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user experience

  • jordanSA•...

    need to add avatar trust mouse-over here too

    user interface design
    user experience
    front-end web development
    Comments
    0
  • annabeth avatar

    Like is different than trust. I think Jordan said at an uptrust session that he misses the like button. I’m having the same feeling lately, there are posts I like that I wouldn’t necessarily say I trust. Or I want to give it some sort of that was cool but I don’t want that statement in my trust algorithm.

    But maybe that’s all for the best? Surely some not-insignificant portion of my trust isn’t in my conscious awareness, maybe feeling a sense of yes to something is functionally the same as trust.

    curiousdwk•...

    I have been using the "Uptrust" button as a "Like" button.  I am not differentiating between the two.

    social media
    online behavior
    user experience
    user interface
    Comments
    0
  • jordanSA•...

    current priority rules of thumb for right now for what to work on (off the cuff)

    thoughts? differences in opinion? 1. Core differentiators: trust and bridging. 2. Value for the user bug fixes & reliability value loops: things that help users get continuous value from the site delightful or fun things smoothness of use 3. Help us grow the platform 4....
    project management
    user experience
    innovation
    product development
    Comments
    0
  • brian avatar

    Frontend Code Review Policy. Frontend Code Review Policy

    Speed of iteration over perfection - Frontend development is inherently iterative. It is often better to ship something and then iterate on it than trying to get it perfect from the get go.

    Not all changes are equal - CSS changes shouldn't require review. With the advent of LLM's, a lot of NextJS code feels solved as well.

    Review Requirements by Change Type

    CSS/HTML-only changes: No review required

    • Pure styling changes (margins, colors, fonts, layouts)

    • HTML structure changes without logic

    • Exception: Changes to key components (e.g. StoryCard, IndexContent)

    • Developer is responsible for visual QA before merging

    Very Small Component logic changes: No review required

    • Changes to the frontend tests

    • Piping some variable around in order to display it (e.g. adding a date)

    • Adding/modifying some simple logic

    • One-line bug fixes

    • Developer is responsible for visual QA and LLM-core review before merging

    Component logic changes: Relaxed review requirements (see below)

    • Data transformation and display logic

    • Any React or NextJS component change that follows standard React/NextJS best practices

      • Adding hooks

      • State management changes

      • Event handlers and user interactions (useEffect)

      • Props and type definitions

      • etc.

    Critical paths: Regular review requirements

    • Authentication/authorization flows

    • Payment or checkout flows (in the future)

    • Data mutations that affect other users

    • Any code in common or backend (i.e. the change is not purely a frontend change)

    Relaxed Review Requirements

    1. Before requesting a review, the submitter is expected to have ask an LLM to review the code and find any code smells, bugs, things that might bite us later on, gotchas, or design problems, and address them. This process should be repeated until the LLM is satisfied.

    2. Review should be up for a day to give others a chance to respond

    3. Code can be pushed if either of these two conditions is met:

      1. Approval from another UpTrust dev

      2. 24 hours + passing the LLM review

    peteSAinUpTrust Dev•...
    Two thoughts The numbered list at the end seems phrased weirdly, as #2 and #3 seem to contradict. Maybe just eliminate #2, and rephrase #3 like "After posting for review, the code can be push if..."  I'm a little concerned about the frame that css and html changes are...
    web development
    software development
    user experience
    quality assurance
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    Incorruptible Organizations AMA with Eric Ries. Wednesday 2/4 at 3:00 PM CT

    Lean Startup author who now focuses on legal structures to protect mission-driven organizations from corruption. incorruptible.co

    Free book giveaway! Register here.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QNfb54LuzwI
    jordanSA•...
    i relate-we run into this problem with uptrust, "user" definitely has the wrong connotations (💉), but then we talk about "heroes" or "participants" or something and none of it quite feels right. Customer seems fine to me?...
    terminology
    user experience
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    Incorruptible Organizations AMA with Eric Ries. Wednesday 2/4 at 3:00 PM CT

    Lean Startup author who now focuses on legal structures to protect mission-driven organizations from corruption. incorruptible.co

    Free book giveaway! Register here.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QNfb54LuzwI
    johnaweiss•...

    i find this discussion tool very difficult to follow. Would prefer everything on one page, in chronological order. 

    user experience
    web design
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    AMA with Jeffrey Ladish. Wednesday 2/4 at 2:00 PM CT

