Charles Schulz and Harriet Glickman

Charles Schulz and Harriet Glickman

Eleven days after they killed Dr. King, a teacher sat down to force a Black child into America’s most famous comic strip. Harriet Glickman wrote Charles Schulz in 1968 and asked him to put a Black kid in Peanuts, where in eighteen years not one had ever appeared.

He almost said no, afraid that a white man drawing a Black child would look like pity. A hundred million readers, eighteen years, and the whole thing turned on one letter.

Eleven days after Dr. King was killed in Memphis, a schoolteacher in California sat down at her typewriter and wrote a letter to a cartoonist. She did not expect him to write back.

Her name was Harriet Glickman. She was forty-one, a mother of three living in the San Fernando Valley, and that spring she felt as powerless as everyone around her.

The country was coming apart. Cities were burning, the television was wall to wall with funerals, and a teacher in suburban Los Angeles kept asking herself what one ordinary person could possibly do.

She was not an activist.

She was a mother with a typewriter and a feeling she could not shake.

The man she wrote to was Charles Schulz. His comic strip, Peanuts, ran in around a thousand newspapers and reached close to a hundred million readers every week.

Charlie Brown, Lucy, Linus, Snoopy.

Eighteen years of that strip, going back to 1950, and not one of those children was Black.

Glickman had spent her life around children. As a teacher, she had watched something up close that stayed with her.

Black children and white children never saw themselves sitting side by side, not in school in the funny pages, not anywhere a child went looking for his own face.

So she said it plainly on the page. She wrote that since Dr. King’s death she had been asking what she could do about the “vast sea of misunderstanding, hate, fear and violence” that had swallowed the country.

She had actually sent the same idea to several cartoonists. Schulz was the one who wrote back.

That was the first surprise.

His reply was honest in a way that probably stung. He told her he had thought about putting a Black child in the strip, and that the idea frightened him.

Not because of his readers.

He was afraid of getting it wrong.

He worried it would come off like a white man patting Black families on the head, talking down to them. “I don’t know what the solution is,” he wrote, and left it right there.

A lot of people would have folded at that. A polite no from a famous man is an easy place to stop.

But Glickman wrote again, and Schulz answered again, and this time he sounded even more certain it was a mistake. He was sure that whatever he drew would come off as a white man being clumsy about something this raw.

Still she did not let it drop.

She wrote back and asked his permission to do one small thing.

She had no interest in speaking for Black people. So she asked if she could show his letter to some Black friends of hers, parents, and let them answer him in their own words.

Schulz said yes.

One of those friends was a man named Kenneth Kelly. He was a Black father of two young boys, and he was an engineer.

Not just any engineer.

Kelly worked on the Surveyor program, the unmanned American craft that was setting down on the surface of the moon.

Sit with that picture for a second. A Black man helping land a spacecraft on the moon took the time to write a cartoonist about whether a Black child could sit in a comic strip.

Kelly was patient with him. He told Schulz that no Black parent he knew would call the gesture condescending, and that even if a few did, it would be “a small price to pay” for what it would give their children.

What it would give them was not complicated. It was the simple sight of themselves, somewhere inside the ordinary American picture they were shut out of every single day.

Kelly even told him how to do it. Do not make the boy a hero, he suggested, and do not turn him into a lesson.

Just a regular kid, one of the gang, nothing special, simply there.

Years later, Kelly would spend himself fighting housing discrimination in his city. That summer, he changed a comic strip instead.

Another friend and parent, Monica Gunning, wrote to Schulz as well. The letters kept landing on his desk in Northern California, polite and unhurried and impossible to wave off.

All of this was happening while the year kept getting worse. In June, Robert Kennedy was killed in Los Angeles, Glickman’s own city, a few weeks after Kelly mailed his letter.

The country was taking blow after blow.

And in the middle of it, that quiet argument about a comic strip kept moving forward, one letter at a time.

Then, one day that summer, Schulz sent Glickman a short note. He told her to check her newspaper the week of July twenty-ninth, because he had drawn something he thought would please her.

