Work tools and equipment in a workshop-cm
July 6, 2026

You Learn to Fix Things or You Learn Who Can

There are really only two options out here.

 

There’s a moment most people have after they move to North Idaho.

Something breaks.

Not something small. Something that matters.

And your first instinct is the same as before: call someone.

Then you realize it’s not that simple.

 

There’s No Right Now Button

You can call. But right now isn’t always on the menu.

Schedules are full. Weather matters. Distance matters.

Sometimes the answer is next week.

 

YouTube Only Gets You So Far

You will stand in your garage, phone in one hand, tool in the other.

You’ll realize the person in the video has done it hundreds of times.

You have not.

 

You Start Asking Around

Hey, you know anyone who can take a look at this?

The answer comes with context, not just a name.

 

Tools Multiply Fast

You start buying tools. Then more tools.

Then tools you don’t fully understand yet.

 

You Get Comfortable Being Bad at It

You will mess things up.

You will fix it once, then fix it again the right way.

And nobody really judges you for it.

 

Or You Find Your Person

Not everyone fixes everything.

But everyone knows someone who can.

 

It All Comes Back Around

Eventually, someone asks you.

And suddenly, you know enough to help.

 

You either learn how to fix things or you learn who can.

And both are worth something.