sábado, 25 de abril de 2026

Sex is divine transcendence








 I. REVELATION
Sex is divine transcendence.

I was fifteen. The air split.

A light - or was it noise? - entered through the bones.

I felt myself blur, melt, re-form.

It wasn’t pleasure, it wasn’t pain. It was eruption.

The skin became a mirror.

The mirror became a storm.

Every breath fractured into colours I couldn’t name.

Time folded, and I saw the animal inside the girl
stretching, screaming, being born - exactly like a fool.

I fell through myself.

I thought it was death; but it was beginning.

Something wrote itself across my ribs -
a sentence made of pulse.

Since then, every word I write smells faintly of that light.

Every line remembers the shiver that named me real.

I am inspired by sexual energy -
and I am scared of the power it holds over me.

But I love my sex drive as much as I love you, amour.



II. WITNESS
Sex is a threshold.

Not body only - breath, shadow, echo.

A small death that opens the room of the self.

Through it I see the angel again.

He stands where the air folds - silent, astonished -

as if beholding the first word.

He does not bless. He witnesses.

Then he disappears into the white noise of the world.

After, I write.

The hand trembles; the page smells of smoke.

I understand: this act is language.

Every tremor becomes a syllable.

Every silence, a door.

No one taught me this.

I found it alone, like a secret passage.

I entered - and something in me stayed there,

listening, translating.

Sex as mirror.

Sex as prayer.

Sex as the beginning of art.



III. WOUND
It happened once, in another life -

or perhaps it was the birth of this one.

A body met another, and the air split open.

Terror and beauty arrived together, like twins.

He said I was beautiful.

The words floated between us, trembling,

almost divine in their simplicity.

And as the world bent inward, I asked:

“What is beauty, really?”

He smiled - a smile that seemed older than us both.

“Beauty,” he said, “is art.”

The room vanished.

Only the sentence remained, suspended in the light,

and from it the rest of my life began to write itself.



IV. CREATION
I lost myself inside him.

No thought. No shame. Only the blur.

Something dark passed through us -

his hands, my silence, the trembling air.

He hurt me, and the hurt became a river,

pouring out of me, burning, almost holy.

I heard my own voice cry out:

It’s not right, you’re cruel.

He stopped, his mouth a shadow against mine.

No tears came. Only another cry -

What is cruelty?

He said nothing.

The silence spoke the oldest language I know.

And in that silence, I understood -

that creation and cruelty are sisters,

that art is born where pain loses its name.

And I began to call that wound - God.




Jeanne Vessantra




What Sex Reveals That Dating Hides

 



Why intimacy exposes character 
faster than conversation ever will

This is probably not the most elegant article title to bring into civilized company, but here we are. At some point I had to admit that a great deal of what people spend months trying to figure out over coffee, text messages, and earnest conversations about emotional maturity becomes much clearer much faster in bed. Which is mildly offensive to human vanity, but unfortunately often true.

People can do a lot in ordinary life. 
They can be charming, thoughtful, evolved, insightful, communicative, well read, spiritually hydrated, and in excellent rhetorical condition. They can say all the right things about closeness, depth, honesty, and connection. Then intimacy begins and suddenly the resume slips off the table. 

Now you are no longer interviewing a curated adult identity. 
You are meeting the body, the stress response, the private shame, the control issues, the tenderness, the self consciousness, the whole little internal committee that shows up when another person gets too close for performance alone to carry the evening.

The more I thought about this, the more it seemed like one of the strangest gaps in how adults talk about relationships. We act as if sex is either too crude to discuss honestly or too romantic to discuss clearly, when in reality it is often a weirdly efficient preview of real life. A tiny virtual reality simulation of the future. 
  • Can this person stay present. 
  • Can they adapt. 
  • Can they laugh. 
  • Can they tolerate awkwardness. 
  • Can they notice another human being, or does the whole experience immediately become a hostage situation organized around their ego. 
These are not minor details.

And if you want to know how someone will behave behind closed doors in a long term partnership, at some point you have to notice who they are behind closed doors, not only who they are in restaurants, on weekend dates, or in beautifully edited conversation. Marriage is not a dinner date stretched over twenty years. It is private life. It is ordinary life. It is what happens when nobody is especially polished, nobody is performing especially well, and reality keeps asking both people to be real anyway.

There is another complication too, which is that by the time sex happens people are often not reading anything with a completely clear mind. They are already attached. They are hopeful. They are flattered. Desire has entered the room. Admiration has entered the room. Hormones are doing what hormones do. That is part of why people miss what they are being shown. 
They explain things away. They interpret generously. They mistake activation for chemistry, compensation for confidence, mystery for depth. So yes, private intimacy can be a preview, but it is often a preview people watch through a very biased lens.

So yes, I decided to write about it. Not to be scandalous, and not because one imperfect night explains a whole person, but because intimacy often reveals things that ordinary courtship politely hides. And frankly, before people start sharing a mortgage, a child, three holidays with in laws, and years of passive aggressive kitchen silence, it may not be the worst idea to pay attention to the preview.

Part 1: Where performance starts to crack
One of the strange things about attraction is how much can be hidden before two people actually enter the same physical space in a real way. Courtship allows for editing. A person can be attentive, articulate, witty, emotionally literate, even unusually intuitive, and still remain largely protected inside image, timing, and control. They can present the version of themselves they most want to be seen, and often they are not even consciously lying. They may genuinely believe that this curated self is who they are. 
But intimacy has a different structure. 
It asks for presence, not presentation. 
It asks the body to participate, not just the mind, and once that happens something begins to give way. The polished surface may still be there, but it is no longer enough to carry the whole encounter.

This is one reason physical intimacy can be so psychologically revealing. 
Not because it is some crude test of performance, and not because people should be judged by one awkward or imperfect moment, but because it reduces the distance between personhood and embodiment. 

