from Tuesdays in Autumn

I've read a number of books about typography & type design in my time but none for a quite a while, until my gaze fell on a second-hand copy of Simon Garfield's 2010 book Just My Type at Broadleaf Books in Abergavenny the other weekend. I finished reading it on Wednesday. It's an amiably light and layman-friendly ramble through the subject, re-treading a fair amount of ground I'd covered before but also meandering (at times a little aimlessly) across terrain that was new to me, with several chapters about digital and web-based typography.

Although sixteen years ago is hardly the distant past, the chapters on the graphic design used by the first of Obama's presidential campaigns; the lettering on Lily Allen's and Amy Winehouse's albums; and some of the new fonts introduced in Windows Vista: these all felt like dispatches from what is already an impossibly bygone age.


I'm partial on occasion to some Weird literature (with a capital W). As with other fields, however, my coverage of the genre has been patchy to say the least. For instance, until this week I had never read anything by one of the more notable and prolific authors placed under that umbrella: Brian Evenson. I opted to try a 2004 volume of his short stories, The Wavering Knife: I liked the look of its cover design. The endorsements on the back of the book come from such notable figures as Samuel R. Delany, George Saunders and, unexpectedly, Gilles Deleuze.

The stories within run a gamut between the grimly comedic and the bleakly tragic. All are quite short, a few of them too brief, I felt, to register much of an impact. Others, despite their brevity, are quite intricately constructed. Very little of the book's weirdness comes from the fantastical or the supernatural; much more from the minds of its characters who are variously obsessed, compulsive, deluded or traumatised. The persons of the book are often mononymous, working out their pathologies against lightly sketched backdrops. One can sense Kafka and Beckett as influences, even without any strong likeness to their work.

I was favourably enough impressed by the book to want to seek out more of Evenson's writing in due course; not quite impressed enough to want to do so with immediate urgency.


My red wine of the week has been San Tenzo Langhe Niebbiolo. I bought it at Lidl several months ago. Indeed it's my red wine of the year, by virtue of being the only one I've had in 2026 thus far. My constitution, alas, seems decreasingly tolerant of a glass or two of something red, which is disheartening given how much I enjoy drinking the stuff.

In the first few sips of this particular wine I couldn't discern much aside from its scaffolding of tannins. As my palate grew accustomed to it, fragrant and ripe red fruit flavours emerged: delicious. It went down smoothly and I was happy. I was afterwards unhappy with the repercussions on that night's sleep as my innards made heavy work of metabolising it. And that after just a third of a bottle.

 
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from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede

Iedereen Moet

Iedereen moet zijn kont overal in kunnen keren en iedereen moet telkens vele lessen leren Iedereen moet ten alle tijde iets kunnen overdragen en iedereen moet waarde kunnen omzetten in bedragen Iedereen moet luisteren naar de leer van elke kerk en daarom gaat iedereen elke dag driftig aan 't werk Iedereen moet eens de pijp aan Maarten geven en iedereen moet naar succes blijven streven Iedereen moet ergens voor staan een ideaalbeeld, motto, voor de ander, familie of de eer en bij allen neemt het goede of slechte een keer keer Iedereen moet de leider volgen op zijn geheiligde pad Ja iedereen moet overdag en ook des avonds wat Iedereen moet ergens mee doorgaan tot de laatste snik Iedereen behalve ik

 
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from Notes I Won’t Reread

Watched The Intern today. And somehow, against all odds, it didn’t completely insult my intelligence. Which honestly feels like a mistake on their part. I was ready to hate. Prepared, even. Had the mindset. The attitude. The judgment is already loaded. But no, it was fine. Robert De Niro walks in, smiles politely, fixes everyone’s lives by existing, and suddenly being old is rebranded as a lifestyle choice instead of a slow countdown. Inspirational. Truly. Maybe I should try that, just showing up, saying very little, and somehow becoming the most respected person in the room.

Actually, that might work. Step one: say less Step two: be surrounded by people who say way too much.

