Posts

🌿 Making Sausage

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  NYC Street Food Cart "Laws are like sausages — it is better not to see them being made." — attributed to Otto von Bismarck   Most people carry some internal picture of the future they hope humanity will move toward. Perhaps more humane, more rational, more beautiful, more truthful, more compassionate, more free, more stable, more curious, more dignified. But one of the most unsettling things about periods of rapid change is realizing that history is not automatically pulled toward the best vision. Different visions compete constantly — through culture, economics, politics, technology, education, and everyday human behavior. My own vision is less about certainty and more about preserving human dignity, protecting democratic and humanitarian values, staying evidence-informed without becoming cynical, keeping curiosity alive, resisting extremism, and creating beauty and meaning in ordinary life. And helping people remain human inside accelerating systems. I know that's no...

🌿 The Dig

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  An ancient funerary boat, made to carry the dead into the next world. Photographed in a museum I no longer remember. That last scene in The Dig is extraordinary. It doesn't force emotion. It just lets love appear in the form of a story. The little boy isn't really talking about a queen sailing. He's trying to build a bridge between this world and whatever comes next for his mother. Children in stories often understand that imagination, memory, myth, and love all overlap. And the film itself is doing the same thing the archaeologists do throughout the story. Trying to preserve something fragile before it disappears. That's why the scene lands so deeply. It isn't sentimental in the usual sense. It's about tenderness in the face of impermanence. The whole film circles one idea: that civilizations disappear, people disappear, war is always approaching, bodies return to the earth. But traces remain. Stories remain. Moments of human connection remain. Sutton Hoo wa...

🌿The Long Way Round: Coffee Filters to Portrait of My Mother

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  This morning I found myself comparing coffee filters.  The natural brown kind, the white kind, the slightly more expensive kind versus the store brand.  One of those tiny domestic decisions that should mean almost nothing. And suddenly I was remembering my mother when she was out of coffee filters and out of money to buy more.  Sometimes she would improvise with a white paper towel or even a plain Kleenex.  It wasn’t a lifestyle experiment.  It was what was available. My mother had good taste.  Poverty never changed that.  She didn’t learn to love cheap things.  She learned to live without things.  She would not pretend that imitation was the same thing as quality. She expressed beauty in the ways available to her, which meant primarily two things:  Sewing and making food. This is where she remained entirely herself, where circumstances had the least reach. She was an excellent seamstress, and she recognized quality in fabric and ...

🌿Not Everything That Frightens Us is True

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  I saw a post this morning that made my heart beat faster. Not because I believed it. Because I understood the story it was trying to tell. Before I even finished reading it, I could already feel the familiar tightening in my stomach, the racing thoughts, the knowledge that another wave of fear and suspicion was being released into the world.  The post claimed the hantavirus outbreak was caused by the covid vaccine. I didn't believe it for a moment. But I recognized the same script, the same structure, the same emotional undertow we've seen so many times before. That recognition carries grief. It was not really about hantavirus. It was about narrative. It was about the way emotionally charged information now moves through society faster than reflection does, faster than context does, and faster than trust can be rebuilt once it has been damaged. One of the hardest parts of living in this moment is learning to recognize the difference between skepticism and permanent suspicion...