    Executive director of Palisade Research; studying AI loss of control risks.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALfhq3r7Cz0
    JulieI•...
    I know exactly what you mean! I've had those too. I think this speaks to needing paths (direct from user or using AI as intermediary) that get information about transactions and how the human 'feels' to the developer....
    artificial intelligence
    human-computer interaction
    user experience
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    AMA with Jeffrey Ladish. Wednesday 2/4 at 2:00 PM CT

    Executive director of Palisade Research; studying AI loss of control risks.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALfhq3r7Cz0
    joshuaSA•...
    I recently had a shockingly opposite experience. I was trying to bring up a new tool and reading the docs sounded lame. So I was working with an AI that kept telling me to disable a setting then set a different option....
    artificial intelligence
    technology
    user experience
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    AMA with Rob Miles on AI Safety. Wednesday, 2/4 at 1:00pm CT

    AISafety.info founder has spent years telling the world about risk posed by strong AI.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6tYqqb6AjTM
    JulieI•...
    Asking more and better questions of the AI too. Most will tell you that they 'don't know' how they arrive at some conclusion or provide an opinion. That is helpful to me as a user. Keeps things in perspective....
    decision making
    artificial intelligence
    user experience
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    AMA with Rob Miles on AI Safety. Wednesday, 2/4 at 1:00pm CT

    AISafety.info founder has spent years telling the world about risk posed by strong AI.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6tYqqb6AjTM
    JulieI•...
    Re: Responsible AI development and deployment?  My thoughts... Discuss and define expectations... Move away from the economic and competitive obsessions...       Should happen anyway in relation to MANY societal issues!!!...
    artificial intelligence
    ethics in technology
    user experience
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    What is the 'Metacrisis' and How Do We Solve It? (AMA). Rewatch the live AMA conversation with Layman Pascal 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jyq_ZfdtTmg
    JulieI•...

    Procedural question: If a Bot asks me for more information, how do I post a reply? So far, it seems cementing of my original comment or posting a new one are my only options.

    online communication
    technology
    user experience
    Comments
    0
  • M

    UpTrust feedback: categories for trust feel way too vague

    I want to first be clear: I am going to give yall a lot of feedback as long as I keep using this, because I have hope that it can be actually good.  I broadly see what yall are trying to do and am excited about it, and hopeful that you will listen to feedback.  Otherwise I would mostly leave.  With that said, a rant:

    "Uptrust this person for "sociology", "ethics"..." — these topics are WAYYYY too vague.  Absurdly vague.  Uselessly vague.

    At least that's my first impression. For the particular comment I'm uptrusting, I would want to see something more like:
    - victim-blaming
    - collaborative mindset
    - conceptual distinctions
    - symmetry
    - political correctness

    ...those are all basically keywords from the post, not hard to extract.  And THOSE are topics on which I can actually assess what I think about the post.  Is this good "philosophy"?  My response to that question is ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ at best, (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻  at worst.

    Those are also topics where I'm REALLY fucking interested in where people's intuitions overlap and don't, which idgaf about for "sociology", mostly.  Or like, things are coming from too far away.

    Likewise, if downvoting something is really going to work for bridging, it's...  not exactly that I want to net say "less trust in this author".  I want to say "this particular post actually got 8/10 things right but the 2/10 it missed make it dangerous." Someone who is incapable of even writing the 8/10 things right would have even less of my trust than that person, but I wouldn't even be voting on the topic because they didn't say anything about the topic.

    I don't feel like I have a way to say much that is real or honest with these votes.  Either option feels very misleading.

    Comment below with what you think about the topics/categories/uptrust button!

    #UptrustFeedback

    SCUBA STEVE•...
    I AGREE WITH YOUR ASSESSMENT I am extremely new here (got my invite to participate last night)  The formatting feels diffrent here which is not necessarily indicating anything negative as Im very new....
    social media
    user experience
    community feedback
    Comments
    0
  • Wayne Nirenberg•...
    I could really use some guidance on exactly how Uptrust works. From what I can tell...........well, I'm clueless. At first I was thinking that uptrusting something made it more popular, and so it functions like a "like" works, while downtrusting something does the opposite,...
    online communities
    social media
    user experience
    digital platforms
    Comments
    3
  • Robbie Carlton•...

