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What Needs Changing

Updated: Sep 28


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At the smallest scales, reality is not linear, not discrete, but relational: observation and context shape outcome, entanglement links distant entities, and potential exists in a superposition until attention collapses it into form. Each choice, every act of creation or destruction resonates outward, affecting the whole. Yet modern culture often behaves as if actions are isolated, as if the world is a predictable machine rather than a responsive web.


Efficiency is celebrated as wisdom, yet we move quickly without discernment. We create and innovate in isolation from context, building technologies that amplify human capacity without guiding it. In our rush, connection is often reduced to transaction: relationships are catalogued, commodified, and measured against utility rather than nurtured as living, evolving networks.


These fractures are adaptive failures of systems optimized for speed, profit, and output at the expense of resilience, coherence, and harmony. And the human organism, exquisitely tuned over millennia to rhythms, cycles, and relationships, finds itself navigating a terrain for which it was not evolutionarily prepared.


Our ancestors cultivated social and environmental practices that aligned human activity with the cycles of nature, the rhythms of body and spirit, and the imperatives of community. Their myths were functional frameworks, encoded lessons in balance, reciprocity, and sustainable power. They recognized that the health of an individual, a family, a tribe, or a community is inseparable from the health of the patterns that sustain them.


My work is an attempt to honor that insight by inviting realignment with patterns that already exist. This work does not seek to dictate outcomes but to restore the conditions under which coherence naturally emerges.

 
 
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