In ordinary social life, many people can function through persona. 
They can rely on charm, verbal skill, seduction, status, confidence, or emotional fluency. They can steer the atmosphere. They can create an impression. 

But when desire becomes real, when the encounter requires receptivity, responsiveness, and a capacity to remain present inside one’s own body, the usual defenses do not work as smoothly. A person may become self-conscious, controlling, detached, impatient, mechanical, needy, fragile, or unexpectedly tender. Something true begins to appear, not the whole truth of a person, but often a truth that is much harder to access in conversation alone.

What starts to crack in those moments is not only performance in the sexual sense. 
It is performance in the psychological sense. 
The effort to look composed, experienced, generous, powerful, unbothered, irresistible, all of that becomes harder to maintain when another person is no longer an audience but a living presence with their own body, rhythm, needs, and perceptions. 

Some people can tolerate that transition. 
They become more real as intimacy deepens. 
Others become more managed. 
They start trying to control the moment instead of entering it. They become preoccupied with themselves, with how they are appearing, whether they are succeeding, whether they are admired, whether they are losing ground. 
And that shift matters, because it shows that the encounter is no longer about mutual experience. It has become organized around self-protection.

That is why intimacy can reveal things that dating often conceals. 
  • It can expose the difference between desire and entitlement, between confidence and compensation, between emotional language and actual capacity for closeness. 
  • It can show whether a person experiences another human being as someone to meet or as someone to use in stabilizing their own self-image. 

Some people come closer and become softer, more attentive, more curious. 
Others come closer and become more defended. 
The body tightens, the mind narrows, the other person starts to disappear as a subject. 
What remains is not connection but management. 
That shift can happen very quietly, but once you know how to see it, it tells you a great deal.

The difficult part is that people usually do not see any of this from a clear distance. 
By the time intimacy happens, they are often already attached enough to misread what they are being shown. They are attracted. They are admiring. They are hopeful. Their body is involved too. Early bonding chemistry has a way of making people generous interpreters of behavior they might judge more clearly in other circumstances. They tell themselves he is just nervous, he is just intense, he is just passionate, he is just shy, he is just not good at vulnerability yet. Sometimes that is true. Sometimes it is not. 

  • Sometimes what looks like chemistry is simply activation. 
  • Sometimes what looks like confidence is compensation. 
  • Sometimes what looks like mystery is emotional absence with good lighting.

There is also something humbling about the body in these encounters. 
The body does not care very much about the story a person has been telling about themselves. It responds to tension, fear, ease, trust, pressure, shame, resentment, excitement, warmth, and emotional safety. A person who appears bold may actually be brittle. 

  • A person who appears detached may be flooded. 
  • A person who speaks the language of depth may still be unable to tolerate reciprocity once another mind and body are fully present in the room. 

In that sense, the erotic encounter does not manufacture character. 
It reveals the degree to which character is embodied.

And that is where this subject becomes more serious than people usually allow. 
We tend to speak about sex either too crudely or too sentimentally. 
We reduce it to chemistry, skill, attraction, technique, preference, liberation, repression, confidence, dysfunction. 

All of those may matter, but none of them gets to the center of what makes intimacy so revealing. 
What it reveals, very often, is how a person functions when they can no longer rely entirely on impression management. 
It reveals what happens when desire meets vulnerability, when self-image meets physiology, when another person is close enough that pretense becomes harder to sustain. 
Some people become more human in that moment. 
Others become more exposed as performers who have lost control of the stage.


Part 2: The body is not separate from the psyche
The body is not separate from the mind in sex, and most people know that already, even if they do not say it in those words. You can feel it almost immediately. A person may want intimacy and still not be able to settle into it. They may be attracted and still not be fully there. They may care, they may desire, they may even be trying hard, but the body does not respond well to pressure, self-consciousness, resentment, fear, or the need to prove something. 

This is where people often become simplistic. 
They talk as if sexual response is either mechanical or emotional, either physical or psychological, when in reality it is both at the same time. 
The body is not some obedient machine carrying out a command from the mind. 
It is part of the whole experience.

That is why intimacy can expose so much without anyone saying a word. 
You are not just meeting desire. You are meeting the condition in which desire has to live. 
You are meeting the person’s level of ease inside themselves, the amount of noise in their head, the amount of tension in their body, and the degree to which they can stay present instead of monitoring themselves from the outside. 

Some people remain relatively free. They can respond, adjust, recover, play, make contact, tolerate imperfection. 
Other people start disappearing into management. Their breathing changes. Their pacing changes. The humor goes out of the room. They become rushed, overly technical, overly serious, or strangely irritated by ordinary vulnerability. 
The body is no longer simply participating. It is carrying the full weight of the psyche.

Hormones matter here, but not in the cheap magazine way people often use that word. 
I do not mean some cartoon version where everything gets reduced to chemistry and cliche. 
I mean that sexual response depends on an entire internal environment. 
Stress hormones can interfere with arousal. Adrenaline can sharpen the body for action while making real receptivity harder. Chronic stress can leave a person keyed up, numb, distracted, or depleted. Even breathing, muscle tone, timing, blood flow, and attention are affected by emotional state. A person who feels under threat, ashamed, enraged, or deeply self-conscious is not having a purely mental experience. Their whole body is participating in that state.

This is where sex becomes more revealing than people like to admit. 
Not because the body is cruel, but because it is honest in ways language often is not. 
Someone can talk about connection all day long and still be unable to tolerate the actual physical reality of closeness. Someone can seem confident and still become brittle the moment the encounter stops revolving around fantasy and starts involving another real person with their own pace, needs, and presence. Someone can look experienced and still be profoundly disconnected from themselves. 
That disconnection can take different forms. 
Sometimes it looks like anxiety. 
Sometimes it looks like flatness. 
Sometimes it looks like control. 
Sometimes it looks like a strange emotional absence right in the middle of something that is supposed to be intimate.

