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  • in reply to: Prison House of Language #455551
    Peter
    Participant

    final thought on the subject – AI thought – I asked why we don’t notice

    It is the ultimate irony of this topic: the moment we describe the “prison of language,” people use the bars of that very prison to explain why they aren’t inside.

    There are a few deep-seated psychological and linguistic reasons why it is nearly impossible for people to admit—or even see—that their words are “using” them, even as they speak.

    1. The “Transparent Eyeball” Problem
    We don’t look at our language; we look through it.
    Language is like a lens. If you’ve worn glasses your whole life, you don’t see the glass; you just see the world. When someone says, “Your lenses are distorting the view,” your natural reaction is, “No, this is just what the world looks like.” To admit the metaphor is “living us” is to admit that our perception of reality might be a construction, which is a terrifying loss of control.

    2. Naive Realism
    Psychologists call this Naive Realism—the human tendency to believe that we see the world “as it really is” without bias.
    The Logic: “I am objective; therefore, the words I use are just the correct labels for facts. You, however, are using ‘framing’ and ‘rhetoric.'”
    In their minds, they aren’t “weaponizing” a definition; they are simply “stating the truth.” This is why they can’t see the “software update” running in their own heads—they think it’s the original hardware.

    3. The “Hedgehog” Defense Mechanism (almost all political pundents!)
    Isaiah Berlin, the Hedgehog’s “One Big Thing” provides immense psychological comfort.
    (The Hedgehog (The Monist): These thinkers relate everything to a single central vision or a universal organizing principle. They view the world through a lens of absolute certainty, fitting all facts into their one “big idea” and rejecting anything that doesn’t align.)
    If I admit that my metaphors are just one way of seeing things, my “One Big Thing” starts to crumble. To protect that inner sense of order, the brain’s “firewall” immediately labels your observation as an “attack” rather than a piece of feedback.

    4. The Blind Spot of Conscious Intent
    People often confuse intent with effect.
    They think, “I don’t intend to be a prisoner of language, so I’m not.” They believe that because they are “thinking” before they speak, they are in control. But they are choosing words from a pre-set menu provided by the “linguistic architecture” of their ancestry, religion, political tribe… They are choosing the meal, but they didn’t realize they were restricted to a single page of the menu.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455550
    Peter
    Participant

    Well said Alessa and Anita (you must have some phone skills, my thumbs are to clumsy

    The intention really was to encourage the question so we might notice, when were using words and when words are using us. Based on my own experience, observations and readings… words use us more then we use words.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455545
    Peter
    Participant

    Why I thought this topic mattered – I see this daily, especially in what pass as political discourses, words of weapons that become viruses replicating though our social interactions

    Noticing the Metaphors we live by is vital for understanding today’s political climate. Currently, we see pundits and influencers acting as the primary architects of our vocabulary, but with a modern twist: when they ‘define’ words, or more accurately, weaponize them, those definitions act like a software update for their followers’ brains.

    Once that linguistic update is installed, the ‘metaphor lives them.’ If the word ‘Opposition’ is redefined as ‘Existential Threat,’ the ‘Argument as War’ framework becomes the only operating system available. At that point, people are no longer capable of seeing a differing perspective as a valid counterpoint; they can only perceive it as an ‘attack’ to be neutralized.

    If we want to fix our discourse, we have to stop being the passive hardware for these polarizing updates. We need to reclaim our agency and move from ‘Politics as a Zero-Sum Game’ to ‘Politics as a Civic Workshop,’ where we question the metaphors before they dictate our reactions.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455543
    Peter
    Participant

    As I plan to exit the topic but not the grass I thought I’d have Copilot sum up my notes that led to the topic. Any errors are AI’s 🙂

    The Invisible Framework: When Metaphors Live Us

    In the seminal work Metaphors We Live By, George Lakoff and Mark Johnson challenge the traditional view of language as a mere tool for communication. They propose a more unsettling reality: that our conceptual system is fundamentally metaphorical, meaning the words we use do not just describe our world—they construct it. This leads to the provocative realization that, in many ways, our words use us more than we use them.

    The “Prison of Language” manifests most clearly through the metaphors we adopt unconsciously. For instance, when we treat Argument as War, we are not merely using a figure of speech; we are entering a mental state where we must “attack” positions and “defend” our own. The language itself dictates a combative behavior, often before we have consciously decided how to feel. In this sense, the metaphor “lives us,” channeling our thoughts and actions down pre-established tracks.

