Sunday, June 28, 2026

How Does Listening Change Understanding?




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How does listening change understanding? It changes it by slowing judgment long enough for reality to become more complex than our first reaction. When we truly listen, we stop treating words, people, and even our own feelings as finished facts and begin to hear structure, motive, tension, and meaning.

Most misunderstanding does not come from a lack of intelligence. It comes from speed. We hear a sentence and rush to classify it. We hear a person and reduce them to a type. We hear a piece of music and decide too early what it is trying to do. Listening interrupts that reflex. It forces the mind to stay open a few seconds longer, and those few seconds can change the whole shape of what we think we know.

Listening slows the mind

Understanding often fails because the mind wants closure more than truth. Quick interpretation feels efficient. It gives us the relief of a settled opinion. But settled opinions are often just early opinions with better posture.

Listening creates delay. That delay matters. If someone speaks in anger, the first layer may be heat, but underneath it could be hurt, fear, humiliation, or a long frustration finally finding language. If you only hear the volume, you understand almost nothing. If you listen for what gave the volume its force, the meaning changes.

This is true beyond conversation. A difficult novel, an abrasive album, or an awkward silence all ask for the same discipline. Stay with it. Do not force the thing into a category before it has finished presenting itself.

How does listening change understanding in conversation?

In conversation, listening changes understanding by moving us from surface content to lived context. People rarely speak as cleanly as ideas do on paper. Their words carry memory, embarrassment, self-protection, and contradiction. If you listen only for claims, you miss the person making them.

That is why two people can hear the same sentence and come away with entirely different readings. One hears the literal statement. The other hears the strain behind it. The better listener usually hears both.

Good listening is not passive. It is active restraint. You notice tone, rhythm, hesitation, repetition. You ask why this point matters so much to this person at this moment. You watch for the gap between what is said clearly and what is being said badly because the speaker does not yet understand it well enough to say it cleanly.

This matters in friendship. It matters in love. It matters in conflict most of all. Many arguments continue because neither side has heard the wound hidden inside the argument. Each person keeps responding to the declared point while missing the deeper claim: You dismissed me. You did not see me. You made me feel small. Once that deeper layer is heard, the argument often changes form.

Listening exposes your own assumptions

One reason listening changes understanding is less flattering. It reveals how much of our understanding was never understanding at all. It was projection.

We tend to hear through ourselves. Our history supplies emphasis. Our fears supply threat. Our vanity supplies certainty. So when we say, "I know what they mean," we often mean, "I have fitted their words into my existing mental furniture."

Real listening disturbs that comfort. It shows that another person may not mean what you would mean if you said the same sentence. The same phrase can come from a different moral world, a different emotional history, a different standard of dignity. Listening does not erase judgment, and it should not. But it makes judgment less childish.

There is a trade-off here. If you listen deeply, you lose the pleasure of simple enemies and simple explanations. Life becomes harder to organize into clean camps. Some people avoid listening for exactly that reason. Certainty feels stronger than curiosity. But the price of certainty is often distortion.

Listening changes how you hear yourself

People usually treat listening as something directed outward. That is only half true. Listening also changes self-understanding.

Most people do not know what they feel when they first feel it. They know the rough weather of it - irritation, sadness, restlessness, envy - but not the source. Inner listening means hearing your own reactions without rushing to justify them. Why did that comment stay with you all day? Why did that song make you feel exposed? Why does one kind of success leave you cold while another kind of work, less rewarded, feels alive?

Without listening, the self becomes a pile of impulses defended by slogans. With listening, experience starts to form an intelligible pattern. You hear recurring tensions. You notice where your public explanations differ from your private motives. That can be uncomfortable. It is still better than drifting.

Artists know this well, even when they do not describe it in philosophical terms. A songwriter listens for the line that feels true before it sounds clever. A serious reader listens for the sentence that resists easy agreement. A performer listens for the difference between display and expression. In each case, listening refines judgment by forcing contact with what is actually there.

How does listening change understanding of art?

Art punishes lazy listening. It exposes anyone who wants instant payoff. A song can sound plain on first encounter and then, after repeated listens, reveal discipline, grief, irony, or formal precision that was inaudible at the start. The opposite also happens. Something flashy can feel empty once the style wears off.

