2026-07-09 19:11:46
Perhaps if you grew up in Canada they taught you about this in history class, but it's brand new to me!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King%27s_Daughters
Apparently in the 1600s, France had a severe gender imbalance in their efforts to colonize North America.
In English speaking colonies, whole communities and families moved together– men, women and children--usually to escape religious persecution and create utopian communities without government oversight (the North) or to reinvent feudal farming communities (the South).
In contrast, the French government was way more hands-on with their colonies, and New France was more of an economic effort than a social/utopian experiment. Most of the French colonists were young working men without wives or families.
So, for ten years (1663-1673), King Louis XIV sent about 800 penniless young women to New France, all expenses paid, with a completely new wardrobe, household linens, and dowry thrown in. This initial financial boost meant that the girls weren't prostitutes or servants, but rather free agents with the economic power to choose their own husbands. Because the King was providing their dowry, they were known as "The King's Daughters" which is a pretty cheeky nickname--a bit of a flex, a bit of a roast.
The best part of reading this Wikipedia entry is scrolling the Famous Descendants section. In addition to some male ice hockey players and at least one canonized Catholic saint, these women passed their genetics on to:
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Angelina Jolie
MADONNA (!!!)
Chloe Sevegne
Now I'm re-imagining the conversation:
ADVISOR: Your Majesty, we don't have enough women in the New World.
KING: Easy fix, Paris is chock full of baddies. Go there and get me 800 of the hottest, smartest, hungriest girls you can find.
KING: Oh, and make sure they can absolutely kick someone's ass!"
Yes, I knowwwww that the Notable Descendants section has a massive selection bias, but it's delightful to imagine a boatfull of healthy, strong 18-25 year-old Madonnas, Angelinas, Chloës and Hilarys. It's such drama!
What kind of social instability and absolute havoc was going on in those ten years when 800 of them showed up? What were they thinking? What were they feeling? How much did they interact with First Nations women? Did they have any moral or intuitive scruples about colonization? What was it like to live in a world with very few older women? I'm sure there is some historical record answering these questions, but since I don't speak or read French, I will probably just enjoy wondering and not knowing.
Thanks for Wikiing with me! :-)
2026-07-08 21:44:47
Ever wondered how your namesake stock has been performing these last few years? Are you outperforming or, um, experiencing headwinds? Well, now you can find out.
[Cannot stress enough that this is a toy, I make no guarantees on the accuracy of this data, and this is not investment advice.]
2026-07-07 19:11:00
I once met a guy who had previously gotten to the top of two different highly competitive professions. I asked him for the secret of his success, which is probably a bad question in general, and he replied:
Most people don't want to succeed, they just want to say that they tried their best and there was nothing they could do.
My first reaction was genuine outrage: I thought the guy was a privileged prick, that he had no idea how truly insurmountable many people's circumstances are, and how lucky he was to have got to where he'd been.
My second reaction was to think about my own life and go:
oh.
I guess I do often give up at the first obstacle.
And:
oh.
I do secretly enjoy the relief of thinking well, I tried– I guess there was nothing I could do.
I still believe there are people who really can't do anything about their circumstances. And that it's fraught to apply this philosophy to anyone but yourself.
There is also a sense in which The Things You Can Do are strongly constrained by the range of things you're willing to do, and that e.g. sometimes you can become a famous artist or philosopher if you're willing to abandon your children, but many of us think that this does not actually justify the results.
But with all those caveats, I do suspect that many people would benefit from trying on for size the thought:
"I'm not truly trying to succeed at X right now, I'm content to say I tried and there was nothing I could do."
And then: "What would I do if I really wanted and needed to succeed at X?"
And then: trying that, and a couple other additional things too.
2026-07-02 19:11:50
I made a game, it's a great way to make friends. If you like Charades, Taboo or Monikers you might enjoy it.
2026-06-30 19:11:10
We must now face the inevitable and talk about AI.
