Through the Prism

After passing through the prism, each refraction contains some pure essence of the light, but only an incomplete part. We will always experience some aspect of reality, of the Truth, but only from our perspectives as they are colored by who and where we are. Others will know a different color and none will see the whole, complete light. These are my musings from my particular refraction.

11.26.2025

Recognize the Seemingly Alien Other as Fundamentally Akin to You


Have you ever realized how easy it is to not know something?

No two creatures experience reality in quite the same way, and that's amazing.

The solution, extensive research shows, is more contact with others. Contact with others leads to the discovery of commonalities, of shared humanity, and breaks down barriers.

Nothing alive is alien to me.

Progress in steel and silicon has long been preceded by progress in imagination.

Teach us to see the world through different eyes.

The unknowable unknowns are invisible, noiseless and strange.

Everything we experience is but a filtered version of everything that we could experience.

Undermine the instinct to dehumanize "them."

Love combines unlike and like, forging a higher unity, bringing together what seems to be different. Love overcomes prejudice by providing it with a more inclusive, elevated form.

The people that you should fear most are the ones who vote like you do—the ones who share meals with you—the ones who adore you. They’ll bless your beauty and ugliness equally. They’ll praise you for the blood in your teeth. They’ll sing an honor song for you as you kick that body lying dead on the street.

Beneath steel and concrete lies something less tangible but just as powerful: culture — the stories and symbols that make some futures seem absurd, others inevitable, and a few worth building.

Do not cling like a magnet to collective, unconscious values.

Nothing can sense everything, and nothing needs to.

Enlightenment is to divest yourself of your ingrained attachment to familiar body shapes and conventional kinds of conduct. It is to recognise the seemingly alien other as in fact fundamentally akin to you.

Invisible infrastructure: culture. The stories, narratives, and memes that determine which futures feel plausible and worth pursuing.

Every animal can only tap into a small fraction of reality's fullness. Each is enclosed within its own unique sensory bubble, perceiving but a tiny silver of an immense world.

We need to make normative the idea that there is not, nor never has been, one "right" way to be.

Something that exists in the collective consciousness before (maybe) becoming reality.

What don’t I know and when will I know I don’t know it?

In mainstream culture, hopeful futures rarely get the same airtime as dystopias.

Challenge collective assumptions; turn accepted norms inside out; do not be a clone of the unconsciousness.

The proper way to overcome our prejudices is by being with the seemingly alien other by really seeing them – by engaging and interacting with them, and gradually coming to understand their point of view.

We need to make all types and realms of diversity normative, and eliminate the need to consider those who are not the same as "us" as "other."

The idea is wonderfully expansive. It tells us that all is not as it seems. It reminds us that there is light in darkness, noise in silence, richness in nothingness. It hints at flickers of the unfamiliar in the familiar, of the extraordinary in the everyday, of magnificence in mundanity.

The relations that bind us to our family, friends, compatriots, humanity, and to other animals appear much like the spiralling whorl of a mollusc shell, each form enclosed within broader forms, with the all-embracing form of life encompassing them all.

Culture isn’t just made in conferences or boardrooms. It is shaped in the stories we tell, the art we share, and the memes we pass along. Everyone participates.

I am a living being, I consider nothing alive alien to me.


A poem.
—Facebook comment on an article about the Aurora Borealis

My favorite boss liked to remind me
that we don’t know what we don’t know.
Sure, there are some things that we know
we don’t know, like the best treatment for pancreatic cancer,
how long the next government shutdown will last,
or why our lunchroom sells moldy cakes.
Those are all knowable unknowns.
The kind of subjects you can ask questions
about. The kind of questions meaty enough
to chew on for decades.
Have you ever realized how easy it is
to not know something? If I asked if you knew
your mother’s birthday, you would answer
yes, after an uncomfortable pause.
If I asked if you knew
my mother’s birthday, you would quickly answer no.
We can realize what is unknown to us faster
than realize what is known. Your mind doesn’t have to shuffle
through the library catalog of your memory
to summon up a non-answer
But the unknowable unknowns are invisible,
noiseless and strange
a gap in your teeth that even your tongue
can’t detect, a language made with tones
you can’t hear, a hole filled with other holes.
In 1908, Kristian Birkeland theorized
that auroras were created when the sun’s ejected electrons
disturbed the Earth’s magnetic field. No one believed him
about the sun. Surely, it was gas or dust
or the Earth’s own unruly shrugs
that caused those flickering colors.
When he invented an electromagnetic cannon,
it exploded in flames in front of his investors.
When he used that cannon to create
the first nitrogen fertilizer,
his partner took credit and iced him out of the company.
For all the things Birkeland knew, he couldn’t have known
that one day, long after his aurora theories
were proven correct,
we would debate, not the fact of the sun
causing auroras, but the fact of who
was causing the sun
to cause the auroras.
I still don’t know who “they” are, the ones poking holes
in the sun. But I do know that my dental hygienist believes
that the reason it didn’t rain this summer
was because of the military satellites,
controlled at the army base next door.
It’s unclear if she thinks the mysterious “they”
were doing so intentionally with their chemtrails and space lasers
or accidentally with their overpaid incompetence.
I didn’t tell her I worked there
and was neither overpaid nor trained in weather control.
I didn’t tell her there really was a building called
the Cloud Study Chamber,
a rusty sphere where they used to study,
not clouds, but biological warfare in the 40s.
I didn’t tell her I research cancer, not weather.
She’d be sure we already had a cure,
but were keeping it from her.
No, I didn’t tell her, not because of fear,
but because she had her fingers in my mouth.
Plato thought that learning was just remembering
what our souls already knew but forgot.
What don’t I know
and when will I know I don’t know it?

From Rattle.


A delightful book that explores the many different types, forms, and varieties of senses that exist among the many different creatures of the world. All the diverse ways that animals can see, hear, taste, smell, and touch that we can't. Extreme examples for every sense--hearing at high frequencies and at low, at high volumes and low, etc.--how each sense has developed in different ways for different circumstances and uses.

Yong is an informative, accessible, and entertaining writer, and his book is both endlessly fascinating and full of wonder. It leaves readers with new appreciation for both their own sensations, perceptions, and experiences of the world and how unique and distinct is the experience of every other creature. No two creatures experience reality in quite the same way, and that's amazing.
Imagine what it might be like to be a mosquito. Flying through a thick sop of tropical air, your antennae slice through plumes of odorants until they catch a whiff of carbon dioxide. Enticed, you turn into the plume, zigzagging when you lose track of it, and surging ahead whenever you pick it up. You spot a dark silhouette and fly over to investigate. You enter into a cloud of lactic acid, ammonia, and sulcatone--molecules released by human skin. Finally, the clincher: an alluring burst of heat. You land, and your feet pick up an explosion of salt, lipids, and other tastes. Your sense, working together, have once again found a human. You find a blood vessel and drink your fill.

-----

Each sense has pros and cons, and each stimulus is useful in some circumstances and useless in others. That's why animals tap into as many streams of information as their nervous systems can handle, using the strengths of one sense to compensate for the shortcomings of another. No species uses a single sense to the exclusion of every other. Even animals that are paragons of one sensory domain have several at their disposal.

-----

Each species is constrained in some ways and liberated in others. For that reason, this is not a book of lists, in which we childishly rank animals according to the sharpness of their sense and value them only when their abilities surpass our own. This is a book not about superiority but about diversity.
That's the idea briefly. Here are more excerpts.
It tells us that all is not as it seems and that everything we experience is but a filtered version of everything that we could experience.

-----

The majesty of nature is not restricted to canyons and mountains. It can be found in the wilds of perception--the sensory spaces that lie outside our Umwelt and within those of other animals. To perceive the world through other senses is to find splendor in familiarity and the sacred in the mundane. Wonders exist in a backyard garden, where bees take the measure of a flower’s electric fields, leafhoppers send vibrational melodies through the stems of plants, and birds behold the hidden palates of rurples and grurples. . . . Wilderness is not distant. We are continually immersed in it. It is there for us to imagine, to savor and to protect.

-----

Earth teems with sights and textures, sounds and vibrations, smells and tastes, electric and magnetic fields. But every animal can only tap into a small fraction of reality's fullness. Each is enclosed within its own unique sensory bubble, perceiving but a tiny silver of an immense world.
More to follow.


More from An Immense World.
An Umwelt is specifically the part of those surroundings that an animal can sense and experience--its perceptual world. . . . A multitude of creatures could be standing in the same physical space and have completely different Umwelten. . . . 