Listening changes understanding of art because art unfolds in time. Meaning is often cumulative. A phrase returns altered by what came before it. A beat enters late and changes the emotional logic of the track. A voice cracks, and suddenly a polished performance becomes human.

This is one reason taste matures. Mature taste is not just having better preferences. It is learning to wait before deciding. It is hearing the difference between what flatters your habits and what expands your perception.

Young listeners often want identity from music as much as pleasure. That is normal. But if music remains only identity furniture, your understanding stays thin. Listening asks more of you. It asks whether the work enlarges your inner life, whether it notices something you have ignored, whether it tells the truth in a form you were not ready for before.

Listening does not mean agreement

This point matters because people often confuse listening with surrender. They think to listen seriously is to lose conviction. It is not. Listening is how conviction avoids becoming stupidity.

You can listen closely and still reject what you hear. In fact, disagreement becomes sharper after good listening because you are responding to the real claim rather than a cartoon of it. Shallow disagreement is easy. Strong disagreement requires accurate hearing.

There are limits, of course. Some speech is manipulative. Some people use the demand to be heard as a way to control the room. Listening is not gullibility. It does not require infinite patience with bad faith. The point is not to grant every voice equal wisdom. The point is to train perception so you can tell the difference.

The social cost of not listening

A culture that stops listening becomes loud and stupid in very specific ways. People perform certainty because uncertainty looks weak. Conversation turns into positioning. Language becomes thinner. Everything gets flattened into approval or rejection.

When that happens, understanding shrinks. We stop hearing nuance in speech, discipline in art, or conflict inside the self. We become easier to provoke and harder to teach. Even ordinary relationships lose depth because everyone is defending an image instead of attending to reality.

That is why listening is not just a polite habit. It is a way of resisting reduction. It keeps human beings from becoming slogans to one another.

Practice listening better

If you want better understanding, listen past your first interpretation. Let people finish. Ask yourself what else might be true besides your immediate reading. Return to difficult art more than once. Notice when you are preparing a response instead of receiving what is being said. Notice, too, when you are using noise to avoid hearing your own mind.

None of this makes life neat. It makes it more exact. And exactness is one of the few honest paths to depth.

The question is not whether you are capable of hearing words. You are. The question is whether you can remain present long enough for meaning to exceed your impatience. If you can, understanding stops being a quick possession and becomes a form of attention worthy of the world.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

What Shapes Personal Taste, Really?


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You can learn a great deal about a person by asking what they return to when nobody is watching. Not what they claim to admire in public, not what earns approval, but what they play late at night, what rooms they find beautiful, what voices they trust, what kind of silence they can bear. That is where the question of what shapes personal taste becomes serious. Taste is not a decorative trait. It is one of the quiet forms of destiny.


What Shapes Personal Taste Beneath Preference

People often talk about taste as if it were a simple matter of liking one thing and disliking another. But taste is rarely that innocent. What we call preference is usually the surface expression of deeper forces - biography, aspiration, fear, class position, imitation, rebellion, memory, even spiritual hunger. A person does not merely choose a style, a genre, or a sensibility. More often, those choices gather slowly around the kind of self that person is becoming.

This is why taste can feel so intimate. To criticize somebody's taste is not just to dispute a judgment. It is to touch the hidden architecture of how they have learned to value the world. The teenager who clings to a certain sound may be protecting an inner life that has no other language. The adult who insists on refinement may be reaching for order after years of chaos. The person who calls something trash may be defending not beauty, but status.

Taste, then, is never only about the object. It is about the relationship between the object and the self.

Memory Is One of the First Sculptors

Before taste becomes articulated, it is absorbed. Childhood has enormous power here, not because it fully determines us, but because it establishes our first emotional associations. The songs in the house, the emotional weather of family life, the textures of neighborhood culture, the rituals around food, clothing, speech, and celebration - these form an early grammar of value.

A person raised around tenderness may hear warmth in a certain kind of music that another person finds sentimental. Someone shaped by instability may prefer harshness, minimalism, or emotional distance because these feel more honest. Often what we call good taste is just familiar feeling made respectable.

Memory gives taste its emotional charge. We are drawn not only to what is beautiful, but to what feels like recognition. This is why people can defend mediocre things with genuine passion. The object itself may be limited, but its connection to memory is not. Taste is often less a verdict than a form of return.