What people often call sexual difficulty is not always about lack of attraction and not always about lack of skill. Sometimes it is the body refusing to cooperate with a state of mind that is too crowded, too defended, too ashamed, too split off, or too burdened by self-observation. 
Sometimes the person is not really with the other person at all. 
They are with an internal audience. They are with an old humiliation. They are with a private fear. They are with a need to confirm something about themselves. They are with a story about power, success, desirability, adequacy. And the more the encounter becomes organized around proving, the less room there is for actual contact.

This is also why self-consciousness matters more than people think. 
Not ordinary nerves. Not basic shyness. Those are human. I mean the kind of self-consciousness where a person is no longer inside the experience at all. They are outside it, watching themselves, grading themselves, trying to look desirable, capable, unwounded, experienced, impressive, unbothered. They split in two. One part is supposed to be having the experience. The other part is supervising it from above. And once that happens, spontaneity starts dropping out. Softness goes with it. Responsiveness goes with it. The body begins to feel less like a place of contact and more like a stage under surveillance.

You can feel the difference. 
A person who is truly there may still be awkward, shy, imperfect, a little messy, but they remain alive. They can recover. They can laugh. They can adjust. They can stay with another human being without the whole moment collapsing into embarrassment or control. 
A person who is not truly there may still know what to do, may still say the right things, may still appear composed, but something essential is missing. Their body is present. Their self is not fully arriving.

That is why the body gives people away. 
Not only in how they respond to your body, though that matters enormously. 
Also in what their own physiology begins revealing once closeness becomes real. 
The body shows whether another person’s vulnerability deepens their presence or activates their defenses. 
It shows whether they can stay warm when things stop being flattering, whether they can adapt when the script breaks, whether they can remain human when the moment is no longer carrying their preferred image.

And this rarely stays confined to the bedroom. 
The person who cannot tolerate not looking strong in private often cannot tolerate it anywhere. 
This may be the same person who cannot take feedback without defensiveness, cannot stay with your pain without making it about themselves, cannot handle inconvenience without withdrawal, cannot tolerate a crying child without irritation, cannot remain emotionally present when you are sick, cannot deal with financial stress without becoming cold or controlling. What comes out in private is often not some isolated glitch. It is a broader way of functioning under vulnerability, stress, and loss of control.

The body is not separate from the psyche, and it is not especially interested in maintaining a polished story. It may be anxious. It may be defended. It may be ashamed. It may be disconnected. It may be tender. But once intimacy begins, it starts giving a much more honest account than self-description usually does.

And once you understand that, the next question becomes more specific. 
If private behavior is telling the truth, what truth is it telling? 
Because not everyone reveals the same thing. 
One person reveals anxiety. Another reveals fragility. Another reveals entitlement. Another reveals detachment. Another reveals control. Another reveals a real capacity for mutuality. 
That difference matters, because it usually points far beyond one private night.


Part 3: What private behavior actually reveals
Once you stop treating intimacy like some bizarre pass-fail event and start treating it as information, the question changes. It is no longer only whether there was chemistry, whether the night felt smooth, whether the two of you seemed convincing inside the story you were building together. 
The more useful question is what began to show itself once the setting got private enough that charm, language, and self-presentation were no longer enough.

People do not all crack in the same direction.

Sometimes what comes out is anxiety. 
Not cruelty, not entitlement, not some grand dark revelation. Just anxiety. The person wants closeness, but the moment it becomes real they start tightening. They overthink. They monitor themselves. Spontaneity drains out of them. Reassurance becomes necessary in a way that pulls them out of contact and back into self-management. Nothing dramatic may happen, but the atmosphere starts revolving around their nervous system trying not to come apart. You can feel them slipping away from you while they are still technically there, busy surviving themselves.

Other people reveal less fear than fragility. 
They may look confident right up until something does not go smoothly, and then the shift is immediate. They get irritated, embarrassed, defensive, overly serious. A small disruption lands like a major humiliation. Your feedback feels like criticism. Your needs feel like proof that they are failing. Your less-than-total responsiveness suddenly becomes an injury. The moment stops being about connection and starts becoming about repairing their self-image. You are no longer sharing an experience. You are standing inside someone else’s panic about how they are being seen.

Then there are people who are not exactly fragile and not exactly anxious. 
They are simply organized around themselves. 
This is easy to miss at first because it can look polished. 
They are not necessarily rude or cartoonishly selfish. The whole experience just keeps bending toward them: their pace, their comfort, their preferences, their gratification, their emotional weather, their idea of how things should go. Your body is there, but more as a setting than as an equal reality. Your pleasure matters if it supports the atmosphere they want. Your limits matter as long as they do not interrupt much. Your feedback is acceptable only when it asks very little of them. That is one of the clearest things private behavior can reveal: whether another person actually has room for you, or mostly for the version of you that fits neatly inside their experience.

There are also people who look responsive, even lovely, but never quite arrive.
These are often the people-pleasers, the ones who learned to do closeness by accommodating rather than by showing up honestly. At first that can feel wonderful. They seem agreeable, attentive, eager, easy. But after a while something starts feeling strangely empty. You do not feel met so much as carefully handled. Their responsiveness is real on one level, but it often comes from compliance, anxiety, or a wish to keep everything smooth. Their own center feels weak. Their own honesty feels faint. Their yes is there, but it does not feel inhabited. And that matters, because intimacy is not only about whether someone is kind. It is about whether they are actually there.

Sometimes the problem is not self-focus or pleasing. It is absence. 
A person stays physically engaged, but emotionally they are somewhere else. The encounter may continue, but it starts to feel lonely. They do not have to become harsh or selfish for that to happen. They just become less reachable, less alive, less mutual. You can feel the distance even when they are doing all the expected things. It is the difference between someone participating and someone arriving. This kind of detachment is easy to miss if you were taught to look only for obvious red flags. But the body notices it quickly. Something is off. There is too little curiosity, too little reciprocity, too little real contact.

