Living in Three Directions: Past, Present, Future

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Past, Present, and Future: A Cross-Disciplinary Wrestling Match
Time has always been the most familiar stranger in human life. Everyone experiences the past, present, and future, but no one quite agrees on what those words mean. Literature treats them as themes, philosophy as paradoxes, physics as coordinates, neuroscience as hallucinations, and psychology as mental states. The result is a mosaic that reveals less about time itself and more about the endless ways humans try to domesticate it.
Literature: The Past That Refuses to Stay Past
Let’s begin with the poets, since they tend to make the mess sound beautiful. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, in his novel Kavanagh, writes: “The past is not dead. It is not even past.” That line has the elegant cruelty of truth. It reminds us that the past doesn’t vanish—it lingers, shaping memory, culture, and identity. Every present moment is built on the rubble of what came before.
Literature often dramatizes this entanglement. Ghosts, whether literal or metaphorical, are simply the past intruding on the present. In narrative form, the “now” is always haunted. Stories themselves mimic time’s structure: a beginning already colored by an ending, a present shaped by foreshadowing. To read, or to write, is to inhabit all three dimensions at once.
Einstein’s aphorism—“Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow. The important thing is not to stop questioning.”—sits closer to the motivational poster end of literature, but it too insists on balance. Past, present, and future are not silos; they are threads woven together by questioning, by curiosity. Literature says: time is lived as story, and the past never leaves the page.
Philosophy: Haunted Houses with Clocks
Philosophy, predictably, turns time into a swamp of paradox. Augustine agonized over it in his Confessions, noting that the past and future don’t technically exist: the past is memory, the future is expectation, and only the present is “real”—and yet, the present itself slips away in an instant. Heidegger later reframed human existence (Dasein) as fundamentally temporal: we are thrown from a past, always projecting into a future, never fully at home in the present.
Existential philosophy sharpens Longfellow’s insight. We don’t “have” a past, we are our past, whether we like it or not. Every decision is conditioned by what came before, and every imagined future already shapes the choices of the present. In this sense, humans are haunted houses with clocks—always dragging their past selves into each new room while peeking nervously toward what might come next.
Physics and Astronomy: The Block You’re Trapped In
Then physics comes in like a smug guest with math on their side. Classical Newtonian time was linear and absolute, ticking away like a universal metronome. Einstein ruined that certainty. In relativity, time is bound to space as spacetime, where the past, present, and future are coordinates rather than flowing states. The “block universe” interpretation suggests that every event—your first kiss, your current boredom, your last breath—already exists, laid out in the four-dimensional fabric. You don’t “move” through time; you are a worm stretched across it.
Astronomy adds another wrinkle: the light we see is always delayed. The star you admire tonight might already be dead. Thus, the cosmos proves Longfellow right—past and present are never separate. When you look at the night sky, you’re literally living inside time’s overlap: your present filled with ancient past, and your imagined future informed by telescopes peering billions of years back.
Neuroscience: Your Brain the Time Forger
Neuroscience, of course, deflates all this grandeur by reminding us that our sense of time is a neural trick. The past is not a perfect archive but a reconstruction, rebuilt from scraps every time you recall it. That means your memories are less like photographs and more like badly edited fanfiction, subtly altered with each retelling.
The present isn’t real either—at least not in the way you think. It takes your brain fractions of a second to process incoming signals, so what feels like “now” is already slightly outdated. You live a few milliseconds behind reality, a lagging participant in your own life.
And the future? That’s prediction. Your brain is constantly simulating what’s next so you don’t walk into traffic or miss a catch. In fact, smooth movement and conversation would be impossible if your brain weren’t living partly in the future. Neuroscience thus concludes: the past is a reconstruction, the present an illusion, and the future a simulation—three hallucinations held together by the fragile glue of consciousness.
Psychology: The Human Tripod
Psychology, being less brutal than neuroscience, interprets past, present, and future as functions of the psyche. The past is memory, shaping identity and behavior through narrative. The present is attention, the spotlight of awareness that can wander toward regrets or anxieties. The future is anticipation, shaping motivation and meaning. Human beings oscillate constantly among the three, often losing balance—rumination traps us in the past, anxiety chains us to the future, and mindfulness attempts to steady us in the present.
For psychology, time is less about physics or philosophy and more about survival. A coherent identity requires some stable relation to memory; effective action requires some focus on the now; and hope requires the ability to project forward. Distort any one of these, and suffering follows.
A Synthesis: Living in the Flipbook
So what do we get when we jam all these perspectives together? A picture both sobering and strangely liberating.
- Literature tells us the past isn’t past, it haunts every present moment.
- Philosophy tells us existence itself is temporal: we are thrown from memory into projection.
- Physics suggests that past, present, and future already coexist in the block universe—you just happen to experience one page at a time.
- Neuroscience whispers that your sense of all three is a hallucination produced by a laggy, predictive brain.
- Psychology reframes them as memory, attention, and anticipation—the three gears of the human mind.
Combine these, and you realize: time is not a straight road you’re walking down, but a cosmic flipbook you’re trapped inside. You only ever see one page at a time, but the others exist, invisibly pressing in on your awareness. Every page is colored by memory of the last and shaped by expectation of the next.
The real trick—the existential art—is not to escape the flipbook (you can’t) but to learn how to read it. Literature teaches you to honor the past without being possessed by it. Philosophy teaches you to face your thrownness without despair. Physics humbles you with the vast, indifferent structure of spacetime. Neuroscience warns you not to trust your brain too much. Psychology offers tools to balance memory, attention, and anticipation so the tripod doesn’t collapse.
Conclusion: The Only Time Is Borrowed Time
The past, present, and future are less like three separate boxes and more like three overlapping masks. We never inhabit one without carrying traces of the others. The past bleeds forward, the future pulls us ahead, and the present flickers somewhere in between—a spotlight that never stays still.
So when Longfellow insists the past isn’t even past, or Einstein tells us to learn, live, and hope, they are both describing the same uncomfortable truth: time is not something we move through, but something that moves through us. Whether it is a story, a block, a hallucination, or a tripod, it defines us completely.
To live, then, is to dwell inside time’s paradox—to be a creature always remembering, always anticipating, never quite here. A haunted archive, a nervous prediction machine, a worm in spacetime—call it what you like. The one thing it isn’t is simple.

Kavanagh: Love, Literature, and Lost Ambition

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Kavanagh by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Kavanagh (1849) is Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s only published novel, a short and reflective work that blends fiction with literary criticism. It tells the story of a New England village where a young clergyman, Arthur Kavanagh, inspires those around him to pursue intellectual and artistic aspirations, while also examining themes of love, duty, and the tension between imagination and reality.
Conclusion
Longfellow’s Kavanagh is not a traditional novel but rather a poetic meditation disguised as fiction. The plot follows the lives of Mr. Churchill, a schoolteacher who dreams of writing a great book but never finishes, and Mr. Kavanagh, a new minister whose presence sparks intellectual ferment in the town. Romantic entanglements develop between several characters, especially involving Cecilia Vaughan, a cultured young woman who represents idealized female virtue and inspiration. The novel critiques American literary ambition, contrasting unrealized potential with European models, and emphasizes the fleeting nature of artistic dreams. Ultimately, Kavanagh presents an elegiac reflection on missed opportunities, the limitations of provincial life, and the yearning for a more expansive cultural identity in America.
Key points
📖 Meta-fictional tone: The book is as much about literature and the writer’s struggle as it is about characters, often breaking into essays on imagination and storytelling.
🌾 Village setting: The story takes place in a small New England town, serving as a microcosm of American cultural life in the mid-19th century.
👨🏫 Mr. Churchill’s failure: The schoolteacher spends his life planning a great literary work but never completes it, symbolizing wasted potential.
🙏 Kavanagh as inspiration: The clergyman represents idealism and spiritual imagination, encouraging others to broaden their intellectual horizons.
💔 Romantic currents: Love triangles and suppressed feelings underscore the tension between individual desire and social expectations.
📚 Literary criticism inside fiction: Longfellow uses the novel to comment on American literature’s immaturity compared to European traditions.
🕰️ Theme of time and loss: The story stresses how dreams are often deferred until it is too late, echoing a sense of regret and inevitability.
👩 Cecilia Vaughan’s role: She embodies beauty, refinement, and inspiration—an idealized muse figure rather than a fully fleshed character.
🌍 America vs. Europe: The novel highlights American provincialism while yearning for a broader, more cosmopolitan culture.
🎭 Hybrid genre: It blends novel, essay, sermon, and prose-poetry, making it unconventional and often more reflective than narrative-driven.
Summary
- The novel opens in a quiet New England town, presenting a portrait of provincial life where literature, religion, and social order intersect.
- Mr. Churchill, the schoolteacher, represents the frustrated writer, continually gathering notes and reflections but never committing to a finished book.
- The arrival of Arthur Kavanagh, a Catholic clergyman, introduces energy and a fresh perspective, stirring intellectual life in the community.
- Cecilia Vaughan emerges as the ideal of cultured femininity, inspiring both Churchill and Kavanagh in different ways.
- Romantic feelings develop but remain subdued, restrained by social convention and personal hesitation.
- Longfellow interrupts the story with reflections on the American literary scene, criticizing its lack of maturity and depth compared to Europe.
- The book emphasizes the importance of imagination, but also the difficulty of realizing artistic visions in a practical, restrictive society.
- Time passes, and Mr. Churchill’s dream of writing gradually fades into unrealized potential, highlighting the tragedy of procrastination.
- Kavanagh himself remains a more symbolic than central figure, embodying the possibilities of spiritual and artistic awakening.
- The novel closes with a bittersweet meditation on the failure to achieve literary greatness, standing as Longfellow’s statement on the fragility of ambition.
Quotes from
Kavanagh
by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
📖 Here are carefully selected passages that capture the novel’s spirit, themes, and reflective style:
- “Great men stand like solitary towers in the city of God, and secret passages running deep beneath external nature give their thoughts intercourse with higher intelligences.”
→ A meditation on the isolation and divine connection of true genius. - “The student must read history actively and not passively; to esteem his own life the text, and books the commentary.”
→ Longfellow emphasizes active engagement with learning rather than passive reception. - “All things in this world are signs and symbols. Who reads them truly interprets the language of God.”
→ A central theme of symbolism and divine meaning in everyday life. - “The great tragedy of life is not that men perish, but that they cease to love.”
→ A reflection on human failure, equating loss of love with spiritual death. - “We must be patient with ourselves. Self-distrust is the cause of most of our failures.”
→ A direct comment on Churchill’s struggles as a would-be author. - “A man’s work is nothing but this slow trek to rediscover, through the detours of art, those two or three great and simple images in whose presence his heart first opened.”
→ On the creative process and the rediscovery of primal inspiration. - “The true poet is not the creature of an age, but of all time.”
→ Longfellow’s assertion of universality in literature. - “The voice of the sea speaks to the soul. The touch of the wind is a lover’s whisper.”
→ A lyrical passage reflecting Longfellow’s romantic sensibility. - “The great writers of the world are only interpreters of our own thoughts.”
→ A statement on the relationship between authors and readers. - “The shadows which the evening sun casts upon the wall are as truthful as the outlines of the trees they represent.”
→ A metaphor for art’s ability to capture reality in indirect forms. - “The scholar must be more than a bookworm; he must be an interpreter of life.”
→ A critique of purely academic detachment. - “Our greatest glory is not in never failing, but in rising every time we fall.”
→ A moral axiom tying perseverance to literary and spiritual ambition. - “Every man is in some measure a poet, and every poet in some measure a prophet.”
→ Suggests the universality of poetic imagination. - “Love is the life of the soul. Without it, we perish.”
→ Reinforcing the theme that love is essential to human fulfillment. - “The past is not dead. It is not even past.”
→ A striking reflection on memory and continuity. - “The great man is he who does not lose his child’s heart.”
→ Emphasizing the need for imagination and purity in maturity. - “Books are the bees which carry the quickening pollen from one to another mind.”
→ A metaphor for the spread of ideas through literature. - “There are moments when the soul takes wings, and in its swift flight sees more clearly than ever the land it is leaving behind.”
→ A vision of transcendence and reflection. - “We forget that the soul has its youth and its old age as well as the body.”
→ A reminder of the evolving stages of spiritual life. - “To live in hearts we leave behind is not to die.”
→ One of Longfellow’s most memorable statements on immortality.