Culture Teaches Us What to Notice

No one invents taste alone. Every society trains attention. It tells people, sometimes subtly and sometimes brutally, what counts as refined, vulgar, authentic, intelligent, masculine, feminine, elevated, or low. By the time someone says, "I just like what I like," a great deal of cultural instruction has already taken place.

Class matters here more than many people want to admit. Education, money, and social environment do not just expand access to certain art forms. They shape the ability to decode them. If you grow up in a world where certain books, sounds, or visual styles are treated as signs of seriousness, you are more likely to approach them with patience. If those same things are presented to you as alien or pretentious, you may reject them before you have even encountered them on their own terms.

This does not mean taste is fake. It means taste is socially formed. Some preferences are sincere and inherited at the same time. The error is thinking that what feels natural to us came from nowhere.

Imitation, Rebellion, and the Search for Self

A great deal of taste develops through imitation. We borrow from older siblings, admired artists, subcultures, teachers, lovers, and the people we want to become. This is not a moral failure. It is one of the ordinary ways identity takes shape. Human beings learn by resonance.

Yet imitation is only half the story. Rebellion shapes taste just as strongly. Many people discover their preferences by refusing the sensibility of their surroundings. Someone raised in banality may seek difficulty. Someone suffocated by moral seriousness may turn toward irony. Someone tired of polished culture may hunger for the raw, the broken, or the obscure.

In both cases, taste is part of self-construction. We adopt forms in order to become legible to ourselves. Sometimes this process is fruitful. Sometimes it becomes theatrical, especially when taste is used as a costume for superiority. A person can confuse having references with having depth. They can mistake curation for character.

This is one reason taste changes. When the self changes, the need behind the preference changes too.

What Shapes Personal Taste Over Time

If the first formation of taste is largely passive, maturity introduces a more demanding question: what do you continue to choose once you have some awareness of what formed you? This is where taste can deepen, stagnate, or become more honest.

Experience complicates preference. Loss can make a person more receptive to subtle art, because pain enlarges their range of recognition. Love can do the same. So can failure. The person who once wanted only intensity may begin to value restraint. The person who once admired cold brilliance may begin to crave moral clarity, warmth, or even simplicity.

There is no virtue in liking difficult things just because they are difficult. There is also no virtue in celebrating accessibility as if ease were automatically profound. The real question is whether your taste is becoming more awake. Are you learning to perceive more, or only rehearsing an identity?

A mature taste does not mean abandoning pleasure for seriousness. It means becoming more conscious of why certain things move you, and whether those movements enlarge your life or reduce it.

The Market Wants to Colonize Taste

Any serious discussion of taste has to admit how aggressively modern life tries to manage it. Algorithms do not merely reflect preference. They train it. Branding does not simply package goods. It wraps identity around consumption and persuades people that selfhood can be assembled through recognizable choices.

This creates a strange confusion. People feel highly individualized while often being guided into narrow lanes of sameness. They are offered the sensation of self-expression through preselected styles, sounds, and opinions. Their taste may feel personal, but it has been anticipated in advance.

The danger is not only commercialization. It is passivity. If you are always being fed what already resembles what you liked yesterday, your perceptual world can shrink without your noticing. Taste hardens into repetition. You stop encountering what might challenge, refine, or rescue you.

For readers who care about art and thought, this matters deeply. A person can become loyal to a sensibility that no longer asks anything of them. They can remain faithful to a version of themselves they have already outgrown.

Taste Is Also Moral, Whether We Admit It or Not

Not every preference is a moral statement, but taste and value are not cleanly separable. What we admire repeatedly enters the structure of our character. If a person is constantly drawn to cruelty masquerading as wit, emptiness masquerading as cool, or domination masquerading as strength, those attractions leave a mark. Likewise, if someone seeks forms that sharpen attention, deepen feeling, or reveal dignity where the culture sees none, that too becomes part of who they are.

This is where the question becomes larger than aesthetics. Taste is a training of love. It teaches us what to linger with, what to praise, what to ignore, and what to call beautiful. Over time, those habits shape perception itself.