On July 31, 1968, Charlie Brown is standing on a beach, and he has lost his ball in the water. A boy he has never met before wades in and carries it back to him.

The boy’s name is Franklin. The two of them get to talking and build a sandcastle together, two children on a beach on a summer afternoon.

No speech. No halo.

No lecture about brotherhood, just a Black child being kind to Charlie Brown, printed in a thousand papers from coast to coast.

The strip would later show that Franklin’s father was a soldier serving in Vietnam. He was never written as a symbol.

He was somebody’s son.

When Franklin appeared, mail poured into Schulz’s office from all over the country. Most of it said the same simple thing, which was thank you.

It should have ended there, small and sweet. It did not.

When Schulz later drew Franklin in school, he sat him at a desk right in front of Peppermint Patty. A Black child and a white child, learning in the same room.

For one Southern newspaper editor, that was the line. He wrote to Schulz to say he did not mind a Black character, but please do not show the children in school together.

The man could accept Franklin existing in the strip.

He could not accept that child sharing a desk with a white girl.

This was 1968. Black children were walking into newly integrated schools behind federal marshals, and a grown man was objecting to a cartoon doing the very same thing.

Schulz had a decision to make, and he made it without any noise. Years later, asked what he had done about that complaint over the classroom, he gave a short answer.

It was five words. “I didn’t even answer him.”

He just kept drawing the two of them at the same desk.

Far off in Philadelphia, a six-year-old Black boy watched Franklin appear with no idea of the fight behind him. His name was Robb Armstrong.

That year had already taken something from him. His older brother had died thirty days before Franklin first turned up on that beach.

Thirty days.

A boy loses his brother, and a month later a new face shows up in the comics page he reads on the living room floor.

So here was a child who already knew the shape of a hole in a family. And then, right inside that grief, a Black kid walked into his favorite comic strip.

Robb looked at Franklin and thought one thing. “That’s like me.”

He had already told his mother, at three years old, that he was going to be a cartoonist.

Now he had proof there was room for him.

A Black boy could belong on the funny pages, because one already did.

That child grew up to become exactly what he had promised. Robb Armstrong created JumpStart, one of the most widely syndicated Black comic strips in the country.

And here is where the story closes a circle no one could have planned. Franklin, through all those decades, never had a last name.

In the 1990s, Charles Schulz picked up the phone and called Robb Armstrong. A special was in the works, every character needed a full name, and Schulz had just realized Franklin did not have one.

So he asked the grown man, the one who had once been that grieving six-year-old, whether he could borrow his name. Robb said yes right away.

That is why the first Black character in Peanuts is named Franklin Armstrong.

Armstrong called it the highest respect a person could be shown.

About the man who reached a lonely kid through a comic strip, he said it simply, “He inspired a kid.”

Harriet Glickman lived to be ninety-three. She died in March of 2020, in the same Sherman Oaks house where she had typed that letter more than fifty years earlier.

The letter outlived her. It rests now in the Charles M. Schulz Museum, the real page, her real words, dated eleven days after Dr. King was killed.

You can stand in front of it today, behind glass, and read the date typed across the top. April 15, 1968, mailed by a woman who was certain no one was listening.

Vadim Zeland

Vadim Zeland

(Tom: This aligns with what I understand, that when we descend from making things happen by lightly deciding they will happen down to using energy to make them happen we are less likely to obtain the desired result.)

Somewhere in Russia, there is a man who does not want to be found.

Not because he is hiding from trouble. Not because he is ashamed of what he has written. But because he genuinely believes that who he is has nothing to do with whether his ideas are true — and that making himself the story would only get in the way.

When readers ask him “Who are you, Vadim Zeland?” he gives the same answer every time: “I’m no one special.” Wemoral

No photographs. No interviews. No stage appearances. No social media presence. Just books — released quietly into the world — and then silence.

He has said: “My biography cannot and should not be of any interest. To transmit this knowledge without personal distortions, I really ought to be nobody. Just an empty vessel.” Wemoral

This is either profound humility or masterful mystique. Possibly both.