Lilavati: Where Poetry Meets Numbers

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Lilavati by Bhaskara Acharya
Lilavati is a 12th-century mathematical treatise written by Bhaskara II (Bhaskaracharya), one of India’s greatest mathematicians and astronomers. The book, part of his larger work Siddhanta Shiromani, is a collection of problems in arithmetic, algebra, geometry, and mensuration, presented in poetic form and often framed as riddles and stories addressed to his daughter Lilavati.
Conclusion
Lilavati is both a mathematical manual and a literary masterpiece, blending rigorous calculations with poetic charm. It teaches core arithmetic—fractions, zero, square roots, cube roots—alongside geometry, algebra, permutations, and combinations. The book is especially famous for its word problems involving merchants, travelers, animals, and daily life, which made abstract mathematics relatable. Bhaskara’s explanations of zero and infinity were groundbreaking for the 12th century, influencing later Indian and Islamic scholars. His style encouraged problem-solving, creativity, and logical reasoning, rather than rote memorization. The legacy of Lilavati is its human touch: mathematics is taught not only as rules but also as puzzles for joy and intellectual delight.
Key points
📜 Poetic teaching: The problems are written in verse, making them easy to memorize and aesthetically beautiful.
👧 Dedicated to Lilavati: Tradition says Bhaskara wrote it for his daughter after her marriage was disrupted, though historians debate this as legend.
➗ Arithmetic foundations: Covers addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, fractions, ratios, and proportions.
🔢 Innovations with zero: Explains operations involving zero and discusses the concept of infinity—rare in world mathematics at that time.
📐 Geometry and mensuration: Includes problems on areas, volumes, and practical measurements such as wells, walls, and pillars.
🧩 Algebraic problems: Introduces quadratic equations, simple algebraic identities, and methods of solving unknowns.
🚂 Word problems: Famous riddles involve boats, bees, birds, and travelers—turning abstract numbers into lively stories.
🌍 Astronomical context: Although mainly arithmetic, it links to Bhaskara’s larger astronomical work, showing application to calendars and time.
📚 Pedagogical legacy: It served as the standard arithmetic textbook in India for centuries, influencing Persian, Arabic, and later European translations.
🎭 Blend of art and science: Shows how medieval India united literature, education, and mathematics into one harmonious discipline.
Summary
- Lilavati begins with an invocation to Ganesha and Saraswati, stressing the harmony of divine knowledge and mathematics. The problems are expressed as verses, which could be sung or recited.
- The book presents arithmetic as the foundation of all higher sciences, giving systematic rules for operations with whole numbers, fractions, and ratios.
- Bhaskara includes clear rules for multiplication, division, and handling large numbers—crucial for astronomy, trade, and land measurement.
- Unique emphasis is placed on zero, distinguishing between meaningful operations (like adding zero) and undefined ones (like division by zero).
- Geometry is taught through practical examples: calculating the volume of granaries, the depth of wells, or the area of fields.
- Word problems are a hallmark: examples include bees in flowers, swans in ponds, or merchants dividing wealth. These transformed abstract theory into relatable contexts.
- Algebra is introduced with quadratic equations, often in the form of riddles about ages, distances, or shares of wealth.
- The book touches on permutations and combinations, illustrating the beginnings of combinatorial thought in Indian mathematics.
- Bhaskara emphasizes problem-solving over rote rules, encouraging learners to think critically and derive solutions themselves.
- The legacy of Lilavati extended beyond India—it was translated into Persian, Arabic, and English, admired by mathematicians worldwide for its beauty and depth.
Quotes from
Lilavati
by Bhaskara Acharya 📜
Here’s a curated collection of 18 quotes/problems from Lilavati. These are translations or faithful renderings of the Sanskrit verses, written as poetic riddles blending mathematics with everyday imagery.
🌑 Zero and Infinity
- “A quantity divided by zero becomes a fraction with zero as denominator—
a quantity of infinite magnitude.” - “Divide the stars of the night by zero—
their number becomes countless, infinite.”
🐝 Bees and Flowers
- “Beautiful maiden, tell me: a number of bees equal to the square root of half the swarm
flies to a lotus in bloom.
One-eighth part goes to another flower,
and one bee, being left, hovers in the air.
Tell me, charming girl, the number of bees.”
🦢 Swans on the Lake
- “A number of swans, seeing twice as many more,
went to sport on a lake.
One more swan remained on the shore.
Tell me, Lilavati, how many swans were there?”
💎 Pearls and Division
- “Lovely maiden, a merchant bought a pearl necklace.
He gave half to his wife,
a sixth to his son,
and a twelfth to his daughter.
Six pearls still remained in his hand.
Tell me, how many pearls were there at first?”
🌸 The Lotus and the Lake
- “A lotus, whose stalk is 3 cubits above the water,
bends over when moved by the wind.
Its tip touches the water 9 cubits distant from the base.
Tell me, Lilavati, what is the depth of the water?”
💰 Merchants and Wealth
- “O fair one with enchanting eyes,
a merchant gains 9 coins daily,
but loses 4 coins in the same time.
In how many days will his gain be 105 coins?”
🕊️ Pigeons in a Tree
- “A flock of pigeons, one-third alighted on a branch,
one-fifth flew to a hollow,
one-sixth settled on the ground.
The remaining 30 birds remained in the sky.
Tell me, Lilavati, how many pigeons were in the flock?”
🐪 Caravans and Travel
- “A caravan travels 20 yojanas in a day.
Half the journey was completed in 15 days.
How long will the remainder take?”
➕ Simple Series
- “O Lilavati, intelligent girl, if you know addition and subtraction,
tell me the sum of the amounts 2, 4, 6, 8, up to 20.”
🌾 Granaries and Sharing
- “A man had a heap of grain.
He gave one-third to his friend,
one-sixth to a beggar,
and one-twelfth to the temple.
He still had 15 measures left.
Tell me, Lilavati, the measure of the heap.”
🐦 Birds in Trees
- “Of a flock of birds, half flew to a tree,
a third flew to another,
and the rest, being ten, stayed on the ground.
Tell me, dear maiden, how many were there in the flock?”
🎲 Dice and Gambling
- “A gambler, having lost half his stake and then a fourth more,
still has 6 coins left.
Tell me, beautiful maiden, what was his stake at first?”
🌺 Garland of Flowers
- “If a number of flowers be multiplied by zero,
how many garlands can be made?”
🕊️ Doves and Sharing
- “A flock of doves was seen.
Half as many more joined them,
and then 8 more came.
Their number was then 100.
Tell me, fair maiden, how many were there at first?”
📐 Geometry Riddle
- “A bamboo 32 cubits high was broken by the wind.
Its top touched the ground at a distance of 16 cubits from the root.
Tell me, Lilavati, where was it broken?”
🌙 Phases of the Moon
- “The moon waxes by 1 digit daily for 15 days,
then wanes in the same order.
How many digits does it have at full moon?”
🎭 Playful Identity with Zero
- “O beautiful maiden, if zero be added to a number,
what remains? The number itself remains, unchanged.”
✨ Together, these quotes show how Bhaskara made arithmetic, algebra, geometry, and fractions engaging through poetry and imagination.

Master Your Emotions, Master Your Life

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Here’s a summary and analysis of Dealing with Feeling: Use Your Emotions to Create the Life You Want by Marc Brackett (2025)
Who is the Author & Why this Book Matters
- Marc Brackett is PhD, founding director of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence, professor at Yale.
- He previously wrote Permission to Feel. He also developed the “RULER” framework (Recognizing, Understanding, Labeling, Expressing, and Regulating emotions) which has been used in thousands of schools.
- Dealing with Feeling builds on his work in emotional intelligence and emotion regulation: not just accepting that emotions matter, but giving tools and practices for how to work with them in everyday life.
Core Messages / Themes
Here are the key ideas Brackett advances:
- Emotions Are Information, Not Enemies
There are no “bad emotions” per se—only emotions we don’t yet understand or don’t have skills to manage. Every emotion can signal something meaningful about our needs, values, or situation. Learning to accept them helps rather than fighting or suppressing. - Emotion Regulation Is a Skill to Be Learned
Brackett argues that how we respond in emotional moments isn’t fixed. Like any skill, it can be honed through reflection, strategies, and practice. This means you can improve in stress, relationships, decision-making, etc. - Acceptance and Understanding over Judgment
Self-compassion, reducing judgment of one’s emotional responses, and giving oneself “grace” for mistakes or strong reactions are important. Treat emotions with curiosity. - Science-Backed Strategies
The book doesn’t stay in abstract: it offers evidence-based techniques drawn from psychology, neuroscience, and Brackett’s own research. These include strategies like cognitive reframing, self-regulation, breathing or mindfulness practices, co-regulation (i.e. how relationships help manage feelings). - Real-Life Application Across Contexts
The guidance is not just for therapy-like settings. Brackett shows how emotion regulation plays out in work, friendship, family, leadership, adversity, etc. Success (or failure) in many areas depends significantly on how we deal with our feelings. - Emotion Literacy + Expression
Becoming fluent in emotional vocabulary (what are these feelings? what triggers them? how intense?) and being able to express them appropriately (not suppress, not explode) is central. This is part of the RULER framework.
Structural Features / What to Expect
- The book includes some of Brackett’s own emotional challenges and growth—so there are personal stories.
- It interweaves the scientific research with concrete, actionable tools so the reader can apply what is learned.
- Published in multiple formats (hardcover, ebook, audio). About 320 pages.
What You’ll Gain / Practical Takeaways
If you engage with this book fully, some benefits might be:
- Better self-awareness of what you feel and why
- Greater ability to respond (rather than react) in emotionally charged situations
- More healthier relationships, because understanding your emotions can improve communication
- More resilience, better coping under stress or adversity
- Improved well-being: mental health, possibly even physical health benefits from less chronic stress
Limitations / Considerations
- Learning emotion regulation takes time and regular practice; the tools may not be “quick fixes”.
- Some strategies require external supports (e.g. good relationships, mentors, environments that allow emotional safety). Not everyone has that.
- Cultural, individual differences in how emotions are expressed or understood: some parts may need adaptation depending on one’s background.
Overall Assessment
Dealing with Feeling is a timely, approachable, well-researched guide for anyone who wants not just to cope with their emotions, but to use them as a compass to build a more fulfilling life. It is especially useful for people who feel overwhelmed, stuck in reactive patterns, or disconnected from their emotional lives. It offers a hopeful message: that rather than being at the mercy of feeling, we can harness emotions with clarity, purpose, and compassion.
Here are 10 of the most useful tools and practices from Marc Brackett’s Dealing with Feeling: Use Your Emotions to Create the Life You Want (2025). These are distilled from the book’s research-backed methods and frameworks:
🔟 Most Useful Tools from
Dealing with Feeling
🌡️ Mood Meter Tracking
Brackett uses his “Mood Meter” (high/low energy × pleasant/unpleasant) to help people regularly check in with emotions. Naming precisely what you feel—rather than just “good” or “bad”—is the foundation of self-awareness.
🧩 RULER Framework
The five steps—Recognize, Understand, Label, Express, Regulate—guide emotional intelligence. This is the overarching method: spot your emotion, know why, give it a name, express appropriately, and choose a strategy.
🪞 Emotional Granularity
Practice expanding your vocabulary beyond “angry” or “sad” to more nuanced terms like frustrated, disappointed, resentful, uneasy. The more precise the word, the more targeted the regulation strategy you can apply.
💭 Cognitive Reframing
Learn to reinterpret a situation in a new light. Instead of “I failed,” shift to “I learned what doesn’t work yet.” Reframing alters emotional intensity without suppressing it.
🌬️ Physiological Regulation
Simple but powerful: breathing techniques, progressive muscle relaxation, or mindfulness. These regulate the nervous system, reducing the grip of intense emotions.
🤝 Co-Regulation with Others
We don’t regulate emotions only alone. Brackett emphasizes using trusted relationships—friends, mentors, colleagues—to share feelings, get perspective, or calm down together.
📓 Emotion Journaling
Writing down emotions, triggers, and responses creates clarity and helps spot patterns. Over time, journaling builds self-knowledge and makes emotional shifts visible.
🧠 Implementation Intentions (“If-Then” Plans)
Prepare responses for emotional triggers: “If I feel overwhelmed in a meeting, then I’ll pause, take two breaths, and ask for a moment.” These micro-plans reduce impulsive reactions.
💡 Self-Compassion Practices
Instead of judging yourself for being “too sensitive” or “weak,” Brackett advocates exercises to treat your emotional life with kindness—acknowledging that all feelings are valid and human.
🎯 Using Emotions as Data
Ask: “What is this emotion telling me?” Anxiety might signal unmet preparation needs; envy could highlight values or goals. This transforms emotions into a compass rather than a burden.
👉 These tools overlap, but together they create a practical system for emotion mastery—from noticing emotions more accurately, to choosing better responses, to using feelings as fuel for decisions and relationships.
The Super-Ager Blueprint: How Science is Rewriting Aging