That does not mean taste must become puritanical. Seriousness is not the same as severity. Humor, pleasure, sensuality, and style all belong to a full life. But if taste has no relation to truth, then it becomes little more than appetite with better lighting.

Can Taste Be Changed Deliberately?

Yes, but not by force alone. You cannot bully yourself into authentic appreciation. You can, however, educate attention. You can stay with difficult works longer than your first impatience allows. You can ask why something revered leaves you cold without pretending the coldness is a badge of independence. You can revisit what you dismissed in youth and discover that you lacked the life experience to hear it.

The reverse is also true. You can outgrow things once central to you, not because they were false, but because they belonged to a previous necessity. Taste should not be frozen in the name of loyalty. Growth sometimes requires a betrayal of older versions of the self.

This kind of self-education demands humility. It asks you to recognize that your immediate reactions are real but not final. It asks you to let experience, reflection, and exposure widen the field.

At its best, taste becomes less about signaling who you are and more about discovering what is worthy of your attention. That is a harder path, because it may lead you away from fashion, tribe, and even comfort. But it also makes your preferences more alive, less borrowed, and more capable of carrying meaning.

A helpful way to think about taste is this: it is not a trophy of refinement, but a record of relationship. It shows what has formed you, what has seduced you, what has wounded you, and what you are still trying to become. If you want better taste, the real task is not just to consume better things. It is to become a person capable of meeting better things more truthfully.

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Life through performance...

 I would like to start a play through performance. Right now, I'm not given the chance. It needs to change...It needs to be discovered and understood. It is a titanium result, please listen. There are young people searching for answers who do not have guidance. It is destroying society. 

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I never understood anyone, now I sit and Listen

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At first, it sounds like a confession of failure, but it can also be read as a realization.

When we are young, or when we are certain of ourselves, we often believe understanding comes from thinking harder, judging more accurately, or finding the right explanation for people. We try to figure others out. Yet people resist being solved like problems.

Sitting and listening is different. It is the recognition that another person's inner world is deeper than our theories about them.

Friedrich Nietzsche wrote that those who have lived through much often become quieter, not because they have less to say, but because they have learned how much remains unknown. Wisdom is not always the accumulation of answers; sometimes it is the abandonment of premature conclusions.

There is a paradox here:

  • When you wanted to understand people, you may have listened less.
  • When you stopped trying to force understanding, you became capable of listening.
  • And through listening, a different kind of understanding emerges.

Not the understanding that says, "I know exactly who you are."

But the understanding that says, "Tell me more."

In that sense, your sentence could be expanded into a reflection:

I spent years trying to understand people and found only confusion. Now I sit and listen. I no longer seek to capture another person's soul in a definition. I listen to their stories, their contradictions, their silences. And in doing so, I discover that understanding was never something to seize—it was something that arrives quietly when judgment leaves and attention remains.

There is a certain maturity in that movement: from certainty to curiosity, from speaking to listening, from explanation to presence. Sometimes that is the beginning of genuine wisdom.

Listen to your taste, a discussion with Nietzsche

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Taste as a Map of the Future: A Nietzschean Reflection

"Your taste is a map of the future you are already creating, but not a prison that forces you to arrive there."

At first glance, taste appears to be a trivial matter. We speak of taste in food, music, art, fashion, and entertainment as though it were merely a collection of personal preferences. Yet beneath these preferences lies something far more profound. Taste is not simply what we enjoy; it is what we value. It reveals what attracts our attention, what we admire, and ultimately, what kind of life we are moving toward.

In this sense, taste can be understood as a map of the future.

Every human being lives through choices. We choose what to read, whom to admire, how to spend our time, what ambitions to pursue, and what ideals to hold. These choices are rarely random. They are guided by taste. Over time, what we repeatedly choose shapes our habits, our habits shape our character, and our character shapes our destiny.

A person with a taste for knowledge gravitates toward learning. A person with a taste for adventure seeks novelty and risk. A person with a taste for comfort organizes life around security and stability. None of these futures is guaranteed, yet each is made more likely by the values embodied in one's tastes.

The philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche offers a powerful lens through which to understand this phenomenon. For Nietzsche, taste was never merely aesthetic preference. Taste revealed the deeper structure of a person's values. Long before a person can articulate a philosophy, their tastes often betray the philosophy they already live.

What one admires matters.