Our Umwelt is limited; it just doesn't feel that way. To us, it feels all-encompassing. It is all that we know, and so we easily mistake it for all the is to know. This is an illusion, and one that every animal shares.

-----

An Umwelt cannot expand indefinitely, though. Sense always come at a cost. Animals have to keep the neurons of their sensory systems in a perpetual state of readiness so that they can fire when necessary. This is tiring work, like drawing a bow and holding it in place so that when the moment comes, an arrow can be shot. Even when your eyelids are closed, your visual system is a monumental drain on your reserves. For that reason, no animal can sense everything well.

Nor would any animal want to. It would be overwhelmed by the flood of stimuli, most of which would be irrelevant. Evolving according to their owner's needs, the sense sort through an infinity of stimuli, filtering out what's irrelevant and capturing signals for food, shelter, threats, allies, or mates. They are like discerning personal assistants who come to the brain with only the most important information. . . . Nothing can sense everything, and nothing needs to.

-----

Johnson suspects that these differences, which some might bill as "disorders," actually predispose people to step outside their Umwelten and embrace those of other creatures. Perhaps people who experience the world in ways that are considered atypical have an intuitive feeling for the limits of typicality.

-----

The Umwelt concept can feel constrictive because it implies that every creature is trapped within the house of its sense. But to me, the idea is wonderfully expansive. It tells us that all is not as it seems and that everything we experience is but a filtered version of everything that we could experience. It reminds us that there is light in darkness, noise in silence, richness in nothingness. It hints at flickers of the unfamiliar in the familiar, of the extraordinary in the everyday, of magnificence in mundanity.
More to follow.


More from An Immense World.
John Caprio, a physiologist who studies catfish, says the difference between smell and taste couldn't be clearer. Taste is reflexive and innate, while smell is not. From birth, we recoil from bitter substances, and while we can learn to override those responses and appreciate beer, coffee, or dark chocolate, the fact remains that there's something instinctive to override. Odors, by contrast, "don't carry meaning until you associate them with experiences," Caprio says. Human infants aren't disgusted by the smell of sweat or poop until they get older. Adults vary so much in their olfactory likes and dislikes that when the U.S. Army tried to develop a stink bomb for crowd control purposes, they couldn't find a smell that was universally disgusting to all cultures. Even animal pheromones, which are traditionally thought to trigger hardwired responses, are surprisingly flexible in their effects, which can be sculpted through experience.

-----

I noted at the start of this chapter that color is fundamentally subjective. The photoreceptors in our retinas detect different wavelengths of light, while our brains use those signals to construct the sensation of color. The former process is easy to study; the latter is extremely difficult. This tension between reception and sensation, between what animals can detect and what they actually experience, exists for most of the senses. We can dissect a mantis shrimp's eye and work out what every component does, but still never really know how it actually sees. We can work out the exact shape of the taste receptors on a fly's feet without every understanding what it experiences when it lands on an apple. We can chart how an animal reacts to what it sense, but it's much harder to know how it feels.

-----

People often assume that pain feels the same across the entire animal kingdom, but that is not true. Much like color, it is inherently subjective and surprisingly variable. Just as wavelengths of light aren't universally red or blue, and odors aren't universally fragrant or pungent, nothing is universally painful, not even chemicals in scorpion venom that specifically evolved to inflict pain. Pain, in warning animals of injury and danger, is crucial to their survival. And while all animals have things to be wary of, they differ in what they must avoid and what they must tolerate. That makes it notoriously tricky to tell what an animal might find painful, whether an animal is experiencing pain, or whether it even can.
More to follow.


More from An Immense World.
If you rest a fingertip upon a surface, you can get only a limited idea of its features. But as soon as you're allowed to move, everything changes. Hardness becomes apparent with a press. Textures resolve at a stroke. As your fingers run over the surface, they repeatedly collide with invisibly small peaks and troughs, setting up vibrations in the mechanoreceptors at their tips. That's how you detect the subtlest of features, even down into the nanoscale. Movement transforms tough from a coarse sense into an exquisite one. It allows many of nature's tactile specialists to react with incredible speed.

-----

Most of these hairs only respond to direct contact, but some are so long and sensitive that they will also be deflected by the wind. . . . Like a bird's filoplumes or a fish's neuromasts, they're flow sensors--albeit exceptionally sensitive ones. Even air that's moving at just an inch per minute--a breeze so gentle it could hardly be called a breeze--will deflect them. Watch them under a microscope, and you'll see them fluttering away under the influence of imperceptible currents, while everything around them is still. With a hundred trichobothria on every leg, the tiger wandering spider can tune in to the airflow around its body, in every possible direction. It uses this sensitivity for lethal ends.

-----

The Japanese orb-weaver Oclonoba sybotides changes the structure of its web when it is hungry. It adds spiral decorations that increase the tension along the spokes, improving the web's ability to transmit the weaker vibrations transmitted by smaller prey. When it is famished, every morsel counts. To capture such morsels, the spider expands the range of its senses by changing the nature of its web.

But here's the truly important part: Watanabe found that a well-fed spider will also go after small flies if it is placed onto a tense web built by a hungry spider. The spider has effectively outsourced the decision about which prey to attack to its web. The choice depends not just on its neurons, hormones, or anything else inside its body, but also on something outside it--something it can create and adjust. Even before vibrations are detected by its lyriform organs, the web determines which vibrations will arrive at the leg. The spider will eat whatever it's aware of, and it sets the bounds of its awareness--the extent of its Umwelt--by spinning different kinds of webs. The web, then, is not just an extension of a spider's senses but an extension of its cognition. In a very real way, the spider thinks with its web.

-----

It is clear that the knifefishes and elephant fishes use their electric fields to sense their surroundings, and even to communicate with each other. Electricity is to them what echoes are to bats, smells are to dogs, and light is to humans--the core of their Umwelt.

-----

The omnidirectional nature of electrolocation means that of all the sense we have encountered so far, it is perhaps the most similar to touch. "We don't find it weird that we can sense touch all over our body," MacIver says. "Now imagine that's extended out a little bit. That's what the electric sense is like, I think. But who knows what it's like for the fish?" Bruce Carlson, who also studies electric fish, imagines that the fish might feel a kind of pressure on its skin. Conductors and insulators might feel different, just as hot and cold objects or rough and smooth ones do to our fingers. "I can imagine that if I swam past a metal ball, I'd get a small cool sensation like a piece of ice rolling down one side of my body," he tells me. This is speculative, of course, but electric fish really do behave as if they're touching their surroundings from a distance. They'll investigate objects by shimmying back and forth next to them, just like humans running their fingertips over a surface. They'll wrap their bodies around mystery items to get clues about their shape, just as we might grasp unfamiliar things in our hands. Daniel Kish said that he thought about echolocation as a tactile sense: He uses sound to extend his sense of touch and to purposefully probe his world. Electric fish use electric fields in the same way.

If all this sounds eerily familiar, think back to how swimming fish create fields of flowing water around their bodies. Objects around them distort those flow fields, and fish can use their lateral lines to sense those distortions. Sven Dijkgraaf called this "touch at a distance," which is exactly what electrolocating fish are doing, only using electric currents instead of water currents. This resemblance isn't a coincidence. The electric sense evolved from the lateral line. Electroreceptors grow from the same embryonic tissues that create the lateral line, and both sense organs contain the same kinds of sensory hair cells (which are also found in your inner ear). The electric sense really is a modified form of touch, repurposed for sensing electric fields instead of flowing water.

-----

Life exists within the planetary electric field and is affected by it. Flowers, being full of water, are electrically grounded, and bear the same negative charge as the soil from which they sprout. Bees, meanwhile, build up positive charges as they fly, possibly because electrons are torn from their surface when they collide with dust and other small particles. When positively charged bees arrive at negatively charged flowers, sparks don't fly, but pollen does. Attracted by their opposing charges, pollen grains will leap from a flower onto a bee, even before the insect lands. . . . 

Although flowers are negatively charged, they grow into the positively charged air. Their very presence greatly strengthens the electric fields around them, and this effect is especially pronounced at points and edges, like leaf tips, petal rims, stigmas, and anthers. Based on its shape and size, every flower is surrounded by its own distinctive electric field. . . . 

Alongside the bright colors that we can see (and the ultraviolet ones we cannot), flowers are also surrounded by invisible electric halos. And bumblebees can sense these. . . . 

