Prologue — The Hour Before MemoryTime does not begin in clocks,nor in the pages of history.It begins in the trembling of the heart,in the faint fragrance of a forgotten room,in the sudden warmth of a summer long vanished.We are not born once,but many times —each memory a rebirth,each sensation a thresholdto another self within us.These poems are fragments of that … [Read more...] about In Search of Lost Time: A Poetic Study Cycle
Comedy Without Politics: How Humor Can Still Unite Us
Introduction — Johnny Carson Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. You know, for thirty years I stood behind a desk, told a few jokes, and tried to make America laugh before bedtime. What I learned is this: laughter is the one language that everybody understands. Politics may divide us, but waiting in line at the DMV, losing your luggage, or trying to put … [Read more...] about Comedy Without Politics: How Humor Can Still Unite Us
The Five Principles of Frequency by Masanori Kuwana
Introduction by Masanori KuwanaWhen I began exploring the nature of life, I discovered that everything—our bodies, our thoughts, even our societies—is made of frequency. We live in an ocean of vibration, and the quality of our frequency determines the quality of our reality. This is not just philosophy; it is the foundation of how life unfolds.In this … [Read more...] about The Five Principles of Frequency by Masanori Kuwana
María Corina Machado: Civil Courage and the Struggle for Peace
Introduction by Václav Havel When we speak of courage, it is often imagined as a dramatic act, a clash of wills or armies. Yet true courage, the kind that shifts history, is quieter, subtler, and infinitely more difficult. It is the courage of individuals who stand alone against entire systems of lies, who refuse to surrender their dignity when everything … [Read more...] about María Corina Machado: Civil Courage and the Struggle for Peace
The Waste Land Explained: Five Critics in Dialogue
Introduction by T.S. Eliot When I composed The Waste Land, it was not to bewilder but to record the reality of a broken world. After the Great War, what remained were fragments—mythic echoes, scraps of memory, voices without harmony. To write in a single, unified voice would have been dishonest. The age itself was fractured, and so the poem had to be … [Read more...] about The Waste Land Explained: Five Critics in Dialogue
The Waste Land Reimagined: Eliot’s Poem as Dialogue
Introduction by Robert Wilson (Director) When I think of The Waste Land, I don’t approach it as a scholar but as a builder of worlds. Eliot’s lines feel less like literature and more like fragments of architecture—shards of stone, beams of light, sudden silences. The stage, then, becomes a kind of desert cathedral where those fragments can be held in suspension. … [Read more...] about The Waste Land Reimagined: Eliot’s Poem as Dialogue
Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations Reimagined for 2025
Introduction by Marianne Elliott When I first approached Great Expectations, I was struck not only by Dickens’s extraordinary storytelling but by its relevance to the world we live in today. Pip’s story is one of ambition, of longing to escape the circumstances of birth, of believing that wealth and status will heal the ache of shame.In 2025, we still live … [Read more...] about Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations Reimagined for 2025
Dickens’s David Copperfield: A 2025 Jack Thorne Adaptation
Introduction by Jack Thorne Charles Dickens once said that of all his children, David Copperfield was the one he liked best. I think that’s because David was closest to himself — a boy pushed into the world too early, broken and rebuilt by the kindness of strangers, the cruelties of society, and the strange, fumbling miracle of love.When I began thinking … [Read more...] about Dickens’s David Copperfield: A 2025 Jack Thorne Adaptation
Agentic AI & The Future of Work: From Chat to Action
Introduction — Yuval Noah Harari For thousands of years, human work has been more than survival. It has been how we craft meaning, how we weave ourselves into the stories of our families, our communities, and our civilizations. Work has carried dignity because it was not just about making things, but about making ourselves.Yet today we stand at a profound … [Read more...] about Agentic AI & The Future of Work: From Chat to Action









