As one of Scott’s three boys, I assure you, whatever wisdom, humility, and overall goodness you see in these videos pales to the real thing. It’s impossible to accurately say what a good man my father is. When I was 14 (20 years ago), a man in his mid twenties said that someone should just follow Scott around and record everything he says for posterity. Now it’s finally (kind of) happening with RUclips, and the world is a better place for it.
I'm an electrician. I'm 33 years old and I haven't done this job for a long time, life is full of surprises and quick turns. Every day I have to deal with the stress of increasingly tight construction times and the stress of a trade that I still have a lot to learn about. It's hard to make ends meet... It's hard in general. I felt so much relief watching this video that I almost wanted to cry. I once read a book by a Japanese author who said that after a certain age it is difficult to find teachers. True, but not this time. Thank you Greetings from Italy
Yes, how to make fire. There's a saying though: "Fire heats water but water can put out fire." Fire is the spirit in us but what is water? The emotions? Be careful, find a way. "Do not eliminate (young carpenter apprentices who are ambitious), rather transmute (teach them patiently even though they went to college and got a degree!) Teach them even though they are not in your hunter gatherer caste even though you really want to reject them Scott! But this is wrong. Jesus broke down the caste system you are so proud of. He tried anyway. Maybe they are more agrarians or musicians or what ever. They often have a family to feed or other career goals than swinging a hammer. Now you even said that as time went on, Scott, that you learned to appreciate having to work hard and learn a trade. "No work is ever lost" to those who spent years learning music but didn't quite make it yet. But same is true in Carpentry.
@@raymond_sycamoreTo say that it is a boomer proclivity is a gross generalization. I’m knocking on my 30s already wishing I would’ve furthered my education past high school. It’s also quite likely I’ll figure out how to finance the mission as well. I most certainly take pride in my blue-collar roots, it’s taken me quite far in the short life I’ve had thus far. The world has a lot to offer but there are things I just cannot pursue without formal education. He does illustrate his perspective quite well during the interview. I find his thoughts on the topic quite relatable. In my case the desire is predominantly that constant chase of learning new things. The more you learn, the more you can create.
He just didn’t choose the right trade to get into. Being a carpenter is a respectable trade but you’re able to get into apprenticeships for other trades like pipefitting, electrical, plumbing that make a lot more money. Plumbing especially is a good one to get into because once you’re experienced enough you have the ability to start your own one man business and go to service calls whenever you like and charger whatever you see fit
@TheeAbstractHero It is possible to audit college courses for free. You don't get a diploma, but you can see if you feel it is worth paying to get the paper. Ask the professor and tell them your goal just to be polite. Your cummulative life experiences could be more valuable than one seasoned with a formal education. It is different for everyone.
The colleges and universities are in large measure a scam, a waste of time unless one chooses a degree in a hard science. They are overly expensive, and much of the curriculum is filled with liberal nonsense. It has only become worse since the rise of today’s ‘woke’ movement. I highly recommend learning a trade instead of the customary liberal college route - although as in most things, there are exceptions.
Joy requires responsibility. Responsibility requires sacrifice. Sacrifice requires work. Work requires discipline. Discipline requires motivation. Motivations requires love. Love is free if you can find it, and is strengthened by joy.
I’ve been watching your channel for years now and even though I have a few years on you I’ll be 72 in June, I always seem to get something from every episode. I live in New Jersey, my Father was a carpenter but he forbid me from doing carpentry. Well I didn’t listen, started framing in 1972 and completed 90 some homes and loved every minute. Of course now at 71, I too have slowed down. Working in NYC for some time I was at the Twin Towers when the first plane hit. Down the road I contacted Cancer from 9 -11 and had to deal with Chemo and a handful of surgeries. I am Cancer free now and can’t wait to get back to work. As you know, when it’s in ur blood you can’t help it. I still have twenty some Porter Cable saws, and lots of tools. I climbed the corporate ladder for a while but at the end of the day I’m just a carpenter. And proud of it. Love ur channel, keep it up
Bless you sir. I contracted the melanoma a couple times already. 3 surgeries so far. Anyway, I'm a concrete guy. You can do it brother. If there's an ass you can kick it. Get sum!
I agree it’s something in your blood I also was forbidden working in construction by my carpenter father, I tried college came back and begged him to let me try it saying I would go back to school the moment I put on my nail bags I knew it was something in me . Any advice for 21 in the trade
I am a 46 year old carpenter and have felt the same way. Even after achieving great accomplishments along the way I'd have anxiety getting the next job done. Not many people I started with are still going. It takes a certain inner strength to last in this trade. Feeling like you never really made it until you realize I'm still here still going. The struggle is real. Survive is the only thought you have at times.
I am 28, started carpentry when i was 19. Lately all it has been is just "survive" its a very difficult road compared to a lot of other carriers out there. I can tell you as a younger man these days it well set you apart from most other men. There are times though when it is very discouraging to continue this road. ive decided I am going to keep my small business and also continue school. Ive always been afraid to admit regret in spite of all the awesome things I (we) accomplished together and the comradery is truly something I will always cherish. BUT the feast and famine aspect is very real and stressful as hell some days... seeing this video and reading some of these comments hits deep. Not too many people understand how damn difficult it is mentally and emotionally with the induvial man. I am however very proud of who i have become and the admirable men ive met along the way.
It’s not like how it was when he grew up. Tradesman can make INSANE money nowadays and if you’re provisional in today’s market, you can make other people do the work. Your knowledge is extremely valuable. Think how you can use it in the age of the lazy.
Millennial here and it is so refreshing to listen to someone like this. Someone so grounded who shares wisdom on what matters in life. Our generation has no clue.
Our society lets the next generation down by failing to make effort to encourage and help them. It perpetuates by saying, “no one encouraged or helped me!” That is a selfish thing to say.
As a 30yo carpenter with a wife, two kids, and the wolf always at my door, I NEVER regret the time spent listening to Scott. This was a consoling and enlightening interview, and gave me a lot of pause to reflect on where I'm at, and thank God for it.
Interviewer: Fantastic!! Interviewee: Legend!! This world needs 100 million more essential craftsmen. So blessed to have found this channel, Scott, you feel like a friend I will never get to meet.
@@WraithlingRavenchildIf that's your only source of wisdom, you are in for a rough life. Firstly true wisdom is fear (reverence) of God. Then you get wisdom from reading your Bible, listening to your parents and elders. You gain wisdom from watching others make mistakes, but the very last place you should get wisdom from is from experience.
As a young kid, fresh out of high school, I got a job as a carpenter helper for a small general contractor. I learned a lot and continued working for him each summer as I attend junior college working for an engineering degree. College was hard for me and the construction work was more appealing (and it paid me well). After two years I told the general contractor I wanted to stay on and become one of his job site superintendents. He looked at me and said, " That's fine with me, but first you have to get your degree and then you come see me about that job." After four more years I got my BSEE degree and I never went back to construction. He was a very wise and successful man, in business and family life. He told me once, " you can earn a living with your back or with your head, you make the choice."
“You only have one chance to spend time with your kids”. Love that. I lived the overtime life, afraid to miss out on the extra money. Now at 35, with a growing family I’m lucky to be able to provide a good life without the long hours. A wise man once told me don’t let fun interfere with work, but don’t let work interfere with fun. Work hard and do what you have to do, but make time for family and friends.
