Had an interesting meeting today.

First, the guy whose left eye twitches when he’s hiding something. I was half-hoping half-afraid his eye would start twitching. Somewhat relieved he seemed more calm and in control today, but knew I would giggle if he did it. There was a brief moment where his eyelids got out of sync but he recovered.

The engineer rubs his legs to pacify himself when he’s stressed or not sure.

I think the difference between the two men is that one will try to cover up what he doesn’t know, while the other is trying to figure it out.

Regardless, both were watching the whole time. And the whole time, I was watching them.

It is the ArQ. Who will be saved.

I saw a falling star today. Or something massive and bright that fell straight down from the sky, burning out before it hit the water. It was the ends of dusk so it stood out, the world in silhuoette. There was a breathless moment where I wondered if it was a crashing plane. What was it?

The way data should work, I should be able to query that experience and get connected other people’s experience (perspective) of the event.

The dimensions of perception we are reaching is where all perception exists in one space (or on the y axis, exists in one moment), and where all perception exists everywhere separately at once.

The space between those is the balance.

We must instantly be able to capture a living breathing moment, and we most show all that brought us to this moment, the infinite sections and cross-sections of influence and relativity with which to predict the future progression if not actually control it. We could program life.

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