    Kudos!

    Still poking around the upgraded UI/UX but it looks and feels great! A marked improvement. Amazing work you guys! @Jordan @Joshua and I don't know who else 🎉🎊

    user experience
    ui ux design
    Comments
    2
  • ns108•...

    User script for a brighter theme for this site

    I prefer light themes to dark themes. I asked Claude for one and he gave me one. If you're on a phone, you need to use Edge Canary, Yandex, or Kiwi browsers—the only mobile browsers that allow desktop extensions to be used (Kiwi isn't being updated anymore)....
    web development
    user experience
    browser extensions
    mobile browsers
    Comments
    0
  • Robbie Carlton•...
    Does anyone else have aesthetic preferences about the 6 digit numbers that get texted, emailed or generated as part of a website sign in process? I just noticed, there are some I like much more than others....
    psychology
    technology
    user experience
    Comments
    4
  • luxurytravel avatar

    Is there a place to report minor UpTrust bugs? I mentioned a couple of things at TBEX and just noticed another (very minor) thing, which is that it automatically adds a full stop (period to you in the US) to the end of every optional title.  So here, for instance, I ask a question in the title, which ends with a question mark, but that also then has a period placed after it.  Pedantic, I know, but I guess you might want to know these things... good luck guys!

    Ralph•...
    These are the three ways that Feedback shows up for me, depending on screen size: This is true in Safari and Chrome and on the iPhone for me. What device are you using? But there is a bug in this....
    web development
    user experience
    responsive design
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    Seeing ourselves and our culture in Charlie Kirk. When I first heard about the murder I didn't know how big of a lightning rod it was going to be. Then my friend Kageni challenged me to write about the Charlie Kirk event “from an integral perspective,”* and I’ve learned to listen to her challenges, even when I'm feeling scared or inadequate (like this one). (For those who don't have the context, I apologize).

    Also, in writing about this human being as an object of our cultural fascination, I've necessarily moved past the well of human grief and empathy. Forgive my insensitivities, oversimplifications (mapping rather than territory-ing), many omissions, forgive if I strayed from my lane, and may we continuously reclaim our shadows to create a more loving world.

    I. We are projecting so much onto Charlie Kirk that says more about us than the real tragedies. This is normal—to quote Valerie Daniel “You can't breathe without getting projected on.” But it keeps us from confronting the raw realities of grief, powerlessness, the horror and unpredictability of life, the darkness and violence in humanity. And the irony—cruel or helpful, depending on your view—is that whatever we’re unwilling to face in ourselves is destined to repeat itself.

    So let’s reclaim these projections, for our personal peace, and to prevent future tragedies. All the negative and positive stuff we project onto Kirk, onto culture, onto whoever we deem the other. Eg: If I can’t stand the celebrations, I’m probably hiding from my own schadenfreude, likely hiding how deeply I’m ashamed of my desire for power and holding others accountable. Or I’m unwilling to be tender with myself when I think I'm a victim, leading to over-responsibility: exhausting for me and enabling to others.

    Loving like this is fierce. I call it forgiveness. It demands the courage to challenge deep rooted beliefs we use to orient to the world, and stay present in the resistance.

    II. There are at least three distinct conversations happening at once:

    1. Murder is always a tragedy, including Kirk’s.

    2. Kirk's complicated character. His views are taken out of context but even so were offensive and scary to many people.

      How do we stay present with that fear and offense? But also the way he inspired so many good things in people, including the kind of integrity and service in young men this his murderer lacked? How do we wrestle with views that appear to span the gamut from traditional christian conservative (amber) to modern defenses of free speech (orange) to post-conventional institutional critiques (green)?

    3. Celebrations of his murder are vastly overrepresented online, but are part of a feedback loop that leads to more fracturing, which leads to individuals like Kirk’s killer making specific horrific unethical choices, which keeps the loop going.

      (Eg: his success was somewhat a reaction to the increasing cultural power of the radical left (operating from amber/ethnocentric structure despite progressive (Green) language), which is now getting amplified, which will amplify another conservative voice, which will lead to more assassinations).

      How can we re-align the system if we don't see we are it? Reclaiming our projections is a necessary first step if we’re highly triggered, because (a) systematically reconstructing our intersubjective meaning-making capacity demands intertribal coordination, and (b) it shows us where our actual power lies.