I love listening to my elders always have ever since I was a kid I feel as if its a necessity to keep and grow culture, knowledge and wisdom. I love this mans interpretation on life and the different perspectives he brings through experience and age. He hit the nail on the head with what this generation is needing.
28 year old who has been remodeling houses for my dad's flipping business since I was 10 or 11 (not full time till I gkt out of highschool) I've loved your channel for a while now, the men that I grew up working with were not particularly good craftsmen and they certainly had no wisdom to offer me. I've had to find my own way on alot of things. Your wisdom is greatly helpful to a young man raising a young family and trying to glorify God doing so. Thank you!
Scott I am really thankful for you to share your life history and wisdom in the midst of this crazy society that we live in. I am a 38years old Brazilian born, italian/korean background family Carpenter and at the moment I am working as a qualified builder in New Zealand. I wasn't fortunate enough to have my parents together through my whole childhood life and I felt that had an huge impact in my adult life affecting my confidence and self-worth deeply, I am really struggling to keep my family together nowdays because there are so many external factors pulling myself in different directions and making me doubt my core valeus as a man. Watching you talking about your life was a deep source of wisdom for me at this very moment of my life. I dont have other words to describe how of a miracle was to bump into your videos on RUclips. I Really hope you read my message and get a little of my appreciation and thankfulness about your life experiences and values as a blue collar work/ builder. God keep blessing you and your whole family.🙏👍
22 years old here, been working w my old man general contracting on and off the last 4 years and I just had to express how grateful I am for this outlook about life and how refreshing it is to find a truly knowledgeable person willing to share values, ideas, and information about the craft
Best conversation I’ve ever heard about life from someone who has been there. I am self-employed and love my work (bodywork/massage therapist) and glad of it since at 67, I now realize will be working till the week I die. Somehow asking for help never occurred to me. This is a conversation that needs to be heard younger than later but never too late.
Scott, as a 23 year old man who just bought his first home I can’t thank you enough for the amount of wisdom, knowledge, passion, love and inspiration you’ve provided for me and everyone. I love and look forward to seeing your new content pop up, I pray I can grow into a man like you, much love from an electrician just trying to figure everything out.
Scott l sixth the best advice l give you any OT or have any extra money put in your retirement it goes fast in the working years , try to use all the technology tools that will save on your body been in the HVACR trades for over 30 years. We all have regrets when we are much older but one thing don’t compare your income to other man’s career.
Scott - I'm an Electrical Engineer, yet one who does construction too. I'm 63 and me, my dad, a couple close friends, and my wife built our the house we still live in ~ 34 years ago. I love, love, love construction and woodworking, and am frankly pretty dang accomplished at it. Rather interesting is that my "road not taken" story is about what if I would have started my own construction business instead of being an engineer. God has a plan for every one of us, and certainly what we experienced was/is his plan. Now, as I'm about to retire in less than a year, I'm ready to have LOTS of fun doing construction projects! Love your channel, and keep up the good work.
Well, well, well, if it isn't the Renaissance Engineer over here, Mr. Jack-of-All-Trades. You've got more titles than a Marvel superhero. Electrical Engineer? Check. Construction Prodigy? Double check. And let's not forget your side gig as the mastermind behind the family home - built 34 years ago and still standing, unlike some of my jokes. So, you're on the brink of retirement, huh? Time to trade in those blueprints for blue leisure suits and embrace the golden years of construction chic. I can already picture you in the neighborhood, offering unsolicited advice to the newbies wielding hammers. 'Back in my day, we didn't have these fancy laser levels. We eyeballed everything, and by golly, it worked!' Classic. And the 'road not taken' story - isn't that just the quintessential plot twist in every midlife memoir? I can see the screenplay now: 'The Shocks and Sawdust Chronicles.' Move over, Hollywood. But hey, cheers to having a plan, whether it's divinely inspired or just a series of questionable decisions that somehow worked out. May your retirement be filled with more construction projects than you can handle and fewer existential crises about the 'what ifs.' Keep up the questionable work, and remember, power tools are a retiree's best friend. Construction on, oh wise master builder! *******This was a ChatGPT generated response. I asked it to make a snarky response to your comment.
Thanks for the comment. I'm a pretty young guy who works as a software engineer for 15 years and has started my own construction business as my side gig for the past 2.5 years. I've been contemplating whether to go full gear in construction or keeping it as a side business for now. Did you switch out your engineering job for construction, or did you kept them both? And why? I need some advice from someone who has gone through this stage in life. Thanks.
@@anhtuanb I stayed in engineering as a profession, and just have helped friends / done my own construction projects (not as a side job or source of income). I was always reluctant to give up a pretty decent salary and take on the risk of going it alone in construction. In general, you won’t “make a lot” of money working for someone else. Do something you absolutely love doing. If you’re an engineer and cannot wait to get into work, enjoy your day, and spend hours at night thinking about your current project, then engineering is your passion. If you’re working on a construction project and can hardly wait to wake up to go do it, and think about the next day’s tasks all evening, the construction is your real passion. Follow your real passion and you’ll be successful AND have a rewarding life. The money will be a byproduct. Best of luck!
It took me 30 years to get to the moment where I decided to start living in faith,. Now I can't stop seeing it everywhere. There are so many good people, humble people, hard working people in the trades. My only regret was not embracing this point of view earlier. Listening to people like Scott has helped me transform my perspective from being totally selfish (believing I was good) to realizing I can always do better, serve more, and have empathy with my fellow brothers and sisters. Thank you for your words of wisdom, Scott. God bless you and your family
55. Started doing this 5 years ago; walked away from public school leadership…regret not doing it sooner. I have so much to learn and I come the this university often. To my great benefit I glean practical wisdom AND applicable knowledge. Your life, my good man, is impacting thousands and generations. Even the boys over at Perkins Builder Bros tip their hats to you. Well done. Please keep it up.
Never mind a video interview, this man needs to write a book . The wisdom and knowledge he possesses will someday be lost to the world, Only to be replaced by stories of once upon a time. He would make an awesome shop teacher a mentor and a friend. I wish you many years of health, happiness, joy and purpose . Thank you for your words of encouragement.
Mr Wadsworth, I did my trade apprenticeship then worked that trade for over 25 years before going to university . I worked in a completely different field after uni and then went back to trade work . Age wise I'm just a little ahead of you but can tell you that uni ( or college in your country) had its merits but can't replace practical work. Don't ever regret what you've done, your videos are an inspiration to many of us; thankyou so much.
I am a young contractor located north in Norway. Been watching you for some years now and you keep inspire me to keep pushing when the lifestyle gets hard🙂 I have learned alot from you. Thank you❤
I still remember discovering your channel through the skillsaw video. I had just bought my first toolkit and had no clue what I was doing. At 25 I had never worked with my hands and you inspired me to try. 5 years later and I've started a side business as an electrician. I'll even renovate my own home (partly) myself. I came for your knowledge, but I stayed for your wisdom. You are a true inspiration for young people. Thank you.
One of the highest compliments I’ve heard a man make about his wife and relationship. “Joy and peace amidst the pressures of life was the default.” Incredible compliment to you and your wife and your relationship!
