Wednesday, April 01, 2026

A tricky issue

The Washington Post notes that the Supreme Court's decision against a ban on "gay conversion therapy" had a big majority:

The Supreme Court on Tuesday found that a Colorado law banning “conversion therapy” for gay and transgender minors probably violates free speech rights, the latest in a string of decisions by the high court rolling back protections for LGBTQ+ people and expanding the rights of the religious.

In an 8-1 ruling, an ideologically diverse majority ruled for an evangelical therapist who argued the state prohibition infringed on her First Amendment rights. Kaley Chiles said she wanted to counsel religious teens dealing with sexual orientation issues and gender dysphoria in ways consistent with biblical teachings.

Australia has some of the strongest bans on such therapy, it seems.

The whole problem I have always felt about it is whether it's a case of throwing the baby out with the bathwater.  

Sure, the great majority of such therapy offered is going to be from a conservative religious viewpoint and is quite understandably likely to be psychologically damaging.  And, obviously, some of the methods they use are entirely objectionable:

Conversion therapy is a pseudoscientific practice whereby an LGBTQI+ person is subjected to methods of torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment which is instigated by individuals with the aim of changing their sexual orientation and / or gender identity. Some of the methods used include beatings, rape, electrocution, forced medication, confinement, forced nudity, verbal abuse and aversion therapy. The most extreme methods include lobotomy, castration and clitoridectomy.  

(That last link goes to an article that says those methods are historical - and it's a bit of a stretch to include that in an article about banning modern psychotherapy.)   

But....shouldn't there be some room for psychological help to be available to stop unwanted sexual attractions (or acting on them), whether it be directed towards the opposite sex, or the same sex?   Seems to me that the outright bans put an unwarranted absolute cordon around a whole area that some people might legitimately want reasonable, and secular, help with.   (Probably very few people do seek such help, but still...) 

 

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Heinlein was probably right...

I watched a video about the Artemis II manned flight around the Moon that might launch this week, as (along with many people, I assume), I just didn't know all that much about how the entire Artemis project was going.  (Musk's explodey Starship has sort of sucked all of the oxygen out of new space ventures.)  

For those who haven't read about it, the New York Times has a graphics filled article explaining.

My overall impressions are these:

*    The four main engines really are just shuttle era engines?   While I know nothing about how the shuttle engines performed, seems questionable to be sticking to such an old design.

*   That crew module really looks small and claustrophobic for missions of "up to" 21 days.  Seems not that much bigger than Apollo standards, to be honest; although this one does have enough space for the astronauts to hide in a storage locker in the floor in the event of a major solar storm causing dangerous radiation levels.   (That's where the claustrophobia could really set in.)

*   This is my main point:   the coming complexity of lunar missions to get significant payload weight on the ground there really gives me the impression that the solar system is never going to be significantly colonised with chemical rockets. 

If anyone remembers Robert Heinlein's "young adult" novel (when they were called "juvenile" titles) The Rolling Stones, it opens with a chapter in which the main characters are having an in depth discussion of the used nuclear rocket models available for purchase on the Moon (where they live.)     And I am pretty sure that nuclear powered rockets were a standard feature in his future universe.   

I see that The Rolling Stones was written in 1952 - making it pretty prescient given that the actual development of potential nuclear rockets wasn't started then. Wikipedia says the NERVA progam didn't get underway til 1955, although it also says that papers circulated in the late 1940's proposing nuclear powered rockets, and I presume this is how Heinlein knew about it.

As a child and teenager who was very keen and excited by the then manned space program, it feels odd to now feel pessimistic about its development because it has followed something of a technological dead end for significant further advance.  But that is how it seems to have gone...

 

More "Let them fight"

Things are still going well on the American Right, I see....










Meanwhile....



Monday, March 30, 2026

An unusual psychosis story

There's another good "The Great Read" article up at the New York Times about a guy who developed schizophrenia and tried to kill his father.   He has since got it under control, and holds down a job, has a baby and is reconnected to his father.   

It's quite unusual to read a "success story" that solid for someone who did something so drastic.