What is known about him is this: before the collapse of the Soviet Union, he did research in quantum physics. Afterward, he worked in computer technology. Then, in the early 2000s, he began writing. Wemoral

The books came out in Russia starting around 2004. They spread first through word of mouth — friend telling friend, stranger telling stranger on early internet forums. No advertising. No celebrity endorsements. No famous face attached.

Just readers saying, quietly, to anyone who would listen: “Something about this is different. Try it.”

The series is called Reality Transurfing. And the central idea — stripped of its more contested theoretical packaging — goes like this:

Most people approach what they want in life the wrong way. They strain toward it. They obsess. They assign it enormous importance. They pour so much desperate energy into wanting something that the wanting itself becomes the obstacle. Like gripping water in a clenched fist: the harder you squeeze, the faster it escapes.

Zeland’s proposal is a fundamental shift in approach.

Stop making your goals so desperately important. Choose what you want clearly, calmly, with quiet confidence — as if you are selecting something from a menu rather than clawing toward it. Align your inner state with the version of yourself who already has the thing you’re reaching for. Stop straining. Start moving.

He frames this through the language of quantum physics and parallel possibilities — describing reality as a vast field of branching variants, and your life as something you navigate by shifting your inner frequency rather than forcing external outcomes.

Here is where honest reporting matters: physicists and scientists have consistently pointed out that Zeland’s use of quantum physics terminology does not accurately represent how quantum mechanics actually works. Quantum effects operate at subatomic scales — they do not function the way self-help writers often describe them. This is a legitimate and important criticism that serious readers of Transurfing should know. All That’s Interesting

Zeland himself, to his credit, has acknowledged this. He says the theoretical model is a framework — a way of thinking — not a scientific claim. He has stated clearly: “The use of the techniques is not dependent on the acceptance of his theoretical model.” You don’t have to believe the physics framing. You just have to try the practices. ABC News

And the practices — stripped of the cosmological scaffolding — are recognizable.

Reduce the anxious importance you attach to outcomes. Listen to what you actually want rather than what you think you should want. Stop being swept along by other people’s ideas of success. Move toward your goals from a place of calm intention rather than desperate striving.

These ideas appear in Buddhist philosophy. In Stoicism. In modern cognitive behavioral therapy. In various contemplative traditions going back centuries. Zeland acknowledges the overlaps openly and without defensiveness.

What he brought to them was a specific, practical, systematic framework — written in plain language by someone who described himself as an ordinary person who had, by his own admission, spent most of his life doing everything wrong.

“All my life I had practiced anti-Transurfing,” he once said. “I had done everything just the wrong way. A clever man learns from other people’s mistakes, but a fool always learns from his own ones. In this sense I had been a headstrong fool.” NBC News

There is something disarming about that. No guru claiming enlightenment. No teacher presenting himself as someone who arrived. Just a man who made a mess of his life, figured some things out, and wrote them down.

The books spread. Slowly at first, then faster. Online communities formed — in Russian, then in English, then in dozens of languages — where ordinary people shared their experiences with the practices. The testimonials that fill these communities are anecdotal and unverified. They cannot be taken as scientific evidence.

But they keep coming. Year after year, in community after community, the same kinds of reports appear: a goal pursued desperately for years suddenly moved forward when the desperate pursuit stopped. A relationship that had been stuck shifted when the straining stopped. Opportunities arrived when the grasping relaxed.

Whether these outcomes have anything to do with Zeland’s framework, or whether they reflect the well-documented psychological effects of reducing anxiety and obsessive thinking — effects that mainstream psychology also supports — is genuinely impossible to know from testimonials alone.

The man himself does not claim to know the answer. He says only: try it. Watch what happens.

He remains hidden. No empire. No disciples gathered around a guru. No course selling for thousands. Just the books, just the ideas, just the quiet persistence of millions of ordinary readers who found something useful and passed it on.

Twenty years after the first book appeared in Russia, the conversation continues — in forums and reading groups and comment threads across dozens of languages — between people who have never met and likely never will, connected only by a set of ideas released into the world by a man who insists he is nobody.