Bumblebees don't have ampullae of Lorenzini. Instead, their electroreceptors are the tiny hairs that make them so endearingly fuzzy. These hairs are sensitive to air currents and trigger nervous signals when they are deflected. But the electric fields around flowers are also strong enough to move them. Bees, though very different from electric fish or sharks, also seem to detect electric fields with an extended sense of touch. And they are almost certainly not the only land-based animals to do so. As we saw in Chapter 6, many insects, spiders, and other arthropods are covered in touch-sensitive hairs. If these hair can also be deflected by electric fields, and Robert suspects they can, the electric senses might be even more common on land than in water.
It is an immense, amazing world.


From a news journal in my state, a letter from the attorney general to a school district:


Excerpts:
Our office has received allegations that schools within your district maintain books in their libraries which contain normative views on sexual orientation, homosexual marriage, gender identity, and transgender issues. . . . 

Schools violate religious liberties when they undertake "unmistakably normative" instruction. . . . 

This necessarily means that books containing normative messages regarding LBGTQ+ issues may not be made readily available to all underage students on library shelves. . . . 
"Normative." Of, relating to, or determining norms or standards. So what exactly does it mean to "contain normative views?" My assumption in this context is that it means any portrayal of anyone LBGTQ+ as acceptable, as anything other than deviant from the "norm" and in need of changing.

As I wrote in Room for Everyone:
People are naturally tribal and xenophobic, cooperative with their in-group while hostile to out-groups. The solution, extensive research shows, is more contact with others. Contact with others leads to the discovery of commonalities, of shared humanity, and breaks down barriers to move others from "out-group" to "in-group."

Books are a form of contact by proxy. Readers come into contact with characters. Seeing them, hearing them, spending time with them helps readers understand them more fully as human. It undermines the instinct to dehumanize them. . . . 

All reading and stories do that. About all characters. It is inherent to the process.

So, of course, social and political identities that are based on a narrowly defined in-group that stands in opposition to others cannot allow itself contact with those in out-groups, nor can it allow members to read stories by or about those others. The group's identity is defined in contrast to those others, who must be considered deviant, wrong, and lesser for the identity to hold. Not human in the same way they are. A threat. Admitting those others as equally valid and fully human threatens the group identity. Reading stories that humanize them is a threat. So they don't want their children exposed to stories that validate the experiences, feelings, perspectives, and shared humanity of those they consider out-group. . . . 

Of course, the reason I am a librarian, a pusher of stories, is because I believe in the power of books to create more contact and bring us closer to eliminating out-groups entirely. I believe in the humanity of everyone, and think more books and more stories will help us all appreciate each other more.
Libraries need to not only provide books with normative views on sexual orientation, homosexual marriage, gender identity, and transgender issues, we need to make normative the idea that there is not, nor never has been, one "right" way to be human.

That, to borrow from Ed Yong above, "everything we experience is but a filtered version of everything that we could experience." That "every [person] can only tap into a small fraction of reality's fullness. Each is enclosed within [their] own unique sensory bubble, perceiving but a tiny silver of an immense world." That "no two [people] experience reality in quite the same way, and that's amazing."

We need to make all types and realms of diversity normative, and eliminate the need to consider those who are not the same as "us" as "other."


An essay.

The feeling of compassion or pity (misericordia) for the elephants went hand in hand with the belief that elephants have something in common with us. The Latin word Cicero used to describe this common ground was societas, meaning union, association, fellowship, a community of belonging. His report raised issues that recur throughout ancient Greek and Roman philosophy: who belongs with us? Our family? Our tribe? Our nation? What about strangers, foreigners? Do we share societas with fellow human beings no matter their native city-state?

These questions were considered essential because their answers determined the limits of moral obligation. The scope of our duties was thought to be restricted to those beings with whom we have fellowship. To belong to the community (koinônia in Greek) is to be akin (oikeîos). To have kinship is to be bound with your fellows by bonds of friendship (philia). It was in response to the perceived breaking of those bonds that the Roman crowd cursed Pompey, judging his slaughtering of the elephants to be a grave injustice.

Questions about who belongs to our shared community, and the duties that community demands of us, were asked long before Cicero and Pompey. Indeed, one of the earliest philosophers to articulate this perennial question was the Presocratic philosopher Empedocles, a 5th-century BCE native of the city-state of Acragas (now Agrigento) in southwest Sicily. His unusual and radical views on our moral community continue to resonate today. . . . 

The significance of Empedocles lies in his view that all living beings belong to a single community or lifeworld, which is governed by a universal law of justice. As reported by Aristotle, Empedocles
bids us kill no living creature, says that doing this is not just for some people while unjust for others, ‘Nay, but, an all-embracing law, through the realms of the sky/Unbroken it stretcheth, and over the earth’s immensity.’ . . . 
Whatever we make of the religious metaphysics, the ethical implications are stark: there is kinship between plants, fungi, other animals and humans, the living other being ‘one of us’ because either it is or might be a daimôn in reincarnated form. Therefore the basis for Empedocles’ universal law of justice are the bonds of fellowship binding us to other living things; it is the law governing a form of community – even if most of us don’t recognise it. . . . 

Empedocles compares the creation of a cosmos teeming with life, starting with only four rhizômata and two cosmic forces, to the way in which painters are able to represent ‘trees and men and women, animals and birds and water-bred fish’ starting from a basic palette of colours. Despite appearances, all living things are made from the combination, in various proportions, of the same material stuff. There is no such thing as absolute birth or death, only a ‘mingling and interchange of what is mingled’. . . . 

For Empedocles, given the primordial promiscuity of living nature, we ought to see life forms not only as rooted in the same matter but also as products of the same generative forces. There is nothing special about human beings, no design or designer setting us apart. . . . 

Empedocles believed that all living things, including plants, have a share of intelligence (phrónêsis) and thought (nóêma). This view is important for Empedocles’ vision of the lifeworld. Whereas shared matter might not be taken to ground moral value, the form of a living body is crucial. For a body to have the relevant form is for its behaviour to be intelligible as displaying understanding of its situation. If it is the possession of cognitive faculties that makes humans and animals akin, shouldn’t we include plants and fungi – as recognisably intelligent problem-solvers able to make sense of their surroundings and respond accordingly – within the community to which we belong? . . . 

Empedocles’ solution to the prejudice, dogmatism and narrow-mindedness afflicting existence differs from that of the modern impartialists. The answer is not to try to adopt an impersonal, God’s-eye perspective, foregoing all and any relationships as the inexorable source of ethical harm. It is instead to strive to forge new bonds or to recognise bonds that already exist. It is Love that allows us to do this. Whereas Strife sorts like with like, atomising the cosmos into homogenous parts, Love combines unlike and like, forging a higher unity, bringing together what seems to be different. Thus, Love overcomes prejudice not by overcoming partiality but by providing it with a more inclusive, elevated form. The highest such form is partiality towards the living as such.

To achieve Empedoclean enlightenment is to divest yourself of your ingrained attachment to familiar body shapes and conventional kinds of conduct. It is to recognise the seemingly alien other as in fact fundamentally akin to you. Revising and widening the Stoic maxim, the Empedoclean position can be captured in the proposition: I am a living being, I consider nothing alive alien to me. From this higher standpoint, the relations that bind us to our family, friends, compatriots, humanity and to other animals appear much like the spiralling whorl of a mollusc shell, each form enclosed within broader forms, with the all-embracing form of life encompassing them all. . . . 

There is a difference between having relations with individuals to whom we owe special obligations and a world governed by the spirit of friendship. After all, we cannot be friends with everyone. Authentic friendship demands the intimate sharing of a life, which limits the number of friends we are able to have. Empedocles’ point is that friendship is possible across the species-barrier because we belong with living beings within the same world, one able to be animated, once again, by the spirit of Love. It is just that we are too blind to see it, as we are naturally drawn through Strife to what is comfortably familiar, to those who are ‘one of us’. The proper way to overcome our prejudices is by being with the seemingly alien other, not by impartially observing them or adopting a theoretical attitude, but by really seeing them – by engaging and interacting with them, and gradually coming to understand their point of view. Excessive, dogmatic partiality can be overcome only by widening the scope of our relationships – by opening our eyes – and not by sundering the ties that connect us to the world and to each other.
There is nothing new under the sun.


An essay.

No one can say exactly when, or even if, this technology — artificial general intelligence (AGI) — will arrive. Yet the idea of it is already shaping budgets, careers, and policy. The story of AGI is acting like infrastructure for the tech, inspiring the systems and structures needed to actually bring it to fruition.