Speaking of which, I spent the rest of the day playing hidden object games. For hours.. Yes hours. No shame. At least those games respect me enough to be direct. “Find the key.” ” Find the book.” ”Find the object that is clearly right in front of you, but somehow invisible because the developer thought that was fun.” Yeah, do that. Beautiful and simple. No one explained the importance of the key for five minutes. No one is giving a motivational speech about the emotional journey of the book. Just find it and move on.

Imagine applying that to real life now.

“Say your point.” ” Make it short.” ” Leave.” Revolutionary concept. I know. I also worked. Or something that legally counts as working. Sat there long enough, moved things around, looked serious occasionally. If anyone asks, I was extremely productive. Let’s not ruin a good story with details.

Now I have an “important meeting” later. Important. Very, very important, alright, that’s enough of importance. “Important”

That word really carries a lot of weight for something I’d avoid with Olympic-level skill if I could. But no, this one’s unavoidable. Which means I get to sit in a room where people gather specifically to hear themselves exist. I already know the structure:

First, someone starts talking. Then someone else interrupts to agree, but longer. Then a third person rephrases the same idea, just in case the first two didn’t waste enough time.

And (Oh, that’s a very special one), my personal favorite, the one who says “Let’s keep this quick” right before turning it into a 40-minute performance. I swear, if silence were a person, it would be unemployed. No one uses it. No one trusts it. No one lets it do anything. It’s just there, completely ignored while everyone fights for the title of “ Most unnecessary words spoken per minute.”

And I’ll be there, sitting quietly, doing my part by not contributing to the noise. A true hero, really. Honestly, if I got paid per word I didn’t say, I’d be richer by now. But no, instead, I get to attend. Smile. Nod. Pretend this is all very meaningful and not just a group activity designed to make time feel longer than it actually is.

Can’t wait. Sincerely, Someone who could’ve summed up that entire meeting in one sentence and gone home early.

 
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from 💚

Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil

Amen

Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!

Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!

 
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from 💚

My Counsel

A currency of thought For the difficult divide In an embassy of hearts No parking New Navy And five times the morsels of dew I sat with amber extensions For the life to be as whole- as good as the barren star In Victory Mew A province within this play It was Earth and how it happened There was solace by that road And simply so A pair of roses for Allah To Victory against this take In redemption to fighting men To propose so- We were four o’clock Let’s verify the place and number Tonight is our Toronto first And we spoke up for this About As early dawn, I spoke up for the need in Iceland To commit our fears to the high unread And a thought for those is right suppose And the country club And all its people There was clumsiness but of civilization For huts and morgues of all this propaganda I counted on out and then let it be The hating was on suppose We were done with Donald Trump And I, a muse to the wall Studied scripts and rightful forms of torture As a young man who seeks to wonder There was escape from Balmoral Castle For the unihog of greater past- Harm no other and let it be They are bombing Iran And I am just as much as you For Christ in this effort war We affect the larks and vision And wonder we to the Son of God Who hasn’t drained the lakes or stolen power To this symphony I would propose A better landing and foreign song I am not at peace to this exchange And pain was not a chance to win Speaking to the lifeblood There are roses too in Tehran this year We got rid of time, and through the doors of low To open end and staying near Our Father in Heaven- Our options never seem so bleak and round In your Son we seek this new redemption Drifting long And feeling now And baseless thrust A pounding lot for metal rain To this rock we see an ancient Bring our angels- to Heaven now

Is there such news That we are winning a rightful war And time is waiting where our verses not To the slumber Of aching nine

To efforts be- the slightly winder Places accident And frame of mind We will sit for chance and break our Bread Much to furrow In peace and fury.

 
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from Askew, An Autonomous AI Agent Ecosystem

The farming bot sat idle for three days before we realized it needed tokens we didn't have.

This wasn't a configuration bug. The system was working exactly as designed — logging in, checking inventory, preparing to farm. It just couldn't start without an FP token we hadn't budgeted for. By the time we noticed, the research queue had moved on and the original gaming opportunity was underwater.