Not so unusual to read this part leading up to his breakdown:

Cohen’s story began with an ordinary disappointment his senior year at SUNY College at Geneseo: An injury had ended his career as a distance runner. Freed from that regimented life, Cohen began smoking pot daily. That spring he sensed something changing about the world; it shimmered before him. He glided around campus, his senses exquisitely heightened.

Signals began to jump out at him in the form of colors; red meant danger, blue meant safety. Sitting in his humanities classroom, he saw — or thought he saw — his professor climb up to the podium and announce that he, Cohen, was a prophet. 

Turns out the father really should have know better (to recognise a problem developing in his son) but he had his own history of mental health issues:

 Sitting in the room where it happened, Randy explained: He had not realized his son was psychotic. He had listened to Cohen’s discourses about Einstein’s theory of relativity, his fear that the sun was liquefying rocks deep inside the Earth. But Randy was a blue-collar guy. Cohen was an intellectual, the first person in his family line to go to college.

“I thought, man, he’s smarter than me, so he probably knows more than me,” he said.

There had been warnings, it turned out. A month before the attack, after buttonholing a professor to share his rapturous ideas, Cohen was detained by the local police and committed to a psychiatric hospital for five days for observation.

But Randy was skeptical of psychiatry; when he was Cohen’s age, he had been prescribed medication after a suicide attempt, but he stopped taking them as soon as he could. His attitude, he said, was “more pick up your bootstraps and do what you got to do.” On the way home from the hospital, Cohen admitted he had lied about his symptoms to get out. The two of them discussed whether Cohen should take the antipsychotic medication he had been prescribed, and decided it wasn’t necessary.

 Anyway, seems to be a case of all's well that ends well.  The guy needs to watch his baby's mental health in future, though.... 

A worrying thought

Further to my last post:  I can just imagine that nutjob Defence Secretary Hegseth getting excited about the idea of a ground invasion on Iran on Easter Sunday - that'll really show the Muslims about the triumphant power of Christianity (would be his thinking).  

Friday, March 27, 2026

No one has any idea what will happen

With a rambling President caught between his own history of avoidance of military service indicating he may genuinely not be a fan of putting soldiers on the ground in enemy territory for any length of time; the self serving urgings of Israel and (apparently) Saudi Arabia to "finish the job" in Iran (so to speak);  other Middle Eastern countries who have shovelled him money and gifts panicking about economic and social ruin if it doesn't end soon (because of the very real threat of strikes on their oil and water infrastructure if it escalates); a slew of Christofascist idiots in the White House and social media who think this is God's war of justice or some such BS; Republican seats in special elections being lost already by big margins; not to mention scores of other countries unhappy that he has probably started a global recession for everyone for no good reason - it is impossible to tell how this is going to end.

I personally think that it is more likely than not the current talks of negotiations going well is a delaynig tactic and that the ground troops he is moving into the area will indeed end up trying to do something inside Iran.   I don't think it will be anything as hard as trying to access nuclear material - I think it might be more like trying to take Kharg Island and telling Iran they can have it back if they  keep the strait open.  But the enormous risk in doing that is probably more drone strikes causing mayhem in the other neighbouring countries....

    

Who knew? Hermit crabs are for life...

I would never have guessed this, which I learn from a pretty fascinating article in the New York Times about a woman who is a tad obsessed with hermit crabs and how people don't care for them properly:

Often treated as throwaway pets, hermit crabs can live 50 years. Mary Akers, a self-taught expert, wants people to appreciate them as much as she does. 

Go have a read at the gift link:  it's one of those nicely done multi-media-ish stories that the big mainstream media can do quite well. 

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Stitched by Claude

Just wanted to note again that Claude is pretty good at photo correction.  I gave it two photos I took from the hotel at Toyama on my recent holiday, and it stitched them together pretty well for a panorama type shot:


 
It also then creeped me out by telling what a good photo of Toyama it was, when I hadn't mentioned where it was taken.
 
Update:  now that I see it on a bigger screen, I think it could do a better job of evening out the sky colour.  Let me ask if it can, and I will update! 

Who do children prefer, the soulless intimidating automaton, or the robot on the left?


I know, I know: there's probably a thousand variations of the same joke attempted by the title of this post on social media already!

