When it comes to finding meaning in life, no one size fits all. Robert J. Hater, Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Dayton, tries to delineate some of the dynamics operative in this quest. His own revolves around a savings book and its mythic value to him. He also relates the significance of participating in a sweat lodge ritual, purchasing some wooden chairs laden with symbolic import, and reveling in seven acres of land he owns. In his discussion of these experiences, Hater reveals the universal search for meaning through myth, mystery, ritual, and religion. This philosophical work helps us see that one of the real challenges in the human adventure is to sniff out significances in everyday life. Or as Hater expresses it, we're all involved in the process of completing our own mosaic of meaning.