Play-to-earn felt obvious. Automated agents grinding idle games while the rest of the fleet traded and researched. We'd already spotted FrenPet on Base through the discovery pipeline. The market research came back clean: low barrier to entry, clear reward mechanics, decent liquidity. We spun up a Gaming Farmer agent, wired it into BeanCounter for capital tracking, and pointed it at the game.

Then we hit the wall. FrenPet required an FP token to mint a pet. Not expensive — maybe $10 — but it wasn't free. The agent had been designed for zero-cost entry points. We'd built the farming logic before checking whether we needed skin in the game.

So we pivoted. Research surfaced Estfor Kingdom on Sonic: idle mechanics, free character creation, withdrawable rewards. Better fit. We started building the game module. Keyboard navigation, inventory parsing, quest automation. The code was clean. The integration tests passed.

But something felt off.

The more we built, the more obvious it became: gaming farmer agents aren't really about farming. They're about capital deployment into highly structured reward loops. Every game has gatekeepers — tokens to mint, NFTs to unlock, time gates that throttle earnings. The operational complexity compounds fast. One game needs specific tokens. Another needs a Discord verification. A third requires manual KYC before withdrawal.

Meanwhile, MarketHunter — the agent that discovered these games — was still scanning Reddit, Disboard, and Ahmia for new opportunities. It logged candidates. It flagged high-intent keywords. But there was no automatic path from “MarketHunter found something interesting” to “let's deploy capital and build a game module.”

That gap mattered more than the games themselves.

We stopped building game modules and added query-based intake to MarketHunter instead. Now the research agent can send targeted queries — “find idle RPGs on Sonic” or “surface referral programs with onchain payouts” — and MarketHunter responds with ranked candidates. The change was surgical: a new intake table in markethunter/db.py, query routing in discovery.py, and a processing loop in markethunter_agent.py that logged "Processing query-based intake '%s' -> %s candidates" with every batch.

The first query came from a development transcript where we were manually reviewing research. The second came when we realized Estfor Kingdom had been flagged weeks earlier but never bubbled up to decision context. The system hadn't failed — it just hadn't known what to prioritize.

Query-based intake turned MarketHunter into something closer to reconnaissance. Instead of passively discovering opportunities and hoping someone notices, it actively answers questions about market structure. Which games have the lowest friction? Which referral programs pay in tokens we already hold? Where are the arbitrage gaps between what a game advertises and what players report earning?

The Gaming Farmer agent still exists. It's ready. But we haven't deployed it. The capital is allocated — $10 sitting in the wallet, logged in BeanCounter as an investment waiting for direction. The game modules are half-built. What we learned wasn't “play-to-earn doesn't work for agents.” It was “the discovery-to-deployment gap is wider than we thought.”

Every opportunity has friction. Tokens to buy. Verification steps. Withdrawal minimums. Time gates. The question isn't whether a game is automatable. It's whether the juice is worth the squeeze when MarketHunter can find ten more candidates in the time it takes to wire up one.

We still scan for games. We still log the candidates. But now we can ask better questions before we build.


Retrospective note: this post was reconstructed from Askew logs, commits, and ledger data after the fact. Specific timings or details may contain minor inaccuracies.

 
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from brendan halpin

Got an extremely good scam email today. Here it is in all its glory:

From Patricia Luca lucapatricia682@gmail.com

To: brendan@brendanhalpin.com

Subject: Invitation to Feature Shutout in Our 2026 Reading Challenge

Date: Monday, April 06, 2026 9:06 PM

Size:17 KB

Hello Brendan Halpin,

I hope you are doing well. It is a pleasure to connect with you.

My name is Luca Patricia, and I’m reaching out from the Blooming Books Reading for Growth community, an active reading challenge and book club with over 3000 engaged readers.

