Friday, 5 June 2026

The difficulty lies, not in the new ideas, but in escaping from the old ones. -John Maynard Keynes, economist (5 Jun 1883-1946)

C

 AHow Do I Become Aware of Awareness?

The question, “How do I become aware of awareness?”, appears simple at first glance, yet it points toward one of the deepest mysteries of human experience. Most of our lives are spent attending to objects of consciousness: sights, sounds, thoughts, emotions, memories, and sensations. We notice what appears in awareness, but rarely do we stop to consider the nature of awareness itself.

To understand the paradox contained in this question, it is useful to compare it with a few familiar examples. Can the eye get behind itself and see itself? Can a camera take a photograph of itself? Can a knife cut itself? In each case, the very thing that performs the action cannot fully become the object of its own action. The eye sees everything except itself directly. The camera captures images of the world but cannot photograph itself without the aid of a mirror. The knife can cut many things, but not itself.

According to many contemplative and non-dual traditions, consciousness is similar. Consciousness illuminates every experience we have, yet it cannot be grasped as another object within experience. Everything that can be observed—a thought, a feeling, a memory, a sensation—is something that appears within consciousness. But consciousness itself does not appear as an object among other objects. It is the ever-present background that makes all experience possible.

This perspective suggests that the search for awareness as an object is fundamentally misguided. When we ask, “How do I become aware of awareness?”, we often imagine that awareness is something hidden that must eventually be found, perceived, or attained. Yet if awareness is the condition that makes all perception possible, then it cannot be found in the same way that we find a sound or a color. It is already present in every moment of experience.

The eye can intuit its own existence through the fact that it sees. Likewise, consciousness can intuit itself through the fact that experience is occurring. The recognition is subtle. One notices that every perception, thought, and sensation appears within a single seamless field of knowing. The contents of experience constantly change, but the fact of awareness remains. In this sense, consciousness knows itself not by becoming an object, but by recognizing its own presence through what it illuminates.

This insight is often expressed in the statement, “You are consciousness.” The claim is not that consciousness is something possessed by an individual self, but rather that the deepest aspect of one's identity is the awareness in which all experiences arise. From this viewpoint, thoughts, emotions, and personal narratives are transient appearances, while awareness itself remains constant.

Meditative practice can be understood as an investigation into this possibility. Rather than seeking new experiences, meditation invites attention to turn toward the nature of experience itself. Over time, practitioners may begin to notice that awareness is already present before every thought and after every thought, beneath every perception and within every perception. Some traditions describe the culmination of this inquiry as an awakening—a sudden recognition that what was being sought was never absent. The seeker discovers that the awareness being searched for is the very awareness conducting the search.

Whether one accepts this conclusion as a spiritual truth, a phenomenological insight, or simply a provocative philosophical possibility, the question remains a powerful invitation. Instead of asking what awareness looks like, one may begin to ask who or what is aware in this very moment. In that inquiry, the distinction between the observer and the observed may gradually dissolve, revealing a perspective in which awareness is not something we possess, but what we fundamentally are.

Key points of the passage

  • The question “How do I become aware of awareness?” is presented as a paradox.

  • It compares consciousness to things that cannot directly act upon themselves:

    • An eye cannot literally see itself.

    • A camera cannot photograph itself without a mirror or intermediary.

    • A knife cannot cut itself.

  • The argument is that consciousness cannot be made into an object of perception because it is the very thing that enables perception.

  • According to this view, consciousness has no observable qualities of its own; it is the "illuminating" background in which experiences appear.

  • Rather than finding consciousness as an object, one recognizes it indirectly through the fact that experience is occurring at all.

  • The statement “You are consciousness” reflects a non-dual perspective found in traditions such as Advaita Vedanta and some schools of Buddhism and mysticism.

  • Meditation is proposed as a way of investigating experience until a direct realization or "awakening" occurs.

Philosophical analysis

This is one interpretation of consciousness, not an established fact. Different traditions and disciplines answer the question differently:

  • Non-dual traditions: Consciousness is the fundamental reality and cannot be observed as an object because it is the subject itself.