This is not an anomaly. Progress in steel and silicon has long been preceded by progress in imagination. Jules Verne’s novels prepared readers for submarines and space travel. Star Trek’s communicator device inspired engineers to create the mobile phone. Douglas Engelbart’s famous “Mother of All Demos” showed a mouse and hypertext before most people had touched a computer — a generation of researchers left his talk determined to build what they had just seen. . . . 

We usually think of infrastructure as bridges, satellites, and fiber-optic cables. But beneath steel and concrete lies something less tangible but just as powerful: culture — the stories and symbols that make some futures seem absurd, others inevitable, and a few worth building.

Progress rests on multiple layers. At the top is hard infrastructure: bridges, laboratories, power grids, and rockets. Beneath that lies soft infrastructure: laws, institutions, and systems that make the hardware useful. And beneath both rests a third layer: invisible infrastructure. Culture. The stories, narratives, and memes that determine which futures feel plausible and worth pursuing. . . . 

Scientist Michael Nielsen has given us a useful term for understanding how culture shapes progress: the hyper-entity. He defines it as an “imagined hypothetical future object or class of objects” — something that exists in the collective consciousness before (maybe) becoming reality. . . . 

Memes aren’t just trivial distractions. The most powerful ones act as cultural infrastructure in miniature: accelerators that can shift public behavior, set the tone of whole industries, or make far-off futures feel urgent. If hyper-entities are the foundations of cultural life, memes are the sparks that can change its direction almost overnight. . . . 

Sparks don’t always start the fires you want, though. The same speed that makes memes powerful also makes them volatile. And what’s true for memes is true for culture more broadly: It doesn’t always drive society forward.

The pattern is simple. Culture magnifies, but it does so indiscriminately — it can amplify fear as easily as hope, mistrust as easily as trust, and rigidity as easily as flexibility. Sometimes culture stalls innovation. . . . 

I’ve noticed how often people look puzzled when asked to imagine positive futures. They can easily list disasters — pandemics, climate collapse, runaway AI — but when pressed for hopeful scenarios, they hesitate. That hesitation is telling. It shows how little scaffolding mainstream culture gives us for constructive imagination.

In mainstream culture, hopeful futures rarely get the same airtime as dystopias . . . 

It means that when people reach for cultural references to make sense of the future, the ones closest to hand are almost always bleak. . . . 

If we want hopeful culture to have a fighting chance, commissioning and supporting art that portrays positive futures may matter as much as funding labs.

That suggests a concrete step: treat culture as a line item in the portfolio of progress, just as we treat laboratories or laws. That means commissioning stories, funding prototypes, testing memes, and backing the kinds of cultural experiments that can scale. If culture is infrastructure, we should budget for it, using economic infrastructure as the bridge that turns imagination into reality. . . . 

Culture isn’t just made in conferences or boardrooms. It is shaped in the stories we tell, the art we share, and the memes we pass along. Everyone participates.
Stories have power.


A poem.
Sherman Alexie


after Luigi Mangione

“We must have gun control,”
say the people who celebrate
the murder by 3D pistol
 
of a bureaucrat. Ah, look
at all the modest despots
reading their poems about
 
peace. “I’m against the death
penalty,” say the people who
celebrate the public execution
 
of a bureaucrat. Ah, look
at all the little tsars, deciding
without trial who is and isn’t
 
worthy of death. Shall we build
the gulags in North Dakota
or the Upper Peninsula
 
of Michigan? “Love is
the answer,” say the people
who write odes to handsome
 
assassins. Look! The audience
has gathered in the arena
to watch their favorite
 
gladiator. Ah, don’t we all
worship the axe and sword
when they’re wielded against
 
the proper enemies? Let
loose the lions on the sinners!
Let loose a trinity of bullets
 
on the bureaucrat! Come
here, let me give you
some advice. The people
 
that you should fear most
are the ones who vote
like you do—the ones who
 
share meals with you—
the ones who adore you.
They’ll bless your beauty
 
and ugliness equally. They’ll
praise you for the blood
in your teeth. They’ll sing
 
an honor song for you
as you kick that body
lying dead on the street.

Acceptance is not the same as endorsement.


I am grateful for memes.

Do not be a person who adds to the thoughtlessness of the time. . . . 

An alternative ideal: a person who does not cling like a magnet to collective, unconscious values. . . . 

Some are called to be prophets, being annoyingly vocal in challenging collective assumptions. Some are called to be comedians, turning accepted norms inside out. Some are called to teach and any teacher responding to the demands of dharma always teaches release from samsara in an awakened approach to the particular subject. Many are parents, who can raise their children not to be clones of the unconsciousness but alert in their own ways. These parents invite their children out of the palace of unknowing even as they give them a loving home. All of us, in our humanity, are called to rise above the rat race and enjoy our originality.
Be reflective, inquisitive, and analytical.


Have you ever realized how easy it is to not know something?

No two creatures experience reality in quite the same way, and that's amazing.

The solution, extensive research shows, is more contact with others. Contact with others leads to the discovery of commonalities, of shared humanity, and breaks down barriers.

Nothing alive is alien to me.

Progress in steel and silicon has long been preceded by progress in imagination.

Teach us to see the world through different eyes.

The unknowable unknowns are invisible, noiseless and strange.

Everything we experience is but a filtered version of everything that we could experience.

Undermine the instinct to dehumanize "them."

Love combines unlike and like, forging a higher unity, bringing together what seems to be different. Love overcomes prejudice by providing it with a more inclusive, elevated form.

The people that you should fear most are the ones who vote like you do—the ones who share meals with you—the ones who adore you. They’ll bless your beauty and ugliness equally. They’ll praise you for the blood in your teeth. They’ll sing an honor song for you as you kick that body lying dead on the street.

Beneath steel and concrete lies something less tangible but just as powerful: culture — the stories and symbols that make some futures seem absurd, others inevitable, and a few worth building.

Do not cling like a magnet to collective, unconscious values.

Nothing can sense everything, and nothing needs to.

Enlightenment is to divest yourself of your ingrained attachment to familiar body shapes and conventional kinds of conduct. It is to recognise the seemingly alien other as in fact fundamentally akin to you.

Invisible infrastructure: culture. The stories, narratives, and memes that determine which futures feel plausible and worth pursuing.

Every animal can only tap into a small fraction of reality's fullness. Each is enclosed within its own unique sensory bubble, perceiving but a tiny silver of an immense world.

We need to make normative the idea that there is not, nor never has been, one "right" way to be.

Something that exists in the collective consciousness before (maybe) becoming reality.

What don’t I know and when will I know I don’t know it?

In mainstream culture, hopeful futures rarely get the same airtime as dystopias.

Challenge collective assumptions; turn accepted norms inside out; do not be a clone of the unconsciousness.

The proper way to overcome our prejudices is by being with the seemingly alien other by really seeing them – by engaging and interacting with them, and gradually coming to understand their point of view.

We need to make all types and realms of diversity normative, and eliminate the need to consider those who are not the same as "us" as "other."

The idea is wonderfully expansive. It tells us that all is not as it seems. It reminds us that there is light in darkness, noise in silence, richness in nothingness. It hints at flickers of the unfamiliar in the familiar, of the extraordinary in the everyday, of magnificence in mundanity.

The relations that bind us to our family, friends, compatriots, humanity, and to other animals appear much like the spiralling whorl of a mollusc shell, each form enclosed within broader forms, with the all-embracing form of life encompassing them all.

Culture isn’t just made in conferences or boardrooms. It is shaped in the stories we tell, the art we share, and the memes we pass along. Everyone participates.

I am a living being, I consider nothing alive alien to me.



11.13.2025

Such That the Self Becomes a Spacious Thing


A lifetime of reading, a career as a librarian, and a D&D hobby where my preferred type is Bard has led to some excellent parenting skills.

Like being able to tell my kids, "It's a pretty decent story, saying, 'We got our uncle's soccer ball stuck in a tree, and, when our dad tried to knock it out with a football, that got stuck too.' But it's an epic retelling to say, 'Today our band of adventurers did battle with a mighty, carnivorous tree that feasted on the flesh of our uncle's balls.'"


Halloween is fun because . . . 

A) You get to escape being yourself and disappear into the illusion of being someone (or something) else for a while; or

B) You get to reveal your true(r) self and escape the illusion that you conform to norms and expectations for a while?