As an aging tradesman myself you really eloquently spoke what I’ve struggled to express myself with the daily struggles we all apparently faced . I never knew it was so common to have these overwhelming struggles at times. I actually sat here with my wife of 23 years and played this video for her. I struggled to explain these feelings to her properly at many times and now she gets it. Thank you for taking the time to produce this wonderfully insightful video and reaching a fellow aging tradesmen in such a profound way! I pray your remaining days on earth be filled with joy and fond memories .much love and respect!
This man is a legend. From an Australian point of view, he is classed as a 'Top Bloke'; someone who is just a hard working fella, that cares about his family and friends (mates). But I've followed him and his videos for a few years now and absolutely enjoy watching his content. If this bloke wrote a book about his life, it would be a best seller! Insofar I refer to an amazing book titled: 'My Fortunate Life' (Albert Facey). If anyone reads this post, check out this book. It was from an average man, who decided to put his 'average life' down on paper....Scott is the embodiment of this type of man! He's a legend. Thanks for your all your videos.
I think of what a treasure this video will be for your grandchildren, and great grandchildren, etc. I wish I knew how my grandfather, or my dad for that matter, would’ve answered these questions. You’ve done well, Scott. Good work.
Watching this video for the first time takes me back to my twenties and the decades long struggle to provide for my family. I started out in law enforcement but transitioned back into auto repair ( my father was a mechanic). I opened my auto repair shop in 1985 at the age of 35. I was good at fixing cars and liked people but I had much to learn about business. My father once told me when I was a teenager concerning business “ son the public will educate you”. He was right . Fast forward to today I have three shops and the only thing keeping me from opening more is the lack of qualified technicians. As Scott was saying it is 180 degrees from where it was 30 years ago concerning the trades. Most of the mechanics I knew in my youth, including my father were from the Great Depression era, they were different. I encourage all young people starting out to learn everything they can about as much as they can then pick a profession that they really enjoy, helps others, can support themselves,their family and become experts in their chosen field. There is a price to pay but if they stick to it and don’t give up they will never be without a job they love. Also give God the praise for your blessings.
Thanks Scott for the heart felt words of wisdom. As a young man my father preached hard work consistently until his passing. I’ve followed his teachings and have done exactly that. Now I’ve got 24 years in as a plumber and my body is feeling the effects and most of the time living paycheck to paycheck. A lot of the time it feels as if I live on the job site. I often wonder if I made the right choice to become a tradesman. I’d be lying if I said that I’m not discouraged. 45 is approaching me and I feel like I’m at a crossroad. I don’t know what to do so I just keep working hard. Pushing through the pain, the stress, the heat, the cold, and the mud. Steadily praying that before the end this pays off for me so my loved ones won’t have to do this. I just can’t help but to wonder if I should have put this blood, sweat, and tears in a different direction
Work smart, don’t get hurt, don’t waist your time, stay healthy, you’ll never get your time back. Continue learning,grow the circle of responsible valuable people around you, be valuable, be the best at what you do. Definitely LIVE every day, teach, share , respect, your family , wife & kids. Dont forget to say thank you every day. What can you do to keep going, growing, & evolving to help produce a quality of life for you, & your family wile living & enjoying every day?
Wow. Especially after a couple of really tough weeks, this was one of the best uses of 45 "leisure" minutes of my time in a while. At 62 and trying now to figure out what my next chapter may be, this interview was food for a lot of thought. Scott, you're a man of many wisdoms. Thank you .
"I deliberately didn't turn my boys into carpenters." That line got me. My father was an industrial Journey Electrician who passed away when I was 13. I can still hear him saying he hoped I didn't end up in the same field as him and hoped I had an easier job. Due to his untimely passing the possibility of college just wasn't in the cards. I'm now a Manfacturer Certified Forklift Technician and make a good living. But I can't help but wonder what my father would think.
Seems like he'd be proud. Being proud of yourself matters too tho. Who wouldn't be proud of their legacy being successful... now it's your turn to pass down a legacy
While browsing through RUclips I stumbled on this today. I teach Woodworking in a faith-based independent school. The wisdom in this video is the perspective I want to leave with my students before they finish high school.
Scott, I've been silently watching your channel off and on for a couple of yrs now. If I'm being completely honest, usually when I need to do how to some task or another. But I want to say, this was thee best episode I've stumbled across; on any channel. As a 52 yr old man, that has finally found something I'm passionate about (career wise). I didn't have any mentors growing up. I had a father that worked himself to the bone in the oilfield, and drank himself to sleep at night. Anyway, I just wanted to say thank you for what you do. Not just the how to type videos, but also this type. For trying to reach people. trying to show people the way.
I am a hard working man in the blue collar life as a Mold maker, loving your channel as a validation that it has been a 40+ years working 55-60hr weeks for my family. Please read the comments that you generate by these amazing conversations your putting out there. I have given my son your channel to give him a resources for life going forward. Thank you God bless you and your adorable family Christopher Marchand ❤
The grass is greener idea comes to us all. I've been in construction as a drywall finisher and I've also been a corporate guy for over 20 years. I have a bachelor's and two master's degrees, but when I reflect on life, I often wish I would have bought a tool belt after high school and trained under a master carpenter like yourself. I love everything about being on a construction site. I left the corporate world and work as a self-employed insurance adjuster, so I get to be on the job site and figure out how to rebuild houses that have been damaged by water and fire. With all that I have accomplished in the white-collar world, I still flirt with the idea of going back to drywall.
Thank you for this video... It really helps me to hear these words as I struggle being away my wife and 2 young children for possibly months as I am about to go swing a hammer in Northern Canada.
I have been watching your channel on/off for a few years. I'm 28 years old. I am just now starting my General Contracting business. I always learn a thing or two from your videos. I find that you really stick to the meat, objectively. There's little-to-no bones to spit out. I loved this interview. As a man of faith I truly believe that God has a plan for all of us that is beyond our wildest imagination and that His love runs deep and true. Thank you for sharing your strength, hope and experience. It is genuinely appreciated. Thank you from a young Canadian man. 🙏💪🛠
After listening to your interview I can"t believe how parallel our lives are. I'm 63 and have seen my share of ups and downs. The best complement I've received was that I was no carpenter, I was a craftsman. God bless!
Scott you are an inspiration to all craftsman! The passion you show for your Lifes work hits my heart. I am 66 years old and still remodeling houses since the age of 16 years old. I left home at 16 years of age had a job and landlord. When I graduated high school neither parent was at my graduation. I know what struggle is all about. I love your talks about work skills and life philosophy. Keep them coming!
41 year old General contractor with wife and 3 kids. I have been working carpentry since I was 15 years old. Now, 16 years in business for myself I can relate to this 💯. Well said! Thanks for the REAL content. Keep up the good work as you hit 66!
Thanks, Scott. Turning 67 in one week and, like you, “get it” each day I get older. We are fortunate to had the incredible grace, mostly unearned, shown to us by The Creator and those whose lives have crossed with ours. Keep up the good work.
I could listen to Scott talk all day! He has a way of speaking that is so genuine without any pretentiousness or hubris. He’s such a wholesome person and a role model in human character. Thanks Scott!
Scott, I am 54 years old born and raised in a third world country ...I came to America when I was 19 years old and know it is hard to adapt to a new culture. Scott you have lots of wisdom and thanks for teaching through your channel Christian values ...and your life experience... God bless you!!!