Then there are the people for whom closeness turns almost immediately into a control problem. 
They direct too much. They rush the pace. They do not like being interrupted by reality. They grow impatient when mutuality requires adjustment. They act as if their momentum should carry the whole moment. Your body starts to feel like something to manage rather than someone to meet. They may never say outright that they only feel comfortable when everything moves through them, but the feeling is unmistakable. The room gets narrower. There is less space for spontaneity, less room for your timing, less room for anything that was not already organized around their will.

And yes, sometimes what emerges is something more recognizably narcissistic. 
Not in the lazy internet way where every disappointing date gets turned into a diagnosis, but in the more serious sense that another person’s reality becomes difficult to tolerate unless it reflects well on them. They may enjoy access, admiration, desire, responsiveness, even emotional intimacy up to a point. But the second your needs become equally real, the mood shifts. Their skin gets thinner. Their curiosity drops. Their self-protection rises. Reciprocity becomes hard because reciprocity means they are no longer the center of the emotional universe. That is the deeper reveal. The real question is not whether they can desire another person. It is whether another person can remain fully real in the room without becoming a threat to their ego.

And then, to be fair, there are the healthier people. 
The ones who do not become theatrical under exposure. They are not always dazzling. They may not create the most intoxicating first impression. But they remain human. They can be awkward without turning cold. They can be imperfect without becoming defensive. They can stay warm while adjusting. They do not need the whole moment to flatter them in order to stay present. They notice what is happening. They respond. They recover. They make room for another person without disappearing themselves. It is not glamorous, but it is rare enough to matter. It tells you the person has some real capacity for mutuality.

That is what private behavior actually reveals. 
Not one neat trait, not some tidy diagnosis, but the direction a person moves in once closeness stops being theoretical. 
Some move toward anxiety. Some toward fragility. Some toward self-protection, control, absence, ego. Some remain capable of contact.

That difference matters more than people think. 
Not because you are trying to diagnose anyone in bed, and not because one night should carry the weight of a whole biography. It matters because private closeness has a way of making a person’s default strategy more visible. Another person is no longer an idea at that point. They are a real body with needs, limits, responses, preferences, uncertainty, and vulnerability. 
Some people become more relational under those conditions. 
Others become more defended.

And that is usually where the truth begins.

Part 4: Why this becomes a preview of marriage and family life
This is where people try to separate sex from the rest of life, as if what happens in private belongs in one sealed compartment and everything that matters later belongs somewhere else. 
In theory that sounds tidy. In real life it usually falls apart. 
The same person who shows you who they are under closeness is often showing you who they will be under inconvenience, dependency, disappointment, fatigue, and stress. 
Not in some perfect one-to-one way, and not because one intimate experience predicts an entire future with scientific precision. 
But the overlap is real enough that ignoring it is often a mistake.

The point is not that sex predicts sexual compatibility alone. 
What it can offer is an early look at how someone behaves when another person stops being an appealing idea and becomes fully real, with actual needs, timing, limits, vulnerability, and a body that does not always cooperate with fantasy. 
That matters because marriage is built out of exactly those conditions. 
So are parenthood, illness, caregiving, financial stress, and grief. 
Life keeps removing the polished conditions under which people most like to be seen, and what remains is the person you actually have.

If someone is deeply self-focused in intimacy, that usually does not stay there. 
Later it may become the partner whose comfort quietly organizes the whole house, whose moods set the climate, whose preferences keep outranking everyone else’s reality. The same structure that made private closeness revolve around them may later shape money, schedules, social plans, sex, childcare, even who is allowed to be tired. They may still call themselves loving. They may still think they are trying. But the center of gravity keeps drifting back toward their convenience, their stress, their appetites, their need to feel good, admired, undisturbed.

If someone becomes controlling in private, do not expect that tendency to vanish once life gets more serious. It usually gets more expensive. At first it may look like impatience with pace, discomfort with mutuality, a need to direct everything, a strange intolerance for reality when it interrupts momentum. Later that same pattern can move into money, time, parenting, logistics, your body, your friendships, even your recovery when you are the one who needs care. It becomes the partner who cannot tolerate plans changing, who resents adaptation, who hears another person’s limits as an insult, who needs everything to move through their preferred channel or the mood darkens.

If someone is emotionally detached in private, that matters too. 
Marriage is not built only out of attraction. It is built out of repeated moments when another person needs you to actually arrive. A detached person may seem calm when life is smooth, flattering, and light. Calm is not the same as presence. When the baby is screaming at three in the morning, when your parent is dying, when work has gone badly, when the mortgage is heavier than expected, when you are sick and not especially inspiring, the real question is not whether they look composed. It is whether they are reachable. A lot of people discover too late that the partner who seemed unbothered in easy moments was never especially available to begin with. They were simply least absent when the stakes were low.

The anxious patterns matter in a different way. 
A person whose nervous system floods easily may not become cruel or controlling. They may genuinely love you. But if every vulnerable moment immediately becomes about stabilizing them, that is still information. Later it can become the partner who spirals during a family crisis, who needs so much reassurance during a sick child, a move, a legal problem, or a financial scare that you end up carrying both the event and their reaction to the event. Love may be present. So is the burden. And burden counts.

Fragile self-esteem matters in long-term life more than people like to admit. 
Someone who cannot tolerate feeling imperfect in private usually struggles later with ordinary reality too. They may get defensive when you ask for help, sulky when they are corrected, wounded when they are not the center of attention, or brittle when family life leaves them feeling inadequate. Children expose this especially fast because they are relentless teachers of imperfection. They interrupt, need things constantly, scream, get sick on important days, and have no interest in protecting anyone’s self-image. Illness is the same. So is sleep deprivation. So is recovery after anything hard. If ordinary human need feels like an injury to the ego, family life will make that obvious very quickly.

