-car garage. Blink my eyes and Boom, my little girl is six-feet tall, I have another son and daughter, I don't work in that little garage anymore , I don't live in that house anymore. Heck, I don't live in that time zone anymore! I have a new home, new friends, and a very different life than I did when I started. Where did I spend all that time?
I spent a lot of that time in a shop full of tools....alone. Making knives. What started as a hobby became a business and my love for the craft survived the transition. For that I am grateful.
But what have I done with sixteen years of my life? These knives I make are the love-child of art and tool. They cut a few apples, some brush, but many never see the light of day. They sit quietly behind glass in a collection, occasionally admired and used even less. And working here by myself, I ask the question: Am I spending my life doing something that matters...in light of eternity? Did I span the entire decade of my 30's plus a few years on either end making things nobody needs? Have I invested the capital of my life into objects which will, given enough time, return to rust? This question is especially relevant sitting in the E.R. getting a piece of steel dug out of my eye, or wrapping a giant burn on my leg. What the heck am I doing here?
That I took the road less traveled is clear. Maybe there's a reason there's no traffic here.
Held alongside the yardstick of eternity, what on earth actually measures up? Perhaps like my grandfather I should have been a surgeon, who was also a foreign aid worker, who was also a missionary, who was also a bible teacher. For 25 years, he ran a hospital in a small village in Africa. Now that's seems like eternal work!. But today the hospital is gone, the missionaries are gone, the people temporarily healed are now mostly dead anyway; the inevitable delayed only for a time. And when a life like that can be accounted as a waste by my yardstick of eternal value, maybe the problem is in me.
This is the thing that has delivered me – not once – but over and over as I re-measure myself. In those moments when life slows down enough and I ask, In light of eternity, does my work matter? This is the answer I hear.
Jesus of Nazareth, (whether you see him as the Son of God or merely the most influential human being ever), spent three years doing the work he is known for; preaching, healing, all of it. Three years. And the rest of it? From coming of age at thirteen in until age thirty he was...what? A carpenter. He spent seventeen years building chairs and hanging doors.
The historical accounts of his life are silent about this part of his life, so my reflections are purely conjecture. I'm not trying to convince the world, nor am I trying to convince you. My private musings are for my benefit alone. I see the accounts of the public life of the man Jesus, and I see the precision of his words, the force of his deeds, and the permanence of his life, and I ask myself, What kind of carpenter would this man have been? The public life of this man has held the attention of the world for 2000 years, and yet I am moved by reflecting on his private life. I cannot imagine that a man who lived with such passion and such wisdom could have built a poor chair.
Would hands that allowed themselves to be nailed to a cross have sacrificed any less in the cause of his labor? Can I imagine him simply biding his time all those years as a carpenter just waiting for the important ministry years to arrive? Would he have hidden mistakes with paint to save a shekel? Would he have balked at the because it was beneath him? That picture seems totally at odds with the values he preached that went on to transform the culture of the planet ever since.
So you see, I believe he made a fine chair: the best materials, no shortcuts, no lemons.
However, they were merely chairs. No matter how strong, how well built, how creative or how ornate, they all eventually fall apart. They crumbled and were probably burned for heat. Nothing more. The doors he hung were in time, un-hung. He devoted himself to learning a craft and applying it six days a week for seventeen years knowing all the time that In light of eternity it would all amount to sawdust. Why?
The one story of his childhood tells us of a twelve-year-old boy at the Temple talking to the religious authorities of his day who were amazed at his understanding. People love a child prodigy. Why not move on to the important stuff right then. If his life had a fixed limit of thirty-three years, why not spend every second possible doing the things for which Eternity remembers him? Surely there is more eternal weight in healing the blind and feeding the mouths and souls of the masses than in working in a shop full of tools. Alone.
