May we keep doing things badly, slowly, and with our whole hearts.
That’s amateur energy.
The word amateur comes from the Latin amator — lover. Someone who does something for the love of it, not for a paycheck or a blue checkmark.
Last weekend, I tried to fix a squeaky hinge on my front door. I had no real tools, no YouTube tutorial, just an old screwdriver and stubbornness. It took 45 minutes. I scratched the paint. The squeak turned into a groan. But when I finished, I stood there grinning like an idiot. Because I did it.
Here’s a blog post written in a reflective, conversational style, centered on the theme — celebrating the beauty of doing something for the love of it, not for polish or profit. Title: In Praise of the Real Amateur: Why Doing Things Badly (But Lovingly) Matters
Scroll through any feed, and you’ll see the highlight reel: the perfectly poured latte art, the immaculately edited hiking vlog, the “quick sketch” that looks like it belongs in a gallery. We’ve confused amateur with amateurish — as if the only work worth doing is professional-grade.
May we keep doing things badly, slowly, and with our whole hearts.
That’s amateur energy.
The word amateur comes from the Latin amator — lover. Someone who does something for the love of it, not for a paycheck or a blue checkmark.
Last weekend, I tried to fix a squeaky hinge on my front door. I had no real tools, no YouTube tutorial, just an old screwdriver and stubbornness. It took 45 minutes. I scratched the paint. The squeak turned into a groan. But when I finished, I stood there grinning like an idiot. Because I did it.
Here’s a blog post written in a reflective, conversational style, centered on the theme — celebrating the beauty of doing something for the love of it, not for polish or profit. Title: In Praise of the Real Amateur: Why Doing Things Badly (But Lovingly) Matters
Scroll through any feed, and you’ll see the highlight reel: the perfectly poured latte art, the immaculately edited hiking vlog, the “quick sketch” that looks like it belongs in a gallery. We’ve confused amateur with amateurish — as if the only work worth doing is professional-grade.