People-pleasing comes with its own price. 
At first it can feel soothing to be with someone who always says yes, seems easy, and adapts quickly. But if that yes is not connected to a real self, the relationship eventually fills with fog. Resentment grows underneath the surface. Honest desire starts disappearing. Decisions become murky. Conflict gets postponed until it leaks out sideways. In family life this often looks like one partner quietly dissolving into accommodation while the other ends up carrying the burden of what is actually true. It is exhausting to build a life with someone who seems agreeable but is never fully present in their own choices.

And then there is the healthier version, which does not get enough credit because it is less theatrical. A grounded person in private is not necessarily dazzling. They may not give you the most intoxicating first impression. What they give you is something better. They can stay human when things are awkward. They can adjust without sulking. They can tolerate your reality without making it into an attack on theirs. They can remain warm when the moment is imperfect. They can notice another person while still having a self. That matters later more than almost any polished trait people advertise early on. It matters when nobody has slept. It matters when money is tight. It matters when sex changes over time. It matters when one of you is grieving, recovering, failing, aging, or simply not at your best.

That is why private behavior is not trivial data. 
It is not just about chemistry. It is not just about pleasure. It is not just about whether one night was good, awkward, or forgettable. 
It is about whether a person can stay decent, flexible, responsive, and emotionally present when life stops being easy to curate. It is also about physiology, about how the body behaves under stress, vulnerability, frustration, exposure, and loss of control. Intimacy brings that forward because it strips away some of the distance people use to manage impression. What emerges is not only attitude or intention, but nervous system function under pressure. The body keeps its own record. It registers strain, safety, impatience, warmth, control, and absence long before language catches up. In that sense, it is not separate from real life at all. It is one of the earliest places where real life starts practicing.


Part 5: The deeper truth
Maybe this is the most inconvenient truth about sex. 
People like to treat it as chemistry, technique, compatibility, timing, attraction, confidence, trauma, luck, magic, bad timing, good timing, all the usual categories. 
Some of that is real, obviously. 
But underneath all that, sex is also one of the fastest reality checks in adult life.

Not always. Not with mathematical precision. Not in some cruel diagnostic way. But often enough.

Because in a very short amount of time, sometimes only minutes, you get a concentrated version of the person. Not the whole biography. Not the entire soul. But enough to make you sit up a little straighter. Enough to think, oh. There you are.

That is part of what makes it feel almost unfairly efficient. 
People can date for months conducting beautiful little interviews over drinks. They can discuss childhood, politics, books, communication, values, healing, attachment, whether they have done the work, whether they believe in therapy, whether they journal, whether they meditate, whether they have a relationship with their inner child and their digestive system. 
And then one private encounter quietly hands you part of the answer key.

That does not mean sex is some sacred oracle floating above ordinary life. It is not magic. It is not a divine exam. It is not a three-game playoff for human worth. 
The point is simpler than that. In private, people lose some of the usual support beams. 
Charm cannot carry everything. Social performance weakens. Saying the right thing is no longer enough to keep the whole scene upright. At some point the body enters the conversation, vulnerability enters the conversation, mutuality enters the conversation, and the whole little system gets more honest.

That is the part worth paying attention to.

And the reveal is not always awkwardness, failure, or visible strain. 
Sometimes it is the opposite. 
Sometimes a person is dazzling in bed for reasons that have very little to do with mutuality and a great deal to do with ego. They may seem highly skilled, unusually attentive, intensely charismatic, almost too confident, not because they are deeply relational, but because the whole moment is organized around being impressive, unforgettable, desired, beyond criticism. In those cases, what gets mistaken for chemistry or generosity may actually be grandiosity with excellent technique. You are not necessarily being met. You may be being overwhelmed, captivated, or strategically impressed, and because desire has already clouded the room, that can be easy to misread.

So the question is not whether someone was smooth every second, whether the night looked cinematic, or whether there was ordinary awkwardness, nervousness, or imperfection. 
Human beings are awkward. Human beings are nervous. Human beings are imperfect. 
That is not the problem. 

The real question is what happens when the moment stops flattering them. 
Do they stay recognizably human. 
Do they stay warm. 
Can they laugh and recover. 
Can they adjust. 
Or do they harden. Do they get colder, narrower, more self-protective, more irritated, more absorbed in saving face than making contact. 
That is usually where the real information starts.

And honestly, a little humor helps here because otherwise the subject gets too solemn, and human beings are too absurd for solemnity alone. We spend years trying to decode one another through text messages, brunches, family introductions, and carefully worded conversations about emotional maturity, while the body is standing in the corner like a very underpaid but brutally honest customs officer saying, ma’am, I have completed the inspection and I have concerns. 
The body notices what the polished mind tries to negotiate away. 
It notices impatience. It notices entitlement. It notices absence. It notices when somebody wants access without mutuality, closeness without inconvenience, intimacy without another real person interfering with the fantasy.

To be fair, it notices good things too. 
It notices warmth. It notices flexibility. It notices when someone can laugh instead of hardening. It notices when another person stays alive in the room instead of disappearing into control, shame, or performance. It notices when someone can handle reality without treating it like an injury.

That is what makes this more hopeful than cynical. 
The point is not to become suspicious of everyone. 
The point is to stop ignoring useful information when it appears. 
If someone becomes mean, controlling, self-protective, emotionally thin, or quietly contemptuous the minute closeness gets real, that matters. If someone becomes more attentive, more gentle, more honest, more present, that matters too.

What you are looking for in the end is not perfection. Not theatrical confidence. Not someone who performs intimacy like a well-rehearsed role. 
You are looking for a person whose basic decency survives exposure. 
A person who does not become smaller, meaner, colder, or more false when closeness becomes real. A person who can stay present without turning the moment into a stage, a contest, or a hiding place.