  • Phenomenology: Consciousness is known through lived experience and self-awareness rather than through observation of a separate thing.

  • Neuroscience: Consciousness is generally studied as a process arising from brain activity and can be investigated indirectly through behavior, brain imaging, and reports of subjective experience.

  • Analytic philosophy: Debates continue about whether consciousness can fully know itself, whether self-awareness is intrinsic to consciousness, and what the relationship is between subjective experience and physical processes.

A possible reformulation

Instead of asking, “How do I become aware of awareness?”, this perspective suggests asking:

“What is present before I focus on any particular thought, sensation, or perception?”

The claim is that the answer is not another object of awareness, but awareness itself. Whether that claim is true remains a matter of philosophical and contemplative debate.

N X 1 in 4 births in England (25.1%) are now emergency caesarean sections,

 A

Key points from the BBC analysis:

  • About 1 in 4 births in England (25.1%) are now emergency caesarean sections, the highest level recorded in NHS data. (The Guardian)

  • Emergency C-sections have risen significantly over the past decade, alongside increases in planned (elective) caesareans. In 2024–25, around 20% of births were planned C-sections and 25.1% were emergency C-sections. (The Guardian)

  • Overall, 45% of births in NHS England hospitals were by caesarean section, exceeding the proportion of spontaneous vaginal births (44%) for the first time in the recorded data. (The Guardian)

  • Experts say there is no single explanation for the rise. Contributing factors may include:

    • More women having babies at older ages.

    • Higher rates of obesity and other health conditions.

    • More complex pregnancies.

    • Changes in clinical practice and patient choice. (The Independent)

  • Women aged 40 and over are especially likely to have a caesarean birth, with around 59% of deliveries in that age group occurring by C-section. (The Guardian)

  • An emergency caesarean is performed when doctors determine that a vaginal birth has become too risky for the mother or baby, for example because labour is not progressing or there are signs of fetal distress. (nhs.uk)

The BBC reported that specialists regard the trend as part of a broader shift in maternity care rather than evidence of a single underlying problem, and they note that caesarean sections are often life-saving procedures when complications arise. (AOL)

Thursday, 4 June 2026

C PLUS X C Q ANSWERED AT D

 A

Here are the core points of what you’re expressing, separated into the philosophical idea and the theological framework:


🧠 1. Philosophical idea: consciousness as something fundamental

  • You’re proposing that consciousness may be the most fundamental “thing” in existence

  • Not just humans, but consciousness in any form could be necessary for reality itself

  • The idea implies:

    • Reality, time, and the universe might depend on consciousness

    • Consciousness may not be extinguishable in an absolute sense

    • “Nothingness” may not truly exist if consciousness is foundational

Core implication:

Consciousness is not just inside the universe — it may be what makes the universe intelligible or existent at all.

This aligns loosely with philosophical positions like:

  • Idealism (mind precedes matter)

  • Panpsychism (consciousness is a basic feature of reality)

  • Some interpretations of quantum observation debates (though often overstated in popular versions)


🕊️ 2. Theological framework: continuity of consciousness in divine judgment

You then shift into a specific biblical interpretation:

After death state

  • Consciousness does not simply vanish into nothingness

  • Instead, it rests or remains in a waiting state

You reference:

  • Ecclesiastes 12:7 → body returns to dust, spirit returns to God

  • John 5:25–29 → resurrection and judgment of the dead

Core idea:

  • Death is not annihilation

  • There is a preserved state awaiting divine judgment


🌍 3. “Self-rule as a trial period”

  • Human history is framed as a period of self-governance apart from God

  • This “trial” demonstrates:

    • Human limitation

    • Failure of independent moral governance


🌿 4. Restoration / future resolution

You reference:

  • Psalm 37:10–11, 29

    • The wicked removed

    • The righteous inherit peace and “the earth forever”

Core idea:

  • A future restoration (“Paradise”)

  • Divine governance replaces human self-rule

  • Those who align with God are restored into a stable, peaceful world


🧩 5. Combined worldview (your synthesis)

Putting both threads together, the structure becomes:

