It might be so that happiness is being true to yourself and finding your own level. When I was far too young to know what my true self might be, I entertained a fantasy about being a carpenter and maker of furniture. But I bottled it: not even having the oomph to ask. But that's okay, if I had gone that way, I would now, after 50 years of errors splinters and broken finger-nails, be pretty good at making tables. As it is I was pretty good at making sense of genomes, despite being embarrassingly ploddy at writing code. We only have one life so it's rarely possible to open the door to all the shops which might provide work which we are pretty good at.
Well before Christmas my Boston Correspondent P told me I must read Ingrained: The Making of a Craftsman (2024) by Callum Robinson. I don't buy books any more, but rather play the long game and wait for a shared copy to come available at the library. And I collected Ingrained just before the Twelfth Night cold snap. Perfect reading as I fired logs into the fire against the penetrating drafts.
I get the feeling that young Callum was saved by wood-work despite not being a Natural at visualizing in 3-D and not having an intuitive feel↓ for the tools of his trade. It was OldBuck-YoungBuck challenging for him that his father was a truly gifted worker-in-wood in a way that seemed without effort. We haven't heard from the father if his feet were paddling gang-busters beneath the surface of his graceful progress. Right at the end of the book father and son had a whisky-fuelled heart-to-heart in which Robinson Père reveals that he stayed working with his hands despite an expensive education and professional quals because he . just . could . not . be a manager which was the only option for him to rise in his profession. Amen, brother.And l👁👁k [L], The Boy done good! With a little help from the love of his life, from his father, from his hand-picked hand-crafting employees, from his therapeutic dog walks: he makes original, graceful, fit-for-purpose, quirky, quality furniture to die for . . . and get written up in Colour Supplements and commissioned by the great and the good - if they can afford it. Because hand-craft and quality come only from first class material and many hours of labour by people who can work magic with steel on wood.
↓ Intuitive feel is what my friend Elli had at the lab bench . . . and I emphatically did not. I am so glad I got out of lab work before I got good enough to pass muster . One self-inflicted spatter accident was one too many and it didn't seem likely to be my last. The rest of my life has been choosing low stakes outlets so that any of my talent which is death to hide is not lodged with me useless.