    III. Reclaiming our projections through collective dream analysis (sociosomnia).

    What if we see America’s reaction to him like a dream that we can interpret? Here’s one view: our culture is in a tizzy around free speech. We seem to both love it and be so terrified of it that we want to cancel and “kill” it. We’re trying to find orientation and values in the chaos of a post-truth world but we don’t yet know how to say “yes, all these points of view are valid (green) but some are more valuable, relevant, and true in this context than others (teal)."


    #TTT
    ---
    *The spirit of "from an integral perspective" in this context is making sense of competing claims to truth without demonizing anyone, but being willing to take a stand for goodness and values. To paraphrase integral grandpappa Ken Wilber, if we assume no one is smart enough to be 100% wrong, then how to we stitch together a coherent sense of what’s happening from all the partial truths and fragmented perspectives? In this particular post I’m relying a lot on adult developmental psychology, but the overall theory has a variety of other helpful meta-frames for understanding how seemingly totally different values relate.

    QuantumTangent•...
    Weird I upvoted this and did not mean to.  I was trying to understand how the up and down buttons work and the differentiating between areas of expertise.   I don't trust this at all. You lost me at "How do we stay present with that fear and offense?...
    user experience
    feedback systems
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    Ordinary Love. An invitation to true wellness culture

    Postmodernity is too egocentric. This includes current “spiritual” trends.

    Here’s what an alternative can look like: Yesterday Dara asked Jason to install a window A/C unit in Val’s room; he came over and did it. Last night a participant shared struggling with a contract at work, and a lawyer in the session volunteered to help her redline it. My sister watches the kids while I help my brother-in-law move their furniture to make room for the new baby. If this doesn’t sound special, that’s the point. You’re already doing this, that’s also the point.

    I’m not writing to admonish us to “get rid” of the “ego”—a particular self-identity*. I think it’s too hard for modern Americans, steeped in a culture of individualism. I love life, people, experience, and I think a good life includes a sense of “me.” Instead, I want to expand the sense of self to go much beyond the concept of “my body, my history” to see the larger whole these are part of. One upshot of this is gratitude, even for what I usually think of as “Jordan’s”—like these thoughts thunk in English. I needed English to think ‘em, so how much are they ‘mine’? 

    Automated & consensual narrative lock-in

    We know that social media exacerbated this. Many studies show narcissism and loneliness increasing faster with mass adoption of social media, especially after 2012. Young kids don’t want to serve as a fireman or doctor anymore, they want to be adored as an influencer (We’re working on this social media problem by launching UpTrust). 

    Now I worry that AI is exponentiating this self-reification trend to unprecedented levels.

    Last week I met four people who were convinced that their personal ChatGPT interface, molding its “personality” to respond based on their unique interactions, was a sentient being. If you think our filter bubbles are bad now, imagine what it’s like when we have 8 billion of them? Each individual’s personal collection of bots reinforcing whatever identity feels special, safe, and comfortable, no matter how limited and delusional?

    There’s nothing wrong with specialness, safety, and comfort, but neither is there anything wrong with ordinariness, risk, and discomfort. Transformation, life, intimacy, and play all demand both. Are we bleaching the color of life in pursuit of maintaining a self? What are we so afraid of that we hide from becoming? Life is transformation. Relating requires and changes our uniqueness. Other people providing friction and challenge—that’s a service, freely given to all at birth.

    Perhaps the trap isn’t narcissism. It’s any reification of identity via any narrative frame, especially spiritual ones, designed to parade as if they’re narrative-free. And the cost is ordinary love.

    Transcend and exclude often means we fall back into less maturity

    I’m still trying to get my mind and language around this, so I’m going to highlight the contrast to see the phenomena more clearly. Does your coach / (AI) therapist / culture / practice help you:

    • Express more gratitude? Become more forgiving? Be more accepting of others’ flaws? “Settle matters quickly with your adversary who is taking you to court”?
      Or say you should be treated a very particular way (reifying a victim identity?)

    • Build infrastructure that’s super helpful but unsexy? Do things that are good for others without recognition? Feed those who are hungry? Do mundane things for the local whole like pick up trash that’s not yours?
      Or build a marketing funnel that will help you promote yourself and perpetuate the ‘me’ ‘me’ ‘me’ cycle? 