I imagine for everyone it's some measure of both. The chance to play with being self and other, different aspects of each, often hidden or denied, the amounts of self and other varying from year to year, context to context.

Everyone is some measure, some mix of both self and other, simultaneously, at all times. It's just more recognized at Halloween.


A mix of many different selves and of many different others
“The camera never lies… but you can take a thousand different pictures of the same scene.”

We all contain multitudes.

Contain your multitudes without inner conflict. Largely thanks to the groundbreaking research of Peter Rabbit creator Beatrix Potter, we now know that lichens are part algae and part fungus, with a sprinkling a bacteria — three kingdoms of life in a single organism, not warring for dominance but working together to make it one of the most resilient life-forms in nature and a keystone of many ecosystems. It was through his studies of lichen that the German microbiologist and botanist Heinrich Anton de Bary coined the word symbiosis in 1879.
A mix of many different selves and of many different others.


I was recently talking to a colleague about his frustrations about getting his mother set up with Medicaid, all of the paperwork and conditions, the twists and turns of the process. All to prove she qualifies for the service, that she is being honest about her need, which she does and is. It was another reminder that so much in our society--in all societies--operates from a baseline that people are guilty until proven innocent. That they are suspect until they show they can be trusted.

Another example, from my place of work for building and network security:
The principle of least privilege is a fundamental security concept that entails granting users the minimal level of access--or permissions--necessary to perform their job functions. This principle helps mitigate security risks by limiting the potential for unauthorized access, data breaches, and misuse of sensitive information. One way that this has been implemented in the past is changing from staff members having access to all files to where department and location files are now restricted to only those currently working in those departments and locations.
Similar changes have been initiated for physical security, with doors to staff areas locking out anyone who doesn't work directly in that part of the building. Our organization promotes collaboration as a highest priority; except when it comes to sharing files and interacting with each other in outside buildings and departments, in which case we are cut off from each other.

I used to wonder whether people were more inherently good and cooperative or bad and selfish. I decided when I was young I would choose to be trusting and even intentionally naive because that would make me happier as a person, choosing to see more good in people than bad, regardless of any evidence. It's been hard at times, as life experiences have mounted, to maintain that attitude as an automatic instinct, yet the more I read and learn the more the evidence convinces me it is true--people are honest and trustworthy far more often than they are not. It's not even close. And expecting people to be so--treating them as if they are--creates a positive spiral that makes them more likely to be so. As is the opposite: expecting them to be bad--and treating them as if they are--makes them more likely to respond as expected.

For instance, in the book Talking to Strangers: What We Should Know About the People We Don't Know, Malcolm Gladwell writes about how humans instinctively "default to truth" with others, that we automatically, without realizing it, accept that others are telling us the truth until evidence convinces us otherwise. We inherently trust as our default setting.
We could start by no longer penalizing one another for defaulting to truth. . . . To assume the best about another is the trait that has created modern society. Those occasions when our trusting nature gets violated are tragic. But the alternative--to abandon trust as a defense against predation and deception--is worse. . . . 

Levine argues that over the course of evolution, human beings never developed sophisticated and accurate skills to detect deception as it was happening because there is no advantage to spending your time scrutinizing the words and behaviors of those around you. The advantage to human beings lies in assuming that strangers are truthful. As he puts it, the trade-off between truth-default and the risk of deception is
a great deal for us. What we get in exchange for being vulnerable to an occasional lie is efficient communication and social coordination. The benefits are huge and the costs are trivial in comparison. Sure, we get deceived once in a while. That is just the cost of doing business.
That sounds callous, because it's easy to see all the damage done by people like Ana Montes and Bernie Madoff. Because we trust implicitly, spies go undetected, criminals roam free, and lives are damaged. But Levine's point is that the price of giving up on that strategy is much higher. If everyone on Wall Street behaved like Harry Markopolos, there would be no fraud on Wall Street--but the air would be so thick with suspicion and paranoia that there would also be no Wall Street.

We accept the fact that being a parent requires a fundamental level of trust in the community of people around your child.

If every coach is assumed to be a pedophile, then no parent would let their child leave the house, and no sane person would ever volunteer to be a coach. We default to truth--even when that decision carries terrible risks--because we have no choice. Society cannot function otherwise.
(see more: Finding Words)

That's a for instance. I have consistently encountered similar thoughts from a wide variety of fields and perspectives.

Yet we don't trust our instincts and natures. Instead, we create processes, procedures, and policies with an assumption of the exact opposite, that people are liars and cheaters as the default and it's up to them to convince us otherwise. So many of our institutions, structures, and practices are based on the underlying belief that human nature is inherently selfish and bad.

If we started believing, as a collective society, that people are generally honest, trustworthy, and well-intentioned, things would be vastly different.


The leaves spin, spiral, and flutter patiently to the earth. 

The acorns hail, bouncing high off driveway and cars, a constant, sporadic clunk and clatter.


Since at least my teen years when I gained independence, since long before I knew it was a "thing," I've been drawn to--and regularly practiced--forest bathing.
Bathing in the forest, however, has nothing to do with water. The idea is to immerse yourself in a natural environment and soak up the many health benefits of being in the green woods. Forest bathing has been widely researched.
In Kansas, you don't get proper, deep forest; you get watershed woodlands. Snaking, sometimes narrow groves of trees that follow the rivers, creeks, wetlands, and other various waterways, running for miles and miles across the countryside. Sometimes this involves the paved trail systems developed and maintained by parks and rec departments, sometimes I have time for the more remote hiking, mountain biking, and horse riding trails.

Within the last month, I've observed a dynamic new to me. In both urban Wichita and suburban Kansas City. Widespread use of the woodlands by the desperate as dwelling places. Homeless habitats, hidden in the densest areas, hoping to escape notice: tents, sleeping bags, packs with meager worldly possessions, loose clothing, camp cooking gear for the lucky, and other assorted food and life detritus. People with no other options, trying to create what shelter they can in places where they won't get shamed or run off. Many people, clearly.

My entire adult life, reports both official and personal have communicated a trend of growing homelessness; of ever increasing rates of need and desperation. I see signs everywhere, constantly more people under bridges, on street corners, in overflowing shelters, at the library. And in the woods.

We need to do a better job taking care of each other.


Last post, I wrote about the experience of having my runes cast by someone at our local Ren Fest and about how I had played with my own design of the results for a combined bind rune (see: Mouth Torch Gift). I decided I liked that image so much--and, more importantly, the meaning behind it--that I got out my wood carving tools and created a little talisman to carry.

Before starting on it, I felt I should check my sketchy research to make sure I understood the bind rune process accurately. I decided to consult, as I did before, ChatGPT. I uploaded pictures of my sketches, and here are selections from our dialogue about it.

First of the initial results:

That’s an evocative trio — Ansuz, Kenaz, Gebo — and actually quite a cohesive one. It suggests a theme of communication, illumination, and exchange — a movement from inspiration to expression to relationship.

So the cast suggests a flow from inspirationilluminationsharing. Communication or creative expression that benefits others is highlighted. It’s a reminder that wisdom isn’t static—you receive it, refine it, and then offer it back as a gift.

On a more introspective level, these runes tell a story about how your insight moves through you — a personal alchemy of communication, creativity, and reciprocity.

Together, the runes tell a unified story:

Receive the message → Refine it with clarity and craft → Share it as a gift.

That’s the path of the inspired communicator or teacher, the artist whose work illuminates, or the seeker whose insights become offerings to others.

If this were a “reading” rather than just symbolism, I’d say it’s an affirmation that your voice, your insight, your creative expression are timely and valuable — that you’re meant to channel, clarify, and give what’s moving through you.

Lyrical Interpretation

From the whisper to the flame, from the flame to the gift.
Breath becomes word, word becomes light, light becomes offering.
We are the runes of speech, of craft, of giving—
the voice of Odin’s breath, the torch in the hand of the maker,
the open palms where giver and receiver meet.

Take what is given to you in silence.
Kindle it until it glows with your own truth.
Then let it pass outward, a gift to the world.

In this exchange the circle is complete:
wisdom flows, hearts are lit, and the breath returns home.

Then, of my bind rune design:

Your design is true to the historical and symbolic essence of a bind rune. It functions as both a meaningful composition and a plausible artifact in the Elder Futhark lineage — not just an artistic riff.

If you were to carve or wear it, you’d be carrying something that feels and reads like an authentic, well-constructed bind rune.