And yet this is where he stayed until age thirty. He and his father with their tools, and some really well-made chairs and doors...why? And this, I believe, is the answer. Because in light of eternity, it does matter. The chairs and the doors...and maybe even the knives. They matter. Or rather the making of them matters. Because the millstone of eternity will certainly pulverize all the chairs and doors and knives back into atoms at some point, but the making of those things... Ah, now that is quite a different matter. What if the effort put into the things I make exists as something apart. The effort, offered back to God as thanks for the life and breath given me slides between those millstones and passes unscathed to the other side. What if the time spent devoting my life to the work of just making these knives carries with it the possibility of pleasing God. What if the physical products of my work serve their purpose in this time and though doomed to eventual destruction, the work itself - the attitude, the passion, the blood, sweat and years are themselves eternal?
In a first-century letter, one of Jesus' most passionate followers wrote, Make it your goal to live a quiet life, minding your own business and working with your hands. Maybe there is value, in light of eternity, to the work I do. Maybe it is enough to bleed and sweat and spend the best years of my life right where I am. Maybe like the man from Nazareth, I am right where I need to be.
Comments
Mark Pereira on June 25, 2023 22:03
Woe! I’ve got tears rolling down my face still, as I write this. I was more than moved by how you defined what you do and how important it is to you and what it means to you! It makes me think of my life and what I’ve accomplished, or rather the lack of accomplishment. Thank you for expressing yourself as openly as you did. Your work is amazing and I hope to some day be able to purchase some of your work.
Anita Berlanga on February 8, 2022 12:47
Burt -
Were you schooled by Jesuits? I’m reading a very Jesuitical turn of phrase and that intellectualism that comes from their teachings – then again, I am Catholic so maybe that’s just my take.
Anyway – please take that as a compliment. The ability to take religion and marry it to intellectualism is a rare and beautiful thing. I came to your site via your mesmerizing turns on Forged in Fire – watching you interact with metal and the mindset you bring to crafting a blade was stunning. Totally different from how other bladesmiths approach it (David Baker may be the exception but his approach is not quite as elemental as yours).
This is a beautiful post, requiring that the thinking amongst us continue to think and a gentle nudge to those who might not be thinking as deeply and nuanced as you. Thank you for this beacon of light in the darkness that swirls around us.
Cole Taylor on February 6, 2022 22:30
Burt, I’ve always been a huge fan of you and your work. I saw you posted about a tune up class on Instagram so I went to your website to get more info and came across the blood, sweat, and years. I read every word and every word spoke to me. I started making knives last year when I was 29. I get discouraged from time to time and ask God if I am on the right path and if this knife making thing is even what he wants for my life. Reading this has given me a little comfort that I’m doing okay on the path that I am on. Stay strong and keep at it. Thank you for taking the time to write what you have. It has helped me as well as others I’m sure!
Andre Alexandre on August 31, 2021 04:20
Hello, Burt.
I hope you are doing well in these strange days that we live in now.
After I read your text, I’d like to say to you that you have a vocation and you cannot escape from that like Jonas, the prophet, tried to do. Jesus Christ, the son of God, loves you and you know it and He has a beautiful plan in your life and a huge vocation for you ( Philippians 3:14) that is bigger than any human plan or human occupation. We are invited to be his witnesses. (Matheus 28:18-27)
May the peace of our dear Lord Jesus rest in you life brother.
In Christ, from a humble Jesus servant.
Nathan on December 7, 2020 00:44
Beautifully written. Just watched a rerun of Forged in Fire, and saw you win. Thanks for your artistry, and your words. You might enjoy Michael Horton’s book “Ordinary”, which this post reminded me of.
BtzefsnI on December 4, 2020 11:42
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Gavin Jenkins on November 30, 2020 15:38
Hi Burt,
Amazing work by an amazing, interesting guy. I’m from the UK and struggle with knife making due to our laws, all i can only hope for is to be a fraction of the maker you are.
Inspirational stuff my friend
Never stop
Gavin
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Mark on October 8, 2020 23:29
Burt,
I come here to look at your knives I can’t afford and was blessed with your musings about Christ. Thanks for your testimony, it really spoke to my heart. God bless you bro.