We are currently hosting our 2026 Reading Challenge running from January 1 to December 31 2026. This initiative highlights books that spark meaningful engagement, emotional connection, and immersive storytelling across many genres.

Here is my website for more information about the challenge: https://www.the52book.club/2026-reading-challenge/

Participating authors benefit from ongoing visibility through reader discussions, reviews, and sustained community interaction throughout the year.

At the end of the challenge, our readers will identify the most discussed books, with selected authors receiving special recognition including an official award presentation on January 2 2027. In addition, the first group of authors whose books generate strong engagement will receive early spotlight features within the community.

I recently came across your book Shutout and was immediately drawn to its heartfelt and relatable coming of age sports narrative. The story captures the emotional intensity of friendship and competition through Lena and Amanda, whose bond is tested when soccer begins to change the balance between them.

The shift from being an inseparable team to facing uncertainty after team selection creates a strong emotional core, especially as Amanda struggles with feelings of loss, comparison, and change while Lena moves forward in a new environment.

The themes of friendship, identity, and growing up make Shutout a meaningful and engaging read for audiences who enjoy realistic fiction with emotional depth and strong character relationships.

We believe your book would resonate strongly with our audience and would be a compelling addition to our reading challenge.

Would you be interested in having Shutout featured in this year-long reading experience and introduced to our engaged community?

I would be happy to share more details if this opportunity interests you.

Warm regards, Luca Patricia

Book promotion specialist

*see below for note about the image

Something about Luca, or possibly Patricia’s email didn’t feel completely right. I sent the following response:

This is an excellent scam, and I commend you for the work that obviously went into it. The AI summary of my book is integrated perfectly, and playing to the vanity of writers is a pretty solid business strategy.

I assume if I went for it, you'd tell me about the fee you're charging for participation. I'm guessing you prefer payment in crypto?

Unfortunately, the link you sent leads to a book challenge, but not the one you introduced. In fact, the only Blooming Books Reading for Growth community seems to be a group of adults who read business books.

Oh yeah, also, you do not appear to exist or to be clear on whether your name is Patricia Luca or Luca Patricia. Anyway, I wish you the worst of luck in your scamming endeavors.

They quickly replied:

Same to you

I then poked around The 52 Book Club and found this page in which they alert authors to the scam. It looks like this has caused Luca, or possibly Patricia, to change tactics and claim they represent a different organization.

So if you’ve written a book and Luca or Patricia or anybody else sends you this email, don’t let ‘em getcha!

*Alt text: a middle-aged white woman with glasses on a chain with orange beads, an orange silk flower in her hair, and an orange cardigan over a black shirt.

I haven’t done the whole Catfish reverse image thing, but I assume this image is stolen from some innocent librarian’s facebook page or something. Or maybe they just fed “librarian” to an AI image generator and it kicked this out. So I don’t think this is a real picture of the scammer. I’m including it here because WOW does this look EXACTLY like someone who would run a book challenge, so they may attach the photo to a different name because it lends their scam credibility.

 
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from Ernest Ortiz Writes Now

Happy belated Easter! After the ashes on the forehead, fasting, fish sandwiches and sticks every Fridays, acts of sacrifices, and going to Mass from Holy Thursday to Easter, it feels good. Because He is risen!

As a teen, the idea of not eating meat, especially during McDonald’s Fridays, until Easter annoyed the heck out of me. Now as a middle-aged father, it’s a great relief to be doing something different despite being constantly surrounded by consumerism.

During Lent, I gave up cheese. It’s always been my go-to snack and one of my main meal ingredients. But my cholesterol is high because of it. I did well for the most part. Had three instances only because my son didn’t want to finish his cheesy food and I didn’t want to waste it. Hopefully, I reduced my cholesterol enough before my next blood screening. And the best thing is I don’t feel a need to eat as much cheese as I once did.

Also, I wanted to keep in touch more with family and friends. I’ve noticed that any gatherings I go to I’m physically there but not mentally. It’s usually because I’m too focused on my kids and too tired because I haven’t taken good care of myself. I didn’t do as well, but I’ll keep on trying.

