A Mason's Work

When the Plumb Is Set: Purpose, Vocation, and Ikigai

4 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio When the Plumb Is Set: Purpose, Vocation, and Ikigai

Descripción

The final step in the week's framework isn't a conclusion so much as a reorientation. Once you have done the excavation work — identified the recurring qualities, triangulated the resonant feedback, separated out the adapted behavior from the genuine expression — the task becomes figuring out where and how to bring that purpose into the world with intention. That might eventually include aligning it to a vocation, but even that isn't strictly required. When you are genuinely operating from your plumb, you don't stop expressing it. It runs through everything. What that state of alignment produces is stability under pressure. The winds blow, the adversities come, the life events happen — but when you know where your center is, you know where you are in relation to it. Brian connects this to the Japanese concept of ikigai: the convergence of what you're good at, what you love, what the world needs, and what you can be paid for. When your excavated purpose, your genuine expression, and your vocational direction all point the same way, the result looks from the outside like that \"beam of light\" moment. From the inside, you know it was built through repeated, intentional, unglamorous work. The episode closes with a direct ask: share it. The person who struggled for years to find their plumb is often the most useful guide for someone currently in the middle of that struggle. What you've built through this process has real value for the people around you — in your lodge, in your family, in whatever communities you're part of. * Moving from excavation to expression: how purpose becomes an operational mode * Why alignment means you can't really be thrown off the horse anymore * Connecting purposeful expression to vocation without making vocation the prerequisite * Ikigai as the convergence of purpose, skill, impact, and livelihood * Why the \"beam of light\" appearance is the result of intentional excavation, not luck * The obligation to share what you've learned with others who are still digging The work of finding your plumb doesn't end here — but this week gives you the operative framework to start doing it on purpose. Free Lodge Resource: Download the A Mason's Work Discussion Guide [https://amasonswork.com/free-guide] - a free, printable discussion guide for your lodge education night. No signup required. Ready to go deeper? A Mason's Work [https://amasonswork.com/book] - the operative method in full. Or bring Brian to your lodge: Virtual Lodge Education Session - $250 [https://buy.stripe.com/9B6fZa0cwbQp30Neet0Jq0o]. Thanks to our monthly supporters * Tim Dedman * Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ [https://www.patreon.com/amasonswork]

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315 episodios

episode When the Plumb Is Set: Purpose, Vocation, and Ikigai artwork

When the Plumb Is Set: Purpose, Vocation, and Ikigai

The final step in the week's framework isn't a conclusion so much as a reorientation. Once you have done the excavation work — identified the recurring qualities, triangulated the resonant feedback, separated out the adapted behavior from the genuine expression — the task becomes figuring out where and how to bring that purpose into the world with intention. That might eventually include aligning it to a vocation, but even that isn't strictly required. When you are genuinely operating from your plumb, you don't stop expressing it. It runs through everything. What that state of alignment produces is stability under pressure. The winds blow, the adversities come, the life events happen — but when you know where your center is, you know where you are in relation to it. Brian connects this to the Japanese concept of ikigai: the convergence of what you're good at, what you love, what the world needs, and what you can be paid for. When your excavated purpose, your genuine expression, and your vocational direction all point the same way, the result looks from the outside like that \"beam of light\" moment. From the inside, you know it was built through repeated, intentional, unglamorous work. The episode closes with a direct ask: share it. The person who struggled for years to find their plumb is often the most useful guide for someone currently in the middle of that struggle. What you've built through this process has real value for the people around you — in your lodge, in your family, in whatever communities you're part of. * Moving from excavation to expression: how purpose becomes an operational mode * Why alignment means you can't really be thrown off the horse anymore * Connecting purposeful expression to vocation without making vocation the prerequisite * Ikigai as the convergence of purpose, skill, impact, and livelihood * Why the \"beam of light\" appearance is the result of intentional excavation, not luck * The obligation to share what you've learned with others who are still digging The work of finding your plumb doesn't end here — but this week gives you the operative framework to start doing it on purpose. Free Lodge Resource: Download the A Mason's Work Discussion Guide [https://amasonswork.com/free-guide] - a free, printable discussion guide for your lodge education night. No signup required. Ready to go deeper? A Mason's Work [https://amasonswork.com/book] - the operative method in full. Or bring Brian to your lodge: Virtual Lodge Education Session - $250 [https://buy.stripe.com/9B6fZa0cwbQp30Neet0Jq0o]. Thanks to our monthly supporters * Tim Dedman * Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ [https://www.patreon.com/amasonswork]