In your bind rune, the visual flow puts Gebo (ᚷ) before Kenaz (ᚲ), which subtly shifts the emphasis from the order of the original draw (Ansuz → Kenaz → Gebo).

1. Original Order: Ansuz → Kenaz → Gebo

Narrative: Inspiration → Illumination → Exchange
This sequence describes a movement outward:

  • You receive a message (Ansuz),

  • You clarify or craft it (Kenaz),

  • Then you offer it to others (Gebo).

It’s the archetypal path of creative expression — the divine spark entering you, being refined by your insight, and finally shared as a gift.

Energy flows from within to without — the “teacher/artist” pattern.


2. Your Bind Rune Order: Ansuz → Gebo → Kenaz

Narrative: Inspiration → Relationship → Illumination
This rearrangement turns the current inward, emphasizing connection before clarity.

Here, inspiration comes first (Ansuz), but before you rush to express it, it moves through relationship and reciprocity (Gebo) — how you exchange energy with others or the world — and then crystallizes into understanding, insight, or creation (Kenaz).

So rather than “I receive and then I give,” it becomes:

“I receive, connect, and through that connection, illumination is born.”

It shifts from solo artistry to shared discovery — enlightenment arising through interaction, dialogue, love, or mutual giving.

That’s a beautiful inversion — not wrong, just more relationally oriented.


3. In Divinatory Terms

If this were a casting rather than a crafted sigil:

  • Ansuz → Kenaz → Gebo speaks of personal expression that becomes a gift.

  • Ansuz → Gebo → Kenaz speaks of communion or partnership that leads to revelation.

The first is the inspired teacher;
the second is the inspired collaborator or illumined friend.


4. As a Bind Rune

Because bind runes compress time and sequence into simultaneous presence, the reordering isn’t a contradiction — it’s a reinterpretation.

You’ve made the relationship (Gebo) the heart of the design, not the conclusion. That makes your version more about living reciprocity — wisdom as co-creation — rather than a linear cause-and-effect flow.

In short:

The change doesn’t “break” the meaning — it transforms it from expression of inspiration into illumination through connection.

When you trace the whole symbol in one flow, it creates a rhythmic circuit:

  1. Inspiration descends (Ansuz)

  2. Meets exchange (Gebo)

  3. Grounds into illumination (Kenaz)

Then, the illumination itself feeds back upward — the flame sending heat and light back to the opening mouth. It’s a breathing pattern — inhale of wisdom, exhale of light — balanced by the cross in the center.

So while the rune appears linear, its energy feels cyclical and alive. You’ve effectively made a closed, self-sustaining circuit of creative reciprocity — a symbol of ongoing inspiration through connection.

In Essence

Your version tells a story not of “I speak and others receive,” but of “we exchange, and in that exchange, light is born.”

It’s a rune that breathes, balances, and burns — a trinity of voice, relationship, and illumination moving in continuous rhythm.

Invocation of Breath, Gift, and Flame

From breath I begin.
Voice of the unseen, enter me —
whisper through thought and sinew,
wordless, waiting.

At the heart, I meet.
Gift crosses gift;
giver and receiver are one motion.
Balance hums where paths entwine.

In the depths, I kindle.
Fire gathers, quiet and sure,
the light of knowing,
the craft of what endures.

Breath to gift, gift to flame,
flame to breath again —
the circle unbroken,
the spirit alive within.

Mantra of the Living Rune

Breath becomes gift.
Gift becomes flame.
Flame becomes breath again.
I listen, I share, I shine.

I had no idea my design of the bind rune included the nuance that subtly shifted the meaning of the original cast, but I love it even more than the original. It more accurately captures my values, experiences, and aspirations. Interconnection is everything, and exchange always precedes illumination. Wisdom is knowing and seeking that. Wisdom is co-created.


Of the book Is a River Alive? by Robert Macfarlane:

It has become fairly common knowledge that, in most countries, corporations are granted legal personhood, with the same protections, rights, and responsibilities as individual people. Less well-known is the recent movement to secure rivers (and other aspects of the natural world) legal personhood, to consider rivers a form of life with all the legal protections and ramifications of those afforded to people and corporations. Numerous nations now have laws officially granting such status to particular river bodies, and the list is growing. This movement, in a sense, is the topic of this book.

Macfarlane is not a legal analyst, however, but a nature writer. And in this book he does not focus on delving into the particulars of legal cases and their political ramifications. Instead, he explores the values and philosophical underpinnings behind those cases. And, most of all, he tells the stories of journeys he undertook to explore three different rivers around the world and of the people working to see those rivers respected and protected. It is passionate and personal, lyrical and profound. It is meant to share ideas and worldviews with readers, to persuade through immersion into experiences. It is moving and compelling.

This is a delightful book to read.


Quotes from the book, section one:
To its recognition of the river as alive, the Act adds a second dramatic innovation: the river is also recognized as a 'legal person,' with the capacity to represent itself in court and to bear rights--the right to flow unpolluted and undammed to the sea, for example, and the right to flourish. The Act establishes a body of River Guardians . . . who constitute the river's 'human face.' The Guardians' task is to speak with and for the river; their obligation is to promote and protect its life force.

-----

Communities have rallied around the recognition that every part of the rainforest, 'from the smallest to the largest, forms one living being with its own consciousness.' . . . 

Growing up there, recalls, the Sarayaku elder Jose Gualinga Montalvo, it was simply a given that the forest and the river were 'alive,' and that together the water, trees, humans and creatures of the forest formed a 'living, thinking being.'

-----

If you pull the temporal lens back far enough, you come to see that trees are migrants too. They walk, move, shift their boundaries. They suffer plagues and pandemics, like us.

-----

To say a river is alive is not an anthropomorphic claim. A river is not a human person, nor vice versa. . . . To call a river alive is not to personify a river, but instead to deepen and widen the category of 'life,' and in so doing enlarge the imagined range for self to move in.
Deepen and widen the category of "life."


Quotes from the book, section two: 
Everything is connected to everything else, I think, relation is life.

-----

If you take away the forest, you take away the rain and the mist--and so the river dies. Where they destroyed the forests to the north of here, the rivers don't even run year-round now.

-----

'If fungi were to speak,' says Giuliana, 'they would tell us what they show us, which is that really the death of an organism is the beginning of countless others; that there is no end to life, just a constantly shifting substrate.'

-----

The millipede is a recaster of meaning and matter, you know. It turns the shit of life into something valuable; takes it in, absorbs its harm, transforms it. Turns death into life, waste into compost, endings into beginnings. It's a detritivore, part of an under-appreciated group of species who do this vital, ethical work. Red ghost crabs are detritivores also. Likewise, cockroaches, maggots, dung beetles, all of this much-despised class of cleaner-uppers. So--I use the millipede patronus when there's suffering or adversity which must be converted into something positive.

-----

Life's tendency is to flourish, and to flourish diversely. Epigenetics and endosymbiosis now show us that this flourishing is happening within individual lifespans and between species in ways that far exceed the Darwinian account of evolution by orderly generational descent.

-----

To be is to be related.
Relation is life.


Quotes from the book, section three:
The alien will not be articulated. Alive, yes, but not in any way we might speak it.

-----

What would a cloud-forest's animate grammar be? Here, life is in constant hyperdrive, splicing and splitting, folding and tangling symbiotically, epiphytically. Its orchids and quetzals, its horseflies and viruses, the invisible, inconceivable underland of its fungal presence, its rivers and trees: these are all elements of its teeming, points in its web. An animist grammar of this place would need a syntax of hypotaxis, not parataxis: one of maximum correlation, proliferating connections quaquaversally; a branching, foliate, fractal, super-furcating language structure. Or maybe this would best be attempted not in grammar but in form: in patterns embedded deep in a text, made of echo and image that begin to reach and radiate towards one another, creating gossamer-thin webs and meshes, moving mycelially or fluvially as the veins of the forest more, as the rivers and the trees spread. . . . 

Life, here, stands clear as process, not possession.

-----

How we imagine the matter of water matters. To recognize its ceaseless migrancy is to recognize that we live in a fundamentally decentralized world, engaged always in multiple forms of relation--and that power can be crucial in determining the capacity of those relations to animate or to exhaust their participants. . . . the 'aliveness' of a river or forest . . . is a process which relocates 'life' to the interface and within the flux of which, at best, we understand ourselves to be extended generously outwards into a vast community of others. . . . A small 'self' suffers and causes suffering, that a love of the living worlds lets single identities and selfhoods expand and encompass other beings, entities and whole landscapes, such that the self becomes a spacious thing.