    • Love your friends and family better? Accept being misunderstood? Show up to their events and support their successes? Take care of them when they’re sick? Be more generous? Patient, humble, respectful, loyal, temperate? Maintain commitments regardless of feelings?
      Or emphasize your in-the-moment desire above all else, calling impulsivity and self-centeredness ‘surrender’?

    • Develop boundaries as expressions of love and connection? Face challenges with grace and acceptance? Take responsibility for your pain, flaws, mistakes, shadows, and limitations?
      Or use "boundaries" to control others and force them to change according to your preferences?

    • Admit ignorance, learn from criticism, hold your beliefs lightly, speak simply about profound experiences, work steadily without needing dramatic breakthroughs, notice your defensive patterns without performatively announcing them, contribute to social understanding, love others as they are?
      Or position yourself as having rare insights to help others transcend their limitations through your techniques and advice?

    This list can go on; I wish I could speak to the connection and community side more but I’m stuck in my own bias. 

    I’m not saying it’s easy, we of course need guides, mentors, feedback–it’s so complicated! Nor am I saying its special—all of this has been said for thousands of years! I’m trying to highlight a healthy version of one pole and unhealthy versions of another on purpose to get more clarity on where we are deeply unbalanced today. This is especially true of ‘spiritual’ hotbeds like San Francisco, Boulder, Ubud, Amsterdam. Austin is somewhat counterbalanced by its Texas-ness—cowboy culture still emphasizes family, duty and sacrifice to a greater good beyond ‘you’. Plus our immigrants are a little more integrated.

    What’s up with me?

    Anyway, I ask myself: Why do I care?

    Sure, practices purported to transcend ego instead teach self-absorption. But it’s in the name— "personal growth" and “self-help.” What’s got me?

    Because I’m guilty of all of this. 

    Sometimes despite my best efforts, I’ve taught people to ignore their minds in order to stay with the sensations of their bodies (rather than integrating them); to ‘surrender’ to their feelings-in-the-moment and ignore larger consequences or agreements and the greater wholes that hold them. I’ve corrected a lot of these mistakes, made amends, even evolved the practice and training. Yet I still can’t quite escape the selfishness of ‘wellness’ culture. Prime example: a couple years ago we hosted a “Give Fest” at the Relateful Studio in Austin with a reverse silent auction, where people bid on what they wanted to give to a local nonprofit. Even my wife and I didn’t follow through on what we ‘won.’

    Let us redefine wellness and self-development. Let us change the metrics to gratitude, forgiveness, acceptance of our and others' flaws, showing up for family, friendship, and our greater communities. Let us celebrate unglamorous, unwitnessed interdependence.

    Three alternatives: what is it all for?

    Burning Man is actually a great example of a positive alternative. The economy is about gifting—and after your first year, it’s well known that to get the most out of the experience, you need to give. People camp in communities, build massive art projects and cars together, and give them freely without credit, burning them at the end. It’s all about creating for the whole, being present with each other in non-transactional relating. All of this disrupts the self-reification loops in such a way that people are consistently shaken from long held encumbrances, and come out of the desert transformed. I say this as an admirer but not a fanatic—I went to Black Rock City in 2012 and 2014, and then didn’t go again.

    Relatefulness

    Relatefulness, especially in Level Up ⬆’s Leadership Program and the The Relateful Coaching Training, does not fall into these problem nearly as badly as almost every other community I’ve seen. We claim our directionality of truth + love. This means the personal can’t be number one—individual expression and growth is always in service of something greater. Of course we make mistakes. (For example, the Level Up structure highlighted individualism. We’ll be returning to a cohort-only model this Fall—more on that in a future email). But we’ve done a really good job focusing on being with what is, especially relationally and communally. 

    We don’t abandon compassion and honesty in service of making sure people feel seen, heard, cultivating a ‘safe space,’ or maintaining instagram-defined-trauma-therapy-norms. This is hard, because I not only want people to feel seen, heard, safe, and heal, I think it’s crucial for a healthy community and for the true pursuit of truth and love. It just needs to be in service of love/truth, rather than an end unto itself. It needs to come authentically from the moment, not as a script or status signal or performance. We run into generative friction embracing the seeming paradox of this polarity all the time, and it is incredibly demanding of our facilitators to walk this tight rope. It demands that we are always changing, individually as leaders, as a community, and even the practice itself. Even our coaching teaches revealing identity commitments, inherently making the self an object in a larger self that can choose “yes” or “no” to, versus reinforcing a self and an existing worldview.