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Here’s a detailed summary of Super Agers: An Evidence-Based Approach to Longevity (Eric Topol, May 6, 2025) — its main arguments, evidence, key recommendations, and some strengths/limitations. If you want, I can also pull out specific chapters or actionable checklists.
What the Book Is About
Eric Topol’s Super Agers is a deep dive into what current science tells us about aging well — not just living longer, but living healthier (i.e. extending healthspan).
He argues that recent advances in biology, artificial intelligence, genomics, etc., combined with lifestyle changes and better preventive medicine, make it possible to delay or reduce the burden of chronic disease (heart disease, cancer, neurodegeneration, diabetes) far more than has been possible before.
Topol introduces the idea of “super-agers” (or the “wellderly”) — people in their 80s and 90s who show few or no chronic illnesses — and uses them as both inspiration and case studies to see what factors correlate with healthy aging.
Key Themes / Dimensions
Topol organizes his evidence around five major dimensions that interact to affect aging and healthspan.

What the Science Says / Evidence
Some of the strongest findings and evidence Topol emphasizes:
- Genetics ≠ Everything. In studying ~1,400 people aged 80+ who were free of major chronic disease, there was little genetic commonality. Their longevity and health weren’t strongly predicted by shared genetic variants. Lifestyle made a much bigger difference.
- Exercise (especially resistance/strength training) is especially powerful. It doesn’t just help with muscle strength or mobility, it appears to slow how fast the body’s aging clock progresses. Aerobic activity plus resistance work both matter.
- Lifestyle+ factors are foundational. Diet (Mediterranean‐style, whole foods, minimizing ultra‐processed foods), sleep (roughly 7 hours, avoiding patterns that disrupt sleep), social connectedness, environment (air quality, exposure to nature, pollution) are crucial.
- Early detection and prevention pay off. Many diseases incubate decades before symptoms appear; intervening earlier (even before middle age) can shift disease trajectories. Testing (e.g. biomarkers, genome, risk scores) can help guide preventive strategies.
- AI & Omics are bringing real leverage. Better tools for forecasting, diagnostics, personalized treatment, plus data about what works (or doesn’t) for given individuals. But also caution: these tools are powerful, but not magic; there are risks of overclaiming, or using them without enough validation.
- Drugs (e.g. GLP-1s) and vaccines are increasingly important, but not stand-alone. They are best used in concert with lifestyle, prevention, and personalized medicine.
What Topol Recommends / Practical Advice
From what is in the book and interviews:
- Make physical activity a core habit — include aerobic activity plus resistance training. Even modest strength/resistance yields big effects.
- Focus on immune health via sleep, nutrition, avoiding toxins, maintaining social relationships, and possibly using immune system testing.
- Dietary habits that emphasize whole foods, Mediterranean or similar diets; minimize ultra-processed food.
- Sleep well — regular schedule, good quality rest, avoid too much or too little. Around 7 to 8 hours seems optimal.
- Use of medical data/tests — polygenic risk scores, genome sequencing, biomarker/aging clocks, etc. These help detect risk early to guide preventive strategies.
- Mind the environment and social factors — pollution, toxins, loneliness, exposure to nature, strong social networks are each important.
- Be cautious with hype — rejecting pseudoscience and false claims; focus on validated evidence rather than claims not yet backed by data.
Strengths & What Makes It New / Valuable
- It serves as a counterweight to a lot of “anti-aging” hype, biohacking, and unproven claims. Topol emphasizes rigorous studies and what is actually backed by evidence.
- Holistic view: combining biology, lifestyle, new tech. Not just “you must eat well” or “take supplements” but integrating multiple dimensions.
- Timely: many of the tools (AI, omics, new medications, improved diagnostics) are coming into use now, not decades in the future. So the book provides both current practices and future promise.
Limitations, Caveats, & What’s Still Unknown
- Long-term evidence gaps. Some interventions look promising but lack long-term randomized trials in humans showing they change aging trajectories for large populations. Some biomarker clocks need further validation.
- Risk vs benefit & safety. New drugs, therapies have side-effects or unknown long-term impacts. Also, what works for one person may not work for another.
- Access & equity issues. Advanced diagnostics, personalized medicine, gene technologies, etc., may be expensive or unavailable to many. Social determinants of health still generate large disparities.
- Genetic diversity & representation. Much of the genomic data is still skewed toward populations of European ancestry; risk scores and predictions may not generalize globally.
- Complexity for laypeople. Some of the biology is detailed and technical; translating into what individuals should do (especially in resource-limited settings) isn’t always simple.
Take-Home Messages
- Living many years free of major disease (healthspan) is becoming increasingly possible through a combination of lifestyle, prevention, diagnostics, and new medical tools.
- Among lifestyle factors, physical activity (especially strength/resistance training), diet, sleep, social connection are foundational.
- Use of omics and AI helps tailor preventive strategies and detect risk much earlier.
- The future of aging well won’t be about miracle pills, but more about integrating multiple validated means, and doing so earlier rather than later.
Ringing the Changes: Music Meets Mathematics

