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THE PATHOLOGY OF A PRIVILEGED ERA



Is Stress Really Stress — or Adaptation Misapprehended as Affliction?

 

 

 

When modern man finds himself unable to affix a tidy label to his woe—when the discomfort refuses to present itself in a form sufficiently tangible to be splinted, sutured, or scanned—he performs a small act of semantic legerdemain and christens it stress. The word functions as a capacious drawer into which we sweep anxieties unnamed, dissatisfactions blindly accepted, and responsibilities deferred. It is a diagnosis of convenience; a verbal umbrella unfurled whenever the weather of the soul becomes inclement.

 

But let us ask, with becoming seriousness: was there ever an epoch in which humanity was emancipated from what we now call stress? Did the citizens of Athens recline in placid serenity while debating in the Agora? Did those who endured the Black Death speak of a tranquil nervous system? Were the citizens of London during the Blitz exempt from physiological arousal only because they lacked our contemporary lexicon? Did the soldiers who advanced across the mud-soaked trenches of the Battle of the Somme experience an enviable peace of spirit as artillery fractured the sky? Did the residents of Rome during the sack of 410 under Alaric I consider their racing hearts a sheer inconvenience of parlance? Did those caught in the convulsions of the French Revolution find their pulses decorously regulated as the guillotine performed its grim arithmetic? Or the countless families uprooted during the Partition of India—did they traverse burning frontiers in a state of parasympathetic repose?

 

History, if it states honestly, offers no golden age of nonchalant nerves—only cohorts who lived through the tremors of tangibility without the modish luxury of naming them.

 

The proposition is self-evidently untenable. What we denominate as stress is not a novel ailment but an ancient adaptation. Long before endocrinology supplied us with the shoptalk of cortisoladrenaline, and the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis, the human organism had already perfected its response to threat. The so-called “fight or flight” mechanism—scientifically articulated by Walter Cannon—is not a twentieth-century invention but a primordial inheritance. When the amygdala perceives danger, it does not convene a philosophical symposium; it initiates a cascade of autonomic reactions: heart rate accelerates, glucose is mobilised, pupils dilate. The body prepares for survival with exquisite efficiency.

 

To call this stress is to describe the orchestra without acknowledging the conductor.

 

Psychology has long demonstrated that the idiosyncratic understanding of stress depends less upon the external stimulus and more upon rational appraisal. Richard Lazarus argued persuasively that what unsettles one person may invigorate another; the incident itself is inert until interpreted. The mind does not merely register reality; it renders a verdict upon it. Thus, two individuals standing before identical circumstances may occupy entirely diverse internal climates—one paralysed, the other animated.

 

It follows, then, that stress is not an extrinsic invader but an inner translation. The body is not at war with the mind; it is in dialogue with it. Present psychoneuroimmunology confirms what philosophers intuited: chronic rumination and perceived helplessness sustain elevated cortisol levels, suppress immune function, and predispose to hypertension, metabolic syndrome, and even major depressive disorder. The Cartesian severance of mind and body has proven medically untenable. The psyche writes its footnotes in the tissues.

 

And yet, our age—luxuriating in amenities unimaginable to our ancestors—speaks as though uniquely burdened. We inhabit temperature-controlled dwellings, command instantaneous communication, and enjoy life expectancies that would have astonished medieval monarchs. Nevertheless, we gripe as though existence has become intolerable. Is it truly the magnitude of our burdens that has increased, or the fragility of our tolerances?

 

One might observe, without ferocity but with forthrightness, that adversity once demanded fortitude because there was no alternative. The stoic strength of a Roman legionary or the passive stoutness of a wartime mother was not born of superior neurochemistry but of necessity. When angst is non-negotiable, heroism becomes habitual. In contrast, when disquiet is perceived as an aberration rather than a constituent of life, every irk feels like injustice.

