Posts

No More Heroes or Villains

Image
  No More Heroes or Villains I'm a writer, and today I killed an article. It wasn't a bad article. The reporting was solid. The structure worked. The facts checked out. But something felt off. After staring at it for a while, I realized the problem wasn't the subject. It was the tone. Over the last few weeks I've been experimenting with different AI systems as part of my writing workflow. Some are better researchers. Some are better editors. Some are better at generating first drafts. Most of the time I'm not looking for a finished article. I'm looking for background information, angles, and ideas. Many of those articles never get published. This was one of them. The funny thing is that the article led me somewhere unexpected. It reminded me of being a kid. Back then I read Highlights . I read Scholastic News . I read the local newspaper. Looking back, I don't remember many...

The Outrage Reset

Image
  The Outrage Reset There’s a rhythm to social platforms that you only notice when it breaks. For several weeks, everything felt quiet. Not peaceful — just empty. Lower engagement. Fewer people engaging. Lower time on platform. A kind of digital low tide. And then, almost on cue, the feeds snapped back with something familiar: outrage . Not the organic kind. The algorithmic kind — the kind that feels placed, like a scent pumped into a mall. It showed up everywhere at once. Different platforms. Same emotional temperature. Same framing. Same tone. Like someone hit the same switch in a dozen different rooms. A system trying anything to get its readers to engage. When engagement drops, platforms don’t get reflective. They get hungry. And outrage seems to be the most common tactic in their playbook. You can feel the machinery in it — the way the posts lean toward conflict, the way the headlines sharpen, the way the feed tries t...

The Quiet

Image
  The Quiet My thoughts on the stillness I've been noticing on social media It's been quiet lately. Not my notifications. Those still ping. Still buzz. Still demand. No, a different quiet. The kind you don't measure. The kind you  notice . I first felt it a few weeks ago. I scrolled through a feed I've checked daily for years, and something had shifted. Not empty. Just... slower. Like a room where everyone stopped shouting at once, and now nobody knows what to do with the space. Then there's a blog I used to read. Updated every Thursday like clockwork. Last post: October. Still sitting in my bookmarks bar like a house with the lights on but no one home. A writer I admire used to post hot takes three times a day. Now? Once a week, maybe. And even then—softer. Less urgent. Like someone who finally put down a heavy bag they forgot they were carrying. The arguments are still there. But they feel tired. Recycled. People typing the same sentences they typed last year, jus...

Okay Everybody Just Calm Down

Image
  Okay Everybody Just Calm Down A personal reflection on navigating AI model drift without losing your workflow — or your mind There’s a moment in almost every episode of  Grimm  where someone shouts my favorite line:  “Okay everybody just calm down!” I’ve heard it so many times that yes, I’ve started keeping count. It’s practically a ritual at this point. Lately, that line has been echoing in my head for a completely different reason:  AI model drift . Not the dramatic kind. Not the “the robots are coming” kind. Just the everyday, workflow‑breaking, tone‑shifting, “why are you suddenly talking like this?” kind. The kind that shows up quietly, right when you were getting comfortable. And the older I get in this AI era, the more I realize: the only sane response is to calm down. Model drift happens — and it’s not personal I’ve had models I loved suddenly change tone, pacing, structure, or reasoning style. Sometimes overnight. Sometimes mid‑project. It’s jarring. ...

The Maybe Story, Part 2

Image
  The Maybe Story, Part 2 I kept thinking about that farmer. The way he says  “maybe”  isn’t vague or mystical. It’s precise. It’s a stance. I started unpacking what he’s actually doing when he refuses to call something good or bad. And it turns out “maybe” contains a lot. He’s practicing  outcome uncertainty . A simple acknowledgment: I don’t know what this will become yet. He’s practicing  meaning suspension . Not rushing to assign a verdict. Not collapsing the moment into a story. He’s practicing  emotional non‑commitment . Not forcing himself to feel good or bad on command. He’s avoiding  narrative lock‑in . Keeping the story open. Letting the arc reveal itself. He’s preserving  optionality . Not boxing himself into a reaction he’ll have to defend later. He’s resisting  social contagion . The villagers want him to join their emotional swing. He declines. He’s practicing  non‑attachment to desire . Not letting “I wanted this” or “I di...

The Maybe Story

Image
The Maybe Story I’ve been thinking about that old Chinese parable — the farmer whose horse runs away, then returns with wild horses, then injures his son, then saves him from conscription. At every turn, the neighbors rush in with their verdicts: “Good fortune!” “Bad fortune!” And the farmer just says: “Maybe.” I’ve realized how often I do the opposite. If I don’t get what I want, I label it  misfortune . If I do get what I want, I label it  good fortune . Instant verdicts. No space. No curiosity. Just a reflexive stamp on whatever just happened. But the “maybe” story has been sticking with me. Not as a moral. Not as a philosophy. More like a small, useful interruption. A reminder that I don’t actually know what anything means yet. That the story is still unfolding. That the first interpretation is almost always the loudest, not the truest. That outcomes aren’t verdicts — they’re data. So I’m experimenting with a new stance. When something happens — good or bad — I’m trying to...

Maybe Life Is More Like Farming

Image
  Maybe Life Is More Like Farming Lately I’ve been thinking a lot about farming. Not literally. I don’t own a farm. I don’t wake up at 4:30 in the morning to feed cattle. I don’t know how to repair a tractor. But as a metaphor for life and work, farming keeps returning to my mind over and over again. Especially lately. The internet often frames work in strange ways. Scale faster. Optimize harder. Move quicker. Crush the competition. Build a personal brand. Maximize output. Everything feels immediate. Everything feels urgent. And yet the older I get, the more suspicious I become of permanent urgency as a way of living. Farming feels different. A farmer still works hard. Very hard. But the rhythm feels fundamentally different from modern hustle culture. There are seasons. There are long stretches where nothing appears to be happening on the surface. There are maintenance days. Repair days. Observation days. Waiting days. And importantly, farming seems to respect reality. You cannot s...