The Second Education: Decades On The Water
I've been around boats my entire life.
Commercial fishing on the Great Lakes is a completely unique category of experience.
Over the last 40 years, I’ve been everything from the rookie deckhand you've watched on the show "deadliest catch" to the master captain.
Charter boats, commercial fishing boats, marine construction, recreational boating.
More recently, I captain a well-built piece of history - an 87-year old, 50-foot, all-steel Burger fishing tug doing Great Lakes fishery survey work.
Real work.
Real weather.
Real consequences.
I earned my 100-ton Master Near Coastal USCG license navigating the Clifford J -- a wisdom-building relic of history -- often through several feet of ice mid-winter and the roughest seas you can imagine.
I learned what it means to be responsible for a boat, a crew, and a mission when conditions turn against you.
The lake teaches you fast.
What you've built either holds or it doesn't.
There's no negotiation with elements.
Wind that can change in an instant.
Ice-cold water that can kill you in minutes from hypothermia.
Waves the size of houses.
There's no rescue from your own decisions when every second counts.
Every system on the boat -- mechanical, navigational, human -- either has structural integrity or it fails when you need it most.
These decades on the water taught me what holds under pressure and what collapses.
Not theory.
Lived experience.
Often in conditions where the wrong call would have ended badly.
I started seeing the same patterns I saw on the water - on land, everywhere.
Businesses.
Marriages.
Careers.
Bodies.
Things either had structural integrity or they were going to fail.
Most people couldn't tell which until it was too late.
Sustainable, resilient systems require design integrity and are naturally well-balanced.
The extreme self-interest and lack of consideration that exists today -- whether finance, corporate, political or geopolitical -- will not currently allow these systems to gain wide adoption.