The Way the Grain Runs

Light falls heavy on the bench. It catches the dust motes dancing in the air. My hand is steady on the handle. The steel bites into the pine, curling a shaving that looks like a ribbon.
It is a familiar weight. Even now, the memory of the grain is sharp. You do not fight the wood; you listen to it. The chisel is just the translator.
I remember a Tuesday afternoon, years back. The shop was quiet. My boy, Tom, was trying to force a mortise joint. He was sweating, getting frustrated. I did not say much. I just took his place, placed the tip of the blade, and let the tool do the work. One clean slice.
He watched the shaving curl up. "It is like it wants to come apart," he said.
"Exactly," I told him. "You just show it the way."
That is the secret most folks miss. It is not about muscle. It is about patience. It is about making something useful out of a rough block. My hands look old in this light. Wrinkled like old leather. But they know the path. The tool knows the path. And the wood, well, it knows the song.