I think it's obvious to everyone that I don't use AI for writing these blogposts, since 1) the ideas are original and specific, 2) the style is idiosyncratic, unpolished, and usually brief.
I do use AI for the little online widgets I make, and I think some of you would be shocked at how much of the work on those was done by the AI directly, and how fun it is to say "can you make me a tool that does XYZ?" and have it spit out something workable from the start. I also use AI for images, e.g. here.
I know a lot of you have strong feelings against AI use, and I respect that. Personally I have complicated feelings about the impact these tools will have on creative work. Here's my thoughts:
I really do believe that some crafted objects contain something you might call The Divine Spark. There are certain ceramic cups that for reasons quite beyond me feel immediately right and true when you hold them. And I think that even amateur ceramicists sometimes make pieces that have this quality (despite being extremely unprofessional in other ways!), and that some professional ceramicists seem able to produce them consistently, and that I've never yet seen a machine make a piece that has this quality. And I actually do believe that this points at something meaningful about this universe.
On the other hand, a lot of the art we collectively consume every day has long been spark-less, and I don't yet believe that going from human-made-slop to AI-slop is meaningfully worse. The confusing part to me is why we surround ourselves with slop to begin with; I have never been able to explain, to myself or anyone else, why I spend 90% of my art-consuming-time on trash IN A WORLD WHERE THERE IS ALREADY MORE INCREDIBLE ART THAN I COULD EXPERIENCE IN A LIFETIME, if any of you know what's up with this I am begging you to explain me. But in any context where people were already consuming things that lack any connection to a soul, I don't personally see the difference between having it be AI or human soullessness.
For me, the operative question right now is whether AI overall helps make human art better or worse. And I think the answer is.... both? I think that any kind of supportive technology can either enfeeble or enrich, i.e. it can help you get better at doing something naturally by yourself, or can become something you rely on so much that you therefore never get better yourself.
I don't have a great theory for when and why something becomes enriching rather than enfeebling. This has all been said a million times before but the Printing Press has been (generally) good for writers, since it saves us from writing everything out by hand, and therefore let millions of people have meaningful creative experiences they couldn't have had otherwise.
The press had negative consequences as well, in that it reduced the amount that people memorize and story-tell, right? Socrates was right that writing decays the memory and circumvents certain kinds of dialogical relationships, no? Maybe not, I don't know – perhaps there are more standup comics today than there were bards in the ancient world, perhaps everything just becomes more with time. I don't really know that much about the past.
I'm also struck that during every moment of change, the relevant privilege group – that is, the people who had the fortune to already be good at the thing the technology helps with – will, by default, be aghast about the change; moreover, that even after hearing this argument (in general) they will believe that in this case their rights are earned.
So the medieval monarchies truly did believe in the Divine Right of Kings, and/but those monarchs were the extreme beneficiaries of it. And when I mentioned this in a college seminar everyone nodded happily, but then when I said that the same applied to us (the seminar participants) as the winners of the current system, everyone got mad at me. Because in our case it was different, we worked hard to be there and it was entirely meritocratic and blah blah blah blah blah.
And both things could be true at once, there could be good reasons to believe in the merits of the current system, and as the winners of that system you would be super highly incentivized to justify it regardless of its complicated pros and cons.
So I think there's something a bit treacherous about e.g. highly literate people who have spent their life benefiting from being good at spitting out words, assessing the merits of a new technology that is extremely good at spitting out words.
I have certain skills and resources – e.g. the ability to improvise a fairly passable poem – that have now become commoditized and lost 99% of their value overnight. I think this is "the problem of expertise" more broadly: the "experts" are the people most likely to understand the value of something, and also the people who have the most entrenched interest in it, and it's hard to separate the two. I really did work hard on my writing, and I really do think it's bad that the cost of slop-production has fallen to zero, and that thoughtful writers will get drowned out in the process.