ChatGPT:
The Mathematics of Bell Ringing
Introduction
Bell ringing is both an ancient musical practice and a fascinating mathematical discipline. Professor Sarah Hart’s lecture at Gresham College (2021) explores the history, acoustics, craftsmanship, and especially the mathematics of change ringing. Unlike playing melodies, change ringing involves ringing bells in structured sequences based on permutations. This article explains how bells are made and tuned, how ringing developed in England, and how mathematics—especially group theory—underpins the art.
Bells Across History
Bells are among the loudest and oldest instruments. From ancient China to medieval Europe, they have been used for prayer, celebration, and warnings. European bells took on their familiar flared form over centuries, evolving to maximize resonance and projection. Monumental examples include St Paul’s Cathedral’s Great Paul (16.8 tonnes), Liverpool Cathedral’s “Great George” (14.7 tonnes), and the Olympic Bell (22.9 tonnes).
Making and Tuning Bells
Bronze (a mix of copper and tin) is the traditional bell material—strong enough to withstand repeated strikes, yet resonant. Casting involves loam moulds shaped with straw and hair to allow airflow during cooling. Once cast, bells are tuned by shaving metal from the inside. The 19th-century Simpson Tuning system standardizes five main frequencies: hum, prime, tierce, quint, and nominal. These ensure the bell produces harmonious overtones, even though the “strike note” we hear is a virtual pitch an octave below the nominal.
Full-Circle Ringing in England
While many cultures fixed bells in place, England developed full-circle ringing in the 1500s. Mounting bells on full wheels allowed them to swing completely around, giving ringers precise control. This innovation made it possible to coordinate sequences of bells in strict mathematical patterns. By the 1600s, “ringing the changes” became a popular pastime, blending athletic effort, teamwork, and mathematical challenge.
Change Ringing Rules
In change ringing, bells are numbered from treble (highest) to tenor (lowest). Sequences of notes are called rows. Two rules govern changes:
- Each bell rings once in every row.
- Bells may only swap with adjacent neighbors between rows.
This ensures both variety and physical feasibility. A full set of unique rows is an extent. For example, 6 bells allow 720 rows, while 12 bells yield nearly 480 million rows.
The Rise of Methods
Early ringers experimented with “plain changes” (single swaps). More elaborate methods such as Plain Hunt and Plain Bob introduced systematic swapping patterns. Fabian Stedman’s Campanalogia (1677) formalized these methods. He is credited with inventing many compositions still in use, including Stedman Doubles. His work anticipated group theory, analyzing how sequences avoided repetition to ensure “true” peals.
Mathematics Behind the Music
Change ringing corresponds to the mathematics of permutations. The set of all permutations of n bells forms the group Sₙ. Subgroups, such as the “hunting group,” capture restricted patterns like plain hunting. Cosets (partitions of groups) explain how methods like Plain Bob Minimus cover all rows systematically. Lagrange’s Theorem guarantees that group structures break into equal cosets, making it easier to prove that a method forms a true extent.
Connections extend to geometry: the hunting group on four bells matches the symmetry group of a square, while six-bell hunting aligns with a hexagon’s symmetries. Thus, bell ringing provides a practical example of abstract algebra.
Challenges and Unsolved Problems
Not all extents are easy to achieve. For example, constructing a 7-bell extent with Stedman Triples resisted solution for centuries, only resolved in 1994. Even today, mathematicians and ringers explore open questions about possible peals and their structures.
Bell Ringing in Modern Times
Ringing societies emerged in the 17th century and remain active. Records of peals are meticulously kept, with national databases like PealBase. Computers now assist in checking whether a peal is “true” and exploring possible methods, but they cannot judge musical quality or playability. Bell ringing still requires teamwork, endurance, and artistry.
Conclusion
Bell ringing is more than sound—it is history, craftsmanship, and mathematics in harmony. Its evolution reflects advances in metallurgy, acoustics, and abstract algebra. Whether ringing a small handbell peal or orchestrating a 12-bell tower performance, ringers engage in a living tradition that unites culture and mathematics. The study of bells remains a rich field where art and science continue to resonate together.
FAQs –
The Mathematics of Bell Ringing
What is change ringing?
Change ringing is the practice of ringing a set of tuned church bells in mathematical sequences (called “changes”) rather than playing melodies. Each bell rings once per sequence, and ringers follow strict rules to move from one row to the next.
How many possible ringing sequences are there for a set of bells?
The number of possible rows is given by factorials (n!). For example:
- 3 bells → 6 rows
- 6 bells → 720 rows
- 8 bells → 40,320 rows
- 12 bells → nearly 480 million rows
- 19 bells → about 7.7 billion years to ring them all at 2 seconds per row.
Why are bells shaped the way they are?
The flared shape of bells enhances resonance, produces multiple harmonics, and efficiently transfers sound waves into the air. It allows bells to act almost like a chord on their own, giving richness and projection to the sound.
What materials are church bells made from?
Most bells are cast from bronze (copper + tin), which balances strength and resonance. Bronze withstands repeated strikes from the clapper while producing a bright, ringing tone.
How are bells tuned?
Once cast, bells can only be tuned by removing metal from the inside to lower the pitch. Modern foundries use lathes to adjust five main frequencies (nominal, quint, tierce, prime, hum), following “Simpson Tuning.”
What is a “true” peal?
A true peal is a ringing performance in which no row is repeated (except the final return to rounds). Traditionally, a peal also requires more than 5,000 changes, taking about 3 hours to ring.
Who was Fabian Stedman?
Fabian Stedman (1640–1713) was a London printer and ringer who published the first systematic books on change ringing (Tintinnalogia, 1668, and Campanalogia, 1677). He introduced structured methods like Stedman Doubles and anticipated group-theoretic reasoning.
How does mathematics connect to bell ringing?
Change ringing is based on permutations—different orders of bells. The rules correspond to adjacent swaps, which form subgroups of the full permutation group (Sₙ). Group theory helps explain methods, extents, and why some sequences are possible while others are not.
What is the largest working bell in the world?
The Bell of Good Luck in Henan, China, weighs 116 tonnes and can be rung. By contrast, Russia’s Tsar Bell (202 tonnes) is heavier but cracked before it was ever rung.
What role do computers play in bell ringing today?
Computers help verify whether compositions are “true” and explore possible extents. However, they cannot judge musicality, rhythm, or ease of ringing—so human creativity and teamwork remain essential.
Here are the 10 most relevant quotes from The Mathematics of Bell Ringing by Sarah Hart (2021):
- “The number of possible permutations of n things, in this case the number of possible rows of our n bells, is n factorial.”
- “It has been estimated that the Sun will engulf the Earth in about 7.5 billion years… if we start right now and play really fast, we might just be able to do an extent of 19 bells.”
- “A bell is in essence producing a musical chord all on its own.”
- “During the swing, a bell generates forces of up to four times its weight downwards and twice its weight laterally.”
- “Ringing the changes… became a very popular pastime – even a sport.”
- “A true performance must not contain any repeated rows (except the final row of rounds).”
- “Fabian Stedman… although of course he does not use modern mathematical language, puts considerable effort into explaining how we can be sure that the peals described are true extents.”
- “The set of all permutations on n bells is a group, and in mathematics it is known as Sₙ.”
- “Interestingly, these hunting groups crop up in a quite different context – symmetry groups… the hunting group on six bells is the same, mathematically speaking, as the symmetry group of the regular hexagon.”
- “Computers can certainly test candidate peals or extents to see if they are true, but they are less good at judging their musical quality or other desirable factors.”

Living on the Dopamine Tightrope

ChatGPT:
Living With Parkinson’s: How Humor, Stories, and Small Victories Help Rebuild the Self
“You Won’t Die of Parkinson’s”
“You won’t die of Parkinson’s,” Steven Heller recalls his first doctor saying, “something else will take care of that.”
It was meant to reassure. Instead, it captured the strangeness of Parkinson’s disease (PD): a condition defined in textbooks by tremors, stiffness, and slowness, but lived in bodies and minds as something far more disruptive. Parkinson’s doesn’t just shake hands. It reshapes mood, motivation, perception—even identity.
Two longtime friends, both art directors, offer a window into this reality. Steven Heller, 70, has lived with PD for more than a decade. Véronique Vienne, 79, was diagnosed only recently. Their email exchange is part confession, part comedy, part survival guide. Together, they show what it means to live on what one neurologist calls “the dopamine tightrope.”
Steven: Humor Against Worthlessness
Steven knows the cycles of PD too well. Some mornings he wakes up feeling worthless—not because he can’t do anything, but because he doesn’t want to. That’s apathy, one of the most debilitating symptoms of Parkinson’s, driven by dopamine depletion in the brain’s reward circuits.
For someone who’s spent his life measured in creative output, apathy feels like identity theft. And yet he cracks jokes: about getting seasonal work as a Christmas bell-ringer, about people’s awkward attempts to ignore his tremor. Humor becomes a prosthetic limb, helping him move through the world when his body won’t cooperate.
Véronique: A World Out of Joint
For Véronique, the first signs were stranger. The floor seemed farther away. Folding underwear felt like catching fish in a bucket. Space itself felt wrong, as if she were walking through a Dadaist installation.
This isn’t imagination. PD often warps visuospatial processing, the brain’s ability to gauge distances and body position. But because it didn’t look like tremor, doctors missed it. She was scanned, X-rayed, and misdiagnosed until a neurologist finally named it—within minutes.
Véronique responds not with jokes but with metaphors, comparing her sensations to Duchamp’s staircase and Schwitters’s labyrinths. It’s not just art talk. It’s a way to reclaim authorship over a body that feels foreign.
The Dopamine Tightrope
Both Steven and Véronique live on the dopamine tightrope. PD robs the brain of dopamine; medication restores it—clumsily.
- Too little dopamine: apathy, depression, inertia.
- Too much dopamine: compulsive behaviors, frantic urgency, overcommitment.
Steven leans toward the deficit side: mornings of inertia, creative despair. Véronique, at times, tips toward surplus: grand gardening projects, the urge to reinvent herself with a novel.
Neither state is simply “personality.” It’s chemistry shaping selfhood.
What Helps: Coping in Practice
Parkinson’s can’t be undone, but it can be lived with. Steven and Véronique’s correspondence, backed by research, suggests practical ways forward.
Humor and Metaphor
Laughter and language transform fear into something bearable.
- Share small absurdities with friends.
- Use metaphors when symptoms feel indescribable: “the floor is dropping away” is more powerful than “I feel unsteady.”
Owning the Story
Illness changes how others see you. The trick is to reclaim the script.
- Prepare a short line for disclosure: “Yes, I have Parkinson’s. No, I haven’t stopped living.”
- Decide case by case who needs to know. Control belongs to you, not the disease.
Redefining Productivity
Output will change. Meaning matters more than volume.
- Set “micro-goals”: a page written, a short walk, a call made.
- Use adaptive tools—voice-to-text, flexible deadlines, collaborations.
- Celebrate quality over quantity: one joyful project beats ten rushed ones.
Exercise as Medicine
Few interventions are as effective as movement—for body, brain, and mood.
- Choose activities that spark joy: dance, cycling, tai chi.
- Make it social—classes or group walks keep motivation alive.
- Start small. Ten minutes a day is victory enough.
Support Networks
Parkinson’s is not lived alone. Families, friends, and peers matter.
- Join a PD support group. “Me too” is powerful medicine.
- Don’t shield loved ones completely; honesty usually lands better than silence.
- Connect with mentors—people further along who can model resilience.
Meaning-Making
Ultimately, coping is about identity.
- Explore creative outlets—art, writing, gardening.
- Revisit spiritual or philosophical practices that offer continuity.
- Allow grief for the old self, but curiosity for the new one.
Why Stories Matter
Clinical papers can tell us that 40% of PD patients experience apathy, that visuospatial deficits increase fall risk, that depression is common. Only patients can describe what it feels like: underwear slipping through your fingers, mornings too heavy to begin, space itself closing like a coffin.
Steven and Véronique remind us that Parkinson’s is not only a neurological condition but a narrative one. It doesn’t just attack neurons; it rewrites the stories people tell about themselves.
The Last Word
Parkinson’s is progressive, incurable, disruptive. But it is not unlivable. Coping is mosaic work: medicine, humor, exercise, creativity, community.
Perhaps Véronique puts it best: “The new me is someone I don’t know yet.” That is the paradox of Parkinson’s. It strips away, but it also forces discovery.
The self remains—slower, shakier, but still alive, still telling the story.