Scott, I just want to thank you for sharing your life here on your channel. As a flawed, sometimes hopelessly distracted man struggling to do what God has called him to do and to balance life as a carpenter, sole proprietor, husband and father for over 30 years, I’m blessed by your candor and wisdom. I love to see and hear how God has blessed you with joy and contentment, not as a result of a life of ease, but of enduring all the hardships of life as a good soldier. I pray you continue to grow in wisdom and that you experience the greater joy of seeing your children walk in truth. God bless.
Scott, just wanted to let you know that you are an essential person in this world. I value your content and I am happy that I stumbled upon your channel.
To the questions asked and the answers given..... ...wow, beautifully done. I enjoyed every single question and response. Scott, I think from watching this video, I feel that every person you've ever met has been positively affected in some way. You should have zero regrets. Every day, for every person is a learning experience. ....and yes, I know the odds. 😂
Scott has the aura of an old school physicist. Clearly a great man... His videos on RUclips are spectacular. He's an exceptional figures that almost anyone would love to have as a guide, not just in trades, but in life.
Hi Scott, I’ve been doing carpentry since I was 12 years old. Went to trade school (boces Board of cooperative educational studies). The wealth of knowledge was priceless, I was able to build a house from the ground up. I also have four children who all grew up with a strong faith and hard work ethic. I owe it all to the Lord Jesus! I did sacrifice many family times which I regret, but thankfully for my wife of 35 years picked up the slack for me. I also didn’t push my kids into my field i sometimes think maybe I should of.
Can we PLEASE start a series like this. I’m middle aged and just started into carpentry (as an engineer…so regrets the other direction having not swung a hammer enough) with a young family, and the amount of wisdom this God fearing man just dropped was incredibly useful! Please please start a monthly series on these!!
You can't possibly do a series on this. This is something that took 65 years to make, if you want a part two your going to have to wait another 65yeara buddy
@@Huffmommy I’m an aerospace engineer. Not a civil. I took thermodynamics, aerodynamics and materials…engineering in school teaches little of application. If you were a degreed engineer you’d understand.
@@homes24 you think a man of 65 years only has an hours worth of knowledge? There were a million more directions he could go here. He talked about work, life and faith. This is an entire sub-series; and I hope he decides to talk more of it.
Thank you Scott you’re like the dad I never had. I’m 23 years old now. I remember coming home as an apprentice carpenter and watching you every night after building decks and homes. You’ve taught me so many things over the years so thank you for your service to us tradesmen.
I'm now 68, just retired electrician in Canada and planning to return and put up an electrical contracting business in my home country next year. This video gives me chills especially on the aspect of worklife balance, now that I'm close to the end. Thanks for pointing that out.
Scott, your ability to articulate the bluecollar experience so eloquently is part of our American canon of experiences necessary to capture and I am so glad it's being captured here. God bless you from a GC in his mid forties with four kids and a wife on a single income! Please keep sharing your experiences and reflections.
Scott, I’ve been watching your videos for some time now. I’m almost 40, self employed, with 4 kids, sole bread winner. Sound familiar. Your words give me hope that when I’m older I can be at peace. I too have those moments when I wake up in the night worrying. I too don’t get work, life balance. You do what needs to be done in order to get the job done and provide for your family. I’m also a Christian man that a lot like you describe, find answers mid stride and find myself praying at unusual times. This video has brought you up a level in my book that I thought was reserved for only my father. In other words a great deal of respect. Thanks for the videos and god bless
I've been wanting to interview the elder statesman in my life. For their family's benefit and mine. I think I'll take these exact questions and use them to take action on my plans. Thank you both for your impact.
As one of Scott’s three boys, I assure you, whatever wisdom, humility, and overall goodness you see in these videos pales to the real thing. It’s impossible to accurately say what a good man my father is.
When I was 14 (20 years ago), a man in his mid twenties said that someone should just follow Scott around and record everything he says for posterity. Now it’s finally (kind of) happening with RUclips, and the world is a better place for it.
AMEN!!!
I like your dad, he's great. God Bless
Raise them up in the ways of the Lord God and they will never stray from him. Amen
You and I are “Good sons”.
I’m just sayin’ …
Got that from day 1 about your dad.
I'm an electrician. I'm 33 years old and I haven't done this job for a long time, life is full of surprises and quick turns. Every day I have to deal with the stress of increasingly tight construction times and the stress of a trade that I still have a lot to learn about. It's hard to make ends meet... It's hard in general. I felt so much relief watching this video that I almost wanted to cry. I once read a book by a Japanese author who said that after a certain age it is difficult to find teachers. True, but not this time. Thank you
Greetings from Italy
"Tradition is not the worship of ashes, but the preservation of fire."
- Gustav Mahler
Excellent quote, Mr. Scott!!
God bless you and your family.
Thank you Michael. You beat me to the punch by just a bit.
@@bobireland1256 indeed...great quote. Especially in our current times!!
Yes, how to make fire. There's a saying though: "Fire heats water but water can put out fire." Fire is the spirit in us but what is water? The emotions? Be careful, find a way. "Do not eliminate (young carpenter apprentices who are ambitious), rather transmute (teach them patiently even though they went to college and got a degree!) Teach them even though they are not in your hunter gatherer caste even though you really want to reject them Scott! But this is wrong. Jesus broke down the caste system you are so proud of. He tried anyway. Maybe they are more agrarians or musicians or what ever. They often have a family to feed or other career goals than swinging a hammer. Now you even said that as time went on, Scott, that you learned to appreciate having to work hard and learn a trade. "No work is ever lost" to those who spent years learning music but didn't quite make it yet. But same is true in Carpentry.
You got to stand for something or you'll fall for anything.....
Thanks for sharing the source.
This is obviously a very intelligent man with a lot of life experience.
You don't have to regret not going to college, Scott. You display more wisdom than many highly qualified people.
I will never understand the boomer proclivity to "regret" if they didn't go to college, at all. My dad is the same way and it makes no sense.
@@raymond_sycamoreTo say that it is a boomer proclivity is a gross generalization.
I’m knocking on my 30s already wishing I would’ve furthered my education past high school. It’s also quite likely I’ll figure out how to finance the mission as well. I most certainly take pride in my blue-collar roots, it’s taken me quite far in the short life I’ve had thus far. The world has a lot to offer but there are things I just cannot pursue without formal education.
He does illustrate his perspective quite well during the interview. I find his thoughts on the topic quite relatable. In my case the desire is predominantly that constant chase of learning new things. The more you learn, the more you can create.
He just didn’t choose the right trade to get into. Being a carpenter is a respectable trade but you’re able to get into apprenticeships for other trades like pipefitting, electrical, plumbing that make a lot more money. Plumbing especially is a good one to get into because once you’re experienced enough you have the ability to start your own one man business and go to service calls whenever you like and charger whatever you see fit
@TheeAbstractHero It is possible to audit college courses for free. You don't get a diploma, but you can see if you feel it is worth paying to get the paper. Ask the professor and tell them your goal just to be polite.
Your cummulative life experiences could be more valuable than one seasoned with a formal education. It is different for everyone.