And none of this stays neatly confined to sex. 
It follows people into marriage, into parenting, into illness, into money stress, into conflict, into all the ordinary unphotogenic parts of life where nobody is especially impressive and charm is no longer enough to carry the scene.

So maybe the old advice was incomplete. Yes, look at how someone treats the waiter. Of course. But also pay attention to who they become when intimacy removes the costume. Sometimes the fastest glimpse of the future comes in a very private present.

I’m not encouraging anyone to run formal intimacy trials by the third date, though women did not invent the rush and would probably benefit most from clearer early data. 
I’m only saying that when closeness happens, it tends to reveal what self-presentation conceals. If anyone finds this framework stressful, I regret to inform you that the nervous system has never been especially committed to public relations.




Vera Hart






quinta-feira, 23 de abril de 2026

On Impermanence

 


Mark Squires






Who can resist the strangulating grip of time?
That which exists today is not there tomorrow
Like shooting stars which vanish in the flicker of an eye
Life comes and goes quicker than a speeding arrow

When someone dear dies and our heart bleeds
And pours our anguish of wordless grief
Remember everything has to eventually die
Like bubbles bursting in a matter of time brief

The only constant in life is its inconstancy
With time, our existence could become a myth
As every sunrise follows a sundown
Each birth leads to an eventual death

In the fluidity of time, we are in a state of flux
Don't obdurately clutch at something in your arms
Instead loosen your grip and let things go
With the ease of water running down your palms

Every lovely flower that blossoms once
Fades in time and eventually turns brown
If a leaf clings tenaciously to the tree
When autumn blasts strike, it falls down

Thus when cruelly expelled by the tree that held it close
Down it lies withered, trampled by treading feet
To die and dissolve in the soil to make it fecund
Allowing fresh life to seeds lying dormant in wait

Impermanence being in the grand design of things
To nothing in this world, one can permanently cling
So, willingly give way to herald in the new,
As autumn leaves cannot be laundered for the spring!


Valsa George




Loving What You Cannot Keep


Val Armstrong





 Everything you hold tightly 
is already leaving




You have done this before. 
You found something worth keeping—a person, a season of life, a version of yourself that felt clean and true—and you held it so tightly you could feel your knuckles whiten. Not from greed. From terror. Because somewhere beneath your daily routines and your ambitions, you understand that time moves in one direction. And so you grip harder, as if love were a vice and not an open palm. 
This is not a character flaw. It is the oldest human ache. 
But it is costing you the very thing you are trying to protect.



The Daily Meditation

“Omnia, Lucili, aliena sunt, tempus tantum nostrum est.”
“All things, Lucilius, belong to others; time alone is ours.”
Seneca, Letters to Lucilius



The Diagnosis

The pain of impermanence is not the pain of loss itself. 
It arrives earlier, quietly, before anything is even gone. It lives in the anticipating. The pre-grieving. The shadow cast by the knowledge that what you love is mortal.

We don’t talk about this honestly. We are trained to acquire, to protect, to optimize—but no system teaches us how to hold something beautiful while accepting it will not stay.



You may recognize these symptoms:
  • A subtle background dread that softens good moments, as if joy and fear now arrive together at the same door
  • A compulsive need to document—photographs, screenshots, saved conversations—as though memory itself cannot be trusted to honor what mattered
  • An emotional bracing that happens before goodbyes, trips, endings of any kind, even small ones, because some part of you has learned that warmth precedes loss

These are not weaknesses. They are signals. 
Your soul is telling you that you have confused love with ownership. And until that confusion is resolved, you will never fully inhabit the present—you will always be mourning it in advance.



The Unpacking

The Shadow is the belief that love requires permanence to be real. That if something ends, it was somehow lesser. That the measure of meaning is duration.

The Light is something far older and more radical: that love is not diminished by impermanence—it is defined by it.

Consider what Seneca is actually saying. 
He does not write this as consolation. He writes it as liberation. 
Aliena sunt—they belong to others. 
Your children. Your health. Your reputation. Your relationships. Even your own body. 
None of it is yours in the way we use that word. 
You are a steward, not an owner. And stewardship asks something entirely different of you than ownership does.

Ownership says: protect, secure, preserve, control.

Stewardship says: tend carefully, love fully, and release without bitterness when the season changes.


This is not resignation. 
The Stoics were not passive men. 
Marcus Aurelius governed an empire. Seneca shaped minds across centuries. 
Their philosophy was not detachment in the cowardly sense—it was full engagement without the poison of clinging. 
  • You love more honestly when you stop demanding that love stay. 
  • You are more present in a conversation when you stop trying to preserve it. 
  • You taste food differently when you stop assuming there will always be another meal.

The deepest error of the grieving mind is that it believes detachment is the cure. 
It is not. 
The cure is what Lao Tzu called wu wei—effortless action, open hands. 
Not refusing to love. Loving without a fist.



The Parable

In 168 BC, the Roman general Lucius Aemilius Paullus defeated Perseus of Macedon at the Battle of Pydna, ending the Third Macedonian War and bringing immeasurable wealth and glory to Rome. He marched through the streets to triumph. The crowds roared. He stood at the absolute apex of what a Roman life could mean.

Three days after his triumph, his younger son—a boy of fourteen—died. Four days after that, his older son died too. Both boys, gone within a week of his greatest victory.

Paullus addressed the Roman people. What he said was recorded and passed down not as a tragedy, but as a lesson in how to hold power and sorrow simultaneously. He told them he had always known that Fortune was unsteady. And so he had prayed, if catastrophe was coming, let it fall on him alone, not on Rome. His losses, he said, were the price of Rome’s safety. 
He chose to interpret his grief not as punishment but as exchange.