Maybe the framework describes something true about reality. Maybe it found a modern language for ancient wisdom. Maybe the practices work for entirely different reasons than the author describes. Maybe the answer is some mixture of all three.

What is true is this: the ideas ask something genuinely difficult of the people who try them. Not to want less. Not to care less. But to hold what they want lightly — with intention rather than desperation, with direction rather than strain.

In a world that constantly tells you to want harder, push harder, force harder — that particular message is quiet and strange and surprisingly hard to find.

Which may be exactly why, twenty years later, people are still passing it along.

“Want what you want. Want it lightly. See what slides toward you.”

Susan Kuhnhausen

Susan Kuhnhausen

One hour before a hitman attacked her with a claw hammer, Susan Kuhnhausen sat in a hair salon reading a poem in Oprah magazine.

“I will not die an unlived life,” it began. “I will not live in fear.”

She had no idea how prophetic those words would become.

On the evening of September 6, 2006, the 51-year-old emergency room nurse finished her shift at Providence Portland Medical Center and stopped at Perfect Look salon on East Burnside Street. She mentioned to her stylist that she was going through a tough divorce—her husband Mike had finally moved out after nearly 18 years of marriage.

An hour later, Susan drove home to her blue Cape Cod in southeast Portland’s Montavilla neighborhood. In the mudroom, she found a note from Mike by the microwave.

“Sue, haven’t been sleeping. Had to get away—Went to the beach.”

She walked toward her bedroom. It was strangely dark. Had she forgotten to open the curtains that morning?

Then a man stepped out from behind the door.

He was 59 years old, with long hair tucked into a tan baseball cap pulled low over his eyes. He wore yellow rubber gloves. In his hands was a red and black claw hammer.

He swung.

The first blow caught Susan on the left temple. For most people, the sight of an intruder with a weapon would have meant one thing: run.

But Susan wasn’t most people.

For nearly 30 years, she had worked in the emergency room. She had helped crack open patients’ chests to perform heart massages. She had disarmed violent, injured men. She had administered IVs to people thrashing from drug withdrawal. And every nurse at Providence trained regularly in self-defense—learning how to slip out of headlocks, how to take someone down, how to survive.

As the man came at her, Susan did something counterintuitive. Instead of retreating, she rushed toward him. She knew from training that a hammer swing has less force at close range. She slammed her body against his, pushing him against the wall.

He spoke the only words she would hear him say that night.

“You’re strong.”

In that moment, Susan knew. This was no burglar. He hadn’t asked where her money was. He hadn’t asked about a safe. He was there to kill her.

“It became quickly clear that his intent was murder,” she later said. “And I fought.”

Susan tackled him. She wrestled the hammer away. She hit him in the head—three times, maybe four—with the claw end. Her father had been a carpenter. He always told her a hammer could be used for self-defense. The claw end worked best.

But the man grabbed the hammer back. Susan reached for his throat and squeezed. His face turned red, then purple, then a darker purple with a blue tinge.

“WHO SENT YOU HERE?” she screamed.

He said nothing.

She let go, thinking he was done. She tried to run. But as she fled into the hallway, he caught her from behind. He spun her around and punched her in the face, splitting her lip. She fell to the floor.

He stood over her with the hammer raised.

“I looked at the floor,” Susan remembered, “and I thought, I’m going to die today.”

She doesn’t know how she did what came next. Somehow, she pulled him down to the floor with her. She bit him—on the arm, on the thigh—hoping that if he killed her, at least her teeth marks would link him to her death.

Then she threw her leg over his body, climbed on top of him, and hooked her left arm around his neck.

“TELL ME WHO SENT YOU HERE AND I WILL CALL YOU A FUCKING AMBULANCE!” she yelled in his face.

He growled at her.

Susan leaned forward and squeezed harder. His face changed color again. He tried to flip her, but her years of training held. She pressed down until he stopped moving.

The fight had lasted approximately 15 minutes.

Susan grabbed the hammer and ran to her neighbor’s house. The neighbor called 911.