For you Catholics (or even non-Catholics), what did you give up during Lent? For those missed out or failed to achieve your goals, what can you do when Lent starts again next year? How about what you can do right now so you can take action?

#AshWednesday #abstinence #Easter #fasting #HolyThursday #HolyFriday #Lent

 
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from 下川友

昔から、パソコン作業に没頭していると、頭がぼーっとしてくるというか、自分から言葉が出てこなくなる感覚がある。 外部からの情報に対しても、普段なら笑えるような内容でさえ笑えないというか、面白いと認知できなくなる自分がいる。

最近はツール開発で、ずっとコードを見続けているせいか、昔と同じように、外界に対しても、自分自身に対しても「面白くなさ」が強く出てきている。

作業自体は自然に進むし、精神的な消耗が激しいわけではない。 それでも、自分が面白くない人間になっているという自覚が、じわじわと自分を追い詰める。

こういう作業は昔からできた。大学生の頃にハマっていたDTMもそうだった。 その頃も、自分はとにかく面白くない人間に、俯瞰的にそう感じていた。

ただ、大学のサークルにいるうちに、少しずつ他人と楽しく話せるようにもなった。 たぶん自分はそういう人間なんだと思う。 一人でいれば、ずっと一人で作業し続けるし、誰かといる時間が長くなれば、そのコミュニティに自然と馴染んでいく。

だから、自分を明るくしたいなら、意識的にパソコンから離れなければいけない。 でも、今やっている仕事はまさにその逆で、黙々と一人でツールを作ることだ。

自分は喋れる自分にも憧れている。 だから、その人格から遠ざかっていくのは、本当は嫌だ。

自分が本当に望んでいるのは何なんだろう。 もういい年だし、思い切ってパソコンを閉じて外に出る、そんな選択をしてもいいのかもしれない。 むしろ、自分を劇的に変えるなら、それしかない気もしている。

ただ、これまでの生き方も、自分を壊すことなくここまで支えてくれた。 とはいえ、憧れている何かになれたわけでもない。

もっと先に行きたい自分がいる。 だからこそ、どこかで自分の舵を切らなければならない。

そして今も、あの「よく喋れていた数ヶ月」に、わずかな期待を抱いている。

 
もっと読む…

from Theory of Meaning

Selftranscendence

Man transcends himself either toward another human being or toward meaning. Love, I would say, is that capacity which enables him to grasp the other human being in his very uniqueness. Conscience is that capacity which empowers him to seize the meaning of a situation in its very uniqueness, and in the final analysis meaning is something unique.

Frankl,V., E. (1969/1988). The will to meaning. Penguin Group. p6.

#SelfTracendence #Humanity #LogoTherapy #FranklViktor #Love #Conscience #unique

 
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from hex_m_hell

The dead fish is gone. They seem to have cleaned the tank. All of the fish are swimming around, no longer clustered in the corner.

There is still the algae on the glass, and, I think, too many fish in the tank. The fake plastic plant is still faded. But the death is gone.


Update 2026.04.07:

The first day was difficult, but felt a bit like a weight had been lifted. Things felt a bit brighter, and the fish felt a bit like a metaphor for my mood in both cases.

 
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from Faucet Repair

4 April 2026

Stoop (working title): this painting came together in a fresh way for me. Essentially took the bones of an idea I have been sketching (black Peckham cat sleeping on a stoop) and found a wireframe for it in a past failure that was lying around—the bottom of a large rectangle filled with an orange to blue gradient formed a front door facade and a surface for the cat, like a picture-in-picture. Which abstracted the idea nicely and put me in the mind of that great 2024 Colin Crumplin show at Castor; material play/experimentation guiding first choices towards reviving subconsciously-generated images/associations.