Ayer4 min
episode The Room as a Mirror: Reading Resonant Feedback artwork

The Room as a Mirror: Reading Resonant Feedback

At some point in the excavation process, the internal signals — the rawness, the vulnerability, the recurring qualities — need to be cross-referenced against something external. Because humans are social organisms, the people around you are often the clearest mirror available. The trick is learning which feedback actually carries signal and which is just social courtesy. There's a meaningful difference between \"good job\" and \"I was moved.\" There's a meaningful difference between polite appreciation and someone telling you that you're the only person they can talk to, or that they felt genuinely safe. Those latter responses aren't flattery — they're data points indicating that your expression reached something real in another person. Brian uses the example of his brother's drawing ability: objectively brilliant, universally recognized, and yet shrugged off by the person doing it. That's a common pattern. Deep skill often doesn't feel like a big deal to the person who has it, which makes external feedback a necessary corrective. The framework here isn't about chasing praise — it's about triangulating. You're looking for the overlap between those vulnerable, emotionally resonant internal experiences and the moments when other people (or the natural world, or animals, or whatever your feedback environment is) respond in a way that goes beyond the surface. That overlap is where the next round of digging belongs. * Why the people around you function as a working mirror in this process * The difference between surface-level praise and meaningfully resonant feedback * Why people with deep natural skill often discount it — and why that matters * Skill without emotional resonance versus resonance without obvious skill * Feedback from non-human environments for people whose purpose runs that direction * Finding the overlap between internal vulnerability and external resonance as a targeting tool With both the internal and external signals mapped, the final step is understanding how those pieces assemble into a purposeful way of operating in the world — and eventually, a vocation. Free Lodge Resource: Download the A Mason's Work Discussion Guide [https://amasonswork.com/free-guide] - a free, printable discussion guide for your lodge education night. No signup required. Ready to go deeper? A Mason's Work [https://amasonswork.com/book] - the operative method in full. Or bring Brian to your lodge: Virtual Lodge Education Session - $250 [https://buy.stripe.com/9B6fZa0cwbQp30Neet0Jq0o]. Thanks to our monthly supporters * Tim Dedman * Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ [https://www.patreon.com/amasonswork]

25 de jun de 20265 min
episode Rawness Is the Signal, Not the Problem artwork

Rawness Is the Signal, Not the Problem

When something uncomfortable happens, most people have a default response ready: make it funny, walk away, fidget, redirect. These aren't character flaws — they're the body moving energy away from the place it needs to settle. The work described here is about moving past those defaults to reach what Brian calls the essence of your response: the unguarded, unmanaged version of how you actually meet the world. What shows up in that space often feels vulnerable or raw, almost like new skin encountering air for the first time. That sensation isn't a warning signal to shut down — it's the indicator that something real and aligned is surfacing. Learning to stay with that rather than clamp down on it is one of the more practically difficult parts of this process, but it's also where the most useful information lives. Over time and in retrospect, you can start to identify the qualities those moments share: a sense of connection with others, a feeling of awe, a particular kind of presence that doesn't happen everywhere. Those recurring qualities are the connective tissue. When you can map them across multiple experiences, you start to distinguish what's genuinely aligned with who you are from what's adapted to the environment. The distinction matters because it's the foundation for articulating a self-expression that's actually yours — and for putting yourself in situations where that expression can happen more deliberately. * Default physical and behavioral responses that redirect discomfort away from awareness * What it means to have an embodied experience of an uncomfortable moment * Vulnerability as an indicator of genuine self-expression, not a problem to resolve * Retrospective analysis as a tool for identifying recurring qualities across experiences * Separating aligned self-expression from environmentally adapted behavior * How these moments build toward a working understanding of purpose The next piece of the process introduces an external dimension: what happens when other people reflect something back to you in those moments of genuine expression. Free Lodge Resource: Download the A Mason's Work Discussion Guide [https://amasonswork.com/free-guide] - a free, printable discussion guide for your lodge education night. No signup required. Ready to go deeper? A Mason's Work [https://amasonswork.com/book] - the operative method in full. Or bring Brian to your lodge: Virtual Lodge Education Session - $250 [https://buy.stripe.com/9B6fZa0cwbQp30Neet0Jq0o]. Thanks to our monthly supporters * Tim Dedman * Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ [https://www.patreon.com/amasonswork]