 

Here, psychology offers another insight: resilience is not the absence of amusement but the capacity to metabolise it. The individual who regards challenge as catastrophe encounters sympathetic overdrive; the one who interprets it as subjective strain recruits protean coping. The difference lies not in the happenstance but in the narrative woven around it. Meaning, as Viktor Frankl demonstrated in extremis, can transmute anguish into endurance.

 

Permit me to offer a pedestrian yet profoundly illustrative example.

 

Traffic—whether inching its obstinate way through London or coagulating under the unrelenting skies of Bangalore—is an ordeal universally lamented and universally suffered. The engines idle, the horns protest, the minutes evaporate with indifferent cruelty. One may either convert this inevitability into a theatre of private indignation or acknowledge it as an immovable feature of one’s daily topography.

 

If one knows, with the certainty of pattern, that this route must be traversed day after day, the wiser course is not rebellion but recalibration. To inform oneself—calmly, deliberately—that there exists no alternate universe in which the road instantaneously clears is not an act of defeat, but of syllogistic sovereignty. The commute remains unchanged; the interpretation does not.

 

Psychology names this cognitive reappraisal: the restrained reinterpretation of an event so that the autonomic nervous system need not erupt in futile fright. The traffic jam is not, in fact, a predator. It does not imperil annihilation. Yet the unexamined mind reacts as though encircled. The heart rate quickens, cortisol seeps into the bloodstream, musculature tightens—an entire physiological opera staged for an audience of brake lights.

 

What, then, is accomplished by rehearsing outrage against the inevitable? Shall the gridlock dissolve because we have scolded it? Shall the lane expand in deference to our exasperation? Or is it rather the case that we wound ourselves twice—first by the delay, and then by the drama we append to it?

 

Acceptance is not passivity; it is alignment with actuality. To say, “This is the road I must travel, and I shall arrive in due course,” is to withdraw the mind’s unnecessary embellishments. The body, receiving a serener decree from its supreme faculty, correspondingly softens its mobilisation. Blood pressure steadies. Breathing deepens. The organism ceases to behave as though subsistence were at stake.

 

Thus the hour spent in traffic need not become an hour spent in torment. It may be refashioned—if one so chooses—into contemplation, music, or even silence. The unknown affair persists; the midmost tempest subsides.

 

And here lies the larger principle: when threatened with what is immovable, resistance is solely a rehearsal of suffering. The mind that relinquishes its quarrel with the preordained spares the body a needless war.

 

Is it possible, then, that what we baptise as stress is often the by-product of expectations inflated beyond veracity? When our desires outstrip our duties, when ease is misread for entitlement, when transient perturbation is medicalised as pathology—do we not risk enfeebling the very mechanisms designed to fortify us?

 

To assert that “there is nothing called stress” may be rhetorically provocative, yet it gestures toward an overwhelming unity: the body and mind are not adversaries but manifestations of a single, integrated organism. The palpitation is thought made flesh; the tension headache is cognition incarnate. We are not afflicted by stress as though by a foreign contagion; we generate it through interpretation, sustain it through rumination, and may, by disciplined perception, attenuate it.

 

The question, therefore, is not whether stress exists—biology affirms that it does—but whether our conception of it has become inflated beyond its utility. Have we transformed an adaptive signal into a perpetual identity? Have we mistaken the alarm bell for the fire?

 

And finally—most searching of all—if previous generations confronted plagues, wars, and privations without the solace of a diagnostic vocabulary, might we consider that what we require is not less activation of the nervous system, but greater cultivation of courage, perspective, and significance?

 

Perhaps the infirmity is not stress itself, but the story we insist upon telling about it.

 


 

MIND – MACHINE & AI


 

The Modern Didactic Dilemma

 

Artificial Intelligence, the Seduction of Convenience, and the Last Territory Machines Cannot Occupy

 

 

 

Artificial intelligence is advancing with the velocity of gossip in a provincial town: by the hour one has simply heard the rumour, it has already assumed authority. In certain circles it is now spoken of with the breathless reverence once reserved for electricity, penicillin, or the internet—another technological epiphany that will redeem inefficiency, reorganise legacy, and perhaps even tidy up the untidiness of human existence itself.