The colleges and universities are in large measure a scam, a waste of time unless one chooses a degree in a hard science. They are overly expensive, and much of the curriculum is filled with liberal nonsense. It has only become worse since the rise of today’s ‘woke’ movement.
I highly recommend learning a trade instead of the customary liberal college route - although as in most things, there are exceptions.
Joy requires responsibility. Responsibility requires sacrifice. Sacrifice requires work. Work requires discipline. Discipline requires motivation. Motivations requires love. Love is free if you can find it, and is strengthened by joy.
I’ve been watching your channel for years now and even though I have a few years on you I’ll be 72 in June, I always seem to get something from every episode. I live in New Jersey, my Father was a carpenter but he forbid me from doing carpentry. Well I didn’t listen, started framing in 1972 and completed 90 some homes and loved every minute. Of course now at 71, I too have slowed down. Working in NYC for some time I was at the Twin Towers when the first plane hit. Down the road I contacted Cancer from 9 -11 and had to deal with Chemo and a handful of surgeries. I am Cancer free now and can’t wait to get back to work. As you know, when it’s in ur blood you can’t help it. I still have twenty some Porter Cable saws, and lots of tools. I climbed the corporate ladder for a while but at the end of the day I’m just a carpenter. And proud of it. Love ur channel, keep it up
Wowzers! Now that's a testimony! Thank you for sharing it.
Bless you sir. I contracted the melanoma a couple times already. 3 surgeries so far. Anyway, I'm a concrete guy. You can do it brother. If there's an ass you can kick it. Get sum!
God bless you I was doing an install when that happened on Hudson and Canal didn’t work in the city much just my timing.
I agree it’s something in your blood I also was forbidden working in construction by my carpenter father, I tried college came back and begged him to let me try it saying I would go back to school the moment I put on my nail bags I knew it was something in me . Any advice for 21 in the trade
@@Alex-kj2kq I tried corporate for a number of years but I’m back at it. Good luck
I am a 46 year old carpenter and have felt the same way. Even after achieving great accomplishments along the way I'd have anxiety getting the next job done. Not many people I started with are still going. It takes a certain inner strength to last in this trade. Feeling like you never really made it until you realize I'm still here still going. The struggle is real. Survive is the only thought you have at times.
I can relate!
I am 28, started carpentry when i was 19. Lately all it has been is just "survive" its a very difficult road compared to a lot of other carriers out there. I can tell you as a younger man these days it well set you apart from most other men. There are times though when it is very discouraging to continue this road. ive decided I am going to keep my small business and also continue school. Ive always been afraid to admit regret in spite of all the awesome things I (we) accomplished together and the comradery is truly something I will always cherish. BUT the feast and famine aspect is very real and stressful as hell some days... seeing this video and reading some of these comments hits deep. Not too many people understand how damn difficult it is mentally and emotionally with the induvial man. I am however very proud of who i have become and the admirable men ive met along the way.
I know exactly how you feel also .
Same here am a young electrician, feeling the same everytime
Your spot on there mate I can relate to that just have to keep it going lads 👍
Damn this was good. Sitting here as a self employed carpenter holding my 13 month baby girl. This was heartfelt.
Good luck to you and yours.
Don’t give up ! I’m 65 and similar construction path!
Right on man. Hope everything works out for you. Work hard.
Ohh man 63 year old self employed carpenter four children divorced, what a crazy ride, I'm so beat up I could cry forever.
It’s not like how it was when he grew up. Tradesman can make INSANE money nowadays and if you’re provisional in today’s market, you can make other people do the work. Your knowledge is extremely valuable. Think how you can use it in the age of the lazy.
Millennial here and it is so refreshing to listen to someone like this. Someone so grounded who shares wisdom on what matters in life. Our generation has no clue.
Our society lets the next generation down by failing to make effort to encourage and help them. It perpetuates by saying, “no one encouraged or helped me!” That is a selfish thing to say.
Slaaaaaave
As a 30yo carpenter with a wife, two kids, and the wolf always at my door, I NEVER regret the time spent listening to Scott. This was a consoling and enlightening interview, and gave me a lot of pause to reflect on where I'm at, and thank God for it.
Every young man or woman needs someone like this in their life.
Absolutely
Life is experienced going forward but best understood backwards. Thank you for this video
Thanks!!! I’ll use your comment in a sentence sometime soon.
I love working with older guys, no wasted time & also great conversations 👍
Lmao, and Just like. Good hard working individuals, the Good Talented old guys arehard to find these days.
Interviewer: Fantastic!! Interviewee: Legend!! This world needs 100 million more essential craftsmen. So blessed to have found this channel, Scott, you feel like a friend I will never get to meet.
No they don’t because our wages will plummet
I love just sitting down and listening to this man like a lil boy with his legs crossed, head in hand, just listening. (32 M, plasterer, 🇦🇺)
Scott has more wisdom than 99% of others. His life experiences exceed any college education. So impressive!!!
You get wisdom from bad decisions.
@@WraithlingRavenchild, Sometimes they call it the school of hard knocks, That’s where I graduated from! Lol
You sound like a robot 🤖
@@WraithlingRavenchild learn more if you fail
@@WraithlingRavenchildIf that's your only source of wisdom, you are in for a rough life. Firstly true wisdom is fear (reverence) of God. Then you get wisdom from reading your Bible, listening to your parents and elders. You gain wisdom from watching others make mistakes, but the very last place you should get wisdom from is from experience.
Retired after 50 years in the building trade as a carpenter in the UK .This man sums it up for me should be giving public lectures
When Scott speaks, we listen....
As a young kid, fresh out of high school, I got a job as a carpenter helper for a small general contractor. I learned a lot and continued working for him each summer as I attend junior college working for an engineering degree. College was hard for me and the construction work was more appealing (and it paid me well). After two years I told the general contractor I wanted to stay on and become one of his job site superintendents. He looked at me and said, " That's fine with me, but first you have to get your degree and then you come see me about that job." After four more years I got my BSEE degree and I never went back to construction. He was a very wise and successful man, in business and family life. He told me once, " you can earn a living with your back or with your head, you make the choice."
“You only have one chance to spend time with your kids”. Love that. I lived the overtime life, afraid to miss out on the extra money. Now at 35, with a growing family I’m lucky to be able to provide a good life without the long hours. A wise man once told me don’t let fun interfere with work, but don’t let work interfere with fun. Work hard and do what you have to do, but make time for family and friends.
I love listening to my elders always have ever since I was a kid I feel as if its a necessity to keep and grow culture, knowledge and wisdom. I love this mans interpretation on life and the different perspectives he brings through experience and age. He hit the nail on the head with what this generation is needing.
28 year old who has been remodeling houses for my dad's flipping business since I was 10 or 11 (not full time till I gkt out of highschool) I've loved your channel for a while now, the men that I grew up working with were not particularly good craftsmen and they certainly had no wisdom to offer me. I've had to find my own way on alot of things. Your wisdom is greatly helpful to a young man raising a young family and trying to glorify God doing so. Thank you!
Wisdom is gleaned from your observation of what not to do from the men you grew up with also.
God isn't real man
Boy, a lot of wisdom here. Like a modern-day King Solomon. I enjoyed this so much 44 minutes seemed like 5. Thank you Scott!