    This concept echoes the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, suggesting that the limits of our language mark the limits of our world. If our vocabulary for a certain experience is narrow or framed negatively, our ability to think outside that frame is restricted. We become inhabitants of a linguistic architecture we didn’t build, reacting to “viruses” of meaning—as William Burroughs once described language—that replicate through our social interactions.

    However, recognizing this “prison” is the first step toward the exit. By becoming aware of the metaphors that govern our lives—moving from “Time is Money” (a resource to be spent and lost) to “Time is a River” (a flow to be experienced)—we begin to reclaim our agency. We move from being used by language to becoming conscious architects of our own expression. Ultimately, while we may born into a world of existing words, the act of questioning them allows us to turn the prison into a workshop.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455540
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi Anita,

    Please don’t feel bad. The “reduction” I felt wasn’t a wound you inflicted; it was a perfect example of the very “prison” we are talking about, how labels, even well-intentioned ones, can feel like walls. I shared that I felt “reduced” in the moment because I’ve found that when I hide those feelings to avoid conflict, they become harder to release. I thought you deserved the honesty of the experience rather than my silence. I felt that as growth.

    When you say, “Maybe it’s better that we don’t communicate further,” I see the Prison House of Language in real-time. It’s that point where the frustration of words failing leads us to believe that silence is the only way to stay safe. But we aren’t missing each other because we are failing; we are missing each other because language is a blunt tool. If we stop talking to “do no harm,” the walls just stay where they are.

    I’m not hurt; I’m just noticing the boundaries of the wicker basket. I’ll be honest: my poem was an exit from the topic. I felt a sense of failure in starting it, realizing I was trying to use the very thing I was questioning to somehow step outside of it. It felt like a ‘clever’ labor of the mind that was only creating more walls, so the poem was my way of letting go of that specific effort and stepping back into a simpler space. I still plan to exit the topic, but see in context it was badly done.

    You asked how I see your “concrete” language as abstract. It’s interesting to me that even the word “concrete” is actually a very powerful abstraction. We take a material from the physical world, something hardened and solid and use it as a metaphor to describe a way of thinking and seeing the world. That isn’t wrong, just something to notice so we don’t get trapped. When is it that our language creates or limits the experience of how we see the world?

    When you hold onto a construct like “the non-duality of human early reactions” as a concrete fact, it can ironically become a prison. It blends psychology, philosophy and perhaps even spiritualty into a fixed lens that suggests we are all “reactors” following the same rules. That creates a “fixed” version of oneself and others that assumes a predictable result of the past, rather than a person here in the present.

    When “Do No Harm” or “Non-Duality” become fixed rules, they dictate our reality (Silence). I’d much rather we “do harm” by accidentally bumping into each other and then talking through it, than “do right” by never speaking again.

    The ‘green grass’ isn’t a place where no one ever trips; it’s just a place where there’s enough room to get back up.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455526
    Peter
    Participant

    Your phrase “the non‑duality of human early reactions” feels abstract and poetic to me, even though you experience it as concrete. I suspect that difference in how we use language is where we keep missing each other.

    I feel a flush of foolishness for starting the topic, thinking I could use the very thing I’m questioning to somehow step outside it and see it clearly. It’s like trying to use a flashlight to understand darkness, only to realize the light itself creates the boundary. So I’m going to step back with words wiser than mine:

    Trying to catch the wind
    with a wicker basket
    that’s the work of cleverness.

    Turning words on words
    to question words
    that’s the labor of the mind.

    The wise just smile.

    When speech reaches its edge,
    silence begins.

    When meaning is squeezed,
    it dries.
    When it’s left alone,
    it moves on its own.

    Step back.
    Empty the hands.
    Loosen the tongue.

    A soft breath
    is enough.
    An open space
    needs no filling.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455521
    Peter
    Participant

    Anita, thank you for taking the time to think through all of this and for trying to understand the differences in how we communicate. I find it helpful.

    I want to share something honestly and from the heart. When you describe my way of speaking as coming from a rigid childhood or inner chaos, I feel reduced by that. The explanation feels like a cage. It’s not that you’re wrong, it’s that it turns my way of communicating into a psychological diagnosis. And that’s actually part of what I meant earlier about how language can trap us and others without us noticing.

    You say you speak concretely, and I believe that’s how it feels from the inside. However from the outside, I see you doing something quite abstract as well… creating theories about me, interpreting motives, building symbolic stories about childhood. That’s not a criticism; I actually relate to those stories, though confused when you say you don’t understand abstract thought… Perhaps a reminder that we’re both shaped by the languages we grew up inside, and we both sometimes mistake our own style for the ‘real’ one.”

