Posts

The Maybe Story, Part 2

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  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

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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

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  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...

What I’ve Learned from Gen Z

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  What I’ve Learned from Gen Z I’m not Gen Z. Not even close. But over the past few years, I’ve found myself quietly learning from them anyway. Not from TikTok dances or internet stereotypes or media narratives about “kids these days.” I mean from watching how many younger people approach work, life, identity, and time itself. It makes me curious. Some of it confuses me. Most of it I deeply respect. And some of it has caused me to rethink assumptions I carried around for decades without ever really examining them. I grew up closer to the old model. Work hard. Be reliable. Stay loyal. Push through exhaustion. Do what the boss says. Keep going. There was honor in that mindset. Still is, in many ways. The world does not function without disciplined people who show up consistently and do difficult things even when they don’t feel like it. But I also think many people from older generations quietly accepted things that were not always healthy or wise. A lot of people postponed their act...

You Can't Toggle Quality On and Off

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  You Can't Toggle Quality On and Off As I've been building things lately, I've thought about quality. About workmanshift. About craft. And so here are my random thoughts about quality... There are certain traits that don’t behave like features. You don’t toggle them. You don’t enable them for one situation and disable them for another. Quality is one of those traits. Loyalty is one of those traits. Respect is one of those traits. Love — in the broad, human sense — is definitely one of those traits. These aren’t context‑dependent behaviors. They’re not conditional. They’re not “if‑then” logic. They’re the underlying pattern of how something moves through the world. When they’re real, they show up everywhere. When they’re absent, you feel the absence everywhere. Humans don’t suddenly become low‑effort in one corner of their life and high‑effort in another. Systems don’t magically shift personality depending on the room they’re in. There might be different modes, different co...

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...