“We have an intruder in the house next door. The intruder was in the bedroom with a hammer. The woman who lives there thinks she may have strangled him. He was down when she left.”

“Does she need an ambulance?”

“No, she’s a nurse. She says call an ambulance for the guy. He may be dead.”

Police arrived to find the intruder dead in the hallway. His name was Edward Dalton Haffey. He had a long criminal record—including a 1994 conviction for arranging the murder of his ex-girlfriend, for which he served nine years in prison.

At first, investigators thought Haffey was a burglar who had picked the wrong house. But Susan knew better. She had suspected from the moment he said “You’re strong” that someone had sent him.

In Haffey’s backpack, police found a day planner. On the week of September 4, two days before the attack, someone had written: “Call Mike. Get letter.”

Inside a folder was a phone number. It belonged to Mike Kuhnhausen.

Further investigation revealed that Mike had hired Haffey—who once worked as a custodian at an adult video store Mike managed—for $50,000 to kill Susan. Mike had wanted her dead so he could inherit their $300,000 house. He knew she had removed him from her life insurance policy, but he figured the house was still worth the gamble.

On the day of the attack, Mike had driven to the Oregon coast and checked into the Lincoln City Inn, establishing an alibi. The day after learning Susan had survived, he bought a .357 Magnum revolver at a pawn shop. Then he wrote a suicide note: “All I ever wanted was to be loved and every time I had it—I fucked it up.”

Police arrested him on September 13. He denied everything at first.

But the evidence was overwhelming. Haffey wasn’t the first person Mike had approached about killing Susan. He had solicited three others before finding a man desperate enough to say yes.

In August 2007, Mike pleaded guilty to soliciting aggravated murder. At his sentencing hearing, Susan was allowed to address him directly. She held up photographs of her own bloodied face.

“You told police that you found out I was okay,” she said. “Do I look okay?”

Then she delivered a message she had prepared.

“You were willing for me to share your small, miserable life until death we did part—the sooner the better, as it turned out.”

She paused.

I am damaged by what you have done to me. I am damaged. But I am not destroyed.”

Mike was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Susan sued him for $1 million in civil court—not because she needed the money, but because she wanted to make sure he couldn’t afford to hire another hitman when he got out. The jury awarded her $1,053,783.

She never had to worry. In June 2014, three months before his scheduled release, Mike Kuhnhausen died of cancer in prison.

Susan had already changed her name to Susan Walters. She moved to a new house. She practiced at the shooting range. She lived with what she called “two life sentences”—the trauma of knowing her husband had tried to have her killed, and the weight of having taken another man’s life.

“I don’t know that you ever get over having killed another human being,” she said. “I’ve always said I don’t take any pride in what I did. But I also feel no shame.”

Her boss at the hospital offered her a different way to see it.

“They are not calling you a hero because you killed a man,” she told Susan. “They are calling you a hero because they want to believe that, given the same circumstances, they could do what you did.”

Today, Susan Walters is a victim advocate in Portland. She helped create Case Companion, a free website that allows crime victims to track their offenders’ court dates, sentencing, and release information. She has worked with WomenStrength and GirlStrength programs, teaching others what she learned the hard way.

“If you can’t run and you can’t hide,” she says, “you have to fight.”

“I didn’t choose my attacker’s death for him. I chose my life.

Maria Andrejczyk

Maria Andrejczyk

In August 2021, a woman stood on an Olympic podium in Tokyo with tears in her eyes and a silver medal hanging around her neck.

For most athletes, that moment would be the greatest achievement of their lives.

For Maria Andrejczyk, it was only the beginning of a much bigger story.

Maria was born in Poland and dedicated her life to athletics, specializing in the javelin throw. Like countless Olympic athletes, she spent years training through pain, exhaustion, injuries, and disappointment. Every meter thrown was earned through sacrifice.

At the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, she came heartbreakingly close to winning a medal. Maria finished fourth, missing the podium by just two centimeters.

Two centimeters.

The distance was so small that it haunted her. Years of preparation had ended with no medal and no place on the podium.