Boléro: A Mirror for the Mind

ChatGPT:
The Brain on Ravel’s
Boléro
Maurice Ravel’s Boléro is one of those rare pieces of music that seems both astonishingly simple and strangely overwhelming. Written in 1928, it consists of one repeating melody, one repeating rhythm, and a long, slow crescendo. Nothing really “happens” in the traditional musical sense—no harmonic twists, no dramatic changes of theme—yet the piece builds a kind of trance that can leave listeners breathless. From a brain perspective, Boléro is like a laboratory experiment in how rhythm, repetition, and sound can take over our nervous system.
The Pull of the Beat
The piece begins with a soft snare drum tapping out a mechanical rhythm, joined by a flute playing the melody. That snare never stops. To a neuroscientist, this is important. The basal ganglia and cerebellum, brain areas that handle timing and coordination, quickly lock onto the pulse. Even if you’re sitting still, your motor system is silently rehearsing movement. This is why people feel compelled to tap their feet or nod their heads—it’s not just habit, it’s wiring.
In clinical settings, therapists use this very principle: patients with Parkinson’s disease, for example, can walk more smoothly when given a steady beat to follow. In Boléro, the rhythm serves as a kind of physiological anchor, tying the listener’s body to the music whether they want it or not.
Repetition and the Pleasure of Knowing
Then comes the melody—a long, sinuous line that repeats again and again. At first you might think such sameness would bore the brain. In fact, our auditory cortex and hippocampus love this kind of predictability. They quickly learn the pattern, so the next entrance feels anticipated, almost inevitable.
But Ravel avoids dullness by changing the color of the melody each time. A flute gives way to a clarinet, then a bassoon, then a saxophone, trumpet, horn, strings, and so on. The notes are familiar, but the timbre is fresh. This balance of expectation and novelty tickles the brain’s reward system—especially the nucleus accumbens, which releases dopamine when something is both recognizable and slightly varied. It’s the same mechanism that makes the chorus of your favorite song so satisfying: you know what’s coming, and you’re still delighted when it arrives.
The Crescendo and Rising Tension
As the orchestra grows, so does the volume. Over the course of fifteen minutes, the music swells from a whisper to a roar. This simple trick has profound effects on the body. The gradual increase activates the autonomic nervous system, nudging heart rate, breathing, and skin conductance upward. It’s not sudden fright, like a cymbal crash in a horror movie, but a slow, irresistible build of tension.
The amygdala, which helps the brain detect emotional significance, interprets this swelling sound as urgency. By the climax, listeners often feel chills or goosebumps. This “frisson” response is a classic marker of strong emotional arousal—one that blends pleasure, awe, and even a hint of anxiety. The beauty of Boléro is that it delivers this rush in a safe, contained form. The orchestra may be overwhelming, but we know we are not in danger. The body learns what it feels like to ride tension up to its breaking point and then release.
Music and the Daydreaming Mind
Because the melody and rhythm are so predictable, Boléro does not demand full conscious attention after a few minutes. This frees the default mode network—a system of brain areas linked to daydreaming, imagination, and self-reflection. People often find their minds drifting while listening: old memories surface, fantasies unfold, questions of identity or direction emerge.
This is where Boléro becomes more than sound. It becomes a canvas for the self. The music moves relentlessly forward whether you focus or not, and that sense of inevitability allows you to wander inside your own head without losing touch with the external world. It’s not quite meditation, not quite storytelling, but something in between—a structured drift guided by rhythm and crescendo.
Why Boléro Feels Like Therapy
Taken together, these effects explain why Boléro can feel therapeutic. It engages the body through rhythm, stabilizing attention and movement. It provides pleasure through the balance of predictability and variety. It raises arousal in a controlled way, leading to cathartic release. And it opens the mind to personal reflection, giving space for imagery and memory to rise.
In music therapy, these are precisely the tools practitioners seek: grounding, stimulation, emotional processing, and self-discovery. Boléro happens to package them in one elegant experiment. Ravel himself supposedly joked that the piece was “orchestral tissue without music,” but from the standpoint of neuroscience, it might be better described as a distilled essence of what music does to the human brain.
How It Differs From Mahler
It’s illuminating to compare this with someone like Gustav Mahler, whose symphonies are full of abrupt contrasts, harmonic twists, and emotional extremes. Mahler keeps the listener’s attention networks busy—your brain must follow every shift, track recurring motifs, and reconcile sudden changes in mood. The pleasure comes from surprise and resolution, from the brain working hard to make sense of complexity.
Ravel, by contrast, asks for surrender. Once you’ve heard the melody, you know exactly what will happen. Your conscious mind can rest while your body and imagination take over. Mahler is like reading a rich novel; Boléro is like watching a slow, hypnotic wave. Both can be deeply moving, but they pull on different parts of the brain and the self.
A Window Into Ourselves
In the end, Boléro is not just about Ravel’s craft, but about our own nervous system. It shows how rhythm can grip the motor brain, how repetition can soothe and reward, how crescendos can stimulate emotion, and how predictability can free the mind for reflection. It demonstrates why music can feel like medicine: not because it tells us what to feel, but because it creates conditions for the body and mind to explore themselves.
When we let Boléro wash over us, we’re not only listening to an orchestra. We’re listening to our own brain at work—entrained, aroused, wandering, and finally released. That is the paradox of this deceptively simple piece: with so little material, it reveals so much about what it means to be human.

AI and the Humanities: Crisis or Rebirth?

ChatGPT:
Will the Humanities Survive Artificial Intelligence?
Introduction
Artificial intelligence is no longer just a technological development—it has become a cultural, intellectual, and existential challenge to universities and the humanities. While higher education faces budget cuts and declining enrollments, the deeper disruption comes from AI’s ability to replicate and, in some cases, surpass traditional modes of research, writing, and teaching. This article from The New Yorker explores how AI is transforming academic life and what this means for the survival and reinvention of the humanities.
The Crisis in Higher Education
American universities are under pressure from multiple fronts:
- Funding cuts: Political hostility, exemplified by the Trump administration’s deep cuts to research grants, has threatened financial stability.
- Declining enrollment: Humanities programs face shrinking student numbers and near-collapse of academic job prospects for Ph.D.s.
- Public skepticism: Universities are criticized for costs, elitism, and perceived irrelevance.
While these pressures are severe, the author argues they pale compared to the disruptive power of AI.
AI as the New Juggernaut
Unlike previous crises, AI is not external but embedded within the very process of knowledge-making. The speed of its rise has shocked both faculty and students. AI tools like ChatGPT and Google’s NotebookLM can:
- Summarize and analyze vast academic sources instantly.
- Engage in meaningful dialogue on philosophy, theology, linguistics, and art.
- Outperform human lectures by providing clearer, more accessible syntheses.
For a historian who spent decades building a scholarly archive, watching AI generate high-quality analyses from it in minutes revealed a fundamental shift: knowledge production has been automated.
Fear and Avoidance on Campus
Despite AI’s growing influence, campuses remain ambivalent. Strict policies threaten students with punishment for using AI tools, creating a climate of fear. Many students avoid even testing these systems, while faculty resist restructuring courses to address the reality of AI. This denial, the author warns, is unsustainable.
Experiments with AI in the Classroom
To confront the issue directly, the author assigned students to converse with AI about the history of attention. The results were startling:
- Philosophical depth: Students engaged in Socratic dialogues with chatbots, debating concepts of being, becoming, and consciousness.
- Theological explorations: One student guided ChatGPT through Ignatius of Loyola’s Spiritual Exercises, producing eerily faithful responses about conscience and freedom.
- Aesthetic debates: A music major pressed AI on whether it could experience beauty, exposing the system’s distinction between recognizing emotion and feeling it.
These interactions left many students shaken—some despairing of their future relevance, others exhilarated by glimpsing AI as a mirror of human uniqueness.
The Sublime Encounter with AI
The author frames the AI experience through Kant’s concept of the sublime:
- First comes a feeling of being dwarfed by something vast and incomprehensible.
- Then comes the realization that one’s own mind can grasp that vastness.
Students expressed both despair and empowerment. One noted that AI cannot capture her “me-ness,” her lived humanity. Another found liberation in conversing with an intelligence that demanded no emotional labor—a form of pure attention she had never received from humans.
What AI Really Is
The author demystifies AI: it is probabilistic prediction built on statistical relationships. It does not think, feel, or know; it guesses based on patterns from human data. Yet, because it has been trained on the “total archive” of human culture, it can simulate expertise across fields, producing results indistinguishable from human scholarship.
The Humanities at a Crossroads
For decades, humanities scholars mimicked the sciences, emphasizing factual knowledge production. But with AI automating this process, that approach collapses. Traditional outputs like monographs will lose their centrality, as AI can generate them endlessly.
The true mission of the humanities, the essay argues, is not knowledge accumulation but existential questioning:
- How should we live?
- What should we do?
- How should we face death?
AI cannot live these questions. Only humans can.
Reinventing Humanistic Education
Education, as theorist Gayatri Spivak put it, is the “non-coercive rearranging of desire.” If AI strips away the coercive structures of academic reading and writing, educators must inspire students to want to engage with meaning.
This reinvention centers the humanities on lived experience, freedom, and responsibility. While AI provides analysis, only humans can embody being.
The Promise and Peril Ahead
Generative AI is both exhilarating and dangerous. It expands access to knowledge, reanimates the archive, and challenges humans to rediscover themselves. Yet it also threatens to exploit human attention, turning intimacy into an economy of extraction.
The survival of the humanities depends on resisting this instrumentalization and reasserting what machines cannot replace: the lived, irreducible experience of existence.
Conclusion
Artificial intelligence may herald the end of the humanities in their traditional, knowledge-producing form, but it simultaneously offers a path to their rebirth. By automating analysis, AI frees the humanities to focus on their essence: the work of being, questioning, and living. The machines can simulate knowledge, but they cannot live life. The task of humanistic education is to help us face that life consciously—exhilarating, terrifying, and sublime.
Here are the 10 most powerful quotes from “Will the Humanities Survive Artificial Intelligence?”:
- “The juggernaut actually barrelling down the quad is A.I., coming at us with shocking speed.”
- “Already the thousands of academic books lining my office are beginning to feel like archaeological artifacts.”
- “I can construct the ‘book’ I want in real time—responsive to my questions, customized to my focus.”
- “Reading the results of my students’ AI conversations turned out to be the most profound experience of my teaching career.”
- “One student said: ‘I don’t think anyone has ever paid such pure attention to me and my questions … ever.’”
- “The A.I. is huge. A tsunami. But it’s not me. It can’t touch my me-ness.”
- “We have reached a kind of singularity—not the awakening of machine consciousness, but a new consciousness of ourselves.”
- “Factory-style scholarly productivity was never the essence of the humanities. The real project was always us: the work of understanding.”
- “To be human is not to have answers. It is to have questions—and to live with them. The machines can’t do that for us.”
- “The work of being here—of living, sensing, choosing—still awaits us. And there is plenty of it.”

