For half a century, Andy Rooney has been an outspoken and opinionated journalist. For most of that time, his stories were written on his beloved manual typewriter. It is only in the past few years that he’s relented and switched to a laptop computer. His ancient typewriter is enshrined in his office where it remains a symbol of a long and creative career.

Andy Rooney is not alone. Watch someone masterful at work and you’ll notice that there’s almost a reverence given to the tools of their trade. On the days when Eric Clapton performs, he chooses not to see or touch his principle guitar. He says that as he prepares to go onstage, he walks to get his guitar and it’s like going to meet a lover.

Paul Hawken was touring British gardens when he learned about the personal relationship some folks have with their tools. He writes, “As I watched the gardeners work I studied their tools. I hefted a spade, the tool of choice. It seemed unusually heavy and it was sharp as an ax. The gardener saw me looking and came over. That was not merely a spade, that was his spade. I asked him if it wasn’t heavy and tiring to use. With a smile he invited me to give it a try. I toiled away as he grew increasingly amused. In his Lancashire accent he said, ‘Let your tool do the work. That’s what it’s made for.’ He showed me how use the weight of the spade, how to make the tool an extension of my arms, how to move my body.”

Hawken was so impressed with the lesson he’d learned that when he returned to the United States he tried to interest some companies in importing English garden tools. No one was interested. Eventually Hawken realized that this idea belonged to him and the successful mail order business Smith and Hawken was born bringing the tools Hawken loved to a new market. 

 Our relationship with tools is important—and maybe even a bit mystical. “I’m always looking forward to opening the ovens in the morning,” says glass artist Dale Chihuly. “Glassblowing is a spontaneous medium that suits me. I’ve been at it for forty years and am as infatuated as when I blew my first bubble in 1965. We use the same tools they used 2000 years ago. I know if I go down to the glass shop, I’m going to make something that’s never been made before. That in itself is an inspiration. I used to think it was the glass that was so mysterious, but then I realized it was the air that went into it that was miraculous.”

 How close or far are you from working with tools that inspire affection? Is there a tool that inspires affection that is gathering dust? Is there a new tool that you’ve been thinking about learning to use?

3 Responses to “Partners in Creation”

  1. Sandy Dempsey

    Books are an old fashioned tool for me and will continue to teach me, inspire me and help me in the years to come, but technology and its inherent potential is a new tool that seems to be a natural extension of who I am.
    Loving this months theme!
    Sandy

  2. Kathy Magrino

    Hi, Barbara! Like Sandy said above, this month’s “tools” theme is AWESOME — and I’m really liking it, too!! My laptop and phone (and a connection to the Internet) are tools that I can’t imagine being without at this point in my life. I can barely remember what it was like to work without a computer…
    Kathy

  3. Barbara Winter

    Thanks for your enthusiasm for this theme. It’s been fun working on it. And I, too, can’t imagine how I functioned without a computer. Last night, I was chatting with my sister (on Skype, of course) and some question came up and she promptly did a Google search. I forget what it was like to not have instant information at my fingertips. AND I think we also forget that all this technology is a powerful catalyst for opportunity that our parents could never have imagined.

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