  • Consciousness is not extinguishable → it persists beyond death

  • Human life is a temporary moral/spiritual evaluation period

  • Death leads to a waiting state, not final annihilation

  • A future restoration resolves history into divine order

  • Reality ultimately depends on consciousness and divine intention, not matter alone


If you want, I can also:

  • Compare this view to philosophical idealism vs physicalism

  • Or map how different religions interpret “consciousness after death”

  • Or break down where science agrees/disagrees with each claim (carefully and neutrally)

DECISION MAKING

 A

Here are the key points from Mark Manson’s “3 Reasons Why You Make Terrible Decisions (And How to Stop)”:


🧠 1. Emotions hijack your decisions

  • Your “Feeling Brain” often overrides your rational “Thinking Brain”

  • Strong emotions (anger, fear, shame, excitement) distort what feels “right”

  • This makes bad choices feel urgent, justified, or unavoidable in the moment

Result: You act impulsively and later regret it

Fix:

  • Build self-awareness of your emotional state

  • Pause and write/talk through decisions before acting

  • Externalize thinking (journaling, coaching, trusted feedback)


⏳ 2. You misunderstand time (present bias)

  • Humans heavily prefer immediate rewards over future benefits

  • We discount future consequences (“I’ll deal with it later”)

  • We think linearly, but life outcomes often compound exponentially

Examples:

  • Skipping workouts “just this once” repeatedly → huge long-term loss

  • Spending now instead of saving → long-term financial impact

Result: You consistently undervalue the future and overvalue the present

Fix:

  • Force yourself to think in long-term outcomes

  • Focus on consistency over intensity

  • Remember that small daily actions compound massively


🏆 3. You’re influenced by status and social pressure

  • Humans are highly sensitive to hierarchy, approval, and prestige

  • We unconsciously overvalue people/things associated with high status

  • The “halo effect” makes attractive/successful people seem smarter or more correct than they are

Result:

  • You make choices to impress others instead of serving your values

  • You get distracted by social validation and external approval

Fix:

  • Notice when status is influencing your decisions

  • Ask: “Would I think this if no one impressive was involved?”

  • Re-center decisions on personal values, not social perception


🧩 How to make better decisions overall

1. Write decisions down

  • Forces clarity

  • Exposes hidden assumptions

  • Makes emotional thinking more rational

2. Override emotional comfort

  • Good decisions often feel uncomfortable

  • Learn to act despite anxiety or resistance

3. Know your weaknesses

  • Everyone has predictable decision biases (emotion, impulsivity, status-seeking, etc.)

4. Design your environment

  • Remove temptations and friction

  • Use structure instead of relying on willpower


⚠️ Final takeaway

  • The worst decision isn’t a “bad” decision — it’s no decision

  • Indecision hands control of your life to external forces

  • Meaningful life requires accepting trade-offs and acting anyway


If you want, I can compress both this and the HRV article into a single unified framework (physiology + psychology of decision-making under stress) — they actually connect more than it seems.

HRV X HR

 A

What that article is really saying is: low HRV + low heart rate is not automatically “good” or “bad” — it depends on why it’s happening and whether the HRV signal is still “behaving normally” relative to heart rate.

Here’s the core idea in simpler terms.


1. The “weird” pattern

You noticed:

  • HRV ↓ (lower than usual)

  • Resting HR ↓ (also lower than usual)

At first glance, that seems contradictory, because we often expect:

  • better recovery → HRV up, HR down
    or

  • fatigue → HRV down, HR up

So this pattern needs interpretation.


2. Two main explanations

A) Parasympathetic saturation (not necessarily bad)

This is the “ceiling effect” idea.

  • The parasympathetic (vagal) system is already very dominant

  • Heart rate is already very low

  • HRV may stop increasing or even drop slightly

Key point:
HRV stops reflecting physiology accurately because it’s “maxed out”

So you get:

  • HR very low (good sign)

  • HRV not rising (or even slightly lower)

➡️ This can actually happen in very well-adapted or highly trained states
➡️ It is not automatically fatigue

Clue: HRV and heart rate lose their normal inverse relationship.


B) Actual fatigue or stress (more concerning)

Here the body is under strain (training, life stress, under-recovery).

