Doer of Things is a record of building a quieter, more capable life.
This space is about ordinary work, useful projects, intentional routines, and the slow process of making life feel more grounded, reliable, and real. It is not about chasing trends, buying more things, or pretending every project is perfect. It is about learning how things work, fixing what can be fixed, choosing tools and systems that last, and paying attention to the small details that make everyday life better.
Through videos, photos, writing, and ongoing projects, Doer of Things follows the process of building a life around usefulness instead of excess. That might look like working on bikes, organizing a garage, repairing equipment, setting up better routines, documenting daily life, building a more functional workspace, spending time outside, or simply noticing the quiet moments that usually get overlooked.
The goal is to move slower, live more intentionally, and create systems that support a better way of living — one that values durability, simplicity, repairability, skill, and calm. A life where the things we own have a purpose, the spaces we use actually work, and ordinary days are treated like something worth documenting.
Doer of Things is part journal, part workshop, part visual record, and part experiment in becoming more capable over time. It is about finding the extraordinary in the ordinary, making useful things feel meaningful, and building a life that works better on purpose.