Then life became even harder.

Only months after the Rio Olympics, doctors discovered a bone cancer tumor in her shoulder. It was devastating news.

The shoulder affected by cancer was the same shoulder she used to throw a javelin.

The same shoulder that carried her dreams.

Suddenly, her athletic career was no longer the biggest concern. Survival was.

Maria underwent treatment, surgery, and a difficult recovery. There were moments when nobody knew if she would ever compete again. Many athletes would have accepted retirement and focused on simply staying healthy.

But Maria refused to quit.

She fought through the pain. She fought through the uncertainty. She fought through every setback placed in front of her.

Years later, she returned to the Olympic stage.

At the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, Maria delivered the performance of her life. Her throw traveled 64.61 meters, earning her the silver medal.

It was more than a medal.

It was proof that she had survived cancer.

Proof that she had overcome disappointment.

Proof that she had come back stronger than anyone expected.

For most people, such a medal would become a treasured possession for life.

Maria kept it for only three months.

In November 2021, she came across the story of an eight-month-old Polish baby named Milosz Malysa.

The child was suffering from a severe heart defect and desperately needed life-saving surgery. The procedure was extremely expensive, and despite the efforts of his family and supporters, they still lacked a large portion of the money needed.

Time was running out.

Without the surgery, the baby’s future was uncertain.

Maria looked at the fundraising campaign and felt something inside her heart.

Then she looked at her Olympic silver medal.

The symbol of everything she had fought for.

The reward for years of sacrifice.

The proof of her greatest athletic achievement.

And she made an extraordinary decision.

Maria announced publicly that she would auction her Olympic silver medal to help save the baby’s life.

Many people were shocked.

Olympic medals are not ordinary objects. They represent decades of dedication, discipline, heartbreak, and triumph.

Athletes dream about them their entire lives.

Yet Maria was willing to give hers away for a child she had never met.

The story spread rapidly across Poland.

People were moved by her generosity.

The auction attracted enormous attention, and soon bids began to rise.

Eventually, the winning offer came from Zabka, one of Poland’s largest convenience store chains.

The company paid approximately 200,000 zloty, providing the exact amount still needed for Milosz’s surgery.

The fundraising goal was finally complete.

The child would receive treatment.

His life had been given another chance.

But the story was not over.

After purchasing the medal, Zabka made an announcement that stunned everyone.

The company revealed that while they had paid the full amount, they had no intention of keeping the medal.

Instead, they would return it to Maria.

They explained that her act of kindness had inspired the entire country and that the medal belonged with the woman who had earned it.

The money would still go to save the child.

The medal would still remain with Maria.

For a moment, it seemed almost unbelievable.

By giving away her greatest achievement, she had somehow managed to keep it.

Not because she demanded it.

Not because she expected it.

But because her selflessness inspired others to respond with generosity of their own.

Soon afterward, Milosz underwent successful surgery.

Photos later showed a smiling child recovering and growing stronger.

A life had been saved.

Maria’s story spread around the world.

People celebrated her not only as an athlete but as a person whose compassion mattered more than any sporting result.

Yet Maria remained humble.

She insisted she was not a hero.

She simply believed that helping someone in need was more important than holding onto a piece of silver.

But what made her decision remarkable was exactly what she was willing to sacrifice.

The medal represented years of work.

It represented surviving cancer.

It represented proving doubters wrong.

It represented one of the proudest moments of her life.

And she was prepared to give it all away for someone else’s future.

That is what made the gesture unforgettable.

Maria eventually returned to training and competition, continuing to pursue excellence in athletics.

Her silver medal sits with her today, returned by the company that recognized its true value.

But the medal means something different now.

It is no longer simply a symbol of sporting success.

It is a reminder of compassion.

A reminder that the greatest victories are not always measured in distance, points, or trophies.

Sometimes they are measured in lives changed.

And the world was reminded that true greatness is not defined by what we achieve for ourselves.

It is defined by what we are willing to give for others.

Maria Andrejczyk threw a javelin 64.61 meters and became an Olympic silver medalist.

