TurnTheWorldAround
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The Most Precious Material in the Universe - A Reflection On Turning Wood For Almost Two Decades
For nearly two decades, one of the most fulfilling places in my life has been standing behind a lathe, turning a simple block of wood into a pen. What began in 2008 as a small class at a Woodcraft store slowly became something much deeper than a hobby. It became a form of reflection, meditation, and perspective.
There is something remarkable about taking raw wood into your hands. Before the tools ever touch it, the material already carries a story. The grain patterns were shaped over years, sometimes decades, by seasons, storms, droughts, sunlight, and growth. Every piece is different. No two blanks ever truly become the same pen. Even before the turning begins, the wood already contains a kind of quiet history.
As I shape a pen on the lathe, I often find myself thinking about how easily we overlook the extraordinary things around us. We are taught to see gold, diamonds, and precious stones as rare treasures. And from our perspective here on Earth, they certainly are valuable. Yet when we step back and look at the scale of the universe, many of those materials are surprisingly common. Entire planets may hold mountains of metals and endless fields of crystalline minerals scattered across distant systems.
But wood is different.
Wood is the product of life. It is born from the delicate balance of water, atmosphere, sunlight, soil, and time. It requires a living world. In the vast silence of the cosmos, that may be one of the rarest things imaginable.
Here on Earth, wood has surrounded humanity since the beginning of civilization. It built our homes, our ships, our fires, our tools, our tables, our instruments, and our shelters. Entire generations survived because forests stood nearby. Even today, despite all our technology, we remain deeply dependent upon it in ways we rarely stop to consider.
Yet because wood is abundant in our daily lives, we often fail to recognize how precious it truly is.
That thought stays with me every time I turn a pen made from wood.
What appears simple is actually extraordinary. A tree grew from a seed in a tiny corner of a living planet suspended in an incomprehensibly vast universe. Years later, a small part of that tree rests in my hands while I shape it into something meaningful. The process feels less like manufacturing and more like stewardship. I am not creating the beauty, only revealing it.
And then there is the pen itself.
A pen is one of humanity's quietest but most powerful tools. Empires, constitutions, love letters, journals, peace treaties, poetry, sketches, signatures, and dreams have all flowed through pens. Long after we are gone, words written by hand can still carry our thoughts into another generation.
There is something deeply meaningful about taking one rare gift of Earth, wood, and transforming it into another timeless human instrument, a pen. The result is small enough to fit in a pocket, yet capable of lasting for lifetimes. Perhaps even longer than the hands that made it.
In a world increasingly focused on speed, disposability, and mass production, working with wood reminds me to slow down and notice what is already around me. It reminds me that the most valuable things are not always the rarest by quantity, but the rarest by meaning. Air, water, trees, craftsmanship, time, and human connection are often taken for granted precisely because they are woven so deeply into everyday life.
The lathe has taught me that perspective changes everything. When we zoom out far enough, even the most ordinary material can become sacred.
And maybe that is part of the lesson.
Not to rush past the simple things.
Not to overlook the beauty hidden inside common materials.
Not to forget that on this small living planet, surrounded by endless darkness, we have been given the extraordinary opportunity to create something lasting from something alive.
Enjoy the journey of turning, creating, and reflecting upon the simple beauty that surrounds us every day. May every piece of wood remind us that some of the most precious things in existence are not the rarest by wealth, but by life, meaning, and connection.
Enjoy the turning journey,
Andy
For nearly two decades, one of the most fulfilling places in my life has been standing behind a lathe, turning a simple block of wood into a pen. What began in 2008 as a small class at a Woodcraft store slowly became something much deeper than a hobby. It became a form of reflection, meditation, and perspective.
There is something remarkable about taking raw wood into your hands. Before the tools ever touch it, the material already carries a story. The grain patterns were shaped over years, sometimes decades, by seasons, storms, droughts, sunlight, and growth. Every piece is different. No two blanks ever truly become the same pen. Even before the turning begins, the wood already contains a kind of quiet history.
As I shape a pen on the lathe, I often find myself thinking about how easily we overlook the extraordinary things around us. We are taught to see gold, diamonds, and precious stones as rare treasures. And from our perspective here on Earth, they certainly are valuable. Yet when we step back and look at the scale of the universe, many of those materials are surprisingly common. Entire planets may hold mountains of metals and endless fields of crystalline minerals scattered across distant systems.
But wood is different.
Wood is the product of life. It is born from the delicate balance of water, atmosphere, sunlight, soil, and time. It requires a living world. In the vast silence of the cosmos, that may be one of the rarest things imaginable.
Here on Earth, wood has surrounded humanity since the beginning of civilization. It built our homes, our ships, our fires, our tools, our tables, our instruments, and our shelters. Entire generations survived because forests stood nearby. Even today, despite all our technology, we remain deeply dependent upon it in ways we rarely stop to consider.
Yet because wood is abundant in our daily lives, we often fail to recognize how precious it truly is.
That thought stays with me every time I turn a pen made from wood.
What appears simple is actually extraordinary. A tree grew from a seed in a tiny corner of a living planet suspended in an incomprehensibly vast universe. Years later, a small part of that tree rests in my hands while I shape it into something meaningful. The process feels less like manufacturing and more like stewardship. I am not creating the beauty, only revealing it.
And then there is the pen itself.
A pen is one of humanity's quietest but most powerful tools. Empires, constitutions, love letters, journals, peace treaties, poetry, sketches, signatures, and dreams have all flowed through pens. Long after we are gone, words written by hand can still carry our thoughts into another generation.
There is something deeply meaningful about taking one rare gift of Earth, wood, and transforming it into another timeless human instrument, a pen. The result is small enough to fit in a pocket, yet capable of lasting for lifetimes. Perhaps even longer than the hands that made it.
In a world increasingly focused on speed, disposability, and mass production, working with wood reminds me to slow down and notice what is already around me. It reminds me that the most valuable things are not always the rarest by quantity, but the rarest by meaning. Air, water, trees, craftsmanship, time, and human connection are often taken for granted precisely because they are woven so deeply into everyday life.
The lathe has taught me that perspective changes everything. When we zoom out far enough, even the most ordinary material can become sacred.
And maybe that is part of the lesson.
Not to rush past the simple things.
Not to overlook the beauty hidden inside common materials.
Not to forget that on this small living planet, surrounded by endless darkness, we have been given the extraordinary opportunity to create something lasting from something alive.
Enjoy the journey of turning, creating, and reflecting upon the simple beauty that surrounds us every day. May every piece of wood remind us that some of the most precious things in existence are not the rarest by wealth, but by life, meaning, and connection.
Enjoy the turning journey,
Andy