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Alejandro M. on September 8, 2020 23:33
Hi Burt, I have never looked up any of the FIF contestants or judges for that matter, until I saw your episode of beat the champs today. I came looking for a beautiful, well-made knife and then I find this page. Like you and many others I have faith and have put in the love, sweat and years to my trade, though constantly thinking (especially recently) about whether or not I am making “a difference.” Am I doing the Lords work? Is my life well spent? and after reading your testimony I can honestly answer… Yes!
Your words rang true and gave me peace. I am sure this won’t be the only time that I came back to your site and this page for a helpful reminder of who I work for.
Thank you,
Alejandro M.
Jay Clark on August 2, 2020 15:00
Burt,
Three of my favorite FF episodes feature you and your skills. Your last appearance, competing against J was so full of fun and joy it’s my all time favorite.
Thanks for your witness.
Jay Clark
Jay Clark on August 2, 2020 15:00
Burt,
Three of my favorite FF episodes feature you and your skills. Your last appearance, competing against J was so full of fun and joy it’s my all time favorite.
Thanks for your witness.
Jay Clark
Chris Smith on June 25, 2020 09:42
Hi Burt,
God bless you sir!
I just visited your site for the first time and read your letter. Thank you for opening your heart for the world. I am also a Christian and currently the same age that you were when you wrote it, and I too have been going through a similar “mid life crisis”. I work in higher education scientific research as a career. I am entering my fourth year of remodeling a house, and I am a novice knife maker. I approach each day to work hard and do my best to glorify The Lord, but lately I have been wondering if anything that I do matters. Your words sound so familiar. The Lord truly works in mysterious ways beyond our understanding. I have watched you many times on FIF and it is like watching Mozart or Monet work. But last night a feeling fell on me to look at your website, and God led me to assurance through your words. Now I know that whether we are a CEO, a janitor, a preacher, or a carpenter we should seek to make the most of everyday and every venture to the glory of God. We never know who else may be watching us; a child, a coworker, a stranger. Everything that we do is a testimony!
Chris
Vincent Price on June 24, 2020 09:53
As I sat in my chair watching your episode of FIF Beat the judges, I was hand sanding a set of scales I had pinned together. Earlier in the day I had buried my 88 year old grandmother. I was chasing the tiniest of scratches before moving to the next grit but kept thinking what does it matter anyway while thinking of my grandmother who had suffered from dementia. This is a knife I have already sold for $80. But I know the scratch is there and that’s what matters. Thanks for your words above, they are poignant and the real meat of the matter. As a man in my 40’s who has had a life altering injury and looking to turn my love of the forge into my career I sure wish I had a mentor such as yourself to work under. My area of West Virginia is void of makers. But you sir are special.
Heide Mechel on June 18, 2020 20:56
Giving glory to our savior! Let your light shine!
Even if one person reads your “About Me” and that leads them to Jesus, what an amazing day!
Much appreciation,
Heide from Michigan
Heide Mechel on June 18, 2020 20:55
Giving glory to our savior! Let your light shine!
Even if one person reads your “About Me” and that leads them to Jesus, what an amazing day!
Much appreciation,
Heide from Michigan
Ben Higgerson on January 4, 2020 21:56
I appriciate your openness about you relationship with our Lord and Savior Jusus Christ Burt. And I agree. My former pastor (retired) used to say “bloom where you’re planted” The Father has you where you are for a reason and he promised to give us the desires of our hearts (albeit “our” desires are to be His desires) You ARE using your position to minister to others. Thanks for what you do.
Bryan F. on December 14, 2019 10:57
Were all exactly where our Father has put us exactly where we need to be wether we or others think differently. We cant be anywhere else its impossible! This is why we should"pray always" be “vigilant” because the jerk “prowls around seeking those…” The father has his own right where he needs em & if He needs something done he’ll place us or others there to do just what he needs done. He’s got angels & miracles to fall back on too, but i believe He loves to work with us much more because he has us in the forefront of his mind (if he has one)always doing eternal work. Thx for your witness buddy!
P.S. remember he loves & adores us, if your child was doing something he/she loves to do would you tell them their wasting their time?