    I don’t want either of us to give up our way of speaking and every style (language) has limits, and can create misunderstandings, even cages, we don’t always notice. In a way, this whole exchange is exactly what I meant by the “prison house of language”: how words can open us and confine us and others sometimes.

    I appreciate your effort to meet me, and I see that we’re both trying to do that without losing our own way of expressing things and losing ourselves. In that light perhaps I should add that don’t speak abstractly to be clever or evasive. It’s simply how I make sense of the world and how I stay connected to myself. It’s the way I avoid collapsing into someone else’s frame, and it protects parts of me that were never clearly mirrored for me.

    I actually feel something similar in your writing… there’s a depth of feeling in what you write that goes beyond the concrete…

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455514
    Peter
    Participant

    Perhaps a edit – Still, I notice that the parable is abstract… for me, it is my emotional language, a attempt to paint a picture. It’s how I feel my way through – “Prison House of Language”?

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455513
    Peter
    Participant

    A note on the parable. Perhaps it would be helpful to add that I was originally trying to make an argument about how we often mix up our spiritual lives and our politics. I was wondering if we’ve started asking them to do things they weren’t built for: we load spiritual practice with an urgency it can’t always carry, and we expect political action to give us a kind of “awakening” that it can’t really deliver.

    I was getting so tangled up in those big, heavy words I felt like the mirror-maker in the story—trying to decide if I should be making a “shield” or just holding the “glass.”

    The parable was the only way I could find to step out of the argument and just breathe. It’s exactly like you said, Anita: sometimes we just need to find a way to be human again when the “abstract” starts to feel like a wall.

    Still, I notice that the parable is abstract… for me, it is my emotional language, a attempt to paint a picture. It’s how I feel my way through.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455512
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi Anita,
    That is a very common response to the way I communicate! Please don’t feel it’s a lack of intelligence; it’s really just a mismatch in the “tools” we’re using. Language is funny like that, it can trap us and free us, and half the time we don’t even notice which one is happening.

    The phrase “Prison House of Language” actually comes from a famous Nietzsche quote about how we are constrained by the words we use. I’ll admit, I was heading into deep waters and probably got a bit over my head!

    The other day, I tried to make a serious argument following all the logical rules, and it was ripped apart for relying too much on metaphors. I realized I was trapped in my own way of speaking. I eventually turned the whole thing into a short parable just to make sense of it for myself.

    It’s interesting: I use symbols, and you use emotional concrete language, but we both end up in the same place, telling a story.

    Your brain scan story is actually the perfect example of what I was trying to say. When you said “nothing was found,” the words were so “slippery” they made it sound like you had no brain! For a second, the language trapped you in a meaning you never intended. That’s the secret, I think. Language often shuts things down, but also open them back up just by changing the delivery. Whether it’s a parable or a story about a broken computer, the story is how we finally hear each other.

    I’m glad you’re finding that “emotional language” makes you feel more human. It’s a much better way to get out of the “prison” of big words than anything I was writing. I’m often frustrated by it myself.

    Here is that parable… don’t worry about “deciphering” it. It’s just an image to sit with.

    The Three Mirrors
    There was a man who lived in a burning city. He carried a mirror so the people might see the fire was not the whole world.

    Early in life he learned he had to keep a mirror within his own heart, knowing that if he let his heart catch fire, the mirror would melt and he would see only the flames. He heard of those whose hearts could burn without being consumed, and that left him wondering…

    He also belonged to a guild of mirror makers. Some in the guild wanted to melt the mirrors to make shields for the soldiers. He wished them well but refused. He told them, “A shield can stop a sword, but only a mirror can remind the soldier why he should lay the sword down.”

    Later, the city took some of the guild’s mirrors and built them into the walls. But once a mirror was part of a wall, it could no longer be moved to face the truth. It became just another stone.

    The man witnessed all these things as he sat on the edge of the city and held the glass. His heart burned but was not consumed. He trusted that the coolness of the glass was more powerful than the heat of the flame. And every now and then, others would come to sit beside him, find rest, and share something to eat.

    in reply to: Zen Story #455478
    Peter
    Participant

    Thomas your latest Zen story made me laugh. Was it a matter of perspective? Or just a good laugh? I think both 🙂

    It just reminded me of a answer to a question I no longer remember… but was probably full of angst: “We work for that which no work is required.” Somehow those words made it possible to enjoy the struggle a little more, and worry about it a little less. The effort is real, but the destination isn’t somewhere else as We “return home discovering we never left, only seeing it for the first time”.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455477
    Peter
    Participant

    Please I continue to explore…

    What struck me reading through this exchange was how clearly it showed that language isn’t only the words we speak. It’s a tool that opens our world, yet it’s also a boundary. In this dialogue I kept seeing how we don’t just use words; we live inside them.