The heroes one celebrates, the books one returns to, the ideas one finds beautiful, and the achievements one respects all reveal an underlying orientation toward life. Taste is therefore a kind of silent confession. It discloses who we are becoming before we can fully explain it ourselves.

Yet Nietzsche would reject the notion that taste determines destiny. Human beings possess the capacity for self-overcoming. We are not confined to our current preferences. We can educate our tastes, challenge them, and transform them.

This is why taste is a map rather than a prison.

A map suggests direction without certainty. It indicates where one is likely to go if one continues along the present path. A prison, by contrast, removes freedom. Nietzsche's philosophy leaves room for transformation. The individual who once valued comfort may learn to admire challenge. The person drawn toward conformity may develop a taste for independence and creation. Through self-overcoming, the map itself can be redrawn.

Indeed, the highest expression of freedom may not be the ability to satisfy every desire. It may be the ability to cultivate better desires. To learn to love what is difficult, noble, creative, or life-affirming is to reshape one's future at its source.

This leads to a deeper philosophical question. Perhaps taste is not merely a prediction of the future but an intuition of a possible self. The things that repeatedly call to us may represent unrealized dimensions of who we could become. Certain books, ideas, works of art, or visions of life seem to resonate with us not because they belong to our present identity but because they point beyond it.

The future, in this view, is not something that merely happens. It emerges gradually from what we learn to love.

Taste therefore deserves greater attention than it usually receives. We often focus on actions while neglecting the attractions that produce those actions. Yet every cultivated taste is a seed. Over years, seeds become habits, habits become character, and character becomes a life.

To understand a person, one might ask:

What do you admire?

What do you repeatedly return to?

What do you find beautiful, meaningful, and worthy of devotion?

The answers reveal more than preference. They reveal direction.

For Nietzsche, and perhaps for all who seek self-understanding, the central task is not merely to discover one's tastes but to examine and refine them. The future is not written in the stars. It is written more subtly in the values we embody, the ideals we admire, and the tastes we cultivate.

Show me what you admire, and I will show you the future you are preparing for yourself. Show me what you are learning to admire, and I will show you the future you may yet create.

Is Mark Zuckerberg living in excess?



Whether Mark Zuckerberg is "living in excess" depends on how you define excess.

By ordinary standards, he lives an extremely wealthy lifestyle. He owns multiple properties, uses private aviation, has extensive security arrangements, and has a net worth measured in the hundreds of billions of dollars.

However, compared with some other ultra-wealthy individuals, he is often perceived as relatively restrained in certain areas:

  • He is known for wearing simple clothing much of the time.
  • He has not become primarily associated with fleets of superyachts, lavish parties, or highly public displays of luxury.
  • Much of his wealth remains tied to ownership of shares rather than personal consumption.

That said, owning large estates, private aircraft, and having access to virtually unlimited resources would still be considered excessive by many people.

So there isn't an objective answer. By the standards of the average person, his lifestyle is extraordinarily luxurious. By the standards of the world's richest billionaires, some people would view him as less extravagant than many of his peers.

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Thursday, June 4, 2026

The cooling of data centers and reducing water consumption

Refrigerant Cooling Could Transform the Future of Data Centers

As artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and digital services continue to expand, data centers are consuming more electricity and generating more heat than ever before. For decades, water-based cooling systems have been the industry standard for removing heat from servers. However, a growing number of engineers and technology companies are exploring an alternative approach: refrigerant-based cooling.

Data centers are the backbone of the modern digital economy. Every online search, video stream, financial transaction, and AI computation depends on servers operating within safe temperature limits. As computing power increases, traditional cooling methods face growing challenges related to water consumption, energy efficiency, and environmental sustainability.

Water cooling systems work by circulating chilled water through pipes and heat exchangers that absorb heat from servers. While effective, these systems can consume millions of gallons of water annually, particularly in large facilities. In regions experiencing droughts or water shortages, this demand has raised concerns among environmental groups and local communities.

Refrigerant cooling offers a different solution. Instead of relying primarily on water to transport heat, refrigerants absorb heat directly from electronic components through phase-change processes. When a refrigerant absorbs heat, it changes from a liquid to a gas, carrying away large amounts of thermal energy. The refrigerant is then condensed back into a liquid and reused in a closed-loop cycle.