And/but the total impact of AI is some combination of "the impact on people who were already good at what AI does" and "the impact on people who were previously not-good at what AI does," and there's a very real chance that the overall outcome is "it's bad for me specifically but good for humans overall," but it'll be hard for the me's of this world to admit that. (It might not be true!, but if it's true it'll be hard to admit it).
The other thing about AI is that it's such a good complement for so many things, and in theory a good complement enables better work from its complementers. I'll write about this more someday but imagine a farmer before the development of mechanization: their output is largely a function of their physical strength, so if you're a 10x strong farmer you can grow 10x more crops than your neighbour.
Then someone invents the tractor and now 1) there's very little advantage to being physically stronger, but 2) there's tons of advantage to being smart and strategic and planning your fields correctly, or whatever. Previously if you were very smart but happened to be weak you couldn't really reap the advantages of your farming-smarts, but now with tractors you finally can, and (what's more) you can now come up with even smarter farming strategies that didn't make sense previously.
And so much of art is like this: previously to be a singer-songwriter you had to be good at writing lyrics and good at writing music and good at singing and good at playing instruments, and now if you're good at any one of these you have an amazing collaborator who can do the others. And honestly I think that's beautiful, and important, and so long as people actually do keep aspiring to be good at at-least-one of these, it's possible that AI will lead to better human art ability. And I know what some of you will say – "you could have just collaborated with another human who had those skills! That is what we're here for" – but as someone who spent a decade trying and very occasionally managing to collaborate with other musicians, the collaboration costs are really really high, and it's obvious to me that 99% of the art that could have existed in the last few decades just never came into being, and if we get that number down to even 90% I think that will be a triumph for the human soul.
For some people, I do understand, the objections are deontological: in that case, obviously the consequences don't matter, it is better to have no art than to use something you believe is wrong. But for those without deontological objections it's surely a question of "what would have happened instead", and so often the alternative to AI art is no art, not human art. It's important to me to figure out how to make sure that the short-term use of AI doesn't lead to long-term atrophy of the human willingness or ability to create, but that's a question of strategy. If we're going down, I plan to go down singing.
2026-06-29 19:11:41
Nowadays, if you have a baby, you can get all the baby supplies delivered to your doorstep, but back when I had my kid in 2004, you had to actually leave your house and go to Target.
My friend had a baby around the same time, and both of us lived near an urban Target superstore in North Seattle. This Target has a strange architectural feature: an outdoor pedestrian overpass bridge from the top of the very tall parking garage to the main entrance of Target. This walking bridge was about 7 stories off the ground! I've never seen another Target building like this, and I hope it's the only one, because it's awful.
So, imagine you are a new mom holding a baby. The only way to get from your car to Target is to carry your tiny baby across this windy, exposed catwalk with transparent barriers that are lower in height than the baby in your arms. (The walkway is actually quite wide, so it's safe if you stay away from the edge, but the optics are disturbing.)
One day, my friend confessed to me that she had been having terrible intrusive thoughts, imagining what would happen if she somehow dropped her baby over the edge of the Target bridge. At the time, I offered all my sympathy, and tried to be a good listener and a good friend. But I honestly didn't know what to think, because I also had these exact same thoughts!!! The difference was that the thoughts didn't bother me very much. For the last 20 years I've been trying to understand why.
Holding my baby while walking on the Target overpass, an image came into my mind about what would happen if he somehow fell over the edge. My brain started imagining the sight, the sound, the horror, the consequences. (I could go into detail, but I won't, because the image is genuinely upsetting.)
But then I had these thoughts about my thoughts:
I thought, "Wow, my brain is doing a great job warning me about danger!"
I thought, "It's a good thing I'm imagining this so viscerally so that I can be sure to avoid it."
I thought, "Ha, I'm such a good mom that my brain is coming up with ridiculous danger scenarios."
I thought, "I bet a lot of imaginative moms have experienced the same thing."
I thought, "Whoever designed this Target building is the worst!!!"
When my friend walked across the bridge, she had the same image in her head of dropping her baby--the sight, the sound, the horror, the consequences.
But her thoughts about her thoughts were different.