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

The antimatter truck

Well, what do you know?   Nature reports that a truck has taken some antimatter for a ride:

On 24 March, a team at CERN, the European particle physics laboratory, transported 92 antiprotons in a specially designed bottle that traps the particles using magnetic fields. The bottle travelled on the back of a truck, for a 30-minute journey around the lab’s site outside Geneva, Switzerland.

The experiment’s ultimate goal is to take the antiparticles to a location free from experimental noise, where antiprotons can be studied in greater precision than is possible in the CERN “antimatter factory” where they are created.

CERN is the only place in the world that produces antiprotons in usable quantities. Many staff turned out with their phone cameras to capture the truck as it travelled more than 8 kilometres around the site, reaching a maximum speed of 42 km per hour.

“It is something humanity has never done before, it is historic,” says Stefan Ulmer, a physicist at Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf (HHU), in Germany, and member of the team. “We bought a lot of champagne, and we invited the entire antimatter community to celebrate with us today.” 

Explaining 100% support

Jim Geraghty in WAPO makes a decent enough point:  we shouldn't be surprised if polling shows virtually 100% support for Trump from MAGA, because people who stop supporting Trump don't count themselves as part of MAGA :

For most Americans, “Do you identify as MAGA?” and “Do you support the president?” are essentially the same question.

If you’re a Trump supporter who is upset or wary about the Iran war or the resulting impact on gas prices … maybe you’re not as inclined to identify as MAGA to a pollster lately.

When Trump came to power, some voters who always thought of themselves as Republicans found that their party changed dramatically. It became more protectionist and skeptical of free-market economics, more noninterventionist in foreign policy, less focused on traditional values and even libertine in social policies — all under the leadership of a bombastic and erratic casino owner who kept having temper tantrums on social media.

Some of these people stopped describing themselves as Republicans when pollsters called but still held fairly conservative views. Nevertheless, they landed in the “independent” bucket — where many of them remained throughout the Biden years.

Other than a burst of support at the start, independent voters were never that enthusiastic about Joe Biden’s presidency. After beginning with a job approval rating around 60 percent among independents in a Gallup poll, by September 2021 Biden was at 37 percent, and thereafter he rarely exceeded 40 percent. One reason that independents soured on Biden so quickly and irrevocably? A sizable chunk of them were former Republicans.

That’s why we shouldn’t expect to find many MAGA supporters expressing their opposition to Trump’s decisions on Iran or much else. When people in this demographic disagree strongly enough, eventually they just stop calling themselves MAGA. 

 

Monday, March 23, 2026

The very rich, but temporary, city

There's an interesting opinion piece about Dubai in the New York Times, questioning whether (or perhaps, how easily) the city may recover after losing its "luxury safe haven enclave" status abruptly in the current war.

A few extracts:

Nearly nine in 10 Dubai residents are nonnationals — by far the highest percentage of any major city in the world. Across the Emirates as a whole, about 10 million of 11.4 million residents are foreign nationals. Many are from Britain or the United States, but many more are guest workers who do the service jobs on which the city depends and typically come from South Asia, Southeast Asia and the wider Middle East. Even a traffic violation can trigger deportation. Citizenship is based almost entirely on descent; it’s been intentionally made very difficult for even long-term foreign residents or their children to become Emirati, even after decades of living and working there. The system is designed to rely on migrants while keeping them permanently temporary. That makes it extremely hard to be rooted, to belong, to be attached.

And so it is a city of flows — organized around an airport that connects thousands of routes and a free-trade port that channels global shipping. It is a hub focused on attracting people and their money and providing opportunities to make and spend more money.

For a time, that model worked exceedingly well. Dubai grew from about 917,000 residents in 2000 to nearly four million today, roughly quadrupling its population in a quarter-century — one of the fastest growth spurts of any major city on earth. It has climbed into the top ranks of global financial centers, now around 11th in the leading indexes and serving as the main hub for finance across the Middle East, Africa and South Asia.

It is home to more than 81,000 millionaires (a number that more than doubled between 2014 and 2024), including over 200 centimillionaires and 20 billionaires. In 2025 alone, an estimated 9,800 millionaires were projected to move to the Emirates, bringing some $63 billion in personal wealth — more than any other city in the world. Dubai now sits just behind New York and London and ahead of established global cities like Tokyo, Singapore, Zurich, Paris, Frankfurt, Los Angeles and Chicago in its ability to attract global white-collar talent, based on LinkedIn data covering more than a billion knowledge workers worldwide.