One of the most promising forms of refrigerant cooling is immersion cooling. In these systems, servers are submerged in specially engineered dielectric fluids that do not conduct electricity. As the fluid absorbs heat from the hardware, it evaporates and transfers the heat away from critical components. This method can dramatically reduce the need for water while improving cooling efficiency.

Industry experts point to several potential advantages. Refrigerant-based systems can provide more direct heat removal, reduce cooling energy consumption, and enable higher server densities. As artificial intelligence workloads become increasingly demanding, these benefits could help data centers process more information within the same physical footprint.

Another advantage is water conservation. In many regions, reducing water use has become a strategic priority. Refrigerant cooling systems can operate with little or no continuous water consumption, making them attractive for facilities located in arid environments.

Despite these benefits, challenges remain. Refrigerant systems often require specialized equipment and infrastructure, leading to higher initial installation costs. Operators must also carefully manage refrigerants to prevent leaks and ensure environmental compliance. Some refrigerants have historically contributed to greenhouse gas emissions, although newer formulations are being developed with significantly lower environmental impacts.

Technology companies, researchers, and infrastructure providers are investing heavily in next-generation cooling technologies. As data centers continue to expand worldwide, the pressure to improve efficiency and sustainability is expected to accelerate innovation in this field.

The future of data center cooling may not be defined by water alone. Refrigerant-based technologies are emerging as a serious contender, offering a pathway toward higher performance, lower water consumption, and more sustainable digital infrastructure. While widespread adoption will take time, the shift toward refrigerant cooling could represent one of the most significant changes in data center design in decades.

As the world demands more computing power, the race is on to keep servers cool while minimizing environmental impact. Refrigerants may soon play a central role in meeting that challenge.

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Saturday, May 30, 2026

Can I build a new society that reflects your own ideals?

Yes. Human history is filled with people trying to build societies that reflect their ideals.

The important question is not "Can you?" but "What ideals would the society be built on, and would others freely choose to live in it?"

Every society begins as an idea:

  • A vision of justice.
  • A vision of freedom.
  • A vision of cooperation.
  • A vision of what makes a good life.

Over time, those ideas become institutions, laws, traditions, and culture.

However, there is a philosophical challenge. A society built around one person's ideals can work only if those ideals leave room for disagreement. Once other people join, they will bring their own values, goals, and perspectives. A society that reflects only one person's vision often becomes unstable because people are not identical.

Many philosophers have wrestled with this:

  • Plato imagined an ideal state governed by wisdom.
  • Karl Marx envisioned a classless society.
  • John Stuart Mill emphasized individual liberty.
  • Robert Nozick argued that people should be free to form communities that match their own values.

One way to think about it is this:

A lasting society is not built when everyone shares the founder's ideals.

A lasting society is built when people with different ideals still want to remain part of it.

If you wanted to create a new society, you would need to answer questions such as:

  1. What rights do people have?
  2. Who makes decisions?
  3. How is power limited?
  4. How are conflicts resolved?
  5. What responsibilities do citizens have?
  6. What values are non-negotiable?

The moment you answer those questions, you are already beginning to design a society.

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Hot Camaro


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Tuesday, May 26, 2026

SLASH!!!

 What The eff's up dude!!!! We love you out here Slash say hello some time I know your checking in at times!!

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Friday, May 15, 2026

Being escorted out of Fenway


A young Dess Dermondy is being escorted out of Fenway Park, Boston, home of the Boston Red Sox. I was with a dozen or so high school friends on opening day. We caused quite a ruckus in the bleacher seat section of the park. They were the cheapest seats. The wetness on my left arm and leg is from beer that was being thrown at the cops as they made their way up to our seats to cool things down. A half dozen or so friends ended up spending the night in Boston's jail. Back in those days, if you gave a cop a hard time, you would later catch a beating in jail. As you can see in this photo, I’m keeping my mouth shut.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Manhattan

 Ok, so my goal in life is end up living in Manhattan. Why? Because of history. History is attractive. Because of the people who live there. The people who live there consider it a community and I would like to be apart of that community and history. There are other reasons but I can't disclose until I live there. It just a goal in my life to be loved by Manhattan. I would like to also document the beauty through photography. It's just a goal for me to end up in Manhattan. It's where I want to die...