She thought, "Something very bad is happening in my brain right now, and I'm helpless to avoid it."
She thought, "It's terrible that I'm imagining this so viscerally. Only a bad mom would imagine this."
She thought, "My baby is in danger, because I'm starting to lose my mind."
She thought, "Something bad happened to me in my past, and now I'm broken forever. If I tell anyone, they will know how messed up I am."
She thought, "I'm the worst."
My friend was definitely suffering from intrusive thoughts, but I think the biggest intrusion wasn't her original thoughts, but her thoughts ABOUT the thoughts.
We can make a chart like this:

That last point is the real kicker! Our brains are designed to be vigilant during danger and then to relax that vigilance when the danger is passed. But if you perceive your own thoughts to be a danger to you, then there is never an opportunity to relax--you get stuck in what I call the threat cycle. You can never let down your guard.
Just like you can have thoughts about thoughts, you can also have feelings about feelings. For example, you could get enjoyment from something, but also be embarrassed that you enjoy it (a.k.a. guilty pleasure). You could feel grief, but be angry that you have to grieve. You could be annoyed, but actually find it funny that you're annoyed.
Let's rephrase this Target pedestrian bridge situation in terms of emotions:

The Solution
The next logical question is, how do we change our thoughts about our thoughts? Changing our thoughts must be the secret to avoiding suffering and becoming awesome, self-actualized superhumans, right??? Let's hack our brains and become invincible through the power of positive thinking!!!
Unfortunately, I don't think this works. I don't believe you CAN change your thoughts, or your feelings! (See: Emotions Are Reactive) Thoughts and emotions arise spontaneously and you can't delete or change them: it's the "don't think of pink elephants" problem. Or if you're Gen Z, it's like "the game" where you lose whenever you think about the game. The moment a thought arises, it has existence.
However, although we can't prevent or alter our thoughts, we might be able hold them within another layer of rationality or compassion. So we need a third tier:

But here's the one weird trick, the actual solution to the problem: it's best if that third tier comes from ANOTHER PERSON.
This is called co-regulation.
Here's what happens when you invite a basically kind, trustworthy friend into your situation and allow yourself to co-regulate with them:

If you have another person alongside you, you can observe that your fears and thoughts are not as scary to them as they are to you. This is the best way (and possibly the only way) of breaking the threat cycle.
Co-regulation doesn't require the other person to have a therapy degree or do any special techniques. It just requires physical presence and a little bit of affection and trust--the amount you would normally have in a positive friendship. That's because basic co-regulation works best when it's not a huge effort for the other person.
Let me put it a different way: the best person to co-regulate with is NOT a person who wants to delve into the deepest parts of your psyche. It is NOT a person who is extremely, personally invested in your mental health (This is why parents and romantic partners tend to be bad co-regulation partners; they have too much skin in the game.) The best person to co-regulate with is someone who likes you, and yet your problems are genuinely not that big of a deal to them! Just a regular friend who wishes you well and isn't bothered by your thoughts.
And check this out--the best part about co-regulation is that the friend doesn't need to even say anything or do anything! The process can be entirely nonverbal. They can simply be standing next you, not being terrified, basically trusting you and being basically trustworthy.
The reason physical, nonverbal presence works so well is because humans evolved as social primates. Co-regulation is pack behavior. Your little monkey brain is looking for conscience and subconscious social cues from other monkeys to let you know that you are safe from danger, and can relax your vigilance. Positive co-regulation with our monkey buddies is how we evolved to keep ourselves safe AND curious AND brave. Social support is our evolutionary superpower.
Obviously, there are other emotional and spiritual models for understanding co-regulation, but I think the monkey model is a great place to start. Monkeys just need other monkeys around to feel safe and be happy!
Objections to co-regulation:
"A mature person is self-sufficient and doesn't need to rely on other people."
NOPE. A mature person is one who has strong, positive relationships with friends and family members. Self-sufficiency is a 20th century lie that makes us lonely and miserable. Next objection please.
