Practices of Time
This growing collection of practices offers ways of cultivating discernment in an accelerated, computational world. Rather than prescribing beliefs or values, they focus on how we notice consequences, track excess, and remain ethically engaged when judgment is pressured to arrive too quickly.
A practice of time that focuses on discerning how good intentions can create excessive energies that outrun good intentions. We live in a world where consequences spread faster than we can assess or predict. Learning to discern accursed shares as they happen will help us better navigate our growing power.
Ressentiment is not a psychological weakness or a moral flaw. It is a signal that judgment has outrun discernment. This practice offers a way to notice when critique hardens into condemnation, suspend withdrawal that feels like moral clarity, and reopen ethical engagement in a world moving faster than inherited values can keep pace.
Metanoia is not repentance by another name. It is an orientation to time that delays meaning, resists judgment, and learns by moving forward. Drawing on Mark’s Gospel, this practice explores how patience, listening, and restraint can open a different experience of the future—one not governed by ressentiment or premature certainty.
What happens to our sense of time when we stare into the origins of life? This practice invites contemplation of emergence, contingency, and delayed order—where meaning, purpose, and consciousness have not yet arrived, and nothing is guaranteed.
Deep dives are not about finishing books—they are about letting difficult ideas change how you experience time. This practice explores how sustained engagement with science, history, and philosophy can stretch certainty and widen the horizon of experience.