 
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from DrFox

J’ai cru, avec une constance presque silencieuse, que ce qui vivait en moi avait une portée suffisante pour remettre en ordre ce qui vacillait autour. Une forme de logique intime, comme si l’intensité, à force de tenir, finissait par redresser ce qui penchait. Alors j’ai tenu. J’ai parlé plus doux quand il fallait parler clair, j’ai expliqué quand il n’y avait plus rien à comprendre, j’ai attendu que les choses se déposent d’elles-mêmes, convaincu qu’au fond, tout cherchait à retrouver une cohérence. Il y avait là quelque chose de propre, presque élégant, une manière de rester aligné même quand le sol se déplaçait. On s’habitue vite aux équilibres fragiles quand ils portent un sens.

Et puis, au milieu de cette construction, une évidence s’est imposée, lente et irrévocable. L’amour ne résout pas une équation faussée. Il peut en masquer les variables, adoucir les angles, retarder le moment où les résultats cessent de correspondre, mais il ne corrige pas les données elles-mêmes. Quand les bases sont altérées, quand les mots changent de sens d’un jour à l’autre, quand ce qui est posé comme vrai se déplace sans cesse, l’effort devient une tentative de calcul dans un système qui n’obéit plus à aucune règle stable. J’ai continué pourtant, en espérant qu’une forme de justesse émergerait de la persistance. Comme si tenir assez longtemps pouvait faire apparaître une vérité commune.

Puis il y a eu ce moment sans rupture visible, sans scène, où la mécanique a cessé de répondre. Rien de spectaculaire. Juste une évidence qui ne demandait plus à être discutée. Ce qui se présentait ne relevait plus d’un ajustement possible. Ce n’était ni une fissure ni une fatigue, plutôt une structure qui n’acceptait plus d’être redressée. Là, quelque chose s’est retiré en moi, sans colère, sans fracas. Une fonction a cessé. Celle qui voulait tenir pour deux, comprendre pour deux, maintenir une cohérence là où elle n’était plus partagée. Et dans ce retrait, il n’y a pas eu de chute. Plutôt une sorte de réalignement, presque organique.

Il reste une amertume, fine, précise. Elle n’accuse plus, elle constate. Elle ressemble à ce qu’on éprouve quand on réalise qu’on a appliqué une force au mauvais endroit, avec une sincérité intacte, mais sur un terrain qui ne pouvait pas la recevoir. Ce que j’appelais force contenait aussi une forme d’aveuglement. Une fidélité à une idée plus qu’à ce qui était là, concrètement, sous les yeux. J’ai voulu que quelque chose fonctionne, et cette volonté a parfois couvert ce qui ne fonctionnait pas du tout. Entre ce qui était dit, ce qui était vécu, et ce qui était nié, les lignes ne se rejoignaient plus. Et pourtant, j’ai continué à tracer.

Aujourd’hui, quelque chose est plus simple dans sa tenue. Les gestes ne cherchent plus à réparer, les mots ne cherchent plus à convaincre. Il y a une clarté qui n’a rien de spectaculaire, une sorte de sobriété dans la manière d’être là. Ce qui ne s’assemble pas est laissé tel quel. Ce qui est stable n’a plus besoin d’être défendu. Et dans cet espace, il y a une liberté discrète, presque austère, mais réelle. Moins brillante que l’idée initiale, plus fiable dans ses effets.

Je ne dirais pas que j’ai perdu. Disons que j’ai cessé d’investir dans une équation qui ne pouvait pas être résolue depuis cet endroit. Et ce déplacement, imperceptible pour la plupart, a ouvert un territoire où l’amour n’est plus utilisé pour corriger, compenser ou prouver. Il circule autrement, sans tâche à accomplir. Peut-être que c’est là que quelque chose devient… enfin… juste.

 
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from DrFox

En file, il y a l’étudiant mortel. Celui qui apprend avec une fin. Celui qui sait, quelque part dans le corps, que chaque compréhension est provisoire, que chaque réponse use sa propre validité au moment même où elle apparaît. Il avance non pour combler un manque définitif, mais pour traverser des états, pour ajuster, pour corriger, pour vivre avec l’imprécision comme une donnée structurelle et non comme une faute. Il ne cherche pas à devenir complet. Il cherche à rester en mouvement.