-----

If the cloud-forest was a place of reticulation, and Chennai one of circulation between waterbodies, the Muthekau Shipu's mode is, surely, flow, I think, and its grammar of animacy is one of ands and throughs and tos and nows, of commas not full stops, of thens not buts, aura not edge, of compounds and hyphens and fusings, silver-blues and grey-greens and mist-drifts and undersongs, process not substance, this joined to that, always onrushing, always seeking the sea and here turning back upon itself, intervolving, eddying in counterflow to cause spirals and gyres that draw breath into water, life into the mind, spin strange reciprocities, leave the whole world whirled, whorled.
A small 'self' suffers and causes suffering, that a love of the living worlds lets single identities and selfhoods expand and encompass other beings, entities and whole landscapes, such that the self becomes a spacious thing.


Macfarlane also introduced me to a concept called Two-Eyed Seeing.
Two-Eyed Seeing (Mi'kmaq: Etuaptmumk) is a basis in viewing the world through both Western and Indigenous knowledges and worldviews.

Two-Eyed Seeing was introduced by Mi'kmaq Elders Albert D. Marshall and Murdena Marshall from Eskasoni First Nation, alongside professor Cheryl Bartlett. Albert Marshall describes Two-Eyed Seeing as an approach to viewing the world "from one eye with the strengths of Indigenous ways of knowing, and to see from the other eye with the strengths of Western ways of knowing, and to use both of these eyes together".

Two-Eyed Seeing was originally brought forward as a tactic to encourage Mi'kmaq university students to pursue an education in science. Since its implementation, the use of Two-Eyed Seeing has been integrated into various institutions' strategic plans, government policies, and research, some of which include the Canadian Institute of Health Research.
The book only mentions the idea briefly, but I love it and think it has far broader range than its initial context. We should always try to "see with two eyes," with the understanding that any single person--any single perspective--can only be the lens of a single eye. To see with two eyes requires someone else, some other, with a different perspective.

Humans and creatures like us have "binocular vision." Our two eyes point in the same direction, but from slightly different locations. They each provide a slightly different perspective--and that allows us to see the world with more complexity, clarity, and accuracy. As Google's AI Overview is currently summarizing for me:
Binocular vision is the ability to use both eyes together to perceive the world in three dimensions, or 3D. The brain combines the slightly different images from each eye into a single, cohesive image that allows for depth perception, distance judgment, and a sense of solidity. This process is called binocular fusion and is crucial for many daily activities.
Practicing two-eyed seeing means processing, combining, and fusing two different perspectives: yours and another. In doing so, you and the other come to a deeper, more "3D" understanding of the issue or reality you are viewing. We see better with the help of others.

We need exchange with others in order to see with two eyes.


On a different note . . . 
The premise [of this book] is audacious: spatial thinking, rooted in perception of space and action in it, is the foundation for all thought.
That's from Mind in Motion: How Action Shapes Thought by Barbara Tversky.
It's not just that language is used to talk about the world, it's that the space of the world and the entities and events we perceive in the world structure language. It's not just that language structures space; it's that space structures language. Space came first. . . .

We spend our lives perceiving and acting in space. It is perceiving and acting in space that keeps us and our predecessors alive. The language and reasoning of space, perception, and action become the language and reasoning of all thought, spatial, social, emotional, scientific, philosophical, and spiritual.
A fascinating book. Not always the most dynamic writing and with a tendency to repeat itself over time, but clearly communicated and easy to understand, with myriad examples of the concepts. Well argued and convincing.
Assembly is actions on real objects. Thinking is mental actions on mental objects--ideas. Actions on ideas that transform them into something else. That's how we talk about thinking, as if it were actions on ideas. We put ideas aside or turn them upside down or inside out. We split them into parts or pull them together. We arrange and rearrange, enlarge, stretch, reverse, join, copy, add, scramble, subtract, lift, glue, push, fold, mix, toss, embellish, separate, nail, scatter, bury, eliminate, turn, elevate, and poke holes in both real objects and mental ones. Intriguingly, we will see soon in the chapter on gesture that performing the actual actions helps the mental ones, the thinking.

-----

Despite the extraordinary expressiveness of the body, the face, and the hands, when we think about thinking, we typically think of words. . . .

Gestures come first, before words, both in evolution and in development.

-----

People blind from birth, both children and adults, gesture, even when speaking to each other. They have never seen gestures nor have their conversation partners. They seem to gesture for themselves. Gesturing by people who are blind, as for the people with sight in the previous experiments, seems to help them speak. But it turns out it isn't just word finding people have trouble with when they can't use their hands. Preventing gestures doesn't just disrupt speaking, it disrupts thinking.

-----

[To talk about the location of something,] you need a shared perspective. You need a common way of looking at the world as a starting point. In fact, it's likely you can't talk about anything without taking a perspective, implicit or explicit, and making sure that perspective is shared (n.b.: shared does not mean agreed). A number of different disciplines arrived at the same two basic perspectives if by different routes: egocentric, that is, with respect to a specific body, typically yours, and allocentric, that is, with respect to the surrounding world. The most familiar allocentric perspective is north-south-east-west.
Perspective features prominently in Tversky's book. It's one of her fundamental concepts. We can't communicate without communicating our perspectives.


Here are some more in-depth thoughts.
Thinking is mental actions on mental objects--ideas--rather than physical actions on physical objects. All inside the mind. Now we move to gesture. Gestures are physical actions, but not on physical objects. Gestures are actions on invisible objects, on ideas, ideas that exist only in the minds of the person gesturing or the conversation partner, if there is one. I trust you to remember the bottom line on gesture: gesturing helps thinking. If thinking is internalized action, then externalizing actions on thought as gestures that perform miniatures of the actions should help the thinking. It does. Our own thinking, and that of others.

The same is true for graphics of all forms, sketches, charts, graphs, diagrams, models, pebbles, cocktail napkins. They externalize thought and thereby promote thought. Taking ideas that are in the mind out of the mind and putting them into the world in front of our eyes helps our own thinking and that of others. Putting thought into the world is key to collaboration, to working together, to the joint action that is core to human society, and to survival.

Both gesture and graphics abstract. They abbreviate, truncate, schematize, generalize. Gestures don't capture entire actions, only thumbnails of them. Much like the words for action. . . . 

Both gestures and graphics put thought in the world, arrange thought, and abstract thought. Both gestures and graphics put checkers on a checkerboard to play in a game of thought, ideas on a stage to perform in a theater of thought.

All those patterns and forms we've collected. The ones our feet create moving in the world: points and paths and boxes and networks and trees and circles. The ones our hands create in designing the world: boxes and lines and circles again, rows and columns and symmetries and repetitions and one-to-one correspondences. We put those on a page to use them to represent many kinds of ideas and many kinds of relations between ideas. They become maps and tables and charts and diagrams. They organize the thoughts in our mind, show them to others, and help us generate more thoughts. There are so many more forms and patterns in math, in physics, in biology, in chemistry, in engineering, in art. Patterns in space, forms in space that are the foundation for each of them. They get formed and transformed, rotated, translated, taken apart and put together.

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There's a set of actions that neither change the world nor our locations in it. These actions change thoughts, our own or those of others. These are gestures. Intriguingly, many gestures are abbreviations of the very actions that change the world or our locations in it: putting, taking, raising, pushing, turning, splitting, mixing, and countless more. As gestures, they express actions on ideas rather than on objects. We talk that way, too, as if ideas were objects and thinking were action on objects. We pull ideas together, put them aside, tear them apart, turn them over or inside out.

Despite the extraordinary expressiveness of the body, the face, and the hands, when we think about thinking, we typically think of words. . . . 

Gestures come first, before words, both in evolution and in development.


Inside perspectives along routes vary in imagined distance, with consequences. People who imagine themselves on the East Coast judge the distance between San Francisco and Salt Lake City to be smaller than people who imagine themselves on the West Coast. Differences in distance between near things are exaggerated relative to distances between far things, which get minimized.

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Rhythm is deeply embedded in our bodies, in our hears, our breathing, our brains, our actions--walking, talking, thinking, dancing, sleeping, waking--our days and nights. Our rhythms organize and synchronize our bodies with the bodies of others.