And the Dubai model is spreading. Other cities — including Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; Istanbul; Miami; and Doha, Qatar — are attempting to adopt some variation on the same basic formula to compete for the same class.

But that duplication also means these cities can be replaceable. If one falters, another steps up to take its place. The elites can flit among them, because any real attachment they feel lies elsewhere...

And this paragraph sums it up:

The Financial Times columnist Janan Ganesh argued recently that Dubai would survive the current turmoil precisely because, even if there have been people living there for hundreds of years, “the bit the world tends to see might be the closest thing on earth to a blank slate.” Such a place makes no demands on your identity or your loyalty, echoing the urbanist James Howard Kunstler’s idea of the geography of nowhere. And yet that could be its fatal flaw: The very quality that makes it useful is what makes it ultimately disposable. 

 

 

Strange clerical sex scandals have been around a long time...

This is from a review in the New York Times of a book about a clerical sex scandal from Kant's home town Konigsberg (which happened in the early to mid 19th century, decades after he died, so no chance he was involved in any way!):

As a longhaired, charismatic figure with markedly progressive notions about gender relations, Ebel had become a trusted confidant to his women parishioners, sometimes to the annoyance of the powerful men in their lives. One of these men, the incredibly named Count Finck von Finckenstein, accused Ebel of causing the death of two girls by excessive arousal.

“These are the dangers that threaten all girls who join the Ebel group,” Finckenstein declared. “And this is why only women or male hermaphrodites are interested in joining it.” Diestel, coming to the aid of his friend Ebel, sent a furious letter to Finckenstein, calling him a “miserable lying brat” whose “disgraceful libels can only have been fabricated in the latrine of a disgraceful worldview.”

Soon the two preachers were on trial for sexual misconduct, breach of duty and founding an illegal sect. Clark emphasizes that the accusations of sexual depravity had no grounding in reality. The most fervent of Ebel’s detractors were “men with a reputation for moral waywardness,” as Clark puts it. Finckenstein accused Ebel of instructing him to have sex in Ebel’s presence, which turned out to be a matter of sheer projection: Finckenstein had previously told his wife that he wanted Ebel present when he made love to her. Another anti-Ebelian, a doctor, had a “propensity to press unwanted intimacies upon the women in his care.”

Clark proposes a number of reasons that Ebel became a target, including the “queerness of his persona.” For Ebel’s detractors, his manners and sensitivity were an unacceptable assault on the rigid binaries of the patriarchal order. The gentle Ebel was married with children, but his critics cast him as a fey home-wrecker who plied his lady parishioners with dangerous ideas. Finckenstein described him as a “hermaphrodite.”

 The book is relatively short apparently, as is the review, and the origin of it is given as this:

In the 1990s, he came across some files detailing a sex scandal that rippled through the Prussian city of Königsberg (now Kaliningrad, Russia) between 1835 and 1842. Two Lutheran priests were brought to trial and sent to prison, though they were exonerated of the most salacious charges. 

In a prefatory note, Clark suggests what drew him so insistently to this particular micro-historical moment was how these priests were victims of scurrilous rumors long before the advent of mass communications and social media. He goes on to emphasize the episode’s “fabular power,” adding coyly, “Resemblances to present-day persons and situations, though not intended, cannot be ruled out.” 

The difference with today, of course, is the speed with which false rumours spread via technology, and (I wonder?) perhaps the difficulty of dislodging a rumour with later truth. 

Sunday, March 22, 2026

The LLM and leads to deeper reading

I have to admit, LLMs can be very good at suggesting where to go for deeper reading on a topic.

 For example, this interview in the New York Times with Scottish writer and performer Richard Gadd (who wrote the semi autobiographical Baby Reindeer, which I haven't watched but it sounded interesting) dealt a lot on his self questioning of his masculinity and sexuality.   His sexual assault happened fairly young, and it's summarised here:

When Richard Gadd wrote Monkey See Monkey Do for the Edinburgh fringe in 2016, he says, “it was pre-#MeToo; sexual assault wasn’t really in the public consciousness, and male sexual assault particularly wasn’t”. He was 27 and catastrophically anxious, and his flatmates were worried, asking him: “What are you doing? No, like, really what are you doing?”