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Saturday, May 9, 2026

what horse are you with my friend

 when the horse lies with you...it's time go. There's no separation . skip take a look skip. Where will i ever belong besides Manhattan 

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Saturday, May 2, 2026

Are you reading your future

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From a few perspectives:

Psychologically:
Often it’s the brain recognizing patterns before conscious awareness catches up. Your mind is constantly processing tiny details — routines, behaviors, environmental cues — and sometimes it predicts what’s coming next so accurately that it feels like you “saw the future.”

This can show up as:

  • Déjà vu — a strange sense that you’ve already lived this moment
  • Strong intuition about what someone will say or do
  • Dreams that seem to later “come true”
  • A sudden certainty about an outcome

Usually, this is your brain making rapid unconscious predictions based on memory and pattern recognition.

Philosophically:
This gets deeper. Some philosophers would ask whether what you’re “seeing” is actually the future, or whether time is less linear than we experience it.

For example:

  • Some views suggest all moments of time may already exist, and consciousness just moves through them.
  • Others argue the future is constantly being created by present choices, so “seeing” it might really be sensing probable outcomes.

Think of it like standing at the top of a hill watching a river. You can often predict where the water will flow because of the terrain. That doesn’t mean you’re seeing the future in a supernatural sense — you’re perceiving the structure shaping what comes next.

In daily life:
If this happens occasionally, it’s often just heightened awareness.

If it’s frequent and unsettling, it can sometimes happen during periods of:

  • Stress
  • Sleep disruption
  • Anxiety
  • Intense focus
  • Emotional overload

Those states can change how memory and perception sync up, making moments feel strangely pre-lived.

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Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Why does killing people matter so much...why

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1. A human life isn’t just a body—it’s a point of view

Each person is a conscious perspective on the world. There’s only one “you” experiencing your thoughts, memories, relationships, plans.

Philosophers like Thomas Nagel emphasize that there is “something it is like” to be a person. Killing doesn’t just remove a body—it erases an entire subjective universe. That’s not replaceable. Even if someone else is similar, they’re not that same perspective.

So the weight comes from this:
killing = permanently ending a unique center of experience


2. It destroys an entire future, not just a present

A person isn’t just what they are right now—they’re also everything they could become.

Think about it this way:

  • future relationships
  • future ideas
  • future happiness, struggles, growth

All of that disappears instantly.

That’s why some philosophers say killing is not just harm—it’s the maximum deprivation. It takes all remaining possibilities at once.


3. It breaks the “basic rule” that makes society possible

Imagine a world where killing didn’t matter.

You wouldn’t trust:

  • strangers
  • neighbors
  • even close relationships

Philosophers like Thomas Hobbes argued that without a strong rule against killing, life collapses into fear and survival mode. You can’t build meaning, art, love, or even normal daily routines if your existence is constantly at risk.

So philosophically:
“don’t kill” is the foundation that allows everything else to exist


4. It treats a person as if they don’t matter

This is where Immanuel Kant comes in.

His idea is that people have dignity—not a price. You can’t measure or trade them like objects.

Killing someone says, in effect:
“your existence can be ended for some purpose or reason.”

That’s why it’s seen as crossing a fundamental moral line—it reduces a person from a someone to a thing.


5. It creates irreversible moral weight

Most wrong actions can, at least in theory, be repaired:

  • you can return stolen money
  • apologize for harm
  • rebuild trust (sometimes)

But death is final.

That permanence gives killing a different philosophical status:
it’s an action that closes off all correction, growth, or reconciliation forever


6. Even if meaning is uncertain, life becomes more precious

Some philosophers like Albert Camus argue that the universe might not have built-in meaning.

But instead of making life meaningless, that actually makes each life more significant:

  • it’s rare
  • fragile
  • self-created

So ending a life isn’t just stopping biology—it’s ending a rare instance of meaning being created in a silent universe.


Putting it all together

Killing matters so much because it combines multiple extremes at once:

  • It erases a unique conscious experience
  • It eliminates an entire future
  • It undermines the trust that holds society together
  • It violates the idea that people have inherent worth
  • And it cannot be undone

That’s why, across almost every philosophy and culture, it ends up at the top of “things that matter.”