Whether you accept that framing or not, something in it endures: 
Paullus did not collapse. 
He did not curse the gods. He had already—through decades of Stoic discipline—trained himself to love his sons without demanding that love come with a guarantee. His grief was real. His composure was also real. They were not opposites.

This is the model. 
Not the absence of grief. Not emotional suppression. 
But a soul so well-rooted that it can be devastated and still remain upright. 
Like the oak that survives the storm not because it is rigid,
but because its roots go deeper than the wind can reach.



The Modern Mirror

Bring this now into the room where you actually live.

You built something. A following, a business, a relationship, a body you’re proud of. And you feel it—the quiet vertigo of knowing it can disappear. Markets move. Algorithms change. People leave. The body ages regardless of the kilometers you log.

So you check the numbers obsessively. You refresh the metrics. You perform for an audience that might evaporate tomorrow, and you feel a hollowness afterward that no open rate or subscriber count fills, because you already know the number will change.

This is the modern form of the ancient disease: using external permanence to cure an internal instability. But the feed will always move. The metrics will always fluctuate. The people you build for will, one day, move on. None of this is a failure of your work. It is simply the nature of the medium.

The ancient answer is not to stop building. 
It is to separate the quality of your effort 
from the permanence of the outcome. 

Paullus trained for decades before Pydna. 
His discipline was not conditional on victory. 
Your work, at its best, should have the same quality—complete in the doing, not waiting to be validated by how long it lasts.

The newsletters you write this week matter now. 
The runs you complete this morning matter now. 
Not because they will last forever. Because they are the expression of who you are choosing to become, in the only moment you have ever actually possessed.


in, Stoic Wisdom




terça-feira, 21 de abril de 2026

In Lieu of Flowers


Aleksandar Nakic





Although I love flowers very much, I won’t see them when I’m gone. 
So in lieu of flowers:  Buy a book of poetry written by someone still alive, 
sit outside with a cup of tea, a glass of wine, and read it out loud, 
by yourself or to someone, or silently.

Spend some time with a single flower. A rose maybe. Smell it, touch the petals. 
Really look at it. 
Drink a nice bottle of wine with someone you love.
Or, Champagne. 

And think of what John Maynard Keynes said, 
“My only regret in life is that I did not drink more Champagne.” 

Or what Dom Perignon said when he first tasted the stuff: 
“Come quickly! I am tasting stars!” 

Take out a paint set and lay down some colours.
Watch birds. Common sparrows are fine. Pigeons, too. Geese are nice. Robins.
In lieu of flowers, walk in the trees and watch the light fall into it. 
Eat an apple, a really nice big one. I hope it’s crisp. 
Have a long soak in the bathtub with candles, maybe some rose petals.
Sit on the front stoop and watch the clouds. 
Have a dish of strawberry ice cream in my name. 

If it’s winter, have a cup of hot chocolate outside for me. 
If it’s summer, a big glass of ice water. 
If it’s autumn, collect some leaves and press them in a book you love. I’d like that. 
Sit and look out a window and write down what you see. Write some other things down. 

In lieu of flowers, 
I would wish for you to flower. 
I would wish for you to blossom, to open, to be beautiful.


Shawna Lemay 
in, The Flower Can Always Be Changing.  




Why We Fear Death More Than Death Itself


Colin Kinnear
 


The Mind, 
the Unknown, 
and the Illusion of Control




Most people are not afraid of death.

They are afraid of what they imagine death to be.

The pain.
The darkness.
The loss of control.
The idea of disappearing into something unknown and irreversible.

But if you look closely, none of these are death itself.

They are projections of the mind.

I once spoke with a nurse who had worked in palliative care for over a decade. She had been present for hundreds of deaths. When I asked her what surprised her most, she didn’t mention the physical process.

She said, quietly,
“People are far more afraid before it happens than during.”

That stayed with me.

Because it suggests something uncomfortable:
What we fear may not be death, but our relationship to it.

Psychology offers a clear explanation.

The human brain is not designed to understand non-existence. 
It is designed to predict, to simulate, to anticipate threats. 
The amygdala—our fear center—activates not only in the presence of danger, but in the imagination of it.

This is why thinking about a future event can trigger the same anxiety as experiencing it.

In other words,
we don’t need death to suffer.
The idea of it is enough.


Ernest Becker, in The Denial of Death, argued that much of human behavior is driven by an unconscious fear of mortality. 
We build identities, pursue achievements, accumulate wealth—not only to live, but to feel that we will not disappear.

We try to outsmart impermanence.

But the more we avoid death, the more power it seems to have.

This avoidance shows up in subtle ways.

  1. We distract ourselves constantly.
  2. We fill our lives with noise.
  3. We postpone difficult conversations.
  4. We act as if there will always be more time.

And so death becomes something distant, abstract—until suddenly it isn’t.

Then the fear arrives all at once.

In Buddhism, this is described not as a failure, but as ignorance—not in a moral sense, but in a perceptual one.

We do not see clearly.

  • We take what is temporary to be permanent.
  • We take what is uncertain to be controllable.
  • We take what is not “self” to be “mine.”

And from these misunderstandings, fear naturally arises.

The Buddha did not teach people how to avoid death.
He taught them how to see reality as it is.

“All conditioned things are impermanent.”

When this is deeply understood—not intellectually, but experientially—fear begins to change.

Because what we resist is no longer surprising.

Think about it this way.

You are not afraid that the sun will set tonight.
You are not afraid that seasons will change.

Why?

Because you accept them.

Death, in its essence, is not different.

It is the natural unfolding of a process that began the moment we were born.

What makes it terrifying is not its nature,
but our resistance to it.

There is also something else we rarely admit:

We are not only afraid of death.
We are afraid of unfinished life.

  1. Unspoken words.
  2. Unresolved relationships.
  3. Dreams we delayed too long.

Regret amplifies fear.