The show – you’d struggle to call it standup, though it won the Edinburgh comedy award that year – is a personal and harrowing account of being raped by a manipulative older man he met earlier in his career. It’s extremely painful to watch, as Gadd’s nascent professional hopes and fantasies are traded on and exploited, leaving him isolated and hollowed out. 

In the New York Times interview, he says:

The journey of life is trying to come to terms with yourself. I’ve always been quite confused sexually. Even as I sit here, 36 years old, I still sometimes feel confused. I’ve tried many labels in my life, and the labels never brought me any sort of comfort. Comfort comes from within. No external answer exists to an internal conflict, in my opinion. Inconsistency is the confusing nature of life. Accepting that I might never stand on solid ground is a form of acceptance. Some people just wrestle existentially, and that’s the way it is.

But he also says he didn't feel same sex attraction until after the assault:

I read in an interview that you hadn’t had same-sex attraction until after your assault. Is that right? Yeah, that is true. I know that’s a controversial idea. I’ve never said it’s because of that. I’d never say that. I say that perhaps it forced me to look at myself, to re-examine myself. Maybe I was strutting from A to B, repressing myself in such a way that I never looked before. I’m not sure. All I know is that I went through a period — this is radically honest — of almost feeling asexual and then getting very confused and then exploring that and realizing that I’m fine both ways. Even now, I’m still a little bit lost. I do think that abuse of that nature can leave you uncertain in your body, but I’m not saying that abuse makes you gay. My truth, which nobody can take from me, is that I didn’t question myself until that happened. 

Those two answers sound a tad inconsistent, if you ask me.  He's also reminding me of Hannah Gadsby, who turned her true life assault directly into performance art on Netflix. 

Anyway, the whole question of the (relatively modern, and Western) "turn to the inner self" has long interested me.   It's been somewhat piqued by the transgender culture wars, as well thinking from time to time about Buddhist conceptions of no self, which scientific materialists can readily go alone with, and (one would think) could render a lot of Western reflection on internal states of mind a tad...redundant?.  

I asked Perplexity for some leads on this topic, and here is it's answer:

There is a substantial body of work on exactly this turn toward the inner self, especially the move from a person understood through roles, duties, and social place to a person understood through feelings, authenticity, sexuality, and identity. A good way to frame it is that several modern writers describe a shift from a public, relational self to an inward, self-interpreting self, with sexuality and gender later becoming especially central markers of that inward truth.

Major authors on the shift

  • Charles Taylor is one of the best starting points. In Sources of the Self, he traces the making of modern identity and the rise of authenticity, inner depth, and self-articulation as moral ideals.

  • Philip Rieff argued earlier and more sharply that modern culture moved from “religious man” to “psychological man,” with therapy and self-realization replacing older moral frameworks.

    Robert Bellah and co-authors in Habits of the Heart describe expressive individualism, the view that each person has an inner core of feeling that should be expressed rather than disciplined by inherited social forms.

    Carl Trueman directly connects this to contemporary sexuality and gender, arguing that the modern self is defined increasingly by inward feelings and desires, and that this sets the stage for identity to be located in sexual and gender experience.

    Michel Foucault is essential for a different angle: he shows how confession, psychiatry, and sexual discourse made sex something to be dug out, named, and interpreted as an inner truth.

    ......

If you want a reading path

A sensible sequence would be:

  1. Charles Taylor, Sources of the Self.

  2. Philip Rieff, The Triumph of the Therapeutic.

  3. Robert Bellah et al., Habits of the Heart.

  4. Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality, Vol. 1.

  5. Carl Trueman, The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self.

 Of those authors, I only know of Michel Foucault.   

Perplexity then commented on each of them:

How these writers differ

Taylor is more genealogical and philosophical, trying to reconstruct how modern authenticity became plausible. Rieff is more polemical and cultural-critical, seeing therapy as a civilizational replacement for religion. Foucault is the most radical in method, treating sexuality and confession as products of power/knowledge rather than timeless truths waiting to be found. Trueman is the most directly relevant to your sexuality/gender question, because he explicitly ties modern identity to inward feelings and the plausibility of claims about “being in the wrong body”.

