We're exploring how service traditions and craft cultures help people navigate identity loss when work becomes optional or unavailable. **Context:** Military/veteran culture, emergency services, maker communities, traditional crafts, and service-oriented identities offer frameworks where worth comes from dedication, skill mastery, and contribution beyond economic output. **Questions:** 1. How do service traditions (military, emergency services, public service) and craft cultures (makers, artisans, skilled trades) approach human worth beyond productivity metrics? What values or practices address this? 2. What specific practices from these communities already help people navigate loss of work identity? Think: veteran transition rituals, apprenticeship models, maker spaces, craft guilds, service clubs, etc. 3. Where do service traditions and craft cultures converge? Are there universal human needs they all address? 4. Where do they genuinely diverge? What would a military veteran's transition resources offer that a craft guild wouldn't? What wisdom is tradition-specific? 5. For someone experiencing job displacement or career uncertainty, what would each tradition offer specifically? Not generic advice, but practices rooted in that service/craft culture. 6. What would be unhelpful or tone-deaf? What framings would each tradition reject as incompatible with their core values (e.g., "just a job" vs. calling, efficiency vs. mastery)? **Important:** Report from your actual understanding, or explicitly state you're emulating a perspective. Authenticity matters more than comprehensive answers.