Then she showed the world that the most powerful thing she possessed was never the medal around her neck.

It was the heart inside her chest.

Donald Knuth

Donald Knuth

His name was Donald Knuth. And in January 1990, he did something that stunned the academic world.

He got rid of his email address.

Not as a protest. Not as a statement. As a calculation.

Knuth had been one of the most important figures in computer science since 1962, when he began working on what would become The Art of Computer Programming — a multi-volume masterwork that didn’t just teach algorithms, it defined how they should be analyzed, measured, and written. It became one of the most influential technical works of the 20th century. American Scientist named it among the books that shaped a century of science.

He’d had email since 1975. Fifteen years of it. And he’d watched what it did to thought.

So on January 1, 1990, he walked away.

His explanation was precise — the way everything he did was precise:

“Email is a wonderful thing for people whose role in life is to be on top of things. But not for me; my role is to be on the bottom of things. What I do takes long hours of studying and uninterruptible concentration.”

On top of things. On the bottom of things.

In nine words, he described the entire tension of modern intellectual life.

Knuth understood something most people haven’t named yet: there are two fundamentally different relationships to time and attention. One requires breadth — staying current, staying connected, responding fast. The other requires depth — going further down into a problem than anyone has gone before, and staying there long enough to find something true.

You cannot do both simultaneously. The tools that serve one destroy the other.

So he chose.

If someone needed to reach him, they sent a physical letter. He read them. He batched his replies — roughly one day every six months. Slowly. Thoroughly. On his terms.

The cost was real. He became less reachable in a world moving toward instant access. Students had to wait. Colleagues adapted. He accepted the friction completely.

The output tells you why.

In 1977, Knuth received the galley proofs for the second edition of his book. The publisher had switched to a new digital typesetting system. When Knuth opened the package and saw the pages, he wrote one line in his diary: “They look awful… I decide I have to solve the problem myself.”

So he did.

He spent the next several years building TeX from scratch — a typesetting system of such precision that it became the global standard for scientific and mathematical publishing. Today, TeX produces the majority of the world’s physics and mathematics literature. An entire domain of human knowledge is formatted by a tool one man built because a book looked wrong.

That’s who Knuth was. Not someone who complained about problems. Someone who sat down and solved them completely.

And the precision didn’t stop there.

In the preface of every book he published, Knuth offered a standing reward: $2.56 to the first person who found any error — technical, typographical, or historical. He called it “one hexadecimal dollar,” because 256 cents is exactly 100 in base sixteen. A programmer’s joke with a mathematician’s rigor behind it.

He wrote over 2,000 of those checks. The total value exceeded $20,000.

Almost none of them were cashed.

People framed them instead. Because a check from Donald Knuth, for finding a mistake Donald Knuth had missed, was worth more on a wall than in a bank.

That is what a standard looks like when it’s lived rather than stated.

To most people who’ve heard his name, Knuth is the academic who wrote the definitive books on algorithms — a figure from computer science’s past, a footnote in a textbook.

But behind that image is a man who made a single, clear-eyed decision: that the kind of work worth doing requires the kind of attention the modern world is specifically designed to prevent.

He didn’t complain about the noise.

He cut the wire.

He went deep. He stayed there. And from that depth, he reshaped how an entire field thinks.

There is a version of success that requires you to be everywhere, always available, always responding. Knuth rejected it completely — and built something that outlasted everyone who chose the other way.

He simply decided that some work is too important to be interrupted.

Then he proved it.

 

Talking To Yourself

Lev Vygotsky

A Russian psychologist spent 10 years proving that the act of talking to yourself out loud is one of the most powerful cognitive tools the human brain has, and almost nobody outside his field has read the work.

His name was Lev Vygotsky.

He worked in Moscow in the 1920s and died of tuberculosis in 1934 at the age of 37. He had no laboratory, no funding, almost no English readers, and a body of work that the Soviet government suppressed for two decades after he died.

He produced the foundational theory of how human cognition actually develops, and the central piece of that theory was a behavior almost every adult is faintly embarrassed about.