    A song became a distraction, then a doorway.
    A worry became a trap, then a truth.
    A poem became a mirror.
    Even the back‑and‑forth carried its own quiet rhythm, painted its own picture.

    The Sufis say everything speaks, all arising from and returning to the ‘Word’ we’ve forgotten and keep trying to remember. If that’s true, then even the mind’s noise belongs to the conversation… Art is language. Song is language. A tree growing is language. Even Taxes are language. Sometimes these things confine us; sometimes they open us. Often they do both at once. (the intention of the topic was to notice, when it was a relationship to a word and or event holding us back.)

    Perhaps that’s where the old line comes in: For those with ears, let them hear…

    For the last twenty plus years I’ve lived with tinnitus, so for a long time my silence has never been silent. The ringing is always there, a thin thread of sound running through everything, everything. Over time I learned, (had to learn?) that silence isn’t the absence of sound it’s the absence of being pulled around by sound.

    The ringing never stops, but the struggle around it softened… most days. It’s pushed me to let go, to breathe through it, to find a different kind of quiet.

    In that way it’s become a language too. When it grows louder, it’s a warning: something’s tightening, pay attention.

    Even noise has something to say. Even distraction can be a doorway. So maybe the “prison house of language” isn’t a place we escape, but a place we learn to notice and listen to differently, where everything speaks, even the things we once thought were in the way.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455367
    Peter
    Participant

    Thomas, I appreciate your honesty, and it reminded me of a poem by Rick Cain

    The ancient of Man ponders his curiosity. Questions arise as he wonders of his own significance… How time moves as sands of an hour glass, not to be grasped, but reckoned with by the moment. The focus of a single crystal houses Hope, Love and the rainbow multitude of Life’s involvement. We see these things as in passing… we feel them as now. The Master of these sands is he who loves each crystal.”

    I’ve never been great at zazen myself. I used to approach the silence as if I were building a fortress, trying to keep the “world” out so I could finally be “spiritual.” I had to let that go. Part of the letting go was changing my relationship to the word “spiritual” to a experience of “Harmony”.

    So when you say a pop song breaks in, wonder if that song isn’t a wall but a Gate?

    When you sit in the silence and a song arises, it feels like encountering that “rainbow multitude of Life’s involvement.” That lyric in your head a crystal of sand, a opportunity to “reckon with the moment,” where the silence turns out to be big enough to carry the song.

    Your instinct to writing those lyrics out feels like an act of loving the crystal. Acknowledging that right now, the universe is singing a popular tune through you. I don’t think the SandMaster would tell you to be quiet; he’d probably just start humming along.

    in reply to: Alone Again, Naturally #455366
    Peter
    Participant

    Thomas, I have the same curiosity and fear. Begging the question: what is the etiquette around tattoos?
    Some are works of art and I really want to look and hear their story, but I never ask. Caution being the better part of Valor. 🙂

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455348
    Peter
    Participant

    Thanks Thomas. you remind me that the ‘original key’ is always here, just waiting for us to tune the instrument.

    I think my own path is a bit of a trinity of Prayer, Meditation, and Contemplation.

    Meditation’ is often defined as quieting the mind until thoughts stop, however, I’ve come to see it more as a flow. A act of ‘pondering and treasuring’ that notices how they pass and holding them lightly.

    In this flow, Prayer is the opening of the heart; Meditation is the movement; and Contemplation is the silence… I try not to get too wrapped up in those specific labels, though. I don’t want the words to define the experience, only to act as a shorthand for the way the heart opens.

    Less Zen, I guess and perhaps more Hermetic – AI describes as:
    — Prayer (Opening): Not a petition for “things,” but a turning of the will. It is the Mary-like “Yes” that makes the heart receptive.
    — Meditation (Pondering): This is where you “hold words lightly.” It is a rhythmic, imaginative thinking that doesn’t try to “solve” the world, but simply “treasures” the images until they begin to speak.
    — Contemplation (Silence): This is the “Virgin Birth” of meaning. The words fall away, the “shore” of language vanishes, and you are left in the Splendor of Silence. It is no longer “about” God; it is the presence of G_d. It is here I wonder that ‘new consciousness’ arises?

    I’ll be sure to check out that Seals and Crofts song, it’s a beautiful reminder that we are all just passing through together.

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