Million Dollar Garage
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May 18,2025
Million Dollar Garage — Post 1
Nothing ever goes right, does it. I live hand to mouth. Introduce any real struggle and I fold—sometimes for months. Still, I love the idea of eating what you kill. I love the reasons I started this—not for praise, but to get to heaven by using the gifts God has given me to steward.
That’s the game: Go to heaven. Do simple commerce. Show people they are not trapped. It’s not a gimmick. It’s not a dream. It’s how I’ve survived—barely—across a decade of ache. No salary. No safety net. Just what I can make and what I can sell. It’s no less of a grind than your job. Just less structure. More ache. More insecurity.
I started this because I had to. Every other path felt like a hollow pacification of others’ expectations. I’m not built to fake things. I’m not built to belong to someone else’s idea of work. I wanted to live by the things I produce—not by what I’m worth to a system.
And I still believe in it. The goals haven’t changed-they’ve worked—in small, holy, broken ways. Paintings. Side sales. Growth. No glory. No scale. Just survival with soul. This life isn’t easier. It just makes more sense to me.
But eighteen months ago, the wheels fell off. I hit the wall—creatively, spiritually, financially. No explosion. Just erosion. Each day wore me down. I couldn’t paint. I couldn’t write. I couldn’t pretend there was hope.
“In the middle of the journey of our life, I found myself in a dark wood, for the straight way had been lost.”
—Dante Alighieri
I sat in the garage, seething—not quietly. Too many bad ideas. Too little movement. No help coming. People said, “Just get moving.” Sometimes that helped. “Be patient.” That always hurt. Most people said nothing. I liked them best.
When you hit your last dime—and you feel you are letting your wife down—your last thread of belief in yourself—you have to move. You throw shit at the wall. You stop waiting. Nobody is coming to save you. So you do what terrifies you most—not because it will work, but because it won’t leave you alone. And you do it with this spirit: fuck it—let’s go. Desperation is the greatest gift.
It took me eighteen months to reprove myself to myself. To re-interrogate every belief. Was I wrong about the work? Was I wrong about my value to the world? Did I have anything worth saying? Did it matter whatsoever?
Yes, it matters, but the questions I was asking were irrelevant. The philosophies I have, these goals, the people I could help (if only just one) were given to me in a Monastery in Kentucky. I mistakently focused on outcomes. I forgot that I only needed to focus on using the gifts. So I started building in my mind. I started writing about it. Finally, I decided to share my writing about this thing that has been in the back of my mind years before I crashed a year and a half ago.
Million Dollar Garage is my backyard studio—part sanctuary, part wreckage, part full-throated prayer. It’s where I paint, write, rant, and rebuild (and tear down). It’s idea based upon a real thing: A leaning, 24x32 pole structure with a gravel driveway and cracked concrete. It’s more than that, obviously, but not at first glance. Actually, at this moment, it is no more than a structure…hopefully it is a launching pad.
Million Dollar Garage is not worth a million. It’s barely a garage. But it is and will be honest. A dispatch from the bottom of the hole—dug by failure, filled with intent. A monument. To my grind. To obedience. Most importantly, it is a sign in the yard that says: something died here-and something was borne.
It’s not granite. It’s sawhorses. Plywood. Michigan sweat. A patio. A garden. My wife. An Old-English named Noah. Three cats I didn’t ask for. Ceiling boards pulled down to paint on. Use what you got, inside and outside, to make something meaningful out of scrap and gratitude.
So here I am. Here we are. Million Dollar Garage. Varhaus. Jason Keusch.
This isn’t a how-to. Not a platform. Not a “watch me paint” thing. It’s not about the art. Or the garage. Or even me. I’m just curating. Trying to listen. To the whisper in the wilderness. To the old saints and busted prophets who kept going when no one listened.
What do we do with what we’re blessed with? Why do we do it at all? What do we do about it? Who do we do it with? That’s what this is. That’s what I’m building. Not for followers. For recognition.
Romans 12:2. You’ll see it again. Not a motto. Not a mission. A spine. Do not conform. Be transformed. That’s the assignment.
And still—it won’t go right. Not yet. You don’t waste anything in this world, and I am not going to neglect my desperation. Onward and upward, in the immortal words of the immortal John Prine: in spite of ourselves.
This is Million Dollar Garage.
One post a week. Sunday nights.
Paint, failure, survival, renewal.
A garage, not a platform. A dispatch, not a pitch.
If it hit you—say so.
Reply. Forward. Leave a comment.
Or just let me know what line stuck. I read everything.
If it missed? Tell me that too.
Not every post is for everyone. But every post is for someone.
Maybe next week’s yours.
—Jason Keusch
Romans 12:2
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