It’s All About the Process
To prepare for this issue, the WCI team carved our very first spoons together. As we edited articles, we also spent time down in the workshop, making a mess and catching up in a way we wouldn’t have otherwise. Sometimes, even for editors, working at a computer doesn’t suffice; you have to experience something firsthand to really get it. And in the end, even if your spoon is stubby and asymmetrical like mine, that’s okay; the process, that act of carving slowly with other people, was the point. The finished product is a bonus. But don’t just take it from us; spoon carver and author Emmet Van Driesche explains on page 87 how spoon carving is a practice, not to be rushed but to be enjoyed. Then, hear from Aspen Golann,…