Vygotsky noticed that young children talk to themselves constantly. They narrate their own actions, they argue with imaginary opponents, they instruct themselves through tasks out loud.

The dominant theory at the time, from the Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget, said this was a sign of cognitive immaturity that children would eventually grow out of as they learned to think properly.

Vygotsky said the exact opposite.

He argued that this self-directed speech was the most important cognitive event in the entire developmental window, because it was the moment a child first started to use language as a tool to control their own mind. The child was not failing to think. The child was learning how to think by externalizing the process and listening to themselves do it.

He predicted that as children matured, this out-loud self-talk would not disappear. It would go underground. It would become silent inner speech, which is the running monologue every adult has inside their own head for the rest of their life.

The voice you hear when you read this sentence is the direct descendant of a four-year-old narrating their own block tower.

For 50 years almost nobody outside Russia had access to his work, and the few researchers who did pick it up could not get funding to test it. Then in the early 2000s the experiments finally started to pile up, and what they found was that Vygotsky had been right about something even more important than he knew.

The first major study came from Gary Lupyan at the University of Wisconsin and Daniel Swingley at the University of Pennsylvania in 2012. They ran a simple visual search experiment. Participants were shown 20 images at once and asked to find a specific object, like a banana or a chair. In one condition they searched silently. In the other condition they were told to say the name of the object out loud to themselves while looking for it.

The participants who spoke the target name out loud found the object significantly faster, with higher accuracy, than the participants who searched in silence. The effect was strongest when the spoken word matched a familiar object the brain already had a strong category for.

Saying the word out loud literally tuned the visual system to detect that thing better. The researchers called it the label feedback effect, and the implication was that the act of vocalizing a goal physically changes how the brain processes the world while pursuing it.

The second major study came out of the University of Michigan and Michigan State in 2017. The lead researchers were Ethan Kross and Jason Moser, and they used both EEG and fMRI to record what happens inside the brain when people talk to themselves while emotionally upset.

They asked participants to recall painful autobiographical memories and reflect on them in two different ways. Some used the first person, saying things like “why am I feeling this way.” Others used the third person, referring to themselves by their own name, saying things like “why is John feeling this way.”

The brain scans showed that the simple act of switching from first person to third person, even silently, decreased activity in the medial prefrontal cortex, the region responsible for rumination and self-referential pain. Within a single second of using their own name instead of the word I, participants showed measurably lower emotional reactivity. The shift required no extra cognitive effort. It cost the brain nothing. And it worked.

Kross described the mechanism in his interviews. Talking to yourself by name creates a small amount of psychological distance from your own experience. Your brain processes the situation more like a problem belonging to someone else, which means it can analyze it instead of drowning in it.

What Vygotsky had intuited in 1934 turned out to be even more powerful than the developmental theory he built it into. The voice you use to talk to yourself is not background noise. It is one of the most precise cognitive tools the brain has, and you can change how it works just by changing the pronoun you use.

People who talk through problems out loud are not anxious or unstable. They are running an externalized version of a process the rest of us are running silently and worse. The kindergartener narrating their block tower, the surgeon muttering through a procedure, the engineer pacing a hallway describing a bug to nobody, the athlete repeating a cue to themselves before a free throw, they are all using the same ancient mechanism that builds and steers human thought.

You can run the experiment yourself the next time you are stuck on something hard. Stop trying to solve it silently in your head. Say it out loud. Describe what you are seeing. Walk yourself through the steps as if you were explaining it to a colleague who is not in the room.

And when something genuinely upsets you, switch to your own name. Ask why this person is feeling this way, instead of why I am feeling this way.

The voice you have been told to keep quiet your entire life is one of the oldest pieces of cognitive technology you own.

Most people are still embarrassed to use it.

Finish reading: https://x.com/ihtesham2005/status/2063266105733615647?s=20

Quote of the Day

“Don’t ever become a pessimist… a pessimist is correct oftener than an optimist, but an optimist has more fun, and neither can stop the march of events.” – Robert A. Heinlein, Writer (1907 – 1988)