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A newsletter about how to make sense of our rapidly changing reality, and consciously shape the future. Expect deep dives, cultural commentary, and the occasional existential scary laugh about existing in wild times and learning to thrive in uncertainty.

Still Processing is a newsletter about thriving in an era of exponential change. Emerging tech, cultural and social upheavals aren’t just evolving, they’re accelerating, reshaping the world faster than we can make sense of it.

Expect deep dives into the implications of this uncertainty, philosophically, practically, and personally. Through thoughtful analysis, storytelling, and a touch of humor, I explore the intersection of futurism, human potential, and spiritual development while observing the absurd trends of this timeline. Think; big ideas decoded so you can thrive in weird times.

We’re aren’t fear based here. I’m about jumping into this new reality with two feet to consciously shape the future. Join me in exploring the forces transforming our world, and learning how to meet them with intention, curiosity, and resilience.

Check out some recent editions:

My Bookshelf

I am a forever learner and voracious reader. I'm fascinated by big ideas and the endless possibilities we seem to have in creating our world around us. The themes and ideas in issues of Still Processing were inspired by ideas from these great books.

Buddha’s Brain: The Practical Neuroscience of Happiness, Love, and Wisdom

by

Rick Hanson

Hanson translates the science of neuroplasticity into accessible practices for conscious mental rewiring—bridging perfectly with my “counterspell” framework.

Thinking, Fast and Slow

by

Daniel Kahneman

A landmark exploration of the two systems that drive our thinking: the fast, emotional, intuitive system and the slow, deliberate one. Essential for understanding how algorithms exploit cognitive shortcuts.

Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion

by

Robert Cialdini

Cialdini’s foundational text on the six principles of persuasion—reciprocity, authority, social proof, liking, commitment, and scarcity—reveals the timeless psychological levers that modern media automates at scale.

Amusing Ourselves to Death

by

Neil Postman

Written in the 1980s but eerily prophetic, Postman argues that television (and by extension, the internet) turns serious public discourse into entertainment, eroding our ability to think critically about truth.

The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains

by

Nicholas Carr

Carr examines how constant online engagement rewires our neural pathways, shortening attention spans and changing how we process meaning—a neurocognitive lens for your essay’s core argument.

Stolen Focus: Why You Can’t Pay Attention—and How to Think Deeply Again

by

Johann Hari

A compassionate, wide-ranging look at the attention crisis, combining personal narrative with research into how Big Tech fragments focus and how we can rebuild depth and intention.

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