Posts

The Quiet Power of Creating Without an Agenda

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  The Quiet Power of Creating Without an Agenda I’ve been noticing something about my own creative life lately. Whenever I sit down to make something with a goal attached — grow this, convert that, optimize the other — the work gets heavier. The joy thins out. The whole thing starts feeling like a performance instead of a practice. And I’m not a guru here. I’m not teaching anything. I’m just describing what I’ve been feeling for a while. Creating From Curiosity, Not Conversion There’s a different energy that shows up when I create without trying to steer anyone anywhere. It’s lighter. Cleaner. More honest. I’m not calculating the downstream effect of every sentence. I’m not trying to impress or persuade. I’m just following an idea because it has a pulse. Most of the modern internet pushes creators toward outcomes — traction, monetization, scale. I’ve followed that current at times. But when those goals sit in the front seat, I can feel something subtle slipping away. Curiosity shri...

What Happens When You Remove the Sales Funnel?

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  What Happens When You Remove the Sales Funnel? There’s a quiet relief that enters the room when you stop treating people like potential customers. The air changes. The posture changes. The whole interaction shifts from extraction to presence. Most of the internet is built on the opposite assumption: that if you don’t guide someone toward a transaction, you’re wasting the moment. But what if the moment is the point? What if the value of an interaction isn’t measured by what it produces, but by what it preserves — clarity, curiosity, trust, ease? When you remove the funnel, a few things happen almost immediately: 1. People stop bracing. They’re no longer waiting for the pitch behind the kindness. They can actually hear you. 2. The conversation becomes real. Not strategic. Not optimized. Just two humans exchanging ideas without a hidden agenda. 3. Your work becomes cleaner. You’re no longer designing for conversion. You’re designing for comprehension, resonance, and usefulness. 4. Y...

Tired of Sales Funnels? So Am I

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  Tired of Sales Funnels? So Am I There’s a particular kind of fatigue that settles in when every corner of the modern web starts to feel like a checkout line. You click a link, open an app, join a community, read a post — and suddenly you’re not a person anymore. You’re a “lead.” A “conversion opportunity.” A warm body being nudged down a funnel someone diagrammed in a slide deck. It’s exhausting. Not because commerce is bad. Not because people shouldn’t build things and get paid for them. But because somewhere along the way, the human layer got stripped out. Curiosity became a metric. Community became a tactic. Even kindness started to feel like a prelude to an upsell. And the worst part is how subtle it all is. You can feel the shift the moment it happens: The tone changes. The warmth becomes strategic. The “welcome” starts sounding like onboarding copy. The “community” starts sounding like a CRM segment. You’re no longer in a conversation. You’re in a pipeline. I don’t think an...

I’m Not Grieving the Old Internet. It Wasn’t Built for Me.

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  I’m Not Grieving the Old Internet. It Wasn’t Built for Me. Every few weeks, another post goes viral about “grieving the old internet.” Developers talk about missing the messy forums, the weird blogs, the rough edges, the sense of humanity. They describe it like a lost Eden — a place where everything felt more alive, more personal, more real. I read those pieces with interest. And then I realized something simple and true: I’m not grieving the old internet. Because the old internet wasn’t built for me. I don’t say that with bitterness. I say it with clarity. For a lot of people, the pre‑AI web was a playground. For me, it was a locked room. The Old Internet Rewarded a Very Specific Kind of Brain People romanticize the “humanity” of the early web, but what they’re really describing is a cognitive environment that favored: long attention spans comfort with walls of text linear reading high working memory tolerance for ambiguity pleasure in deciphering bad documentation gatekeeping a...

Command Affirmations

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  Command Affirmations I’ve been running an experiment in how I talk to myself. For years, when I wanted something — a change, a break, a door to open — my internal posture was one of hopeful waiting. I would  wish  for things to line up. I would  hope  the right opportunity would find me. And underneath all of that, there was a quiet, unexamined assumption: that I was the one asking, and something else was the one granting. Lately, I’ve been trying the opposite. The Shift It started small. A desire for an invite to a particular technical society. It was a professional situation I’d been circling for months. Every time I thought about it, my inner voice would say something like: "I hope this works out". And one day, without planning it, I heard myself think something else instead: "Invite, I command you come to me now." I didn’t say it out loud. I didn’t write it down. I just let it sit there in my mind, a flat statement, no pleading attached. And something shif...

One Size Fits All… Or Does It?

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  One Size Fits All… Or Does It? Tuesday night thoughts. The quiet kind that show up when the day slows down a little. I’ve been thinking about reading lately. Not just  what  we read, but  how  we read. When I was growing up, reading was presented in a very straightforward way. Sit down. Look at the page. Read silently. That was the model. And for some people, it worked beautifully. But for others, it didn’t quite land the same way. For me, silent reading has always felt a little… incomplete. I can do it. I’ve done it my whole life. But something about it feels flat, almost like half of the experience is missing. What really brings text alive for me is  text-to-speech  combined with reading along visually. Listening while my eyes follow the words. That pairing—audio and visual together—rounds things out. It gives the words rhythm. It gives the sentences shape. The meaning seems to settle in more naturally. It’s what people now call  immersive rea...

Flexibility as My Superpower

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  Flexibility as My Superpower It’s late. The house is quiet. And I keep circling back to a simple thought: I think flexibility might be my superpower. Not in a dramatic way. Not in a “bend with the wind and conquer the world” kind of way. Just in a steady, ordinary, keep-your-balance kind of way. When I look at my day-to-day life, it’s full of systems. Software systems. Websites. Platforms. Devices. People. AI tools. They’re all powerful. They’re all impressive. They’re all, in their own way, a little rigid. Systems don’t bend to my mood. They don’t care about my preferences. They require certain inputs. They expect certain behaviors. If I don’t give them what they require, I get friction. Error messages. Confusion. Unexpected charges. Interfaces that don’t behave the way I hoped. Collaborations that don’t flow the way I imagined. And that’s where flexibility comes in. Not as surrender. Not as weakness. But as alignment. If I can step back and say, “Okay. What does this system req...