The Art of Turning Toward Growth Psychological Edaphoecotropism There’s a kind of beauty you only notice when you slow down. An old lamppost on a city sidewalk.A mature tree whose …
Even though I draw heavily from my personal story to illuminate Biblical truth, I want to be clear:I take the Word seriously.My metaphors may stretch into fractals. My stories might …
Music doesn’t just move us. It remakes us. Sound activates memory, reopens emotion, and gives us a sacred tool for shaping the narrative of our lives.
So choose your sounds the way you’d choose your thoughts, your companions, your prayers.
Listen with purpose.
Heal with rhythm.
Actually this entire site could be called The Mythomatician’s Field Guide. But I like creating subsets for precision in thinking so I present this section called The Field Guide. Here, …
Before any meaningful mental shift can happen, two internal mechanisms must already be in motion. Psychology gives them names: the Pygmalion Effect and the Galatea Effect. These aren’t just abstract theories. They’re the invisible engines behind real growth, real learning, and real self-redefinition.
We think of 100% as totality. Completion. Certainty. But here’s the mystical twist: 100% is less than infinity. And your life belongs to the infinite. For centuries, we’ve used numbers …
Why Beating the Odds Starts by Ignoring Them Let’s get something straight: percentages are brilliant. In the aggregate, they tell sweeping stories of populations, patterns, and probabilities. But when it …
the Three Cons of Conscious Behavior—Conditional, Conditioning, and Congenital—and how understanding them has transformed the way I guide others and walk through the world. Some people change easily, some need …
Numbers have always intrigued humanity. From ancient civilizations that revered numerical patterns to modern societies that rely on complex calculations, numbers serve as bridges between the tangible and the abstract. …
The Spirit of Truth reveals different insights to each individual, prompting self-discovery. Macbeth’s tragic downfall stems from ambition and fear upon encountering prophecy, unlike Jesus, who accepts his fate for a greater purpose. The “Yeast or Fly” test helps discern whether new insights nourish understanding or provoke anxiety. The interplay between Shakespeare and King James raises questions about influence and interpretation, urging reflection on whether information is connective or corruptive.