 

Such enthusiasm, however, is not entirely highbrow. It is partly fascination and partly ignorance—the twin midwives of technological mythology.

 

One hears the claim repeated with almost evangelical certainty: AI will make us superhuman. But how exactly? What is the cadre of this assured transcendence? Before surrendering to the delirium of inevitability, one might ask a few impertinent questions.

 

Let us begin not with philosophy but with daintiness.

 

Consider the modern world’s reliance on digital infrastructure. In contemporary geopolitical rhetoric, there are already threats directed not purely at armies or industries but at banks, financial networks, and the immense data centres that sustain the computational nervous system of global subculture. One well-placed disruption—whether cybernetic or kinetic—could extinguish oceans of data in a twinkle.

 

Contrast this with an older custom of ink and ledgers. Should catastrophe strike, it might destroy a building or burn a library, but the edifice of understanding would perdure distributed, recoverable, salvageable. Time, patience, and human recollection could restore what flame had erased.

 

Today the vulnerability is far more elegant.

 

The machine promises efficiency but centralises insubstantiality. What once existed in thousands of human hands now resides in silent vaults of silicon.

 

Which leads to a rather impolite question: what, ultimately, is more valuable—the human mind or the machine it has constructed?

 

For the present the pyramid still seems obvious. Yet the cultural mood increasingly suggests otherwise.

 

Artificial intelligence is frequently envisioned as a rival consciousness, an emerging savant poised to eclipse its creators. But this is an exaggeration bordering on metaphysics. AI does not think; it processes. It does not imagine; it aggregates. It does not dream; it predicts.

 

In essence, it is the most industrious clerk mortality has ever hired.

 

And there is nothing inherently sinister about delegating drudgery to machinery. Heritage itself is a history of such delegations. The steam engine relieved muscle, the calculator relieved arithmetic, the washing machine relieved domestic toil.

 

But cognition is a more delicate dependency.

 

A human being forms an identity through abrasion—through rebellion, confusionfallacy, embarrassment, revision. A young writer discovers a voice only after the humiliating apprenticeship of imitation and failure. Thought deepens not through fittingness but through struggle.

 

If a machine begins supplying finished sentences before the mind has endured the effort of forming them, something curious occurs. One may acquire fluency without congruity, coherence without comprehension.

 

The prose gleams. The interior detritus hollow.

 

Psychologists have begun to notice this phenomenon in empirical terms. Researchers describe a process called cognitive offloading, in which individuals increasingly delegate memory, reasoning, and decision-making to technological systems. Over a while, the mind begins to relinquish the strive required for deep analysis, resulting in diminished critical thinking and weaker problem-solving abilities. 

 

The mind, like a muscle, atrophies when relieved of recalcitrance.

 

There are other symptoms as well. Recent workplace studies have described a peculiar fatigue among heavy users of AI tools—what some researchers have begun calling “AI brain fry.” Workers supervising multiple AI systems reported increased mental exhaustion, slower decision-making, and comprehensible fog despite the covenant of greater efficiency. 

 

The paradox is exquisite.

 

A technology designed to reduce mental labour can, when overused, produce a subtler form of mental depletion.

 

There are also societal consequences. Early research into conversational AI suggests that frequent interaction with such systems can correlate with loneliness and emotional habituation, particularly when individuals begin regarding the machine less as a tool and more as a companion. 

 

Machines simulate attention. They do not reciprocate it.

 

None of this means artificial intelligence is malevolent or undesirable. Far from it. Properly employed, it is an extraordinary extension of creature capability—compressing space, accelerating research, relieving monotony, and amplifying productivity.

 

But like every instrument of power, it requires hierarchy.

 

The machine must remain a servant, not an epistemological substitute.

 

The greatest danger is not technological domination but psychological surrender: the gradual habit of letting the machine think first.

 

Because there exists one enclave into which AI cannot meaningfully intrude.

 

Experience.

 

The internet today overflows with immaculate content—articles written at industrial speed, newsletters engineered for engagement metrics, social media prudence packaged with algorithmic precision. It is efficient, polished, optimised.