Bryan F. on December 14, 2019 10:51
Were all exactly where our Father has put us exactly where we need to be wether we or others think differently. We cant be anywhere else its impossible! This is why we should"pray always" be “vigilant” because the jerk “prowls around seeking those…” The father has his own right where he needs em & if He needs something done he’ll place us or others there to do just what he needs done. He’s got angels & miracles to fall back on too, but i believe He loves to work with us much more because he has us in the forefront of his mind (if he has one)always doing eternal work. Thx for your witness buddy!
P.S. remember he loves & adores us, if your child was doing something he/she loves to do would you tell them their wasting their time?
Frederick Burrill II on September 1, 2019 14:03
Well Burt,
I was a student of yours at a class in Maine. You showed me how to make things with my hands and for that I am grateful. I like to think what you taught me has made me not only happier, but a better person over all. I watched you do that for an entire group of us who had no idea what we were doing. There is no such thing as wasted time. Keep making.
Dusty Burrill~
Matthew on May 22, 2019 02:34
Hello Burt.
First want to say, as a enthusiastic hobbyist-type knifemaker and leatherworker, (if that’s what I am or do and/or feel and think , or one of the things, or what I’m defined as for the purposes of this post to someone like yourself and any who may read this… ok enough of that haha) that I like your knives and sheaths. For what that’s worth, which isn’t much.
I read your reflective and philosophic type post… and must say, pretty deep. And kinda depressing . But nothing new. (Though what is new under the sun? )
And something probably most every one of us in the human species thinks about or goes through at some point to some degree…
Since as the Bible says, God has put eternity in our hearts.
And you seem to be searching for an answer or meaning or a deeper worth in it all….
(And seem to be close or on the right track with it at least… in that you mentioned God, so hopefully know Him…the real One that is…unlike the poor heathen fool, who really should be pitied.)
But in my humble, feeble and very limited human mind I’d say the deeper worth youre searching for just isn’t there.
And that, ultimately, as King Solomon the wise wrote… It all is vanity. It all is worthlessness.
There really is no deeper worth in it or much anything we do.
No matter what, no matter how great our knives are or how great our skill at crafting them soon we’ll die and/or theyll be handed on to people who dont appreciate them and our toil forgotten, eventually they’ll rust and corrode to dust and all our toils are in vain.
And, still with Solomon (paraphrased) about the best you can do is eat, drink , be meerry and find some pleasure in the works of your hands.
Nice huh? :))
But not all’s lost. Not all so depressing. ))
I’d encourage you to read Ecclesiastes Chapter 6 (the Bible) in particular… and other writings of Solomon, as here he is sort of facing the end of his days and reflecting back on his life.
If you know the Bible (if you don’t, DO!) you’d know King Solomon, the son of David, was pretty much the man with everything, the richest and wisest man who ever lived… blessed by God amd denied nothing in life….1000s of concubines even haha, you name it he had it, he knew it, he did it, he built it…. etc etc.
All his days from youth were spent seeking every pleasure and fulfillment , amassing unimaginable riches and power and knowledge and wisdom and bla bla… I believe his reign was the one time the whole Kingdom if Israel was united and under God and the peak of its unrivalled power and influence… closest to what God always offered them…
All under him.
So he was pretty well to do haha.
And as he neared his death and was looking back on it all, reflecting… he (depressingly) concluded that “all is vanity”. Worthless.
The fool and the wise they all die and go to the same dust and etc etc… read it for more.
And basically that the the only thing of any true worth was his service to God and hope in God.
But also read and contrast them with the writings of his father King David.
The humble shephard boy who became Israel’s first King, who killed Goliath with the sling and who served God faithfully all the days of his life.
The one who God Himself says was “a man after His own heart”.
Who (as recorded in the Bible) as an old man nearing death also was reflecting back on his days…
And reached much the same conclusion as Solomon.
That all was worthless except his service to and hope in God.
But whereas Solomon was all depressed and misreable… David, despite his body brealing and failing him and pain overtaking him and such , was quite hopeful and cheery and grateful and praising of God.