Scott I am really thankful for you to share your life history and wisdom in the midst of this crazy society that we live in. I am a 38years old Brazilian born, italian/korean background family Carpenter and at the moment I am working as a qualified builder in New Zealand. I wasn't fortunate enough to have my parents together through my whole childhood life and I felt that had an huge impact in my adult life affecting my confidence and self-worth deeply, I am really struggling to keep my family together nowdays because there are so many external factors pulling myself in different directions and making me doubt my core valeus as a man. Watching you talking about your life was a deep source of wisdom for me at this very moment of my life. I dont have other words to describe how of a miracle was to bump into your videos on RUclips. I Really hope you read my message and get a little of my appreciation and thankfulness about your life experiences and values as a blue collar work/ builder. God keep blessing you and your whole family.🙏👍
22 years old here, been working w my old man general contracting on and off the last 4 years and I just had to express how grateful I am for this outlook about life and how refreshing it is to find a truly knowledgeable person willing to share values, ideas, and information about the craft
There are very few if any “famous” people that I’d be honored to meet. You sir are one of them
Absolutely
Like, just watch him work
"The lottery of the birth canal" this man encapsulates truth with simplicity, add the pricless gift of parents who enabled a godly environment.
Best conversation I’ve ever heard about life from someone who has been there. I am self-employed and love my work (bodywork/massage therapist) and glad of it since at 67, I now realize will be working till the week I die. Somehow asking for help never occurred to me. This is a conversation that needs to be heard younger than later but never too late.
"Tradition is not the worship of ashes, but the preservation of fire.---Gustav Mahler"
Thanks Scott, my life is better because of you.
Right on man, young generation please learn from it and mostly believe in the truth
Bless you, Scott you are an inspiration to all of us and then some .
Much respect. Im 30 yrs in carpenter in Ontario love the kill to eat reference. Real miracles come from hard work.
Scott, as a 23 year old man who just bought his first home I can’t thank you enough for the amount of wisdom, knowledge, passion, love and inspiration you’ve provided for me and everyone. I love and look forward to seeing your new content pop up, I pray I can grow into a man like you, much love from an electrician just trying to figure everything out.
How did you become a journeyman union or outside ?
Be careful whom you marry. It can ruin you financially and many other ways
We’re all just trying to figure it out. You’re on a great track at your age….Stay true to self…Wishing you nothing but blessings man
Scott l sixth the best advice l give you any OT or have any extra money put in your retirement it goes fast in the working years , try to use all the technology tools that will save on your body been in the HVACR trades for over 30 years. We all have regrets when we are much older but one thing don’t compare your income to other man’s career.
Scott has been the shepherd for the working man putting into words what others cannot. Keep up your message we are listening. God bless
Scott - I'm an Electrical Engineer, yet one who does construction too. I'm 63 and me, my dad, a couple close friends, and my wife built our the house we still live in ~ 34 years ago. I love, love, love construction and woodworking, and am frankly pretty dang accomplished at it. Rather interesting is that my "road not taken" story is about what if I would have started my own construction business instead of being an engineer. God has a plan for every one of us, and certainly what we experienced was/is his plan. Now, as I'm about to retire in less than a year, I'm ready to have LOTS of fun doing construction projects! Love your channel, and keep up the good work.
Well, well, well, if it isn't the Renaissance Engineer over here, Mr. Jack-of-All-Trades. You've got more titles than a Marvel superhero. Electrical Engineer? Check. Construction Prodigy? Double check. And let's not forget your side gig as the mastermind behind the family home - built 34 years ago and still standing, unlike some of my jokes.
So, you're on the brink of retirement, huh? Time to trade in those blueprints for blue leisure suits and embrace the golden years of construction chic. I can already picture you in the neighborhood, offering unsolicited advice to the newbies wielding hammers. 'Back in my day, we didn't have these fancy laser levels. We eyeballed everything, and by golly, it worked!' Classic.
And the 'road not taken' story - isn't that just the quintessential plot twist in every midlife memoir? I can see the screenplay now: 'The Shocks and Sawdust Chronicles.' Move over, Hollywood.
But hey, cheers to having a plan, whether it's divinely inspired or just a series of questionable decisions that somehow worked out. May your retirement be filled with more construction projects than you can handle and fewer existential crises about the 'what ifs.' Keep up the questionable work, and remember, power tools are a retiree's best friend. Construction on, oh wise master builder!
*******This was a ChatGPT generated response. I asked it to make a snarky response to your comment.
AI is going to change mankind. Incredible potential, yet frightening as well. Thanks for the snarky response 😂
Thanks for the comment. I'm a pretty young guy who works as a software engineer for 15 years and has started my own construction business as my side gig for the past 2.5 years. I've been contemplating whether to go full gear in construction or keeping it as a side business for now. Did you switch out your engineering job for construction, or did you kept them both? And why? I need some advice from someone who has gone through this stage in life. Thanks.
@@anhtuanb I stayed in engineering as a profession, and just have helped friends / done my own construction projects (not as a side job or source of income). I was always reluctant to give up a pretty decent salary and take on the risk of going it alone in construction. In general, you won’t “make a lot” of money working for someone else. Do something you absolutely love doing. If you’re an engineer and cannot wait to get into work, enjoy your day, and spend hours at night thinking about your current project, then engineering is your passion. If you’re working on a construction project and can hardly wait to wake up to go do it, and think about the next day’s tasks all evening, the construction is your real passion. Follow your real passion and you’ll be successful AND have a rewarding life. The money will be a byproduct. Best of luck!
What a plot twist THAT reply was.
It took me 30 years to get to the moment where I decided to start living in faith,. Now I can't stop seeing it everywhere. There are so many good people, humble people, hard working people in the trades. My only regret was not embracing this point of view earlier. Listening to people like Scott has helped me transform my perspective from being totally selfish (believing I was good) to realizing I can always do better, serve more, and have empathy with my fellow brothers and sisters. Thank you for your words of wisdom, Scott. God bless you and your family
Your perspective 🫡
My sentiment has been echoed throughout these comments... "authentic" is the man before us and that is all that I can add... Thankyou
Scott you’ve taken what Larry Haun started and ran with it. You’re a real inspiration to a generation of tradesmen. Thanks man.
55. Started doing this 5 years ago; walked away from public school leadership…regret not doing it sooner. I have so much to learn and I come the this university often. To my great benefit I glean practical wisdom AND applicable knowledge. Your life, my good man, is impacting thousands and generations. Even the boys over at Perkins Builder Bros tip their hats to you. Well done. Please keep it up.
Never mind a video interview, this man needs to write a book . The wisdom and knowledge he possesses will someday be lost to the world, Only to be replaced by stories of once upon a time. He would make an awesome shop teacher a mentor and a friend. I wish you many years of health, happiness, joy and purpose . Thank you for your words of encouragement.
Mr Wadsworth, I did my trade apprenticeship then worked that trade for over 25 years before going to university . I worked in a completely different field after uni and then went back to trade work .
Age wise I'm just a little ahead of you but can tell you that uni ( or college in your country) had its merits but can't replace practical work. Don't ever regret what you've done, your videos are an inspiration to many of us; thankyou so much.
I am a young contractor located north in Norway. Been watching you for some years now and you keep inspire me to keep pushing when the lifestyle gets hard🙂 I have learned alot from you. Thank you❤
AS a 21 year old electrical apprentice that was some awesome advice and wisdom! Thank you Scott!