24 de jun de 20266 min
episode Excavating Purpose from Personal History artwork

Excavating Purpose from Personal History

Brian spent close to a decade trying to pick the right degree, the right path, the right answer — and the decision got so heavy it just stalled. That experience turns out to be instructive, not just biographical. The search for purpose fails when it's framed as a high-stakes selection event. It works when it's framed as excavation. The premise here draws directly from the working tools framework at the core of A Mason's Work by Brian Mattocks: the podcast has always been about using Masonic operative tools to conduct a genuine excavation of self — identifying the conceptual fallacies we build around ourselves and dismantling them. Purpose lives under that construction. For most people, the first twenty years of life involve burying the plumb. The remaining years are spent digging it back out. The mechanism for that digging is intentional discomfort: putting yourself in unfamiliar, low-risk situations where your natural, unscripted reactions become visible data. What you're looking for in those moments isn't performance — it's the unguarded response. That response starts to reveal how you actually approach problems, which is often more distinctly yours than you'd expect. No two people excavate the same way, which is why the examples from Brian's own life are offered as data points rather than templates. * Why framing purpose as a high-stakes choice causes it to stall * The plumb as something buried over the first decades of life * Intentional discomfort as a practical excavation tool * Observing unscripted reactions as meaningful self-knowledge * Why personal examples are useful data, not universal instructions The next step in the process moves from observation into what those uncomfortable moments actually feel like from the inside — and what to do when the rawness surfaces. Free Lodge Resource: Download the A Mason's Work Discussion Guide [https://amasonswork.com/free-guide] - a free, printable discussion guide for your lodge education night. No signup required. Ready to go deeper? A Mason's Work [https://amasonswork.com/book] - the operative method in full. Or bring Brian to your lodge: Virtual Lodge Education Session - $250 [https://buy.stripe.com/9B6fZa0cwbQp30Neet0Jq0o]. Thanks to our monthly supporters * Tim Dedman * Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ [https://www.patreon.com/amasonswork]

23 de jun de 20265 min
episode The Plumb Is Not a Vibe artwork

The Plumb Is Not a Vibe

Brian Mattocks opens the week with a confession: he spent years in lodge not really understanding what the plumb was supposed to teach. \"Stay upright through your several stations in life\" sounded like a break-room cat poster. What changed his thinking wasn't a revelation — it was recognizing what the plumb actually does. It finds the center of the earth regardless of where you're standing. It doesn't operate on mood. That consistency is the whole point. That mechanical reality reframes how we think about purpose. Most people imagine purpose as a far-off destination, something you finally arrive at once life settles down. Brian argues the plumb says otherwise: purpose isn't a place you reach, it's a way of being that permeates everything you do right now. Waiting for the beam of light from the sky isn't a discovery strategy — it's just surrendering your own autonomy. Finding your plumb and finding your purpose are, at root, the same kind of work. This episode sets up the operative framework explored throughout the week: purpose as alignment, not arrival, and self-knowledge as something built through intentional practice rather than waited on. * Why \"be true to yourself\" reads as a platitude but contains a real operative principle * The plumb as a mechanical model for consistency of character * Purpose as permeating expression rather than far-off destination * The problem with waiting for the \"beam of light\" moment * Why alignment and purpose are essentially the same process The week ahead will move from this foundation into the practical work of excavating that alignment from the life you've already lived. Free Lodge Resource: Download the A Mason's Work Discussion Guide [https://amasonswork.com/free-guide] - a free, printable discussion guide for your lodge education night. No signup required. Ready to go deeper? A Mason's Work [https://amasonswork.com/book] - the operative method in full. Or bring Brian to your lodge: Virtual Lodge Education Session - $250 [https://buy.stripe.com/9B6fZa0cwbQp30Neet0Jq0o]. Thanks to our monthly supporters * Tim Dedman * Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ [https://www.patreon.com/amasonswork]

22 de jun de 20266 min