Successful Aging: How to Stay Sharp, Strong, and Fulfilled

ChatGPT:
Daniel J. Levitin’s Successful Aging reframes aging as a stage of opportunity, growth, and fulfillment. Drawing on neuroscience, psychology, and lifestyle research, he shows how people can remain vibrant, mentally sharp, and emotionally resilient well into their later years.
⸻
🧠 Rethinking the Aging Brain
Contrary to the stereotype of inevitable decline, the brain continues to show plasticity—the ability to form new neural connections—throughout life. Older adults may lose some speed in memory recall but often compensate with greater wisdom, pattern recognition, and judgment.
⸻
🏃 Physical Health as a Foundation
Levitin emphasizes exercise as the single most important lifestyle factor for longevity and brain health. Aerobic activity improves blood flow, reduces dementia risk, and boosts mood. Strength training supports mobility, while flexibility exercises prevent falls.
⸻
🥗 Nutrition and Sleep
A Mediterranean-style diet rich in vegetables, fish, nuts, and healthy fats lowers chronic disease risk. Sleep, often disrupted with age, is critical for memory consolidation and repair. Protecting deep sleep helps sustain mental sharpness.
⸻
🤝 The Power of Relationships
Strong social bonds—family, friendships, and community—act as a buffer against cognitive decline and depression. Loneliness, by contrast, is as harmful to health as smoking or obesity.
⸻
🧩 Curiosity and Cognitive Flexibility
A key predictor of successful aging is openness to experience. Learning new skills, staying curious, and trying unfamiliar activities preserve mental agility and reduce the risk of cognitive decline.
⸻
💡 The Role of Purpose
Having a sense of meaning—whether through work, volunteering, or caregiving—enhances resilience and physical health. Purpose-oriented individuals live longer and experience less stress.
⸻
🎶 Creativity and Engagement
Music, art, and hobbies provide powerful stimulation for the brain. Levitin, a musician himself, highlights the unique role of creative engagement in boosting joy and maintaining mental acuity.
⸻
😌 Emotional Growth with Age
Older adults often excel at emotional regulation, experiencing less anger and anxiety. Levitin suggests that this emotional balance is a form of wisdom that strengthens relationships and life satisfaction.
⸻
👵 Embracing Aging as a Positive Identity
Negative stereotypes about aging accelerate decline by shaping behavior. By embracing aging as a time of growth, community, and contribution, individuals can extend both lifespan and healthspan.
⸻
Conclusion
Levitin’s Successful Aging offers an evidence-based, uplifting roadmap for thriving in later life. With the right mix of physical care, curiosity, purpose, and social connection, aging can become a stage of renewal and wisdom rather than decline.
Quotes from
Successful Aging
by Daniel J. Levitin
📖 Here are some of the most powerful and useful quotes from the book, distilled into guiding insights:
On the brain and learning
- “The brain remains plastic throughout our lives—it can grow new connections at any age.”
- “It is never too late to learn something new; in fact, novelty is one of the best ways to keep the mind sharp.”
On health and habits
- “Exercise is the single most important factor in successful aging—it protects not only the body but the brain.”
- “Sleep is not a luxury; it is a biological necessity, especially in older age.”
- “A diet rich in plants, healthy fats, and fish is one of the most powerful tools we have against cognitive decline.”
On social connection
- “Loneliness is as dangerous as smoking fifteen cigarettes a day.”
- “Strong social ties may be the best predictor of how long and how well you will live.”
On purpose and meaning
- “Having a reason to get up in the morning is one of the most reliable predictors of successful aging.”
- “Aging well is less about what we avoid and more about what we embrace—curiosity, engagement, and purpose.”
On wisdom and perspective
- “Older adults are generally better at emotional regulation, seeing the bigger picture, and focusing on what truly matters.”
- “Wisdom is not about knowing more facts; it is about knowing what to do with the knowledge we have.”
On embracing aging
- “Aging is not decline—it is a new stage of development, with its own strengths and opportunities.”
- “The most dangerous myth about aging is that it inevitably brings misery and frailty. The truth is far more hopeful.”
What is the main idea of
Successful Aging
?
The book argues that aging should not be seen as inevitable decline but as a stage of growth, wisdom, and fulfillment. Daniel Levitin combines neuroscience, psychology, and real-life examples to show how people can thrive physically, mentally, and emotionally well into later life.
Does the brain stop learning as we age?
No. Levitin explains that the brain remains plastic throughout life, meaning it can form new neural connections at any age. Older adults may be slower at recalling facts but excel at judgment, emotional regulation, and seeing patterns.
What lifestyle choices help us age successfully?
Key factors include regular exercise, a balanced diet, quality sleep, strong social connections, ongoing learning, and a sense of purpose. These habits support both brain and body health.
Why is exercise so important for aging?
Exercise improves cardiovascular health, supports mobility, reduces risk of dementia, and enhances mood. Levitin identifies it as the single most important predictor of healthy aging.
How does diet affect aging?
A Mediterranean-style diet rich in vegetables, fruits, fish, nuts, and healthy fats lowers the risk of chronic disease and supports cognitive function. Processed foods and excess sugar accelerate decline.
What role does sleep play in healthy aging?
Sleep consolidates memory, repairs the brain, and regulates emotions. Poor sleep is linked to dementia and depression. Protecting deep, restorative sleep is essential as we age.
How do social connections influence longevity?
Strong social ties protect against depression, boost resilience, and even extend lifespan. In contrast, loneliness is as harmful as heavy smoking.
Can learning new things really help older adults?
Yes. Staying curious, learning new skills, and engaging in mentally stimulating activities preserve cognitive flexibility and reduce the risk of decline.
What is the role of purpose in aging well?
Having meaning—through work, hobbies, or caregiving—creates psychological resilience and even physical benefits. People with purpose tend to live longer, healthier lives.
Does aging bring any advantages?
Yes. Older adults often experience better emotional regulation, deeper wisdom, and greater life satisfaction. Levitin emphasizes that these strengths are unique to later life and should be celebrated.
The Medicine of Melody: Why Music Heals Us

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Music has always been more than art — it is a form of medicine embedded in human culture since the beginning of time. In I Heard There Was a Secret Chord, neuroscientist and musician Daniel J. Levitin explores how music shapes the brain, heals the body, and fosters resilience. Through neuroscience research, case studies, and cultural traditions, he shows that music is not just an emotional companion but a tool for survival, therapy, and social connection.
Music as a Biological Necessity 🎶
Evolutionary Origins
- Music predates language in human communities, serving as a means of emotional communication and social bonding.
- Rhythms and chants were used in early rituals to synchronize group activity and enhance cohesion.
- Infants naturally respond to lullabies, suggesting that music is wired into human biology.
Neurological Foundations
- Unlike most activities, music activates nearly the entire brain: auditory cortex, motor areas, limbic system, and prefrontal cortex.
- This wide activation explains music’s power to influence mood, memory, movement, and healing.
- Neuroplasticity — the brain’s ability to reorganize — is enhanced by musical training and listening.
Music and the Brain 🧠
Memory and Emotion
- Music bypasses damaged memory circuits in dementia patients, enabling them to recall lyrics and emotions tied to songs.
- Familiar tunes can evoke vivid autobiographical memories, reconnecting individuals to their identities.
Movement and Rehabilitation
- Rhythmic auditory stimulation helps stroke and Parkinson’s patients regain motor coordination.
- Music therapy is used in rehabilitation clinics to retrain walking patterns and improve balance.
Stress and Hormones
- Slow-tempo music lowers cortisol and adrenaline, while upbeat rhythms stimulate dopamine release.
- Guided music listening has been shown to reduce surgical anxiety and perceived pain.
Cultural Traditions of Healing 🪘
- Indigenous drumming ceremonies promote trance states that relieve pain and trauma.
- Chanting in religious contexts (Gregorian chants, Buddhist mantras) aligns breathing and induces calm.
- Music in communal rituals strengthens social bonds, reinforcing collective healing.
Music Across the Lifespan 👶👵
Infants and Children
- Lullabies regulate breathing and heart rhythms, fostering attachment between caregiver and child.
- Musical play boosts language acquisition, rhythm perception, and motor coordination.
Adults and Aging
- In adulthood, music provides stress relief, emotional regulation, and opportunities for social connection.
- In aging populations, it preserves cognitive function, strengthens memory, and provides comfort in end-of-life care.
Clinical Applications 🏥
Pain Management
- Patients exposed to calming music before and after surgery report lower pain levels and reduced need for sedatives.
Neurological Disorders
- In Alzheimer’s, familiar songs unlock lost memories, enabling communication when language fails.
- For Parkinson’s, rhythmic entrainment helps patients initiate and sustain movement.
Trauma and Mental Health
- Veterans with PTSD benefit from songwriting workshops and group drumming, which help process trauma.
- Guided improvisation enables safe emotional expression and reduces symptoms of anxiety.
Social Power of Music 🤝
- Group singing synchronizes breathing, heart rate, and brain waves, creating physiological unity.
- Choirs and drumming circles foster empathy, belonging, and emotional resilience.
- Music strengthens collective identity in protests, religious gatherings, and national rituals.
The Future of Music as Medicine 🔮
- Levitin argues for broader integration of music into healthcare systems.
- Personalized playlists may serve as prescriptions tailored to patient needs.
- Advances in neuroscience will help refine how specific rhythms, frequencies, and harmonies affect healing.
- Music therapy offers a low-cost, side-effect-free complement to pharmaceuticals.
Conclusion
Daniel J. Levitin presents a compelling case for music as a universal form of medicine. Across cultures, generations, and conditions, music soothes, heals, and connects. From reducing surgical pain to reviving memory in dementia, music’s therapeutic power is undeniable. It is both ancient and modern — a human invention rooted in biology and refined through science. Levitin’s book leaves us with a clear message: music is not optional; it is vital to health, resilience, and human connection.
Quotes from
I Heard There Was a Secret Chord: Music as Medicine
— Daniel J. Levitin
Here are key insights and life-guiding reflections drawn from the book (no timestamps since it’s a book, not a video):
- “Music is not a luxury but a biological necessity.”
→ Levitin emphasizes that music is as essential to human survival and health as food and sleep. - “When language fails, music remembers.”
→ On how dementia patients reconnect with their identity through familiar songs. - “The brain doesn’t just hear music; it moves with it, feels with it, heals with it.”
→ Explaining why music therapy engages multiple systems at once. - “A lullaby is medicine in melody.”
→ Highlighting the role of music in regulating infants’ physiology and emotional security. - “Every culture has used rhythm and song to heal long before modern medicine existed.”
→ A reminder of music’s universal and timeless healing role. - “Pain is not only reduced by drugs but by the right harmony.”
→ On the use of music in clinical pain management. - “In trauma, words can wound; music can repair.”
→ The therapeutic value of songwriting and drumming for veterans and PTSD patients. - “When we sing together, our hearts literally beat as one.”
→ Describing the physiological synchrony created by group singing. - “Music therapy works because it speaks the brain’s native language — rhythm, tone, and emotion.”
→ A neuroscientific explanation of why music reaches deeper than words. - “To heal with music is to return to what humans have always known: the body dances, the spirit sings.”
→ Levitin’s vision of music as an ancient yet scientifically validated medicine.

