
Hadestown Review: singing how the world could be, in spite of the way it is
What a modern folk opera about Orpheus and Eurydice can teach us about cruelty, care, and the fragile work of hope.
Reflections on the practices, principles, and complexities of care in fostering connection and well-being.
What a modern folk opera about Orpheus and Eurydice can teach us about cruelty, care, and the fragile work of hope.
A cup of tea, a cold night, and a stranger who stayed too long. A body conditioned by experience moves through the choreography of staying safe.
From village megaphones to market ideologies, tracing the shifting meanings of liberalism—and why freedom without ethics falls short.
On rest, responsibility, and the philosophies that quietly live us.
What if the real gap isn’t between knowledge and action, but between concern and care? Our entanglement with systems makes meaningful change difficult—but does it absolve us of responsibility?
When we bring our soul back into the act of caring for the world, sustainability shifts from obligation to fulfilment.
How do we create healthy conditions of discourse in an increasingly polarized, and ideologically volatile world? What does it mean to cultivate an online culture of curiosity and care?
Is it possible that our prized tool for dissecting truth—critical thinking—might actually be sharpening divides rather than bridging them? Peter Gilderdale confronts a paradox at the heart of a cherished intellectual tradition: are we merely critiquing, or are we truly considering?
A deeply reflective exploration of how an insistence on curiosity and care can transform our engagement with the world by re-enchanting our attention, deepening human connection, and challenging the transactional nature of modern society.