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Even if incomplete, ambiguous, inconsistent, and biased, our mental spatial frameworks play crucial roles in our lives and in our imaginations. They allow us to envisage other worlds, worlds we have not seen, that no one has seen, even impossible worlds. Metaphoric worlds where places are replaced by any kind of entity or idea and paths by the relations among them. The worlds of fiction, of the arts, of science.


The core of the empathic approach is perspective taking . . . Perspective taking and perspective switching are strategies that are general enough to work for just about everything. The perspectives don't have to be human ones, even if it's humans who are doing the thinking and the creating. Mathematicians report one problem-solving strategy they use is to look at an algebraic problem geometrically or a geometric problem algebraically.

Biomimicry encourages new perspectives. Architects and designers use biomimicry with outcomes that are as delightful as they are efficient. . . . 

Changing medium changes perspective. Bronze, iron, aluminum, Teflon, reinforced concrete, titanium, silicon--all led to innovations. . . . Throughout history, technological advances have changed perspectives, changed ways of thinking, changed ways of living. . . . 

Perspective taking is central to more than creativity and problem solving, or maybe it's that so much of life is problem solving and requires creativity. Diplomacy, international and domestic, right inside the home and the office and on the streets. Role-playing is perspective taking. So is cognitive behavior therapy. And empathy. I'm not saying it's easy. All too often it's really hard. Confirmation bias can get in the way. Self-protection can get in the way. Emotions can get in the way. Perspective taking doesn't guarantee success, but it's a good bet. Maybe it's hard, but in the end, perspective taking can actually overcome bias, diffuse emotions, and protect the self.

We've already seen many ways to find new perspectives. Reconfigure the parts. Take the point of view of different roles, places, events, categories, creatures, physical processes, materials, research methods, disciplinary viewpoints, nationalities, philosophies, religions, ideologies. Be your own adversary: challenge your own view. The list goes on. Some of this is stuff we know, from living and learning, so thinking from other perspectives often just needs a reminder.

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For more on storytelling, we turn to comics, the most inventive form of storytelling around. Because comics use all sorts of depictions and all sorts of verbals, what we say applies far more broadly, to stories in prose, to visualizations. Comics typically show bodies acting in space, the foundational theme of this book. Comics are also diagrams: they use boxes to contain and separate, they line up the boxes in rows and columns and group them on pages. They use language and symbols in many ways.

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It turns out that it's not quite that simple (never forget my caveats and my caveats about caveats).
The core of the empathic approach is perspective taking . . . Perspective taking and perspective switching are strategies that are general enough to work for just about everything. The perspectives don't have to be human ones, even if it's humans who are doing the thinking and the creating.


A recent article.

Health care providers have long suggested stressed-out patients spend time outdoors. Now hundreds of providers are going a step further and issuing formal prescriptions to get outside. The tactic is gaining momentum as social media, political strife and wars abroad weigh on the American psyche.

Of course, no one needs a prescription to get outside, but some doctors think that issuing the advice that way helps people take it seriously.

“When I bring it up, it is almost like granting permission to do something they may see as frivolous when things seem so otherwise serious and stressful,” said Dr. Suzanne Hackenmiller . . . 

Spending time in natural areas can lower blood pressure, reduce stress hormones and boost immunity, multiple studies have found.

“Study after study says we’re wired to be out in nature,” said Dr. Brent Bauer, who serves as director of the complementary and integrative medicine program at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. The program focuses on practices that usually aren’t part of conventional medicine, such as meditation, acupuncture, massage and nutrition. “That’s more than just ‘Woo-woo, I think nature is cool.’ There’s actually science.”
Doses of apparent frivolity aid productiveness far more often than not.


A poem.
Jamie Bradley


Her shoes said, love me
like a broken animal.
 
The river is red with clay
& white at its swinging lap.
 
In a Cuernavaca market, the flesh hangs
everywhere: pig flesh, wood flesh.
 
Sadly, there are few old houses
that sit, affordable.
 
All the photos in a doctor’s office
say, learn to be a better patient.
 
Ordinary moments.


From Thomas Moore's book Original Self: Living with Paradox and Originality, from the short essay headlined with, "The meaning of life can be found at any moment without moving our eyes and without doing anything differently.":
When people talk about finding meaning in life, they imply that they can figure things out and set them right. But meaning that makes life worth living may be nothing more than a moment's realization, a sensation, such as the touch of your baby's skin, or a sudden breathtaking appreciation for your home, or the passing thrill when you are reminded of your love for your spouse. Meaning may be an epiphany rather than an understanding. . . . 

We can still the yearning heart that longs for satisfaction, not by finally finding the perfect mate, the dream house, or success in the workplace, but by perceiving, perhaps for the first time, the pulse of eternity in the moment at hand and the contours of the whole in the ordinary thing currently in sight.
Meaning comes from feeling part of something greater, connected to the whole; from intimately feeling part of the vastness of creation in small, ordinary moments and interactions.


Once I carved the first side of the talisman with my bind rune inscription, I thought I should do something with the other side.

I decided to pair it with the Adinkra symbol of western African wisdom that I've previously adopted, the Funtunfunefu Denkyemfunefu that depicts two crossed, intertwined crocodiles that compete with each other for food yet share a single stomach, so that what either eats feeds the other. It is seen as portraying a central paradox of life: unity and interdependence amidst diversity. See Unity in Diversity: All Rivers Flow to the Sea for more.

Since spaced allowed and aesthetics dictated, I decided to add a smaller Adinkra symbol below it. Boafo Ye Na represents support, cooperation, and teamwork, conveying the message that "willing helpers are rare." It symbolizes the importance of support, cooperation, and teamwork, encouraging people to lend a hand to those in need and to be willing to provide assistance whenever possible.

That side inspired the second spell below.


Invocation of Breath, Gift, and Flame
From breath I begin.
Voice of the unseen, enter me —
whisper through thought and sinew,
wordless, waiting.

At the heart, I meet.
Gift crosses gift;
giver and receiver are one motion.
Balance hums where paths entwine.

In the depths, I kindle.
Fire gathers, quiet and sure,
the light of knowing,
the craft of what endures.

Breath to gift, gift to flame,
flame to breath again —
the circle unbroken,
the spirit alive within.

Inhale wisdom,
Exchange generosity,
Exhale light.
Voice to
Relationship to
Illumination.
I hear,
I interact,
I guide;
and hear new guidance in return.

The cycle flows on.
Wisdom, generosity, light.


Song of Relationality
I am in the world and the world is in me;
I am of the world and the world is of me.

Atoms, cells, microorganisms--components:
shed, received, exchanged;
eaten, excreted, bled;
intermingled.
Fungi, detritivores recycle death,
breaking down nutrients; ingredients
to become new life.

Reality is relational,
says the quantum physicist,
the physical world 
a web of interactions.

Stories
teach us who we are.
Culture, language, social connection.
Enlightenment arises through interaction,
dialogue, love, and reciprocity.

Relation is life;
to be is to be related.

I hear the world and the world hears me;
I see the world and the world sees me;
I know the world and the world knows me.

Each autumn tree is more beautiful than the last;
each new sunset the best one ever;
nothing is as glorious as the emergence of spring.

Each leaf on tree or ground
its own work of art;
branching veins of structure;
curves, curls, edges;
variegated colors;
fluttering in the wind.

The enormity of the universe--
the mystery of the universe--
too infinite to grasp.
Each particle of life,
in its microscopic, subatomic scale,
equally mysterious and vast.

I am meaningless
in micro- and macro- scale.
I am essential
in personal scale;
meaningful to community,
friends, family, relations.

I hurt the world and the world hurts me
I love the world and the world loves me

I'm stupid, says my child to himself,
I'm stupid I'm stupid I'm stupid.
I hate myself, says my spouse,
my partner, the one I love most,
the world would be better off without me.

Homeless dwell all day at the the library
where I work while powerless to meet their needs;
tents and makeshift dwellings in the woods
where I walk: hidden, threatened and threatening.

The politics of hate dominate;
ceaseless war and oppression;
a natural world suffering for us all.
The absence of harmony.

We endlessly give of ourselves
for our families, our units, our tribes;
every "I" is part of many "we"
to love and cherish, to care for.

I flow into the world and the world flows into me.

All that you touch, you change.
All that you change, changes you.

Life and death, pain and joy;
cycling, reciprocating, clashing.
One continuous "us,"
distinct yet united.

I flow into the world and the world flows into me.
I am of the world and the world is of me.
Flow, cycle, spiral together.




Let single identities and selfhoods expand and encompass other beings, entities, and whole landscapes, such that the self becomes a spacious thing.