I am a professional reminder-er and permission granter who moonlights as an artist, author, professional speaker, and publisher of The Adultitis Fighter, which helps people create lives filled with adventure, meaning, and joy. I enjoy Star Wars, soft t-shirts, and brand new tubes of paint. My wife Kim and I homeschool our three weird kids and live in Wisconsin, where we eat way too many cheese curds.
Greetings from Sheboygan, where I am excited to show you the first episode of a new video series from my studio overlooking Lake Michigan. This is Echo Base Dispatch—a brief transmission from here to wherever you are—where I share what I’m working on, what I’m wrestling with, and the lessons I’m learning along the way. (Click the video above to watch it, or keep reading for the full transcript.)
The best part of living on the edge of Lake Michigan is witnessing the incredible, infinite creativity of God every day. Upon the simple canvas of sky and water, He paints an endless stream of masterpieces.
His work effortlessly transitions from calm to mysterious to turbulent, and his use of color, form, and texture is breathtaking. One day, the sky is a watercolor painting, with subtle pastel hues bleeding into one another like a melting scoop of rainbow sherbet. Other days are oil paintings, with an impasto of thick, angry clouds scraped across the sky. Some days, He pulls out all the crayons, some days his palette is quite limited, and some days, I swear, He's inventing new colors.
Since I've been living here, I've harbored a desire to capture what I see. I know my version can't hold a candle to His, doomed to look like a dime store copy of a copy of a copy. A proverbial exercise in futility.
But alas, I can wait no longer. On the occasion of turning fifty soon, I have decided to undertake a quest in which I sit on the edge of the Master's studio and create fifty copies of some of His best work. Fifty paintings of the same sky and water that somehow never look the same.
I'm calling the series of paintings "50 Shades of Great."
As if this tinker project wasn't challenging enough, I am adding an extra wrinkle: I can only use four colors on each painting.
[The four colors I've chosen for this one are Ultramarine Blue, Cadmium Yellow, Quinacridone Magenta, and White.]
There's a reason I'm limiting myself like this.
Let's start by hopping in a time machine, back to a time when a box of 64 Crayola crayons — complete with a sharpener in the back — was as valuable as anything on Earth. I recall it containing every color known to mankind, exotic hues not found in the pedestrian collections of 8 or 24: Periwinkle. Brick Red. Cornflower. Thistle. Goldenrod. And of course, Gold and Silver, which I was convinced were made with real bits of the precious metals.
The box of 64 crayons turned anyone into an artist. Everything was possible; there was nothing you couldn’t draw.
Nowadays, we're still artists. No longer working in crayon, turning out drawings to decorate the fridge, we are now tasked with creating better communities, businesses, and teams. In this work, we often yearn for a bigger budget, less red tape, or more cooperation from colleagues, upper management, and politicians. We could use more training, more structure, more resources.
If only I had brick red! Can you imagine what I’d do with periwinkle? We could make a real difference with silver and gold in our crayon box!
How we long for the unlimited possibilities that box of 64 crayons represented!
If I had double the budget, I could really make some strides with these students.
If I had a few extra hours a week, I could make some real progress on this plan.
If I had another acre, an extra room, or a few hundred more square feet, I could be so more productive and efficient.
If I had a bigger team, we could get so much more accomplished.
Money. Time. Space. Manpower.
Silver. Cornflower. Brick Red. Periwinkle.
You may want the big box of 64 crayons, but there is never a time when you’ll have everything you wish you had.
Most of the time, it feels like you’re a few crayons short of filling the humble box of 8.
Short of the resources that would make your work significantly easier or more effective, it’s easy to feel paralyzed and tempted to throw your hands up in resignation. We let the disappointment over what we don’t have keep us from making the most of what we do.
But here’s an important truth to keep in mind. The best painters in the world can create a masterpiece with only four colors: red, yellow, blue, and white. That's all you need to paint a rainbow.
Even though art supply stores feature walls of paint tubes in a dizzying array of pigments, the wise teachers implore their students to proactively limit their palette to a handful of hues to ensure a harmonious, pleasing result.
True creativity thrives when constrained by limitations. Ultramarine was the finest and most expensive blue used by Renaissance painters. It was made from lapis lazuli, a rare and expensive stone, often costing more than gold. But when you are using a lot of warm earth tones, as those master painters did, a neutral gray made from black and white can take on a blue tone by comparison.
Having access to all the colors does not make one an artist.
It’s about knowing how to use the ones you have.
Whether you are an educator, a healthcare professional, an entrepreneur, or a parent trying to raise great kids, I understand you wish you had more time, more resources, and more freedom to do the important work that needs to be done.
Unfortunately, that may never be the case. It rarely is in the real world.
But that’s ok.
You are simply called to do the best you can with what you have.
Don’t let your limitations hold you back, dear artist.
You may not have the whole box of 64, but you have everything you need to make a masterpiece.
Where do you feel stuck because you're waiting for something you don't currently have? Is there something you can do to move forward using resources you do have? Share your thoughts with me, join the conversation in the Escape Adulthood League, or spend time this week recording them in your journal.
Stay young and stay fun,
P.S.
You’re invited to a private unveiling of my latest original painting from Echo Base! Make plans to join me on Friday, February 6th at 7:45 pm CT for a casual and intimate livestream as I share the story behind the piece. Not only will it go up for auction that evening, but I will also be revealing new prints, gift items, and exclusive limited editions featuring the new art.
A replay will be made available, but there are a few surprises in store for the people who attend live. And if you tune in early, you might just get a sneak peek at me working on my next one… 👀!
Know any dreamers in your life?
The Penguin Who Flew is Jason Kotecki’s first-ever children’s book, starring a persistent penguin named Marty with an impossible dream.
On a mission to help people break free from Adultitis to build better lives, businesses, and teams.
I am a professional reminder-er and permission granter who moonlights as an artist, author, professional speaker, and publisher of The Adultitis Fighter, which helps people create lives filled with adventure, meaning, and joy. I enjoy Star Wars, soft t-shirts, and brand new tubes of paint. My wife Kim and I homeschool our three weird kids and live in Wisconsin, where we eat way too many cheese curds.
View online • Get this from a friend? Subscribe here! Shenanigating Since 2000 | Special Issue 🌟 Hello, Reader! Have you ever had a dream in your heart? Did it come true, or crash and burn? Maybe it feels stuck in neutral, or perhaps life’s been so busy your dream is missing in action… Wherever you find yourself, we invite you to join us for a LIVE Flying Lessons Workshop THIS Saturday, January 24, 2026, from 10:00 am – noon CT. We’ll be using Jason’s children’s book, The Penguin Who Flew, as...
View online • Get this from a friend? Subscribe here! Shenanigating Since 2000 | 2026 Issue #02 🍰 Artwork from "The Penguin Who Flew" by Jason Kotecki. Happy Sunday, Reader! Greetings from Sheboygan, where I am publishing this newsletter in tribute to a mentor who taught me that freedom from embarrassment is a superpower. Here's me tying on my cape... Every book has a typo. I don't care how prestigious the publisher, how persnickety the author, or how many editors looked it over; there will...
View online • Get this from a friend? Subscribe here! Shenanigating Since 2000 | 2026 Issue #01 🤍 Photograph by Kim Kotecki. Happy Sunday, Reader! Welcome to the evolution of this newsletter, now simply titled The Adultitis Fighter. I've been writing it in one form or another for about 25 years! The earliest version I could find on my computer was from February 8, 2002, with a note proudly declaring "298 members and counting..." We've grown quite a bit since then, and although it still...