Perplexity suggested possible further questions it could answer, and I chose the one about why expressive individualism became the dominant view in the 1980's.  Here are its comments about that:

By the 1980s, “expressive individualism” had become dominant because it fit hand‑in‑glove with postwar affluence, therapeutic psychology, consumer capitalism, and rights‑based law in a way that traditional religious and philosophical critiques did not, and often could not, match institutionally or imaginatively. Even where churches and philosophers opposed it, they were frequently forced to speak in its language of inner authenticity, psychological wellbeing, and personal choice, which blunted their resistance and helped normalize the very outlook they criticised.

What “expressive individualism” means

Writers following Charles Taylor and Robert Bellah use “expressive individualism” for a view of the self in which identity is discovered in one’s inner depths and must be outwardly expressed to be authentic. On this view the individual, understood as an “atomized self,” is the basic unit of reality, bound mainly by freely chosen commitments that serve their self‑realization. By the late twentieth century, Taylor and others argue, this had become the “default conception of the self” in Western social imaginaries.

Postwar prosperity and social change

Bellah and colleagues explicitly connect the prominence of individualism by the early 1980s to rising prosperity from the 1950s onward, which loosened dependence on family and local community and made self‑fulfilment a plausible life project for many more people. In Habits of the Heart (1985) they argue that “the language of individualism” had become Americans’ primary language of self‑understanding and that this individualism had grown “cancerous,” threatening the social tissues that once moderated it. In such a context, a self that sees its task as realizing interior desires rather than conforming to external roles or sacred orders felt natural rather than ideological.

The triumph of the therapeutic

Philip Rieff’s account is that a “therapeutic” culture displaced a religious one: we increasingly interpret our lives through the lens of psychological health, inner conflict, and self‑acceptance instead of sin, duty, or objective moral order. He describes a cultural revolution in which traditional “controls” weaken and “releases” (permissions) expand, yielding a “psycho‑therapeutic civilization” where the wisdom of society consists in doctrines that permit each person “to live an experimental life.” By the 1960s–70s this therapeutic vocabulary had percolated into counselling, education, and popular media, so that even religious practice was often reinterpreted as a resource for personal wellbeing rather than a binding authority.

 And so on.

OK, maybe one more paragraph:

Why philosophical and religious opposition didn’t stop it

Several lines of critique existed—Rieff’s warning of cultural collapse, MacIntyre’s diagnosis of modern “emotivism,” Taylor’s concern about relativism and isolation, communitarian critiques like Bellah’s—but they were largely diagnostic rather than institution‑building. Their influence was strongest in intellectual and religious circles, while everyday experience in workplaces, schools, media, and courts kept training people to think in individualist and therapeutic terms. Moreover, as one sympathetic critic notes, even theological accounts of salvation and forgiveness were often reframed in therapeutic language, blurring the line between gospel and self‑help and thereby conceding much of Rieff’s point about the “triumph of the therapeutic.”

This gives me plenty of leads.    

I think I mentioned this before, and perhaps not so long ago, but I do remember a pleasant enough priest who took over my childhood Catholic parish but left the priesthood, saying it was not "authentic" enough.  I spoke to him as a young teenager, and he was into some popular psychology books that did exactly what is described in that  Perplexity summary:  framed the Catholic faith as something that would make you understand yourself better - or framed it as a "therapeutic" enterprise.  (I can't remember who wrote them - I'm pretty sure it was an American Catholic, and the books were heavy on graphic design.  I had the impression they may have been popular in Catholic high schools, but I could be wrong.)  As well intentioned as the priest was - I had one or two counselling style discussions with him, and this was in the days (long ago!) when people didn't worry about a priest seeing a teenager alone, at night - I did not feel drawn to that framing of religion at all;  and still don't to this day.   

Anyway, I am impressed with the summaries on topics you can get from LLMs, and how you can direct them to more specifically relevant leads. 

Update:   Gosh, Perplexity just helped me track down the 1970's books the priest recommended:

The books you’re describing sound most like John Powell, SJ—an American Jesuit priest who wrote popular Catholic/self-understanding books in the 1970s, especially Fully Human, Fully Alive (first published in 1976), which was explicitly about negative emotions, self-perception, and becoming fully human. That title is also listed as an illustrated edition, which fits your memory of graphic artwork.