What a man. Thank you Mr. Wadsworth.
I still remember discovering your channel through the skillsaw video. I had just bought my first toolkit and had no clue what I was doing. At 25 I had never worked with my hands and you inspired me to try. 5 years later and I've started a side business as an electrician. I'll even renovate my own home (partly) myself.
I came for your knowledge, but I stayed for your wisdom. You are a true inspiration for young people. Thank you.
One of the highest compliments I’ve heard a man make about his wife and relationship. “Joy and peace amidst the pressures of life was the default.” Incredible compliment to you and your wife and your relationship!
As an aging tradesman myself you really eloquently spoke what I’ve struggled to express myself with the daily struggles we all apparently faced . I never knew it was so common to have these overwhelming struggles at times. I actually sat here with my wife of 23 years and played this video for her. I struggled to explain these feelings to her properly at many times and now she gets it. Thank you for taking the time to produce this wonderfully insightful video and reaching a fellow aging tradesmen in such a profound way! I pray your remaining days on earth be filled with joy and fond memories .much love and respect!
I agree. Well said.
This man is a legend. From an Australian point of view, he is classed as a 'Top Bloke'; someone who is just a hard working fella, that cares about his family and friends (mates). But I've followed him and his videos for a few years now and absolutely enjoy watching his content. If this bloke wrote a book about his life, it would be a best seller! Insofar I refer to an amazing book titled: 'My Fortunate Life' (Albert Facey). If anyone reads this post, check out this book. It was from an average man, who decided to put his 'average life' down on paper....Scott is the embodiment of this type of man! He's a legend. Thanks for your all your videos.
I think of what a treasure this video will be for your grandchildren, and great grandchildren, etc. I wish I knew how my grandfather, or my dad for that matter, would’ve answered these questions. You’ve done well, Scott. Good work.
As a carpenter in his 20s today I appreciate channels like this
As a 54-year-old Carpenter, that's good to hear
Watching this video for the first time takes me back to my twenties and the decades long struggle to provide for my family. I started out in law enforcement but transitioned back into auto repair ( my father was a mechanic). I opened my auto repair shop in 1985 at the age of 35. I was good at fixing cars and liked people but I had much to learn about business. My father once told me when I was a teenager concerning business “ son the public will educate you”. He was right . Fast forward to today I have three shops and the only thing keeping me from opening more is the lack of qualified technicians. As Scott was saying it is 180 degrees from where it was 30 years ago concerning the trades. Most of the mechanics I knew in my youth, including my father were from the Great Depression era, they were different. I encourage all young people starting out to learn everything they can about as much as they can then pick a profession that they really enjoy, helps others, can support themselves,their family and become experts in their chosen field. There is a price to pay but if they stick to it and don’t give up they will never be without a job they love. Also give God the praise for your blessings.
Salute thankful for your advice 🫡
Thanks Scott for the heart felt words of wisdom. As a young man my father preached hard work consistently until his passing. I’ve followed his teachings and have done exactly that. Now I’ve got 24 years in as a plumber and my body is feeling the effects and most of the time living paycheck to paycheck. A lot of the time it feels as if I live on the job site. I often wonder if I made the right choice to become a tradesman. I’d be lying if I said that I’m not discouraged. 45 is approaching me and I feel like I’m at a crossroad. I don’t know what to do so I just keep working hard. Pushing through the pain, the stress, the heat, the cold, and the mud. Steadily praying that before the end this pays off for me so my loved ones won’t have to do this. I just can’t help but to wonder if I should have put this blood, sweat, and tears in a different direction
Work smart, don’t get hurt, don’t waist your time, stay healthy, you’ll never get your time back. Continue learning,grow the circle of responsible valuable people around you, be valuable, be the best at what you do. Definitely LIVE every day, teach, share , respect, your family , wife & kids. Dont forget to say thank you every day.
What can you do to keep going, growing, & evolving to help produce a quality of life for you, & your family wile living & enjoying every day?
Wow. Especially after a couple of really tough weeks, this was one of the best uses of 45 "leisure" minutes of my time in a while. At 62 and trying now to figure out what my next chapter may be, this interview was food for a lot of thought. Scott, you're a man of many wisdoms. Thank you .
"I deliberately didn't turn my boys into carpenters." That line got me. My father was an industrial Journey Electrician who passed away when I was 13. I can still hear him saying he hoped I didn't end up in the same field as him and hoped I had an easier job. Due to his untimely passing the possibility of college just wasn't in the cards. I'm now a Manfacturer Certified Forklift Technician and make a good living. But I can't help but wonder what my father would think.
Seems like he'd be proud. Being proud of yourself matters too tho. Who wouldn't be proud of their legacy being successful... now it's your turn to pass down a legacy
Not the certified forklift driver😭😭😭
He would be so proud of you.
@@michaellaguna9020 Forklift Technician. I fix the forklifts.
That’s strange most people praise how good of a job being a electrician is. ?
While browsing through RUclips I stumbled on this today. I teach Woodworking in a faith-based independent school. The wisdom in this video is the perspective I want to leave with my students before they finish high school.
I rate this video an infinate out of 10. So, so much wisdom is shared here.
👍👍👍
Scott, I've been silently watching your channel off and on for a couple of yrs now. If I'm being completely honest, usually when I need to do how to some task or another. But I want to say, this was thee best episode I've stumbled across; on any channel. As a 52 yr old man, that has finally found something I'm passionate about (career wise). I didn't have any mentors growing up. I had a father that worked himself to the bone in the oilfield, and drank himself to sleep at night. Anyway, I just wanted to say thank you for what you do. Not just the how to type videos, but also this type. For trying to reach people. trying to show people the way.
Thanks Scott! You're a great mentor to us all!
I'm 62 and have been a carpenter for over 40 years. All he said has happened to me. I enjoyed most of it.
Thats amazing
What a well spoken gentleman, very thoughtful and focused.
I am a hard working man in the blue collar life as a Mold maker, loving your channel as a validation that it has been a 40+ years working 55-60hr weeks for my family. Please read the comments that you generate by these amazing conversations your putting out there. I have given my son your channel to give him a resources for life going forward. Thank you
God bless you and your adorable family
Christopher Marchand ❤
Thank you for this. The young generation like myself needed it
The grass is greener idea comes to us all. I've been in construction as a drywall finisher and I've also been a corporate guy for over 20 years. I have a bachelor's and two master's degrees, but when I reflect on life, I often wish I would have bought a tool belt after high school and trained under a master carpenter like yourself. I love everything about being on a construction site. I left the corporate world and work as a self-employed insurance adjuster, so I get to be on the job site and figure out how to rebuild houses that have been damaged by water and fire. With all that I have accomplished in the white-collar world, I still flirt with the idea of going back to drywall.
Thank you for this video... It really helps me to hear these words as I struggle being away my wife and 2 young children for possibly months as I am about to go swing a hammer in Northern Canada.
I have been watching your channel on/off for a few years. I'm 28 years old. I am just now starting my General Contracting business. I always learn a thing or two from your videos. I find that you really stick to the meat, objectively. There's little-to-no bones to spit out. I loved this interview. As a man of faith I truly believe that God has a plan for all of us that is beyond our wildest imagination and that His love runs deep and true. Thank you for sharing your strength, hope and experience. It is genuinely appreciated. Thank you from a young Canadian man. 🙏💪🛠
5:03 - 5:14 truer words have not been spoken! That is the way it works. Fantastic interview!!
