Last night I asked Claude to turn one of my Midjourney watercolors into clean SVG code for the app.
The machine paused… then confessed:
“I cannot recreate the beautiful, intricate watercolor illustrations… Your art has complex line work, rich textures, expressive faces, watercolor blending. My SVG gives you basic circles and simple paths. No real artistry.”
It felt like watching a poet try to paint with Lego bricks. 👁️🧸
Do we dare know the Truth? Do we travel or stay still? Do we know when we arrive — did we, can we?
Check out my new blog post! 👁️ 👇
https://t.co/BBObkULLKR
@elonmusk When you look through the window there is nobody or very few. You go out and the game is activated, people walking, talking, cars driving left and right. Game!
This is truly the most beautiful video I’ve seen lately
So tender and heart-warming, yet it makes you stop and reflect, with a subtle touch of sadness
We may have gained so much, but perhaps we’ve lost even more✨
Seven days before the fire rushes in which dreams will you take along, what bravery will pack when going on a path unknown 🐴✨🔥
#yearofthehorse#ChineseNewYear2026
Twelve days until the Year of the Horse awakens.
In the quietness of love, all we share is the magic of our unspoken dreams. 🐴🌸✨
#YearOfTheHorse#ChineseNewYear#FireHorse
Seeing the videos from #CransMontana how fire breaks out and kids filming instead of running, we need to start looking seriously into the phone addiction.
Stop blaming the kids. We, the adults, are responsible for creating this addiction. We, the adults, need to fix this.
This morning, I heard on IG someone mention "The Quickening."
I googled it.
As many people as many views.
Spiritual teachers - consciousness awakening. Tech folks - AI cognitive enhancement.
Same term. Opposite meanings.
Are we becoming more human or less?
More in my latest blog 👁️ https://t.co/a8QSp3Grgn
Tomorrow, the Moon reaches its farthest point from Earth this month—nearly 253,000 miles away, turning completely dark as it enters its new phase. A micro new moon. The smallest, most distant, most invisible it gets.
Orbits aren't static. The Moon swings close, pulls back, disappears, returns. Marketing works the same way—some campaigns need tight proximity, others need distance. Some messages should dominate the feed, others work better in the dark.
What you keep in close orbit—your core message, your key audiences, your main channels—and what you deliberately push out reveals your actual marketing strategy. Not everything needs constant attention. Some things work better far away.
The Milky Way contains around 100 billion stars, but we can only see about 5,000 with the naked eye on a clear, dark night. The rest are hidden by distance, dust, and the limits of human vision. What makes a star visible isn't always its actual brightness—it's proximity, position, and whether anything stands between us and its light.
Marketing obsesses over universal visibility, as if everyone should see the same thing. But perception shifts with perspective. What's invisible from one angle blazes from another. A star hidden by dust clouds to you might light up someone else's entire sky.
Maybe the goal isn't being seen by everyone. It's being brilliant for those who can actually see you.
Tonight the Northern Taurids meteor shower peaks—slow-moving debris from Comet Encke burning up as Earth passes through its ancient trail. Unlike the flashy Perseids, Taurids produce just a handful of meteors per hour. Patient. Unhurried. Easy to miss if you're looking for spectacle.
Marketing gurus preach frequency. Post three times daily. Bombard every channel. Flood the feed or drown in obscurity. More, louder, everywhere, always.
Five slow meteors that people actually stop to watch beat a hundred bright streaks nobody remembers seeing.
Today Jupiter stands still—reaching its stationary point before beginning retrograde motion. Named for the Roman king of gods, it's always carried themes of expansion, wisdom, the search for meaning beyond ourselves.
Marketing chases scale. Bigger audiences, broader reach, more noise in more spaces. But when the planet of growth pauses, maybe it's time to ask a different question. Are we expanding toward something real, or just getting louder?
Finding your place might mean pulling back into what's actually true, not stretching toward what you think everyone wants to hear.
Yesterday's full moon marked the peak of the lunar cycle, but today the Moon begins its slow retreat into darkness. What pulls us forward isn't the brightness we've already seen—it's the mystery of what emerges in the new phase, the unexplored side we haven't yet discovered.
Marketing sells the full illumination, the polished surface everyone can see. But the real work happens in the dark phases—when you're figuring out who you actually are, not who you're supposed to project.
The Moon doesn't fear its own darkness. It uses it to become something new.