    And even as we teach people how to meta-narrate as a way to witness and disembed themselves from unconscious habits that have been running them, we recognize that the compulsion to name and categorize experiences—spiritual or otherwise—often becomes a form of conceptual possession, serving self preservation rather than self-transformation.

    Frozen
    The Disney movie Frozen shows another fantastic example of a healthy alternative. (I just watched the Broadway version with my kids this weekend, so it's fresh on my mind). 

    In my view, the critical part of Elsa moving from “Conceal don’t reveal” to “Let it Go” is not about self-expression, it's about surrendering the need to control, particularly others’ reactions to her true nature. As a result she loves what she previously saw as her shame (her ice power), an identity transformation that eliminates the victim-perpetrator dynamic entirely and unlocks her ability to use her power for everyone’s benefit.

    But of course the most incredible part is reframing the trope of “true love”—not just from romantic to familial love, but about the act of loving others. The secret that ‘healed’ Anna’s frozen heart wasn’t receiving ‘true love’ from someone else, but her performing a selfless act of true love herself. Even better, she truly loved the one who accidentally caused the curse in the first place, in a show of what I like to call “true forgiveness”—there was never any threat to love’s presence in the first place. So in some real sense, nothing to forgive. Family love, particularly love that endures despite harm, represents the ordinary, unglamorous love that doesn't depend on worthiness or reciprocity (romantic love ideally is the same, but often feels like something we need to earn or could lose). 

    Oh and there’s the wonderful Olaf, as a projection of the best of Anna and Elsa’s innocence in childhood. And I love that it’s not spiritual :)
     

    True spirituality isn’t spiritual (and is definitely not about ‘me’)

    As usual, I’m writing this for myself as much as anyone. Can I experience states of fundamental wellbeing, help others, and act with virtue and integrity without any internal or external narration / validation? Without needing it to be spiritual development? Who would be accumulating spiritual experiences or qualities anyway, and what would they be good for if not to benefit the whole of existence?

    Can all of my mastery lead me to being completely ordinary? Not needing actions to be recognized as anything, even by myself, I respond to what's in front of me without overlaying (spiritual) significance.

    And can I not do that for the sake of development either? If I notice that self-referential trap, may I love myself in it and move on with the normal good stuff of living. The self-referential loop is infinite if I engage it.

    Instead, let me show up lovingly for the sake of itself, because that’s what love does.

     

    —

    *Although that is a path that can work for some people like Byron Katie or Eckhart Tolle, it’s a hard one to “do” because the will that acts needs to eventually be transcended. In both of their histories, their dissolution was more done to them.

     


    (this will be sent out to my #TTT email in a couple of days, but UpTrust gets the early exclusive ;) )

    renee•...
    Hey thanks! That makes sense. Was it up or downtrusted? I dont see that. Or dont see how to see that. Once i saw a video pop up when I signed in from you to show someone around the website. Can i still  access that?...
    website navigation
    user experience
    Comments
    0
  • S

    Something like an introduction. This platform seems like an awesome idea, but I still mostly don't understand how it works which has kept me from landing here very often.

    This post is something of an experiment for that reason. I wonder if someone will see it and respond. I wonder if that happens, whether I will know unless I specifically come back from time to time to check. 

    Then again, I do often put a lot of effort to write meaningful things on platforms like Facebook and find myself disappointed in the response. I'd love to discover an online space that felt generative rather than just practicing resiliently swimming upstream.

    By way of introduction, I do many things, but they all boil down to various questions of relationship - all the relationships that can be imagined between self, other and world. When my attunement feels the way I like it to do, everything is like music to me, so I call that 'musicality of being.' 

    Above all these days, I'm focused on the art of listening - in all the ways that one might imagine what "listening" means (I'm trying to further diversify my own definitions.

    I recently wrote some "Notes on Listening": 

    https://open.substack.com/pub/sethdellinger/p/notes-on-listening?r=p5zo5&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=false

    If you took the time to read this . . . thanks!

    https://sethdellinger.substack.com/
    dara_like_saraSA•...

    Email notifications are now live!

    You can opt-in by going to your settings and checking the box. Top right corner Profile Pic --> Settings

    technology
    user experience
    digital notifications
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