How I write

Absolute_Reality_v16_A_bustling_metropolis_of_towering_newspap_0.jpg
I just finished responding to @k00b's review here and I want to write something on SN now.
I thought it might be interesting to think about why I want to write something on SN now. I already wrote something which took me more than I initially planned but that is kind of the point. Let me explain.

Shades of Grey

My reply started with looking at @k00b's changes and realizing that he might have done the same mistake I initially did: the existing code didn't care about multiple pins next to each other so after a pin an unpinned item always followed.
That was no problem before since that was never the case. But now it could be the case. I replied that this means that my code changes weren't clear enough and then I wanted to respond to everything else, too. I don't want to look like I just ignored everything else.
Also, this might actually be my favorite part of working with @k00b: He takes his time to make sure I understand why he changed some code so I can "level up faster" (quote from him that he mentioned early on when I joined SN which stuck).
So I read his other comments and like the person I am, I wanted to make sure I understand exactly what he means. But I also have this tendency to make sure I understand what other people mean since only then I can find loopholes in their arguments without embarrassing myself—since else the loophole might actually just turn out to be me not reading their reply properly.
How dare someone criticize my code! I better make sure that's reasonable critic.
So you can see this like playing a high-risk, high-reward game. I think that's also why I chose the field of ~security (not only in cyberspace) as part of my focus in life: it's usually a high-risk, high-reward game (it's hard to find zero-days) and when you found a loophole, your options for exploitation are endless. It's like stumbling into a secret area of life and being faced with a lot of doors and which door you take will shape who you are; not only in front of others but most importantly in front of yourself. There is no one you can ask, no network access, no way out. Additionally, these doors aren't black and white. Most of them are shades of grey:
A computer security researcher who has inadvertently violated the law during the course of her investigation faces a dilemma when thinking about whether to notify a company about a problem she discovered in one of the company’s products. By reporting the security flaw, the researcher reveals that she may have committed unlawful activity, which might invite a lawsuit or criminal investigation. On the other hand, withholding information means a potentially serious security flaw may go unremedied.
— Electronic Frontier Foundation, A "Grey Hat" Guide
Additionally, you sometimes take a door that you think is more white than black but after you entered it, and looked around in the room, you realize it's a dark and empty place and the door behind you is locked now—assuming you can even find it again in the darkness.
But I am getting off track here. Guess I have to find a way back anyway (pun intended).

Writing as an Antidote

The only known antidote to the Equation are the concepts of Freedom and Hope; the New Genesis hieroglyph of Freedom, called the Metron Emblem, significantly wears down the formula's ability to dominate other wills, allowing the infected to fight against the Equation and win while exposed to the symbol.
— DC Comics Database, Anti-Life Equation
So I explained why I like to find loopholes with a code review as an analogy. But what does this have to do with how I write?
As mentioned before, I am convinced that writing is the same as thinking, just in a more profound, accountable, conscious and aware way:
This also has a very nice feeling of symbiosis. To have something to write, I need to experience things I can write about. And to experience things in a more profound way, I need to write about them. Writing is Thinking.
The best example for this is how I just come up with stuff while writing and then I search for them and find unexpected interesting stuff. It's as if my writing routes interesting stuff into my brain; I don't even necessarily need others for that:
During the years 1942 to 1948, the passing away of a dear daughter, his devoted (if somewhat "bossy") and beloved wife, and his revered mother, and the horrible violence and turbulence of India’s independence and subsequent partition, could not shake Maharaj’s enlightened equanimity, which treats all happenings as the dream-drama of an unborn, undying, universal consciousness. Fully awake, nothing can disturb one who abides as transcendental, absolute Awareness beyond its play of consciousness.
For example, I didn't know about the Anti-Life equation before writing this but reading about it was intriguing. I was just thinking about how I essentially use writing as a means to a happier life. And this happiness comes from being more aware of how I feel, what I think about, knowing why I think about the things I think about and sharing these thoughts with others so we can have a weird dance:
I remembered the one major reason why I like to write. I like to write because I like to read what other people think. It makes me feel connected to them. Writing can be about sharing intimate thoughts in a very scalable way. And just like these people shared their thoughts with me, I want to reciprocate and share my thoughts with them; in the hope it might give them a similar feeling so we can feel connected together. Like some weird dance of thoughts with emergent properties where something might come out of it but even if nothing comes out of it, it was still worth it. Like musicians that don't play to reach the end of the song, but playing is the goal.
The same is true for the EFF article. I have not read this article before but while writing about the reason for my passion for ~security, I realized how the most interesting part for me might indeed be that you have a choice choices and that most of them are the aforementioned shades of grey. Wouldn't it be boring if everything is black and write white in an obvious way? Would that still be considered to have a choice choices?
What is black and white without the endless shades of grey in between?
I feel like I didn't mention what I initially wanted to mention but I forgot about it. I also feel like I mentioned what needs to be mentioned.
I also don't feel like writing any more currently. It's almost 8 am and the coffee shop I regularly visit (I consider this to be a bad habit) is opening.
Oh, I remember now. I also wanted to mention that my Z2Z series didn't feel like I was hitting my nerve. It was just a glimpse of what writing could achieve for me. That's why I needed to stop to rethink not lightning but how I want to write.
I also wanted to mention that posts like these are what I mentioned here with "you're not going to miss them":
Anyway, great post as ever. I'll miss them when they're gone.
Thanks and trust me, you're not going to miss them :)
At least I hope so. :)