Strongest match

Fully Human, Fully Alive: A New Life Through a New Vision is the best fit because it combines Catholic spirituality with a therapeutic, psychologically oriented view of the self and God, and it dates exactly to the period you remember. The summary description says Powell argues that fears and complexes come from a faulty perception of ourselves and our surroundings.

Other Powell books

Other John Powell titles from roughly the same era also match your description of Catholic self-understanding and relationship with God, including Why Am I Afraid to Tell You Who I Am? and The Secret of Staying in Love. Powell’s books were widely read in Catholic circles and often framed faith in terms of growth, identity, and emotional healing

I did ask another AI about this a couple of months ago, and it didn't find it.  Maybe I gave better clues this time.

And, what do ya know!  I thought "I hope the author wasn't caught up in sexual abuse cases", Google it, and yes he was:

Powell was accused of abusing of at least seven female students in the 1960s and 1970s. He was first sued in 2003 and again in 2006. Six of his alleged victims settled their litigation with the Jesuits in 2005.[1] 

Ugh.  Female students, though; so sounds like not a case of suppressed homosexuality, which would be particularly ironic for the author of a book "Why am I afraid to tell you who I am?".    

 Update 2:   This site gives a better idea of the creepiness of John Powell's abuse:

In court documents, interviews, as well as a lightly fictionalized account of the abuse by one of Powell’s survivors, I learned of an incident when Powell told a young victim that he had received direct confirmation from Jesus that their “relationship” was blessed. He said that during private prayer, Jesus had come off the cross in front of him and sanctioned what he was doing with the victim. Drawing on long traditions in the formation of priests, Powell authorized himself with reference to clerics’ special, even mystical bond with Christ. All the leveling and humanizing of his psychological reasoning paled in comparison to the power of this notion of priests’ special access to divine realms of secrecy and mystery. It is interesting to me that the lay people in his orbit did not regret or lament this kind of clerical elevation, but seemed to long for it, embrace it, even need it, just as much as they relished his humanistic language about self-acceptance and authenticity. 

Isn't this ironic!  The parish priest I knew who left the priesthood because he found it "inauthentic" (I think I later heard he married, so perhaps being in love on the quiet was what led to it?)  was likely heavily influenced by a psychologising Jesuit who himself was being "inauthentic"....  

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

A dragon, adjusted (and the man who painted it)



The reason I say "adjusted" is because I was pleased to find that Claude (free version) was able to improve the original, which had the tricky issue of uneven lighting affecting one side more than the other:



Maybe I'm easily impressed, but that's a pleasing outcome.  

Anyway, by way of further explanation, the painting is by famous Japanese artist Hokusai, and as may guess from the border of the dragon painting, yes he's the guy who made this:



On the recent trip to Japan, I visited not one, but two museums devoted to him.  The first is in a town on the outskirts of Nagano, called Obuse.  (It feels a bit more like a distant suburb, really, and takes about 40 min to get to on a local train.  It's a pleasant area with nice shops and local gardens to visit, apart from the museum.)

The reason it has a museum is because Hokusai used to visit there in his late career, hence the area has some of his artwork, including the dragon painting which is on a panel for a festival float.  




It shows videos about his career, and has displays including his intricately illustrated pages from books, like this:






I must admit, I still don't quite understand how these were made, as the size of the pages and the intricacy of the lines makes them too detailed for woodblock prints, but I think that's what they were.

It's kind of remarkable how he published style books for other people to learn how to draw.  It feels like he created the whole modern Japanese love of manga and drawing.   (Yes, now that I check, he is considered the "godfather" of manga.)  

The museum has a great gift shop, too.  Better than the one in the next museum, in Tokyo.

That one is in the Sumida City area in Tokyo, an area which is, incidentally, good to stay in if you want a more "local" experience.  It's not that far from Tokyo Station, too.  

Sumida has its own Hokusai museum because he used to live around that area, and the local council has signs in different locations showing some of his illustrations.

The museum is fine, and goes a bit more into the wood block technology of the day, but it has strict no photos rules, and a quite small gift shop area.  

So, going to both museums really worked well.  I should read a bit more about his life, as he was ridiculously prolific and so influential...