How we treat ourselves and each other is the most important thing in the universe.
If consciousness is the universe becoming aware of itself, then how we think, feel, act and interact is what matters most. Everything else is secondary.
My work
I look at real-world ethical questions and explore what they might teach us about ourselves.
Because the world as we know it doesn’t feel right.
Not in a doomsday, apocalyptic way, but in the ordinary. The mundane. The everyday.
In how we speak to ourselves, what we put up with, and how easily we lose connection with each other while acting like everything’s fine.
Most of it isn’t deliberate, but it’s barely questioned.
I don’t think that makes us broken. But it does mean we’re living unexamined lives.
And if that’s true, it’s worth doing something about it.
So, that’s what I do.
Here, you can read my writing on the subject, including the book I’m working on: Emergency Isn’t Disaster.
People I want to learn from
I’m interested in people who are curious about how we live, how we relate to each other, and why we accept some things without question.
People willing to pay attention, ask difficult questions and remain open to changing their minds.
If that sounds like you, reach out.