No footnotes this time? Crazy.
this territory is moderated
Thanks and trust me, you're not going to miss them :)
Got it :)
Here's what this prompted in me just now:
I write fiction, but in recent times have been running into an issue where I get into the middle of a story and get ... bored by it. I realize that I'm just grinding it out to finish it in some plausible way, but whatever interested me enough to prompt starting it has gone.
So in the past ... week and a half, I've been doing this new thing, which an observer or a camera wouldn't notice, but when I'm in the middle of one of these slogs, I clear my mind and ask myself: what is interesting about what's going on in this story? Even if it's not in the story, but an implication, something happening off-stage, a random character I made up and referred to in passing, or even just something about where my mind wants to go. Is there any destination, given where things are, that I could orient to?
So far, two stories in with this method, it's helped. There has been, so far, a distant sound that I could start heading to, and then it's okay. Then I can keep going.
I have no idea if that's interesting or any use to you, but just in case :)
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Please, don't underestimate just how interesting that really is!
Are we going to have the chance to read any of your work? (Excuse me if I've not seen them already)
Perhaps @cleophas' recent successful run has whet your appetite?
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @ek OP 30 Jan
I write fiction, but in recent times have been running into an issue where I get into the middle of a story and get ... bored by it. I'm just grinding it out to finish it in some plausible way, but whatever interested me enough to prompt starting it has gone.
I don't necessarily write fiction1 but I think I know this feeling.
So in the past ... week and a half, I've been doing this new thing, which an observer or a camera wouldn't notice, but when I'm in the middle of one of these slogs, I clear my mind and ask myself: what is interesting about what's going on in this story? Even if it's not in the story, but an implication, something happening off-stage, a random character I made up and referred to in passing, or even just something about where my mind wants to go. Is there any destination, given where things are, that I could orient to?
Sounds like you're building a universe! And your stories are glimpses into that universe.
I initially thought that what I am doing is different (since it's not fiction), but when I view it from this angle (building a universe) it might be quite similar: When I notice I don't want to write about a topic anymore (even though I still feel like I am a one-trick pony which just delivers the same message in different packages), this usually means that I want to write about a completely different topic now. I then try to connect these two stories in some way since both are about topics that interest me. So this means that I am the connection and I am kind of building my own universe.
This also gives me the feeling of having a never ending source of ideas since hopefully, there will always be something that interests me, lol.
Might be the same for you and your universe! Always more to tell. The art is to know how to deliver it :)
So far, two stories in with this method, it's helped. There has been, so far, a distant sound that I could start heading to, and then it's okay. Then I can keep going.
As long as it's not the The Call of Cthulhu :)
Footnotes
  1. I might at some point though. I have definitely not ruled it out.
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As long as it's not the The Call of Cthulhu :)
That makes me wonder: what genre is your fiction?
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when you found a loophole, your options for exploitation are endless.
thrilling!
that's also part of my nomad adventures - digging those secrets and loopholes; life could be so much fun when you discover things most people don't even know:)
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343 sats \ 6 replies \ @ek OP 30 Jan
I really need to read your blog. A lot of ancient loopholes to be found there, I guess. And I feel like the nomad life is calling me (at least for a while) but at the same time, I want to have a dog and it doesn't feel like the right time.
Do you still consider yourself to be a nomad? I thought you settled down?
Btw, found a bug in your blog. The word "words" is at a weird place on desktop:
Looks good on mobile:
Interesting bug 👀
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ancient loopholes
well, the ones that I stopped talking about, most likely I found something wrong with it:) like those digital nomad lifestyle things...or offshore planning, so many big words.
Do you still consider yourself to be a nomad? I thought you settled down?
I'm more like a semi nomad - I still travel, but less and more intentional, like I know why I go to certain places, maybe visit people I like or to learn certain skills or dig something interesting instead of going for the sake of going; I've met people who traveled to ALL the countries, but they don't know anything deep, or don't even bother to learn the local languages; they do all the "travels" to showoff and trying to impressive others, so silly, but normies buy those tho.
a bug
yes, I tried to solve it before but still don't get it. 👀
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I've met people who traveled to ALL the countries
Maybe you need to ask them if they have been to bitcoinlandia yet. I heard it's a very beautiful place, very interesting and open-minded people, affordable prices.
yes, I tried to solve it but still don't get it.
Mhh, it gets more interesting 👀 Are you using Ghost? Or am I confusing you with someone else?
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Maybe you need to ask them if they have been to bitcoinlandia yet. I heard it's a very beautiful place, very interesting and open-minded people, affordable prices.
most of them are shitcoiners 🤯 and love to showoff, not quite a humble pleb!
affordable prices
is it priced in sats only? the places where I'm in, I want Bitcoiners come to occupy it. 😂
Are you using Ghost?
yes, Ghost - the best self sovereign blogging platform.
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is it priced in sats only?
it's priced in v4v only :)
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so strange, it keeps showing me this today whenever I tried to edit.
Invalid prisma.$queryRawUnsafe() invocation: Timed out fetching a new connection from the connection pool. More info: http://pris.ly/d/connection-pool (Current connection pool timeout: 10, connection limit: 2)
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Yeah, noticed the same. But it should still work. Database seems to be under heavy load today. We shouldn't show these error messages though.
465 sats \ 5 replies \ @Roll 30 Jan
You are writing that "writing is thinking" and Are you walking to think ? Are you using walk as antidote ? and/or Do you use other technics ?
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Great questions! What currently comes into my mind:
  • Walking is contemplating
  • Sleeping is working
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and what about meditation, nature ? are you a writer ?
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and what about meditation, nature ?
Sounds good
are you a writer ?
I don't know, can you tell me? What makes a writer a writer?
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do you write books, articles, poem or whatever in that direction ?
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No, I just write here and I wrote some blog posts about WireGuard here
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I mostly write my personal take on news and articles regarding various subjects associated to Bitcoin and Altcoins. To write something that will leave an impression, you need to read a lot. Of course, you aren't going to miss them because they are quite undervalued.
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