“As I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, i shall fear no evil”.
(Btw this referances, in ancient times old age was known as the “evil time”. Of pain and fraility and such. The reality. [I assume, not quite there yet myself haja] Not the glamorous skin cream and hair dyes and luxury retirement condos the media pushes it as these days.)
And he finishes by declaring his hope and excitement that soon he “shall dwell in the house of the LORD forever and ever. Amen”.
Anyway, just thought I’d share this, kinda depressing but hopeful food for thought. :))
God bless.
Dean cheek on March 29, 2019 14:14
Hello burt you are truly inspiring I will take what you said and think about it often I to love working with my hands , I only just started making knives and I’ve often wondered why have I had this obsession since I was a child to make knifes and work metal and is it something I should really be spending most of my free time on? My answer to that is most definitely, nothing gets me more excited than working some metal and after reading what you wrote and thinking about it a bit I’ve never been happier to start a new life making things with my hands. Rock on burt thanks for the inspiration!
Naudé Theron on January 6, 2019 06:24
Burt, your words are so true and inspiring. Praise God for people like you, not afraid to praize His name.
Regards
Naudé
Namibia
bill schwartz on November 9, 2018 09:47
Amen.
Jesse Miller on August 15, 2018 21:33
Burt, your words show insight, and they serve as proof that you’re as thoughtful about Eternal Kingdom Work as you are your craft. I think we could all stand to be reminded that our work counts, and that it should be done as if it were for Jesus himself. Great reflection my man.
John on January 19, 2018 19:12
I stumbled onto your page haphazardly, or (God wanted me to read this). I was looking for a special gift for my amazingly beautiful wife who can cook wonderfully. There is something very special about owning something that was hand made from someone who takes thier craft to heart. The ability the creater has to feel, hear, smell, inhale and exhale the finished product. The process. The love. The immense sense of pride to see the finished creation. The wonder where it will go, what type of life it will bring to others, the usefulness it will bring into the world?
I read every comment on this with a tear in my eye, and felt the appreciation in the words typed. God only knows why we do what we do and why we do it. Everything done with the glory of God in our thankful hearts does matter in eternity.
I needed this message right now. Thank you!
Daniel on December 31, 2017 20:05
I believe that when undertaking a noble craft, it is important to to mind how we do it, and with what spirit we undertake these tasks. With honor, integrity, and humble pride in our work. The work that no one sees but we. Perhaps our maker is right along side us in those instances of passion and inspiration in our craft. With these ingredients, the end product takes care of itself and become more than just stuff. Clearly.
I believe that if we are examining what we do in this particular light of significance, then we have already got it.
They say the joy is in the journey. If we are truly one with our soul and the will of God then we are exponentially blessed. It seems to me that you are right there. All is as it should be. Nothing happens in his world by accident.
God bless you and those that work to glorify him as well. We’ve all got our special places in the world and it wouldn’t be quite the same without each and every one of us, fulfilling our specific souls’ mission.
So, head down, nose to the grinding stone, and let’s keep honoring our work, ourselves, our fellow man, and let’s do it in his name.
Stay sharp brother,
Daniel
Ken Swerdlow on November 12, 2017 21:21
Thank you for your inspiring speech on what really matters. Godspeed
Adam Merrick on October 3, 2017 02:36
Uzair on August 29, 2017 08:21
Hy I am Uzair, author Of Knives
Jim on August 15, 2017 20:52
Burt,
This is almost two years to the day that you posted about Blood, Sweat and Years. Please allow me to comment, although belatedly, on the question of “does my work matter” . We first met at the Atlanta Blade show more than a decade ago. I purchased a simple drop point blade, about the time you earned your journeyman smith. Yes, the blade is marked BF on one side and JS on the other. That blade has served me well in preparing meals at home and away. It is a reliable tool that has never failed and dutifully prepared the bounty we have been blessed with through the years. A couple of years later, some of your work was with me on deployments where it was used, and perhaps abused. I left one of those blades with a friend who remained in country as I returned home, it was of some comfort to him to know he had the right tool at hand. You worked on a knife for me to present to a gentlemen upon his retirement. Now that he had the time to fish with his boys, he has a good knife to clean his catch. One can not ever get back the years lost when the kids were young but your knife was with him during many fishing trips with his boys. I faced a career change a few years ago. I find that perhaps while I would use a fighter, skinner, or military knife a bit less – I still need a tool to prune the trees, harvest a fruit or a vegetable, or cut some rope. Maybe I’ll give you a call about a sheepsfoot blade. You see – your work does matter, for in all those years, my friends and I were confident that the tool we held was made by a man who knew his craft and that is a comfort.Sincerely,
Jim
Justin blauert on February 26, 2017 14:29
Great insight Burt I have come back several times to read this post when I think similar thoughts in my life I would encourage you to write more as your time permits God truly has given you a gift with words.