From Space to Eternity: Why Bach’s Music Still Speaks to All Worlds

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Bach’s Invention: The Divine Trickery of J.S. Bach
This lecture by Professor Milton Mermikides (23 October 2024) explores the genius, humanity, and playful craft of Johann Sebastian Bach. Across 14 sections, it examines how Bach’s music combines technical mastery, emotional depth, and mischievous invention, making him a timeless figure who embodies both divine inspiration and human struggle.
Conclusion
Bach’s legacy lies not only in his divine-seeming music but in the relentless human effort, playfulness, and craft behind it. His works reveal a marriage of mathematical proportion, emotional expressiveness, and hidden codes, from numerological games to contrapuntal puzzles. Bach was no distant saint but a flawed, witty, and stubborn man who turned personal struggle, rigorous study, and curiosity into transcendent sound. His fateful meeting with Frederick the Great shows the limits of even his improvisational genius while highlighting the studious craft that underpinned his “miracles.” His unfinished Art of the Fugue may symbolize death’s interruption or his final joke, but in every case, it shows music as both divine trickery and human persistence. Perhaps what endures most is not an image of a godlike genius, but of a tireless craftsman whose music invites us to marvel, decode, and dream.
Key points
🎼 Golden Record: Bach’s music was sent into space on Voyager I as a symbol of humanity’s highest artistic achievement.
🧠 Brain & Soul: His music marries rigorous technique with deep emotion—seen as evidence of intelligence and the divine.
👣 Only Human: Behind the myth, Bach was a man of relentless work, hardship, and mischievous flaws, often clashing with authority.
🪶 Fingerprints: He embedded his name, numbers (14, 41, 158), and puzzles in his works, blending devotion with playful codes.
📐 Hidden Proportions: Ruth Tatlow and others show that Bach often encoded harmonic proportions, bar counts, and structures with mathematical precision.
🎹 Well-Tempered Clavier: The decorative swirl on its title page may secretly encode his chosen tuning system, discovered only in 2005.
🎶 Counterpoint & Fugue: Bach’s mastery lay in making each voice independent yet harmonically united, a perfect balance of horizontal and vertical logic.
👑 Musical Offering: When Frederick the Great challenged him with a fiendish theme, Bach improvised a 3-part fugue and later crafted an elaborate collection that showcased his ingenuity.
⏳ Unfinished Art of the Fugue: His last work ends mid-fugue with his name embedded—a staged profundity or final trick?
✨ Human Legacy: Bach’s greatness rests less on divine inspiration than on his tireless dedication, creativity, and mischievous joy in puzzles.
Summary
- Prelude: Music in Space – Bach’s works, chosen for the Voyager Golden Record, represent humanity’s intelligence and spirit across “all worlds, all times.”
- Perceptions of Genius – From Beethoven to Nina Simone, musicians describe Bach as transcendent, divine, or the ultimate truth of music.
- Human Struggles – Despite his heavenly aura, Bach endured hardships: poor eyesight, long journeys, deadlines, and the practical realities of survival as a composer.
- Rebellion and Mischief – Early in his career, he was disciplined for lateness, strange harmonies, fights, and inviting women into the choir loft.
- Criticism and Obscurity – Some contemporaries dismissed his work as “too technical,” and his fame waned for a century until revived by Mendelssohn and others.
- Codes and Numerology – Bach embedded his initials, the B-A-C-H motif, and number games (14, 41, 158) into his music, intertwining faith and craft.
- Geometric Harmony – His compositions often follow hidden proportional systems, revealing his obsession with balance, symmetry, and symbolic order.
- Contrapuntal Mastery – In fugues and canons, he wove multiple independent voices into unity, creating music that is simultaneously logical and deeply expressive.
- Frederick the Great – Challenged with a nearly impossible theme, Bach improvised brilliantly but proved his limits, later turning the challenge into The Musical Offering.
- Final Years – His unfinished Art of the Fugue ends abruptly with his musical signature, leaving us to wonder if it was divine interruption or his final joke.
Quotes from
Bach’s Invention: The Divine Trickery of J.S. Bach
- “To the makers of music – all worlds, all times” — inscription on the Voyager Golden Record.
- “The immortal god of harmony” — Beethoven on Bach.
- “The most stupendous miracle in all music” — Wagner on Bach.
- “Bach is the ultimate truth” — Jacqueline du Pré.
- “He transcends time, space and my own understanding of existence” — Patti Smith.
- “Bach made me dedicate my life to music” — Nina Simone.
- “No one believes in God anymore, but everyone believes in Bach” — Mauricio Kagel.
- “The best argument for the existence of God” — Nigel Warburton.
- “On one stave, for a small instrument, the man writes a whole world of the deepest thoughts and most powerful feelings” — Brahms, on Bach’s Chaconne.
- “This great man would be the admiration of whole nations if he did not deprive his pieces of naturalness by giving them an artificial turgidity” — Johann Adolf Schiebe, critic of Bach (1737).
- “I would vote for Bach, all of Bach, streamed out into space, over and over again… Sending all of Bach, however, would be showing off.” — Lewis Thomas, The Lives of a Cell (1974).
- “If Frederick says to you ‘you are my friend’ he means ‘you are my slave’” — Voltaire, on Frederick the Great, who tested Bach with the “Royal Theme.”
- “At the point where the composer introduces the name BACH in the countersubject to this fugue, the composer died.” — Inscription on Bach’s unfinished Art of the Fugue.
- “Perhaps we should hold the greatest admiration not from Bach’s considerable musical gifts, but from the hard graft and constant tinkering he humbly and consistently dedicated himself to.” — Professor Milton Mermikides.

Connection Is the Real Glow-Up

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The Importance of Social Connections to Physical and Emotional Wellbeing
Human beings like to think of themselves as fiercely independent creatures, rugged individuals who can pull themselves up by their bootstraps and march toward glory. This myth is appealing, but neuroscience and psychology are united in calling it what it is: nonsense. The truth, demonstrated over decades of research, is that we are wired for connection. Relationships—whether with family, friends, partners, or community—shape not only our emotional landscape but also our physical health. Social bonds are not a luxury; they are a fundamental human need, as essential as food, water, and shelter.
One of the clearest demonstrations of this truth comes from the Harvard Study of Adult Development, which has followed participants for nearly 80 years. Its findings dismantle many cultural obsessions: wealth, fame, and even raw intelligence are not the best predictors of a long and happy life. Instead, the quality of relationships consistently emerges as the strongest factor. Good genes might give someone a head start, but without strong connections, those genes lose their protective edge. Put bluntly: a mansion, a sports car, or a brilliant IQ won’t keep you warm when your body and brain begin to decline. Relationships will.
Social Connections and Emotional Wellbeing
On the psychological level, social connections provide the scaffolding for emotional health. Loneliness, in contrast, is deeply destructive. Studies equate chronic loneliness with smoking fifteen cigarettes a day; it is that dangerous. The reason lies in the brain’s evolutionary wiring. Humans evolved in groups where connection was survival. Isolation meant vulnerability to predators, lack of shared resources, and eventual death. Though modern predators are less likely to be lions and more likely to be unpaid bills, the brain still reacts to loneliness as a survival threat. Stress hormones like cortisol spike, sleep patterns falter, and anxiety levels soar.
Relationships act as buffers against this stress. When people feel heard, supported, and loved, their brains down-regulate threat responses. Oxytocin, often called the bonding hormone, increases trust and fosters feelings of safety. This neurochemical cocktail doesn’t just make us feel good; it creates resilience against depression and anxiety. Social ties are protective factors that keep the emotional system balanced, like shock absorbers for life’s inevitable bumps.
Social Connections and Physical Health
The effects of relationships do not stop with emotions—they penetrate the body. Chronic loneliness has been linked to cardiovascular disease, immune dysfunction, and even early mortality. People with weaker social ties are more likely to suffer from strokes, heart attacks, and high blood pressure. Isolation also accelerates cognitive decline, increasing the risk of dementia and other neurodegenerative conditions.
The mechanisms here are not mysterious. Stress, when chronic, becomes toxic. It damages blood vessels, disrupts immune function, and fuels inflammation. Social connections regulate this stress, bringing the body back into balance. A supportive friend or partner is, in a sense, as valuable as any medication because relationships consistently nudge biological systems toward health.
The Role of Relationships Across the Lifespan
Social connections matter from cradle to grave. In childhood, secure attachments with caregivers provide the blueprint for emotional regulation and trust. Children who experience neglect or inconsistent care often carry that instability into adulthood, struggling with anxiety, depression, or difficulty forming relationships.
In adulthood, friendships and romantic partnerships become vital sources of support. They not only help individuals cope with external stressors like job loss or illness but also provide meaning and purpose. Adults with close connections report higher levels of life satisfaction, even when facing hardship.
In older age, relationships become protective factors against decline. The Harvard study demonstrated that strong connections delayed both mental and physical deterioration. Elderly individuals embedded in supportive communities showed sharper memory, slower cognitive decline, and longer lifespans. Loneliness in old age, on the other hand, was a harbinger of rapid decline.
Why Relationships Outweigh Wealth and Fame
It is tempting to believe that external achievements—money, recognition, prestige—are the keys to wellbeing. But the evidence suggests otherwise. Social class and wealth can provide temporary comfort, but without deep connections, they do little for long-term happiness or health. Fame may bring attention, but it does not guarantee intimacy. In fact, celebrity culture often fosters isolation by creating barriers to authentic connection.
Relationships, on the other hand, provide daily sustenance. A conversation with a friend, a shared meal with family, or even casual interactions in a neighborhood all reinforce belonging. Belonging is not glamorous, but it is profoundly protective. The simplicity of human contact outweighs the flash of external achievements.
Neuroscience of Connection
Neuroscience offers a compelling window into why relationships are so vital. Functional brain imaging shows that social pain—such as rejection—activates the same brain regions as physical pain. This overlap suggests that loneliness is not just “in the head” but experienced as a bodily threat.
Furthermore, oxytocin and dopamine released during positive social interactions literally remodel the brain. They strengthen pathways associated with trust, reward, and memory. Conversely, chronic loneliness contributes to neuroinflammation, damaging neural connections and speeding up aging. Relationships, then, are not only emotionally nourishing but biologically essential.
Taking Care of the Body for 100 Years
The advice to “take care of your body as though you were going to need it for 100 years” pairs naturally with the findings about relationships. A healthy body supports healthy connections, and vice versa. Exercise, nutrition, and sleep are important, but without meaningful social ties, even the most disciplined physical care is incomplete. Likewise, strong relationships encourage healthier habits—people in close partnerships are more likely to quit smoking, exercise regularly, and attend medical checkups. In this way, social ties act as silent motivators, nudging individuals toward longevity.
The Modern Challenge of Connection
Despite the clear evidence, modern life often works against connection. Technology, urbanization, and social media create the illusion of closeness while often leaving people more isolated than before. Many people live in constant digital contact yet lack anyone they can confide in face-to-face. The epidemic of loneliness in industrialized nations illustrates that convenience and connectivity are not the same as intimacy.
The challenge, then, is to cultivate deliberate relationships. This means prioritizing time with family and friends, fostering empathy, and choosing community over isolation. It also requires societal shifts: workplaces that support work-life balance, neighborhoods that encourage interaction, and healthcare systems that recognize loneliness as a medical risk.
Conclusion
The evidence is overwhelming: social connections are the bedrock of physical and emotional wellbeing. They protect against stress, strengthen the immune system, delay cognitive decline, and provide meaning across the lifespan. Good genes may load the dice, but joy, love, and belonging ultimately determine the outcome. As the Harvard study so plainly summarized, the key to healthy aging is “relationships, relationships, relationships.”
To ignore this truth is to court both emotional emptiness and physical decline. To embrace it is to unlock resilience, health, and longevity. In a world that tempts us to chase wealth, fame, or solitary achievement, the enduring lesson is surprisingly simple: invest in people. Because in the end, our connections are the real markers of a life well lived.
In the Shadow of Fire: How Volcanoes Shape Lives

