Better World With Design

Working with My 20-Year-Old Self: Birth of The Answer Engine

17 min · 6 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio Working with My 20-Year-Old Self: Birth of The Answer Engine

Descripción

In this episode, I explore what happens when you let your younger self speak without interference—when you refuse to edit, improve, or apologize for who you were. Drawing from my 1996 handwritten journals, written as a nineteen-year-old immigrant in Florida, I discuss how those carefully crafted words became the lyrics for "Pop A Pill"—a track that bridges three decades without compromise. This isn't about nostalgia or revival. It's about genuine dialogue across time, made possible by one rule: use the archive exactly as you find it, or don't use it at all. Topics covered: * Why your younger self might have access to truths your older self has lost * The political dimension of refusing to disavow earlier versions of yourself * How handwritten journals from 1996 become forensically valuable in the age of AI * What it means to dance to the rhythm of who you used to be * The double-dog dare at the heart of working with unedited archival material Full lyrics to "Pop A Pill" included in the essay. Links: * Read the full essay: [Your website/Notion page URL] * Listen to "Pop A Pill": [Streaming link]

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episode Working with My 20-Year-Old Self: Birth of The Answer Engine artwork

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In this episode, I explore what happens when you let your younger self speak without interference—when you refuse to edit, improve, or apologize for who you were. Drawing from my 1996 handwritten journals, written as a nineteen-year-old immigrant in Florida, I discuss how those carefully crafted words became the lyrics for "Pop A Pill"—a track that bridges three decades without compromise. This isn't about nostalgia or revival. It's about genuine dialogue across time, made possible by one rule: use the archive exactly as you find it, or don't use it at all. Topics covered: * Why your younger self might have access to truths your older self has lost * The political dimension of refusing to disavow earlier versions of yourself * How handwritten journals from 1996 become forensically valuable in the age of AI * What it means to dance to the rhythm of who you used to be * The double-dog dare at the heart of working with unedited archival material Full lyrics to "Pop A Pill" included in the essay. Links: * Read the full essay: [Your website/Notion page URL] * Listen to "Pop A Pill": [Streaming link]

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