The systemic thinker’s dilemma In the world of professional craft, we often encounter a friction point between the "just get it done" mandate and the visionary's need for context. Adam Savage identifies this specific tension when a maker or technician begins questioning how their task fits into a wider strategy. If you find yourself documenting processes or automating workflows on your own time because your boss only cares about the immediate output, you aren't just being "difficult." You are exhibiting a deep management mindset. This proclivity for systemic thinking is exactly what turns a skilled hand into a lead or director. Moving from model making to management Savage recalls his own trajectory at ILM, where his curiosity about the art director's aesthetic goals gave him more creative freedom. George Lucas built an environment where understanding the big picture wasn't just allowed; it was rewarded. If your current leadership doesn't value your ability to make the process safer, faster, or easier for the next person, they are failing to recognize a natural manager in their ranks. Seeking out the biggest possible picture makes you better at your job, even if you have to hunt for that context yourself. Surviving the friction of liminal spaces Career transitions—especially layoffs—create what Savage calls "liminal spaces," those fraught gaps where the past has left you but the future hasn't yet arrived. He cites Rainer Maria Rilke and his work Letters to a Young Poet to describe the discomfort of remaining in a place where you cannot stay standing. These moments of sadness or uncertainty are technically difficult because we naturally want to run toward the next thing. However, there is immense power in remaining "lonely and attentive" during these gaps. Meditating on the emotional future Instead of trying to game the future through logic alone, use the final month of a job to audit your experiences. Meditate on how your future job should *feel* rather than just what it should *be*. By identifying the delta between your current reality and your ideal collaborative environment, you prime your brain to recognize the right opportunity when it finally slots in. This practice of reflection is a powerful interpersonal tool that turns a painful ending into a deliberate foundation for what comes next.
Letters to a Young Poet
Books
Jun 2026 • 1 videos
High activity month for Letters to a Young Poet. Adam Savage’s Tested among the most active voices, with 1 videos across 1 sources.
Jun 2026
- Jun 6, 2026