After listening to your interview I can"t believe how parallel our lives are. I'm 63 and have seen my share of ups and downs. The best complement I've received was that I was no carpenter, I was a craftsman. God bless!
Scott you are an inspiration to all craftsman! The passion you show for your Lifes work hits my heart. I am 66 years old and still remodeling houses since the age of 16 years old. I left home at 16 years of age had a job and landlord. When I graduated high school neither parent was at my graduation. I know what struggle is all about.
I love your talks about work skills and life philosophy. Keep them coming!
Wywiad z prawdziwym człowiekiem, o prawdziwych problemach, z prawdziwymi odpowiedziami. Jestem pod wrażeniem. Dziękuję.
Wtf language are you writing???
The care of craft transcends language and time. Troska o rzemiosło wykracza poza język i czas.
@@ابراهيم_محمد_الازهر He's writing Polish, if I'm not mistaken.
@@ابراهيم_محمد_الازهر Are you aware there is more than one language in the World?
@@ابراهيم_محمد_الازهرpolish language
Thank you for sharing story of your Life God Bless You and Your Family 🙏🙏
41 year old General contractor with wife and 3 kids. I have been working carpentry since I was 15 years old. Now, 16 years in business for myself I can relate to this 💯. Well said! Thanks for the REAL content. Keep up the good work as you hit 66!
If you had to do it over would you become a GC
First time viewer. Absolutely loved this video. Resilience makes us strong, and more able of finding joy in the quiet moments.
Thanks, Scott. Turning 67 in one week and, like you, “get it” each day I get older. We are fortunate to had the incredible grace, mostly unearned, shown to us by The Creator and those whose lives have crossed with ours. Keep up the good work.
You said it , how true that is
I could listen to Scott talk all day! He has a way of speaking that is so genuine without any pretentiousness or hubris. He’s such a wholesome person and a role model in human character. Thanks Scott!
Scott, I am 54 years old born and raised in a third world country ...I came to America when I was 19 years old and know it is hard to adapt to a new culture. Scott you have lots of wisdom and thanks for teaching through your channel Christian values ...and your life experience... God bless you!!!
What a wise, smart, and likable man!
He’s a RUclips treasure!
Scott, I just want to thank you for sharing your life here on your channel. As a flawed, sometimes hopelessly distracted man struggling to do what God has called him to do and to balance life as a carpenter, sole proprietor, husband and father for over 30 years, I’m blessed by your candor and wisdom.
I love to see and hear how God has blessed you with joy and contentment, not as a result of a life of ease, but of enduring all the hardships of life as a good soldier.
I pray you continue to grow in wisdom and that you experience the greater joy of seeing your children walk in truth.
God bless.
At 93 I am still listening and learning from Scott What a pleasure to get ALL THIS WISDOM YOUNG FOLKS PLEASE LISTEN.
Well spoken ,intelligent man.
Scott, just wanted to let you know that you are an essential person in this world. I value your content and I am happy that I stumbled upon your channel.
What a well spoken and great man. A lot to ponder upon at any age here.
To the questions asked and the answers given.....
...wow, beautifully done. I enjoyed every single question and response.
Scott, I think from watching this video, I feel that every person you've ever met has been positively affected in some way.
You should have zero regrets. Every day, for every person is a learning experience.
....and yes, I know the odds. 😂
Scott has the aura of an old school physicist. Clearly a great man... His videos on RUclips are spectacular. He's an exceptional figures that almost anyone would love to have as a guide, not just in trades, but in life.
Man that whole thing brought a 45 minute tear to my eye
Mr. Scott, You are the legend, the rock. You just have voiced the life story of many many good man.
What a powerful human, truly blessed and not only grateful, but generous, thank you both for this
Need more of these kinds of videos
Hi Scott, I’ve been doing carpentry since I was 12 years old. Went to trade school (boces Board of cooperative educational studies). The wealth of knowledge was priceless, I was able to build a house from the ground up. I also have four children who all grew up with a strong faith and hard work ethic. I owe it all to the Lord Jesus! I did sacrifice many family times which I regret, but thankfully for my wife of 35 years picked up the slack for me. I also didn’t push my kids into my field i sometimes think maybe I should of.
Not only a way of doing work, but a way of living life you show to all of them who need both. Thank you for that.
You are a great man sir, thank you for all you do. Im just an old carpenter out of TN who would have been honored to work with you. God bless
Can we PLEASE start a series like this. I’m middle aged and just started into carpentry (as an engineer…so regrets the other direction having not swung a hammer enough) with a young family, and the amount of wisdom this God fearing man just dropped was incredibly useful! Please please start a monthly series on these!!
You’re not an engineer if you needed this
What do you mean by that? @@Huffmommy
You can't possibly do a series on this. This is something that took 65 years to make, if you want a part two your going to have to wait another 65yeara buddy
@@Huffmommy I’m an aerospace engineer. Not a civil. I took thermodynamics, aerodynamics and materials…engineering in school teaches little of application. If you were a degreed engineer you’d understand.
@@homes24 you think a man of 65 years only has an hours worth of knowledge? There were a million more directions he could go here. He talked about work, life and faith. This is an entire sub-series; and I hope he decides to talk more of it.
Nearly made me cry. So much wisdom in one video.
Thank you Scott you’re like the dad I never had. I’m 23 years old now. I remember coming home as an apprentice carpenter and watching you every night after building decks and homes. You’ve taught me so many things over the years so thank you for your service to us tradesmen.
Thank you for the wonderful wisdom you shed on humanity
I always see such a humble wisdom in this guy. I presume his kids were lucky to have him as a father.
I'm now 68, just retired electrician in Canada and planning to return and put up an electrical contracting business in my home country next year. This video gives me chills especially on the aspect of worklife balance, now that I'm close to the end. Thanks for pointing that out.
This was very well done. Insightful questions, with even better answers! Thank you for sharing your life, lessons and wisdom with us Scott!
Scott, your ability to articulate the bluecollar experience so eloquently is part of our American canon of experiences necessary to capture and I am so glad it's being captured here. God bless you from a GC in his mid forties with four kids and a wife on a single income! Please keep sharing your experiences and reflections.
Scott, I’ve been watching your videos for some time now. I’m almost 40, self employed, with 4 kids, sole bread winner. Sound familiar. Your words give me hope that when I’m older I can be at peace. I too have those moments when I wake up in the night worrying. I too don’t get work, life balance. You do what needs to be done in order to get the job done and provide for your family. I’m also a Christian man that a lot like you describe, find answers mid stride and find myself praying at unusual times. This video has brought you up a level in my book that I thought was reserved for only my father. In other words a great deal of respect. Thanks for the videos and god bless
As a young buck, I enjoyed this interview very much. Thank you both.
Scott, I love your heart, your wisdom, and your candidness.
This interview should be shown to every high-school students, about life, work and the importance of faith.
I've been wanting to interview the elder statesman in my life. For their family's benefit and mine. I think I'll take these exact questions and use them to take action on my plans. Thank you both for your impact.