Aaron Kenstler on February 12, 2017 11:07
Burt,
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. As a fellow craftsman, It has given me much to think about. So much of creation is enriching but unnecessary. I love yellow apples, but I could live without ever having one. When we see the vast diversity and complex variation of life, one thing is clear. Our Grand Creator must love creating and seeing others enjoy his work.
Being created in His image, some of us also have a strong need to creat also. You are complementing God by imitating Him.
Thank you for your incredibly refined work, it is inspiring. I hope to meet you some time.
Aaron
Mickey on November 10, 2016 22:09
I also wrote and erased several comments. All I will say is I am a single father with custody of my two kids. I work quite a bit. But, I was playing around with knife making. But, seeing you work on forged in fire inspired me to take it more serious for sure. I only have 2 weekends a month and one day a week to practice the trade. But, you can be for sure that when my girls aren’t here I am in a two car garage practicing. I barley make ends meet half the time and sometimes they don’t meet at all. But, as my girls grown and my financial troubles decline. I will finally get to order a very sharp peice of art that I sit on every lunch break and dream about owning. Please keep up the breathtaking work.
Matthew Parkinson on October 23, 2016 21:17
Well written and poignant Burt. I very much enjoyed the read.
Even a heathen like me can relate to this, it is something I have been thinking over in the quit of my mind as well, the call of the Vocation. That feeling that so much of what we do is for our soul rather than the product. That a bit of us lives on through our work, through our ideas, our understanding and hopefully our example.
This to me is grace, that undefinable thing of the gods love. Our work is given we must but pick up the hammer and do it.
MP
Pete Winkler on October 15, 2016 17:40
Enjoyed your article Blood, Sweat and Years, Burt. Well thought out and written. Great perspective on eternal things and values…Walking in the way, living truth, sharing our life thru our creativity, love of family, neighbors and friends finds deep reward when done thru a surrendered life that follows the Master…Give em heaven….
Paul on August 31, 2016 15:48
Excellent… Well out. I totally understand and relate. Thanks for sharing
Nick on January 23, 2016 22:30
Burt,
I cannot help but think that we would truly get along as friends. Your “private musings” are quite thought provoking. I find joy in thinking about such things as you describe in your post and I see similarities in the way we think through these larger ideas. In your writings, you have also given me new ways to think of things. You are a great storyteller and I thank you for sharing such personal thoughts.
This particular topic fits in with a discussion I have been having with a friend of mine. We talked of the purpose of any job or pass time we pursue on this earth. Aside from the great joy that God sees in the works and toils of his children, we may also be practicing for our jobs in heaven. Can you imagine handing your maker something made by your hands? Such joy!
If, for whatever reason, you find yourself in Iowa, please look me up. You are always welcome at my table.
Regards,
Nick
A.A on December 31, 2015 22:30
Burt,
Let me add to what your life’s work has come to. I emailed you a few years ago after my first deployment to Afghanistan, where I noticed one of my comrades had one of your beautiful fixed blade knives. I wanted a unique American made, originally American symbol of a warrior. After a few conversations over specifications for the project, and your gracious pricing for military members, you sent me what I believe to be a work of art. I opened the box to the pure joy of seeing this fine piece of craftsmanship.