Studies in existential psychology show that people who feel their lives lack meaning or authenticity report higher levels of death anxiety.

Not because death is different for them,
but because their relationship with life is.


And slowly, almost quietly,

the question begins to change.

Not, “How do I stop being afraid of death?”

But, “How do I live in a way that leaves less to fear?”


Because in the end,

it is not death itself that disturbs us most,

but the sense that something remains unfinished.


  • Unlived moments. 
  • Unspoken words. 
  • A life only partially entered.

If fear of death is largely created by the mind,

then the real question is no longer:

“What will happen when I die?”

But:

“Why does my mind react this way at all?”


And even more importantly:

If fear is constructed,

what else are we carrying—unconsciously—

that might shape our final moments?



Let's go deeper into something most people never question:

What if the pain of dying is not just physical… but something we’ve been building our entire lives?





 Luna Rose



sábado, 18 de abril de 2026

I speak with the future


Pi Longo






We sit on our skeletons’ bones. 
We hear with our skeletons’ bones.
We speak of beauty by moving our jaws and our teeth.

The original meaning of Paradise: a place, 
a walled garden. 
Our lives, our stories, this hour inside one.
A staircase from Piranesi. A hummingbird drinking.

Outside it, vanishing species and rivers.
Outside it, Nanjing, Ninevah, Dresden.
Outside it, Gaza, Sudan, Myanmar, Kyiv. Here.

The world starts and ends, starts, ends, ends again,
restarts.  

A kalpa is brief, and wall-less.

Unborn ones, take nothing for granted.
Not nectar, not thirst.

May your lives be uneclipsed, your failures be passing.

May you have your portions of beauty, of grief, 
in a garden whose plants and birds I cannot imagine. 



Jane Hirshfield




Alive or Just Getting Through the Day?


shutterstock





What does it mean to cultivate aliveness in a time of disruption?

How do we stay connected when everything seems to pull us apart?

How do we reserve our attention and affection for the people right next to us instead of pouring it into our devices?




Every day, we meet people stretched thin by the pace of contemporary life—partners who care for each other yet feel depleted, individuals negotiating between desire and overwhelm, people trying to reconnect to themselves and others against a backdrop of pervasive uncertainty and disconnection.

These realities are zapping our sense of joy and connection. 
As many of us zombie walk our way through meal planning, a 9-5 that may feel unstable right now, childcare, and trying to make time for family and friends, many things that once mattered deeply to us (self-care, hobbies, new adventures) fall by the wayside.

And sex? If it’s not scheduled, it’s probably not happening. 
Not when our brains are convinced that doomscrolling in bed will provide us more dopamine and relief than initiating foreplay.

And yet, our awareness of this reality doesn’t make it any less painful. 
Long before bringing our phones to bed (and to the bathroom, work meetings, and the dinner table) became commonplace, reconciling our dual needs for togetherness and separateness had long been a challenge. 

Sustaining safety and adventure in the same relationship is a balancing act—hard to do when our fractured attention has become a permanent fixture of our current society. This is how many of us live now: out of sync, out of balance, holding on.


So again, what does it mean to cultivate aliveness in a time of disruption? 
We could focus on defining “aliveness” and practical ways to access that precious state of awe and presence. But let’s take a moment to redefine “disruption.” Perhaps by tapping into that word’s multiple meanings we can look at the challenge differently.

The word “disruption” has a double-meaning. 
It can refer to the painful interruptions that drain connection, but it can also refer to the catalytic sparks—the moonshots—that push us to reimagine how we love. 
No one likes a disruption, but they wake us up, don’t they?

A wrong turn. A misunderstanding. 
A lost opportunity. A huge mistake. An illness. 
Some disruptions yank us out of our complacency; some instantly remind us of what and whom we stand to lose. Some make us fight for what matters and others reveal what doesn’t matter as much as we thought it did. Some disruptions instruct us to be curious instead of holding on for dear life to whatever certainty we can find.

So, what to do? 
Feeling alive isn’t only about noticing the beauty all around us, listening to great music, dancing, drawing, laughing, trying new things. 
Real, deep, meaningful connections require tolerating ambiguity, taking risks, and stretching beyond our comfort zones. Just past that edge is where desire lives. Most importantly, aliveness isn’t something we wait for; it’s something we cultivate, reach for—and practice.


We practice aliveness by leaning into certain disruptions: asking new questions, directing our attention to something different, taking a detour together on an unfamiliar road. 
We often think of relationships as places we go to feel safe, and safety is important. 
But relationships are also places that ask something of us. 
They ask us to stay engaged, to remain permeable, to resist the slow drift into indifference, to problem-solve, to try and fail, and try again.

To be alive is to be in relationships—with others, yes—but also with uncertainty, with change, with the parts of ourselves that are still unfolding. 
The disruptions are not going anywhere. But neither is our capacity to meet them differently. And in that space, in the way we respond, repair, and reimagine, we begin again to feel something, not just stable and secure, but alive.

Let’s Turn the Lens on You
A Small Disruption, Chosen

Pick one small moment today where you would normally go on autopilot—and interrupt it deliberately.

  • At dinner or in bed, leave your phone in another room and ask yourself (or a partner): “What’s been on your mind lately that you haven’t said aloud?” Then stay with the answer. No fixing. No pivoting.
  • The next time you’re feeling the urge to withdraw (scroll, multitask, shut down), do the opposite: name it. “I’m checking out right now, but I don’t want to.”
  • Break a script you always follow. For instance, when someone asks “how are you?,” don’t just say “good, and you?” this time. Pause for a moment. You don’t need to answer fully with lots of details, but answer honestly.

Afterward, reflect: 
  1. What did this disruption cost you? 
  2. And what did it make possible? 

Aliveness doesn’t come from novelty alone. 
It often comes from risking something in the presence of another.




Esther Perel