You can see:

  • HRV ↓ (autonomic stress response)

  • HR ↓ or unchanged (not always elevated!)

This is the key nuance most people miss:

Fatigue does NOT always raise resting heart rate.

In some cases:

  • parasympathetic rebound

  • suppressed physiological system

  • energy conservation state

…can also produce low HR + low HRV together.


3. The most important diagnostic idea in the article

The key discriminator is:

👉 Relationship between HRV and heart rate over time

  • Normally: HRV increases when heart rate decreases (strong correlation)

  • If this relationship weakens or disappears:

    • possible parasympathetic saturation

  • If both drop in a structured way under training load:

    • more likely fatigue / stress accumulation


4. Why “normalized HRV” matters

The author argues that looking at HRV alone or HR alone can miss the picture.

So they combine them:

Normalized HRV = HRV adjusted for heart rate

Why?

Because it helps detect cases where:

  • HR looks “good”

  • but HRV is silently suppressed

That combination is often more sensitive to:

  • training overload

  • accumulated fatigue

  • stress states that don’t raise HR yet


5. Practical takeaway (the real message)

If you see low HRV + low HR, ask:

1. Is this athlete very well trained / peaking?

→ could be parasympathetic saturation (not a problem)

2. Is there heavy training load, poor sleep, stress, dieting?

→ more likely fatigue

3. Is HRV still tracking HR normally?

  • yes → more physiological (normal adaptation)

  • no → possible saturation or measurement artifact


Bottom line

That pattern is not a contradiction — it’s a fork in interpretation:

  • Low HR + low HRV + normal correlation → likely adaptation / high parasympathetic tone

  • Low HR + low HRV + broken correlation + heavy load → likely fatigue or dysregulation


If you want, I can translate this into a simple decision tree you can use with your own wearable data (Oura, Garmin, Whoop, etc.).

Walk 8.7 k

 This article’s core message is: walking is great exercise, but how you walk matters. Small changes in pace, posture, footwear, and terrain may increase the health benefits and reduce injury risk.

Here’s a practical summary of the 5 ways to get more out of your daily walks:

1. Walk faster

A casual stroll is fine, but a brisk pace tends to deliver more cardiovascular and metabolic benefit.

  • Typical walking pace: ~100 steps/minute
  • Suggested “health benefit” zone: 120–130 steps/minute

Quick check: count your steps for 15 seconds and multiply by 4.

The article also notes research linking slower walking speed (gait speed) with higher risk of future health problems, including dementia. Walking speed is sometimes called a “vital sign” because it reflects overall physical function.

2. Let your arms swing naturally

Avoid walking with hands clasped behind your back.

Why?

  • It can affect posture
  • It may increase shuffling
  • It reduces your ability to catch yourself if you trip

Natural arm swing helps coordinate your torso and stride.

3. Replace worn-out shoes

Walking shoes don’t last forever.

A rough rule of thumb:

  • Replace shoes after about 300–400 miles of use.

Signs of wear matter because worn shoes can contribute to:

  • foot pain
  • knee pain
  • back discomfort

A healthy wear pattern often runs diagonally from the outer heel toward the big toe.

4. Strengthen your big toe

This sounds oddly specific, but the big toe plays a major role in balance and push-off during walking.

Simple “toe yoga” test:

  1. Sit barefoot.
  2. Lift only your big toe while keeping the others down.
  3. Then reverse it: big toe down, smaller toes up.

Many people struggle with this at first, but practicing can improve foot control and balance.

5. Add hills or uneven terrain

Walking the same flat path every day uses your body in a limited way.

Adding:

  • hills
  • slopes
  • stairs
  • uneven ground (safely)

can improve:

  • cardiovascular fitness
  • balance
  • coordination
  • lower-body strength

The bigger takeaway

The article highlights research suggesting that around 8,700 steps/day is associated with substantially lower mortality risk compared with very low daily activity levels. But you don’t need a perfect number to benefit—consistency plus a brisk, well-supported walk tends to matter more than chasing an exact step count.

If you want, I can also turn this into a  simple 15-minute “optimal daily walk” routine you can actually follow.