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  • A Full Life Demands Reflection

    August 24, 2025

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    Silas Hale

    Why We Need Mental-Distance to Thrive In a world of hyper-connectivity, deliberately slowing down is a radical act of depth and preservation. There are moments when beauty reveals itself without demanding our attention. It does not arrive with a notification, nor does it compete for our limited attention spans. It simply exists, whole and…

  • The Scenic Route: Why Slowing Down Boosts Focus, Creativity, and a Life Well Lived

    The Scenic Route: Why Slowing Down Boosts Focus, Creativity, and a Life Well Lived

    August 17, 2025

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    Silas Hale

      Try What I Call, “The Scenic Route Philosophy“… In an era built on acceleration, deliberately slowing down might be the most subversive choice you can make. A few months back, I stood behind my Minolta SRT 101, and framed up (what I think) was a great shot of a parked Triumph Bonneville. It…

  • Slow Living & Analog Media: Barbershop Lessons for Mindful Tech Use

    Slow Living & Analog Media: Barbershop Lessons for Mindful Tech Use

    August 17, 2025

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    Silas Hale

    These human-to-human exchanges are not content to be consumed; they are human transactions that accrue meaning. Slowing Down:  I shot this barber pole in late afternoon about 6 months ago, it’s a storefront that remembers more conversations than the sidewalk does. The picture is a small thing—grain, light, a vertical slice of my  downtown—but…

  • Transparent Architecture and the Digital Age of Self-Exposure: A Byung-Chul Han Perspective

    Transparent Architecture and the Digital Age of Self-Exposure: A Byung-Chul Han Perspective

    August 13, 2025

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    Silas Hale

    In our world that is currently defined by transparent architecture and constant self-exposure online, perhaps the most important space to protect is the interior one. The Digital Age of Self-Exposure…     In cities around the world, transparent architecture has become the new skyline. Walls of glass replace stone and steel, and buildings are…

  • How a Year-Old Photo Finally Made Rick Rubin’s Advice Click

    How a Year-Old Photo Finally Made Rick Rubin’s Advice Click

    August 11, 2025

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    Silas Hale

    I used to think this cycle of writer’s block was a problem. Now I’m wondering if it’s actually the point of the creative act of writing. Why I’m still reading “The Creative Act” and what Multnomah Falls taught me about novel writing…      I took this shot of Multnomah Falls over a year…

  • Complicit in Society’s Spectacle: What Can We Do?

    Complicit in Society’s Spectacle: What Can We Do?

    August 9, 2025

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    Silas Hale

    We can’t fully escape the mechanism, but we can develop a critical consciousness about our role within it. At this very moment of typing these words, I am complicit in a performance. I produce this mostly for myself as an archive of my search for meaning in our current age, but the irony—and the…

  • Morality, Materialism, and the Changing Society

    Morality, Materialism, and the Changing Society

    August 8, 2025

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    Silas Hale

    This isn’t a profession of love for organized religion. It’s a testament to the changing landscape of our society.      There’s something unsettling about this image of a church at dusk—not because of what’s there, but because of what surrounds it. The stark white tower stands at attention in front of a cotton-candy…

  • The Philosophy of Analog: Reflecting on Life Through Film Photography

    The Philosophy of Analog: Reflecting on Life Through Film Photography

    August 7, 2025

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    Silas Hale

    What does it mean in the overall landscape portrait of my fleeting life? When I take a photograph of myself on film, there’s something raw about it—no filters, no retakes. Just a single, unrepeatable moment. That’s what I love about analog photography: it slows me down, forces me to frame with intention, and—maybe most…

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