"If my therapist says supportive things to me in our sessions together, I should be able to remember those supportive thoughts later when I am in the stressful situation."
Ugh, I know, right? I wish this strategy worked! Sometimes it does, but often it does not. Our monkey brain responds much more easily and fully to someone who is physically present in the present moment. Your therapist is there to offer co-regulation when big emotions come up during your sessions. And, that supportive relationship can help you recognize what kindness and stability feels like, so you can start finding it in other people. In other words, therapy is great, but it's not a substitute for in-person daily-life co-regulation; it's more like training in how to recieve it.
"I don't want to ask my friends for co-regulation because I don't want to be a burden."
Yes, this is a huge obstacle!
A lot of people keep their thoughts and fears private, and don't reach out to friends, because they're afraid of dragging others down, or asking for "too much." But this type of support can be fully reciprocal, and EVERYONE needs co-regulation with something! Fear requires co-regulation, but so does boredom, distraction, hesitation, and discouragement.
If you're worried that asking for help might make you a burden, offer a 1-to-1 co-regulation swap! Ask your friend to come with you to a scary doctor's appointment, and then offer to sit in the room with them while they clean out their closet. If you pair asking for help with giving help, everyone wins.
Inversely, if you always find yourself in the helper role, try being more outspoken and clear about what you need help with in return, even if it's weird or small or random! Switching from giving help to receiving help can be humbling and vulnerable, so be gentle with yourself. Let your friends know that it's hard for you to ask, so that they can be gentle with you as well. As a bonus, this will lead to much deeper, more sincere friendships.
"I don't have any friends."
OR
"All my friends and family members are jerks and/or emotionally unstable."
Oh no, I'm sorry! Making friends will have to be a blog post for another day. For now I would suggest practicing co-regulation with friendly acquaintances, coworkers, and classmates. Just being around someone calm or cheerful can create nonverbal co-regulation, even if the relationship is not very deep. You don't have to excavate your deepest fears, just find someone with chill vibes and allow yourself to tune into their vibe. (I think this is the main reason why people work on their laptops in coffee shops.)
If you need co-regulation late at night when no one else is awake, listening to an audiobook or guided meditation can be a quick hack, because the narrator is reading in a calm, relaxed voice. This is a great place to start: https://self-compassion.org/self-compassion-practices/#guided-practices
The effect of the recorded human voice is not as powerful as in-person physical presence, but it IS always available.
Just as a caveat, I wouldn't reccomend watching videos on your phone for co-regulation, because having a single point of visual focus keeps your brain in vigilance mode. (This may be why using short form video platforms increases general anxiety rates.) With audio only, you can allow your body and eye muscles to wander freely and physically relax, which reduces vigilance, helping you exit the threat cycle.
OK, let's go back to that moment 20 years ago, when I was very young and not very confident. My friend told me about her intrusive thoughts, and I replied, "Oh no, that's so terrible, I'm sorry you have to go through that. That must be so hard." I think that was a sincere response, but not very helpful. I was just mirroring back her own fears that the situation was something to be afraid of.
Later on in my life, after I learned more about human psychology, I might have said, "Have you considered that intrusive thoughts are a symptom of OCD? Check out this great cognitive behavioral therapy workbook! https://a.co/d/08FwyxJB "
This approach CAN be helpful for some people, IF they are feeling otherwise socially supported, and are in a season of self-reflection and growth. But for many people in many phases of life, framing bad thoughts in terms of a "disorder" just reinforces the thought that says, "There is something wrong with me. My thoughts are dangerous and need to be fixed. This my fault." I believe that diagnoses and CBT are good tools, but only work in the context of community and good relationships.
Honestly, nowadays, I wish I could go back in time 20 years and say this to my friend:
"I love you! It's ok to feel this way! I have a hard time with Target too, because I always get distracted and lose track of time. So give me a call and we will meet up in the parking garage with our babies. We can hold hands and walk across the bridge together."
