The Human Experience
Universal questions, explored through practical patterns and timeless wisdom. Navigate uncertainty, purpose, love, and meaning — with AI as your practice partner.
Choose the terrain you're currently traveling. Each exploration presents practical patterns for working with universal human experiences — drawn from philosophy, psychology, and lived wisdom.
When the ground shifts beneath you. How different traditions approach impermanence, the unknown, and the uncontrollable.
The many forms of human connection. From Greek classifications to Eastern relationship frameworks to modern attachment theory.
Finding meaning in what you do. Aristotelian flourishing, Japanese ikigai, and the question of good work versus meaningful work.
When life breaks you. Buddhist paths through pain, the Book of Job, Nietzschean transformation, and Frankl's search for meaning.
Confronting the finite. Memento mori across traditions, Tibetan death practices, Epicurean non-existence, and existential authenticity.
Wanting more. The Bhagavad Gita on duty without attachment, Daoist natural ambition, and the modern achievement trap.
What happens when the playbook fails. Empathy for the moment when old patterns no longer apply and new paths must emerge.
Reclaiming attention from the infinite feed. Wrestling philosophy meets parking lot presence. Choosing wandering over doomscrolling.
The Greeks understood what we often forget: love isn't one thing. It's many things — each with its own texture, demands, and gifts.
From eros (desire) to agape (unconditional love) to philia (friendship), exploring the landscape of human connection reveals why we struggle with relationships: we're often speaking different languages.
Read The Physics of Love →Seven Greek words for seven kinds of love
Eudaimonia, virtue ethics, and the examined life
Control, resilience, and amor fati
Impermanence, suffering, and liberation
Flow, naturalness, and wu wei
Relationships, ritual, and social harmony
Authenticity, choice, and meaning-making
Covenant, faith, and divine relationship
Dharma, duty, and the paths of yoga