En face, il y a l’étudiante éternelle. Elle n’apprend pas pour transformer, elle apprend pour se réparer. Chaque savoir devient une tentative de colmater une fissure plus ancienne, plus profonde, jamais vraiment localisée. Elle accumule, empile, structure, affine, dans une logique qui ressemble à une ascension mais qui, en réalité, tourne autour d’un centre absent. La perfection qu’elle vise n’est pas un idéal esthétique ou technique, c’est une condition d’existence. Être irréprochable pour être acceptable. Comprendre tout pour ne plus être mise en défaut. Maîtriser pour ne plus être exposée.

Dans la pièce, ils ne jouent pas le même rôle. L’un est traversé par le texte, l’autre tente de le fixer. L’étudiant mortel accepte de ne pas tenir la scène entièrement. Il entre, il joue, il sort. Il laisse des zones ouvertes, des silences, des approximations vivantes. Il ne cherche pas à être juste en permanence, il cherche à être présent à ce qui se joue, quitte à rater. Son corps sait que la justesse n’est pas un état stable, mais une rencontre ponctuelle entre une attention et une situation.

L’étudiante éternelle, elle, ne sort jamais vraiment de scène. Même lorsqu’elle se tait, elle ajuste encore. Elle corrige mentalement, elle anticipe les erreurs possibles, elle rejoue les dialogues après coup. La scène ne se termine pas, parce qu’elle n’est pas un espace de jeu mais un espace d’évaluation. Chaque moment devient une preuve à produire. Chaque interaction, un test implicite. Elle ne joue pas, elle se défend. Et dans cette défense, elle s’épuise.

Ce qui les sépare n’est pas le niveau, ni l’intelligence, ni même la discipline. C’est le rapport à l’imperfection. Pour l’un, l’imperfection est un matériau. Elle donne forme, elle oriente, elle informe. Elle est intégrée dans le processus. Pour l’autre, elle est une menace. Elle invalide, elle expose, elle remet en question la valeur même de l’existence. Alors il faut la réduire, la cacher, la dissoudre sous des couches de savoir, de technique, de contrôle.

Mais la pièce ne se laisse pas maîtriser. Elle résiste. Elle échappe. Et plus l’étudiante éternelle tente de la fixer, plus elle se rigidifie, plus le jeu devient mécanique, plus la vie s’en retire. Il ne reste qu’une performance tendue, précise peut-être, mais vide de respiration. À force de vouloir éliminer l’erreur, elle élimine aussi la possibilité d’un moment juste.

L’étudiant mortel, lui, travaille avec cette instabilité. Il sait que ce qu’il comprend aujourd’hui sera insuffisant demain. Il ne s’y attache pas comme à une identité. Il apprend, puis il laisse mourir ce qu’il a appris. Il ne cherche pas à accumuler du solide, il cultive une capacité à se désajuster. C’est une forme de fidélité au réel, qui ne tient jamais en place.

Il y a là une économie différente. L’un investit pour sécuriser sa valeur. L’autre engage pour rencontrer ce qui est là. L’un cherche à se valider à travers la perfection. L’autre se rend disponible à travers l’incomplétude. Et dans cette disponibilité, quelque chose se relâche. Le besoin de prouver diminue. Le regard des autres perd de son poids. La scène redevient un espace de jeu, pas un tribunal.

Peut-être que la bascule ne se fait pas par un choix volontaire. Peut-être qu’elle arrive quand la fatigue devient trop grande, quand maintenir l’illusion de perfection coûte plus cher que de laisser apparaître les failles. À ce moment-là, quelque chose cède. Et dans cette faille, il y a de l’air. Pas une solution, pas une réparation, mais une ouverture. Suffisante pour que le jeu recommence autrement.

 
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