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What I Learned from Buying New Jeans

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  What I Learned from Buying New Jeans I needed a new pair of jeans recently. Nothing dramatic — just the usual slow realization that the ones I’d been wearing had crossed that invisible line between “broken‑in” and “structurally defeated.” So I bought a pair. They fit great for about three days. Then came the droop. Normally I would’ve shrugged, tossed them in the rotation, and repeated the cycle the next time I needed a new pair. But this time I ended up talking it over with an AI. Not in a “help me find my identity” way — just in a “why do jeans do this?” way. A Decision on Autopilot And somehow that turned into a deep dive on denim construction, elastane fatigue, fiber recovery rates, and how stretch behaves over time. I learned more about jeans in ten minutes than I had in the last ten years. I also learned that the way I’d been choosing them — same size, same brand, same autopilot routine — wasn’t actually serving me anymore. The interesting part wasn’t the denim lesson. It w...

Signal and Noise

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  Signal and Noise I’ve noticed something about myself lately. Certain kinds of news still trigger me. Not in a dramatic way — more like a subtle tightening, a little static in the system. A headline, a chart, a quote, and suddenly my mind is off to the races. And then I sleep. And I wake up feeling better. It’s funny how often that’s the real reset. Not a technique. Not a framework. Just sleep. I’ve also noticed something else in this age of AI. When I look at the same news through an AI’s eyes, the whole thing feels different. Not calmer, exactly — just… cleaner. AI doesn’t get tangled in the narrative. It doesn’t pick a side. It doesn’t spiral. It just does what it does best: Pattern matching. Spotting anomalies. Separating  signal from noise  without getting emotionally welded to either one. And then — crucially — moving on. There’s something refreshing about that. Not the “AI is better” argument. Not the “AI is objective” fantasy. Just the simple reminder that it’s p...

The Attention Economy Doesn’t Work on Me Anymore

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  The Attention Economy Doesn’t Work on Me Anymore I’ve been paying attention to something subtle in my own behavior lately. It’s not a big revelation, and I’m not trying to make a cultural diagnosis. It’s just something I’ve noticed in myself as I move through the modern internet. The old attention economy — the one built on dangling headlines, open loops, and engineered urgency — doesn’t land anymore. Not on me. Not the way it used to. There was a time when a half‑finished headline would pull me in. A time when the ellipsis felt like an invitation. A time when the “you won’t believe…” framing actually worked. But somewhere along the way, the reflex died. Not dramatically. Not as an act of discipline. Just… quietly. I scroll past the unfinished sentences now. I see the hook, and nothing in me bites. It’s not resistance. It’s not judgment. It’s simply a lack of interest. I don’t feel FOMO. I don’t feel JOMO. I don’t feel anything at all. It’s like watching a machine run a pattern I...

The Age of Headlines That Don’t Finish Their Own Thoughts

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  The Age of Headlines That Don’t Finish Their Own Thoughts There’s a new genre of digital noise that has quietly taken over the modern newsfeed, and it’s not misinformation, outrage bait, or even the classic click‑optimized headline. It’s something stranger, lazier, and somehow more desperate. It’s the  headline that refuses to finish its sentence . You’ve seen them. You scroll, and suddenly you’re staring at something like: “Scientists warn the next five years could be the most…” Or: “Google’s CEO says the future of AI will make everyone…” And then nothing. The sentence just… gives up. It’s like the headline itself ran out of enthusiasm halfway through the thought. This isn’t journalism. It’s a slot machine with punctuation. The New Shape of Desperation The unfinished headline is the purest expression of an industry that has run out of levers to pull. It’s not even pretending to inform you anymore. It’s just trying to provoke a reflex — a tiny jolt of curiosity, a micro‑twit...

They’re Treating News Like a Ransom Note

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  They’re Treating News Like a Ransom Note I’ve been watching the "Discover" feed lately, and it’s reached a level of absurdity that is actually starting to feel like a comedy sketch. We’ve moved past clickbait. We are now in the era of the  Dangling Sentence . I’m scrolling through my phone and I see a headline: "Elon Musk: AI will mean everyone can have a penthouse if they..." and then it just stops. Total silence. Or,  "Tim Cook in memo to employees on his exit as Apple CEO: I have never been more..." They aren’t just burying the lead anymore; they’re burying the nouns. They’re treating news like a ransom note where you have to pay with your attention just to see the end of the sentence. The Itch I No Longer Feel There was a time—not that long ago—where that ellipsis would have worked on me. That’s the classic  FOMO  (Fear of Missing Out) trap. It’s a psychological "open loop." Your brain sees a gap in a story and it wants to bridge it. It’s a...

When Reading Finally Clicks

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  When Reading Finally Clicks For most of my life, silent reading has been work. Not the good kind of work — the kind that feels like pushing a wheel through sand. I could do it, sure, but it never felt natural. It never felt  easy . And for a long time, I assumed that was just the deal: some people read effortlessly, and some people grind through it. Lately, something shifted. I started pairing silent reading with text‑to‑speech — reading with my eyes while listening with my ears — and the whole experience unlocked. Not in a dramatic, life‑changing, “everyone should do this” way. Just in a quiet, almost funny way:  Oh. This is what reading feels like when my brain gets the channel it prefers. I’m not evangelizing. I’m not trying to convert anyone to immersive reading. I’m just noticing what happens when I read and listen at the same time: The cognitive load drops. The words land cleanly. The meaning sticks. The friction disappears. It’s easy. Effortless, even. And that e...

A Disastrous Retail Moment and What It Taught Me About Expectations

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  A Disastrous Retail Moment and What It Taught Me About Expectations I had a retail experience recently that was so bad it almost felt like performance art. I’m not naming the store because the store isn’t the point. What it  did  do was kick loose a line of thinking I’ve been circling for a while about expectations — specifically, the difference between the expectations I place on myself and the expectations I place on anyone or anything else. I’m not offering advice here. I’m not trying to teach a lesson. I’m just describing the thoughts that surfaced. High Standards for Myself, Low Expectations of Everything Else I’ve realized I hold myself to pretty high standards. Not perfection, but clarity, competence, follow‑through, and a certain baseline of professionalism. Those are things I can control. They’re internal. But when I extend those same standards outward — to businesses, services, institutions, or even individuals — I end up disappointed more often than not. Not ...