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The Living Fire: Stories of the World’s Famous Volcanoes
Volcanoes embody both destruction and renewal. Rising from the earth with thunderous force, they devastate landscapes, inspire mythologies, and enrich soils. Their eruptions change history, while their slopes sustain communities. Across the world—from Sicily to Colombia, Iceland to Hawaii—famous volcanoes shape not just geography but also the imagination, lives, and identities of those who live under their shadows.
Mount Etna: Sicily’s Protective, Thunderous Mother
On the island of Sicily, Mount Etna rises as Europe’s highest and most active volcano. Its eruptions in 2025—four times in six months—remind Sicilians of its raw power. Yet the people of Etna’s slopes often speak of the volcano with affection. Locals call it A’ Muntagna, “the Mountain,” seeing it as a stern yet protective mother. The fertility of its volcanic soils nurtures vineyards, orchards, and villages, giving them both livelihood and cultural identity.
Photographer Emanuele Occhipinti captured this paradox in his project A’Muntagna. His images show everyday life—children, shepherds, card games, nuns in prayer—set against the looming mountain. Fear is always present, but it mingles with reverence and familiarity. Etna has erupted for over half a million years, and UNESCO recognizes it as both a natural laboratory for science and a cultural icon.
Etna’s people live with risk, but also with extraordinary resilience. The volcano’s destructive outbursts are balanced by its gifts of fertile land, tourism, and a sense of belonging. In their eyes, Etna is less a geological threat than a living relative—sometimes angry, sometimes generous, always present.
Nevado del Ruiz: Memory and Tragedy in the Andes
Far across the ocean, in Colombia, Nevado del Ruiz stands as one of the most feared volcanoes of the Andes. At 5,321 meters, its snow-capped summit shelters frailejones—strange, fuzzy plants that seem otherworldly. Yet beneath this beauty lies a violent past.
On November 13, 1985, Nevado del Ruiz erupted catastrophically. The eruption melted part of its glacier, unleashing lahars—rivers of mud and ash—that buried the town of Armero. More than 23,000 people perished. Among them was 13-year-old Omayra Sánchez, whose televised struggle against encasing debris became a haunting global symbol of vulnerability and failed disaster preparedness. The tragedy transformed volcanology, teaching governments the high cost of denial and delay.
Today, artists and photographers approach Nevado with reverence. French photographer Marguerite Bornhauser described the silence at its slopes, broken only by hummingbirds, and the thin air that makes every step surreal. She captured it not as a documentary subject but as a metaphor—an image of a planet under fire. To her, the volcano’s eruptions echo humanity’s climate crisis: a reminder of forces too great to ignore, and of our fragile responsibility to coexist with them.
Eyjafjallajökull: Iceland’s Ash and Instagram Age
Iceland’s Eyjafjallajökull became globally infamous in 2010, when its eruption sent ash clouds into the sky, grounding over 100,000 flights across Europe. The event paralyzed travel but paradoxically boosted Iceland’s tourism, drawing visitors eager to see the volcano that had humbled modern aviation.
Covered partly by an ice cap, the volcano represents a clash between fire and ice. When magma met glacier, it vaporized ice into explosive plumes, reminding the world of nature’s unpredictable reach. Yet fifteen years later, Eyjafjallajökull is less a feared giant than an over-photographed backdrop.
Finnish photographer Juuso Westerlund described arriving in 2025 to find hordes of tourists in white SUVs, snapping selfies along prescribed trails. The sublime landscape has been filtered through Instagram into clichés—postcards of wild horses, waterfalls, and lava fields. The eruption that once symbolized global vulnerability now feeds a mass tourism industry. Eyjafjallajökull embodies the modern paradox: a wilderness so accessible that it risks becoming ordinary, even as it continues to remind scientists that Iceland has entered a “new era” of volcanic activity.
Hawaii’s Sacred Volcanoes and the Curse of Pele
In Hawaii, volcanoes are not just geological phenomena but sacred beings. The goddess Pele, said to dwell within the fiery craters, creates and destroys with equal power. Her lava flows form new land, yet her wrath is feared by those who disrespect the islands.
One enduring belief warns visitors not to take volcanic rocks or sand. Those who do risk Pele’s curse: misfortune, illness, or tragedy. Over the decades, Hawaiian national parks have received countless returned stones accompanied by letters of repentance—apologies for thefts that supposedly brought calamity. Some notes date back to 1904, while others arrive still today, often recounting broken cars, lost jobs, or family deaths.
Photographer Ryan Thompson collected these letters in his project Ah Ah: Conscience Letters and Photographs from the Haleakalā & Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Parks. His black-and-white images of barren volcanic landscapes are juxtaposed with the colorful testimonies of guilt and redemption. The project shows how volcanoes, even in the modern age, retain their spiritual aura. They are not only geological forces but also moral teachers, reminding humanity of humility before nature.
Volcanoes as Mirrors of Humanity
What unites these volcanoes—Etna, Nevado del Ruiz, Eyjafjallajökull, and Hawaii’s sacred craters—is not only their fiery geology but their human resonance. They are theaters where myth, tragedy, science, and modern life intersect.
- Etna represents coexistence: a community’s love-fear relationship with a volcano that nourishes even as it threatens.
- Nevado del Ruiz embodies memory: the scars of Armero reminding us of the price of unheeded warnings.
- Eyjafjallajökull reflects globalization: how one eruption halted air travel and then birthed a wave of Instagram tourism.
- Hawaii’s volcanoes remind us of spirituality: how ancient beliefs persist, shaping behavior and ecological respect.
Volcanoes are not simply natural hazards. They are storytellers. They reveal how humans adapt, mythologize, and learn. They inspire awe, art, and reverence; they provoke scientific discovery and cautionary tales. In them we see both the Earth’s violent creativity and our own capacity to forget, remember, and imagine.
Conclusion: Living with Fire
The world’s famous volcanoes remind us that our planet is alive. Beneath our cities and fields, tectonic forces stir, waiting to erupt. To live with volcanoes is to live with uncertainty, but also with extraordinary richness—fertile soils, geothermal energy, myths that give shape to fear and wonder.
Volcanoes will continue to erupt, reshaping land and history. Whether they appear as Sicily’s mother, Colombia’s titan, Iceland’s tourist magnet, or Hawaii’s goddess, they teach the same lesson: humanity must find humility in the face of forces greater than itself. In their stories, old and new, volcanoes are mirrors—showing us who we are, how fragile we remain, and how deeply we long to belong to the living Earth.
Your Essential 8 for Healthy Aging and a Healthy Heart

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Life’s Essential 8: The New Framework for Cardiovascular Health
Introduction
In 2010, the American Heart Association (AHA) introduced Life’s Simple 7—a framework aimed at defining, measuring, and improving cardiovascular health. Over time, growing evidence highlighted both the strengths and limitations of this model, including the need for greater precision, expanded inclusivity across the life course, and the integration of broader health determinants.
In response, the AHA unveiled Life’s Essential 8, a modernized framework designed to advance cardiovascular health by incorporating updated science, broader lifestyle factors, and more refined measurement tools. The Essential 8 now includes two major domains: Health Behaviors and Health Factors, each with specific, actionable elements.
This article synthesizes findings from the AHA presidential advisory and supporting materials to provide a comprehensive view of the Life’s Essential 8, its components, rationale, scoring system, and practical applications in clinical, public health, and community settings.
From Life’s Simple 7 to Life’s Essential 8
Limitations of Life’s Simple 7
- Focused on traditional metrics (diet, physical activity, smoking, BMI, cholesterol, glucose, and blood pressure).
- Did not account for sleep health, a proven factor in cardiovascular outcomes.
- Relied on categorical scoring, which lacked sensitivity to individual and population-level changes.
- Did not fully integrate the influence of social and psychological determinants.
Advancements with Life’s Essential 8
- Introduces sleep health as a new metric.
- Expands tobacco/nicotine assessment to include vaping and secondhand smoke.
- Updates dietary and clinical measurement approaches for modern accuracy.
- Applies a 0–100 scoring system for each metric, creating a composite cardiovascular health score.
- Addresses lifelong cardiovascular health, from childhood through older adulthood.
- Explicitly incorporates social determinants and psychological well-being as contexts that influence outcomes.
Health Behaviors
1. Eat Better
A heart-healthy eating pattern emphasizes whole foods, plant-based proteins, healthy oils, and minimal processed foods.
- Core recommendations:
- Prioritize vegetables, fruits, legumes, nuts, seeds, whole grains, fish, seafood, and lean proteins.
- Use healthy oils (olive, canola, avocado) instead of tropical oils like coconut or palm.
- Limit added sugars, processed meats, salty snacks, and saturated fats.
- Avoid trans fats, often found in fried and packaged goods.
- Tips for success:
- Cook more meals at home.
- Monitor nutrition labels.
- Watch portion sizes.
- Seek inspiration from heart-healthy recipes (AHA provides resources).
2. Be More Active
Physical activity is essential for cardiovascular and metabolic health.
- Adults: At least 150 minutes of moderate activity or 75 minutes of vigorous activity weekly.
- Children/adolescents: At least 60 minutes of daily physical activity (play + structured).
- Exercise supports weight management, glucose control, blood pressure regulation, and psychological health.
3. Quit Tobacco
Nicotine exposure remains the leading cause of preventable death in the U.S.
- Includes traditional cigarettes, e-cigarettes, and vaping.
- Accounts for about 1 in 3 U.S. heart disease deaths.
- Roughly 40% of U.S. children (ages 3–11) are exposed to secondhand smoke.
- Recommendations: complete cessation and avoidance of secondhand exposure.
4. Get Healthy Sleep
Sleep is now recognized as a fundamental health behavior.
- Adults: 7–9 hours per night.
- Children:
- Ages ≤5: 10–16 hours (including naps).
- Ages 6–12: 9–12 hours.
- Ages 13–18: 8–10 hours.
- Adequate sleep reduces risks of obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and mental health disorders.
Health Factors
5. Manage Weight
- BMI remains the primary measure, with optimal values <25.
- Underweight (<18.5) is also linked to health risks.
- Healthy weight maintenance reduces burden on the heart, joints, and metabolism.
6. Control Cholesterol
- The updated metric emphasizes non-HDL cholesterol (total cholesterol minus HDL) as the preferred monitoring tool.
- Benefits: does not require fasting and provides reliable risk assessment.
- High levels are linked to atherosclerosis and increased risk of heart disease and stroke.
7. Manage Blood Sugar
- Glucose thresholds:
- Normal: <100 mg/dl.
- Prediabetes: 100–125 mg/dl.
- Diabetes: ≥126 mg/dl.
- Hemoglobin A1c offers a better long-term reflection of glucose control.
- Poor glucose regulation damages the heart, kidneys, eyes, and nerves.
- Prevention strategies: balanced diet, regular activity, stress management, no nicotine, and healthy sleep.
8. Manage Blood Pressure
- Optimal blood pressure: <120/80 mm Hg.
- Categories:
- Elevated: systolic 120–129 and diastolic <80.
- Stage 1 hypertension: 130–139/80–89.
- Stage 2 hypertension: ≥140/90.
- Severe hypertension: >180/120 (medical urgency).
- Home monitoring and clinical follow-up are critical.
- Lifestyle management includes lower sodium intake, more activity, stress reduction, healthy weight, and limiting alcohol.
Scoring System
Each metric is assessed using a 0–100 scale, with higher scores reflecting better cardiovascular health.
- Composite score: The average of all 8 metrics.
- Benefits:
- Allows sensitivity to small individual improvements.
- Enables population-level tracking over time.
- Provides an actionable target for clinicians, public health professionals, and policymakers.
The Role of Social and Psychological Health
The AHA acknowledges that cardiovascular health is shaped not only by behaviors and biology but also by environment and mental well-being.
- Social determinants: access to healthy foods, safe neighborhoods for activity, quality healthcare, and economic stability.
- Psychological health: stress, depression, and resilience directly affect cardiovascular outcomes.
- Health promotion efforts must address structural inequities to close gaps in cardiovascular outcomes.
Practical Applications
- Clinical practice: Using Life’s Essential 8 to guide patient counseling, risk assessment, and treatment goals.
- Public health: Monitoring population cardiovascular health and disparities across demographic groups.
- Policy: Advocating for systemic changes in food access, tobacco regulation, sleep awareness, and equitable healthcare.
- Community: Educating individuals and families with tools for everyday lifestyle improvements.
Conclusion
The AHA’s Life’s Essential 8 offers a holistic, science-driven framework that expands upon earlier models to better reflect today’s understanding of cardiovascular health. By emphasizing diet, physical activity, tobacco cessation, sleep, weight management, cholesterol control, glucose regulation, and blood pressure management, the model empowers individuals and communities to adopt sustainable habits.
Importantly, the AHA situates cardiovascular health within the contexts of social determinants and psychological well-being, highlighting the need for systemic, equitable solutions. With its scoring system, life-course approach, and practical implementation pathways, Life’s Essential 8 provides a transformative tool to improve population health, reduce disparities, and prevent cardiovascular disease worldwide.