Since that day I have taken your knife to Afghanistan twice more. It has accompanied me through the mundane daily tasks, to some of the most harrowing combat that I have ever experienced. And, since that day our family has been blessed with a son. A son who will inherit what has now become a family heirloom. So, I would say not a moment wasted on your craft bother.
Thank you again.
A.A.
Ed McManus on November 1, 2015 01:27
Burt,
Continue to be the best person you can, your family and friends will always remember you for the person you are and the kindness you show to others.
Continue to be the artist who crafts truly spectacular blades and you will live for eternity in the minds of those of us who are blessed enough to own one or more of your knives.
For the record I carry one of your personal carry knives as part of my normal equipment every time I leave home and hope to purchase a combat #3 from you in the near future for use when I am in the outdoors, hiking, fishing and hunting, and at some point will be passed on to my kids. But regardless of whether one of your knives is “used” by its owner or proudly displayed in some office take heart in the knowledge that you have attained a level of craftsmanship that very few can reach.
Marty M on September 12, 2015 02:14
I think it is natural to wonder if you’ve made the “right” choices in life. In terms of career choices I don’t think a man can do much better than following their passion. So you have won there.
I work in law enforcement. I was talking to a coworker the other day. We are the same age and have 7 years until retirement. Neither of us have much passion for the job any longer. Being a police officer isn’t looked at as an honorable profession anymore. We are trapped though. Can’t leave or we won’t get our pensions. We do the job and try to do as much good a possible. For the most part though it is a soul sucking endevour.
We each came up with the same solution independently. Basically the job is just a mechanism to enable us to support our families and pursue our passions/hobbies. That is how many folks get though life I think. It’s a bit sad, but it’s a coping mechanism.
So consider yourself lucky (I’m sure you do). Your passion and work are the same and you are rewarded well both monetarily and spiritually by it. You are truly living the dream.
I recently decided to make the jump from knife collector to maker. I have a new grinder. I have arranged to take some classes with a MS. I’m burning the midnight oil after work and hopefully by the time I retire from the JOB in 7 years I’ll know what I’m doing and can merge my passion with my work as you have done. Better late than never.
Best regards,
Marty M
P.S. By the way I started reading the bible because of something you posted on your old site almost 10 years ago. So you’ve made a difference in my life in more ways than one.
P.P.S. I have two of your knives (a mammoth scaled hunter and a big chopper) and gave a
third Foster away to a friend (another nice hunter). All three see use. All three create memories…
J. Owens Smith on September 12, 2015 00:55
Burt, good thinking, good writing, wise questioning. If I understand the applicable Scripture accurately, we don’t stumble into God’s perfect will for our lives accidentally. I think the progression is: surrender, seek, wait, and obey. I have “done my own thing” all my life, and it has not worked out very well. According to “worldly” standards, I have accomplished some big stuff. Trouble is, I “leaned to my own understandings, and never asked Him to direct my path!” What matters is obedience and motive. God’s blessings on you and your family. Owens
Matthew Gregory on September 4, 2015 08:20
Ozymandias.
Shelley’s the easy one to reference for this, but it could just as easily have been Conrad, although somehow he’s always got the darker portrayal of the topic…
Welcome to your early forties!!! No one issued me a helmet, but I’m thinking it might have helped. ; )
Jason on August 16, 2015 10:50
“Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.” Oscar Wilde. What you do matters to me.
Ty on August 15, 2015 14:56
I believe every man wonders about himself and his work in similar fashion. I sell commercial insurance and never imagined I would have such a boring sounding job, although it can be exciting at times. I agree with your comments of just doing your best at whatever it is you do as God would expect. You just keep being the best knife maker you can be, and I will be the best insurance agent I can be. In one way or another, it will be to the benefit of others and that’s what matters.
