love
All you need is Love, and Love is all you need.
Essence, Embodiment, and Relational Reality
The Failure of Reduction and the Need for Synthesis There is a persistent failure in many modern attempts to explain what a human being is. Some frameworks reduce the person entirely to matter, insisting that identity, consciousness, morality, and meaning are nothing more than emergent properties of physical processes. Other frameworks move in the opposite direction, detaching spirit from reason and grounding belief in intuition alone, often at the cost of coherence or accountability. Both approaches fail because both misunderstand essence. One denies that essence exists at all. The other treats it as something vague and undefinable.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast12 days ago in Humans
Goodbye
I’ve stood here countless times wondering how she’s been all this time. Ten years. Ten long years have passed, and somehow it still all feels like yesterday. It feels like yesterday, where we were standing here, this very bridge, where it all began and where it all ended. Two souls, two strangers who by the end had become one. It feels like yesterday, where we were pretending the goodbye wasn’t going to be final. Believing our love could survive distance, time, silence and pride.
By Christos Ampadinis13 days ago in Humans
Wendy Mesley: Husband, Net Worth, Age, Children, Biography & More. AI-Generated.
Wendy Mesley is a renowned Canadian television journalist whose career spans over four decades. From her early reporting days to hosting major programs on CBC News, she has been a prominent face in Canadian broadcast journalism.
By Enoch Sagini13 days ago in Humans
Ginella Massa: Husband, Parents, Biography, Age, Career & More. AI-Generated.
Ginella Massa is a trail-blazing Canadian journalist known for making history as one of the first hijab-wearing national news anchors in Canada. Her journey from a young immigrant to a prominent television host reflects her resilience, cultural identity, and commitment to representation.
By Enoch Sagini13 days ago in Humans
Melissa Nakhavoly: Husband, Age, Biography, Career, Children & More. AI-Generated.
Melissa Nakhavoly is a Canadian journalist and television news reporter known for her work with CityNews Toronto and 680News. With a multi-faceted career spanning radio and television, she brings a passionate voice to community issues and social justice.
By Enoch Sagini13 days ago in Humans
Resistance Is Not the Enemy
Iron sharpens iron. Brakes save lives. Friction preserves form. Modern culture treats resistance as failure. Anything that slows momentum is framed as obstruction, anything that introduces friction is assumed to be opposition, and anything that interrupts progress is labeled a setback. But this instinct misunderstands how both physical systems and human growth actually work. Resistance is not inherently hostile. In many cases, it is the only thing preventing collapse.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast13 days ago in Humans
The Refiner’s Fire Is Not the Whetstone
There is a difference between being sharpened and being transformed, and confusing the two leads to frustration when growth does not feel productive. Sharpening implies refinement of existing form. Fire implies change in composition. Both processes are uncomfortable, but they operate on different levels and for different purposes. When people expect sharpening and receive fire instead, they often assume something has gone wrong, when in reality something deeper is taking place.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast13 days ago in Humans
You See From Where You Stand
"The room remains full whether you can see it or not." One of the most persistent misunderstandings about perception is the assumption that seeing is the same as knowing. People often believe that if something feels clear, it must be complete, and if something feels obscure, it must be absent. But awareness does not work that way. What you perceive at any moment is not a measure of what exists. It is a measure of what your current position allows to pass through.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast13 days ago in Humans
(17) The Shape of the Work
This essay exists to make the structure of the series visible after the fact. It does not introduce new arguments or advance new claims. Its purpose is architectural. It explains how the work is organized, why the sequence matters, and what each movement is responsible for accomplishing. Without this reference, readers may grasp individual insights while missing the coherence of the whole. With it, the series can be understood as a single, intentional construction rather than a collection of adjacent essays.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast13 days ago in Humans
(16) A Coherent Orientation
- Seeing the Whole Rather Than the Pieces - At this point in the series, it becomes possible to see what could not be seen at the beginning. Each essay examined a distinct failure mode, but none of them were independent. Representation becoming abstract, authority detaching from consequence, law becoming unequal, fear governing populations, coercion turning inward, participation hollowing out, and collapse arriving through withdrawal were not separate phenomena. They were expressions of the same underlying design failure viewed from different angles. What initially appeared fragmented resolves into a single, intelligible pattern once the system is observed as a whole.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast13 days ago in Humans
(15) Meaning Beyond Systems
- The Limits of Institutional Meaning - Modern societies quietly train people to derive meaning from institutions. Careers, credentials, civic participation, political identity, and social status are framed not merely as functional roles, but as sources of purpose. When institutions appear stable, this arrangement feels natural. Effort is rewarded, progress is legible, and contribution seems to matter. Meaning and structure reinforce one another. But when institutions fail structurally, this arrangement collapses. The same systems that once promised significance begin to feel hollow, extractive, or hostile.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast13 days ago in Humans