God Bless
Jamie Cantrell on August 13, 2015 19:28
I got old before I found you. I’m the one who got a military knife from you and the sheith buckle wouldn’t open easily, I got it for my son who flies helicopters for the Marine Corp. you made a plastic (markita) sheith , he loved it. I managed to con you out of a second one,I use to camp a lot and the knife is amazing. I can cut through bush like it is a machitie.it is still sharp after a lot of camp use .When I go to gun and knife shows and talk to the knife dealers I throw your name at them and they back down. Thanks for being who you are and your place in our life. I have a third knife that is in the safe!
John on August 13, 2015 16:48
Ripple in the pond
Antoinette on August 13, 2015 16:25
Burtrum, WOW! Your writing improves with each post and this one is very thought provoking – to say the least. Same for the previous comments too! Though I don’t own any of your knives, I truly enjoy seeing them and your amazing art work. I subscribe to your newsletter because I truly enjoy reading all you post. Knowing you since a young boy of only 15ish and seeing the man you’ve grown to be – I believe God has you right where He wants you to be doing exactly what He wants you to do! Especially this year, giving you the time to write and still do what you love. Don’t stop! Keep on going! And may God get all the glory! God bless, Ant :)
David Harrington on August 13, 2015 15:04
Burt,
I really enjoyed your commentary. I have also pondered over our purpose as workers in this world. I have spent my carreer developing electronic devices for aerospace companies. Talk about things becomming obsolete in a short time! I think you hit the nail on the head though. It is not the thing that we make that has eternal significance, it is our attitude and relationship to God and others that counts. Doing honest and quality work dedicated to the Lord points others in that direction as well. It is also a way to serve others. Your talents and work create a product that others admire and desire and purchase. You use that money to support your family and also purchase materials and tools. Those purchases help those people provide for their families and so on. All of this glorifies God and displays His provision for us and those around us.
Dave
Chris Akers on August 13, 2015 15:04
We all, are BORN to DIE.
What we DO in between birth and death matters.
We can DO, good or evil.
Remember, GOOD and EVEIL are the vessels to get us to death. The crafts along the way, are, in many cases not relevant. It is what is in the heart making the craft that is.
The knife is beloved to someone, because it was made by a Master Blade smith, or bought because the Master is their friend, or maybe because he has a unique technique, or they just like the blades look.
They buy it to fit THEIR needs, whether it is for visual pleasure, shaving, cutting, or holding it in their lap, or carrying it in their pocket.
We each view the knife differently, from OUR perspective.
Our EXPERIENCES along the way help to create the perspective.
I other words…..
I market health insurance to the low income constituents.
In 50 years, will that mean anything to their families?
NO!!
How about life insurance?
Possibly.
But if I help someone today that needs (or perceives) the need of my product today, and then they do use it, it makes a difference today.
That is the realm I live in…the here and now.
Why?
Because GOD put me here, in the now!
.
Chris on August 13, 2015 14:02
Burt,
I have purchased several of your knives. I am/was guilty of keeping my blue collar hunter in the safe. I purchased darksides as they aren’t so pretty I hate to use them. Then one day I realized that my reluctance to use/carry the hunter was as much about my inability to keep a knife sharp as it is about the art in your knives.
I now use them all even though I still can’t sharpen a knife to save my butt.
I have no god given artistic talent. My gifts lie elsewhere and I marvel at people such as yourself who can turn raw materials into working pieces of art.
You may never hear that one of your knives saved a soldiers life. One of your knives might be used to cut loose a seat belt to remove an accident victim, or perhaps simply used by a grandfather to whittle with his grandchild. Maybe many are ‘only’ laying under glass and being admired. If that somehow takes away from your work, then there are a lot of useless things hanging around museums around the world.
Your knives start conversations with perfect strangers and honest dialogue on common ground never hurt any group/person.
Then again perhaps your purpose in continuing is simply because I don’t yet have a camp knife. :)
Rick Wallinger on August 13, 2015 13:56
Burt,
I wrote and erased many comments just now. Then I remembered this is your “place” to share what you will. Not mine.
I will say only this. Forget the concept of Time. All the chairs built, doors hung, knives forged, deeds done are forever and eternal.
Thank you for sharing.
Rick