 

And often utterly vacant.

 

What it lacks is the tenacious irregularity of lived experience: the humiliations, the failed ventures, the ill-judged decisions, the jiffies of uncertainty where one discovers, painfully, what one actually believes.

 

The world does not suffer from a shortage of information.

 

It suffers from a shortage of authenticity.

 

A machine can synthesise knowledge, but it cannot inhabit a life. It cannot lose money in a failed business, misjudge a partner, rebuild after collapse, or discover wisdom through error. It can summarise anthropoid suffering; it cannot suffer.

 

Which is why the most premium cultivated currency of the future may not be skill, credentials, or even technical expertise.

 

It may simply be lived experience.

 

The chaotic, inconvenient, contradictory accumulation of events that constitute a human life.

 

In an age where machines generate infinite subject matter, the rarest commodity becomes perspective.

 

Your mistakes.

Your recoveries.

Your private encounters with dereliction and perseverance.

 

These things possess a narrative density that no heuristic can fabricate.

 

The remedy, therefore, is not rejection but discipline.

 

Human beings must foster what might be called technological sobriety—a deliberate relationship with machines that preserves the sovereignty of the mind. This involves several muffled acts of resistance:

 

  • Analytic ownership: solving problems autonomously before consulting machines.
  • Intellectual friction: reading difficult texts, writing without assistance, arguing ideas aloud.
  • Analogue boundaries: limiting the reflex to outsource every question to a machine.
  • Human conversation: preserving the unpredictable, emotionally complex exchange that machines cannot replicate.
  • Creative primacy: using AI as an amplifier of contemplation, never as its origin.

 

In short, we must wield artificial intelligence as we once wielded calculators: indispensable assistants, but never authorities.

 

Tradition advances through tools, but it survives through minds.

 

And so we arrive at the central blunder of our trice.

 

This is not a war between mind and machine.

 

It is something subtler.

 

A duel.

 

The machine may accelerate awareness, assemble information, and perform feats of calculation that dwarf human capacity. But the machine did not invent inquisitiveness. It did not invent imagination. It did not invent meaning.

 

The mind did.

 

And whatever marvels the coming decades may unveil, one fact stays stubbornly unaltered:

 

The mind made the machine.

 

And for as long as civilisation persists, it is the mind—not the machine—that will tarry supreme.

 

P.S. And no, this was not composed under the tutelage of artificial intelligence. I bide, for the moment at least, bolshily reliant on my own AI—the ancestral model housed inconveniently inside the skull. The mind, though slower and occasionally erratic, still manages to arrange words with a fastidiousness and intention no machine has yet persuaded me it can surpass. Until further notice, I trust that organic acumen more than the synthetic variety to determine not merely how something should be said, but why it ought to be said at all.

 

 


THE DIGESTIVE CONCERTO NO. 1


 

The elder brother stood by the window, the morning light catching the dust in the air like powdered gold. On the table lay the evidence of the crime: a small ceramic bowl, empty now, which only moments earlier had held an indecent heap of capsules, tablets, and pills—reds, yellows, greens—like a fallen cathedral of colour.

He turned, one eyebrow lifted in tragic disbelief, and spoke with the gravity of a man delivering a sermon to a nation already doomed.

“My dear brother—oh, you magnificent arse—you cannot possibly expect the poor stomach to behave like a well-drilled troupe when you fling the bursting brass section at it at once. Vitamins, taken together in one heroic gulp, do not line up suppliantly and dissolve into virtue; they huddle, they quarrel, they jostle for space like musicians all tuning at the same time. Each insists upon its own moment, its own potency, and instead you give them chaos—a noisy muddle where none can properly be heard. Take them as they are meant to be taken, singly and with sense, lest all that promised strength be lost in the ridiculous brawl you yourself have conducted.”

He finished with a flourish, as though laying down a baton after a symphony of common sense, his voice still humming with concern disguised as irritation. Somewhere, a kettle hissed like polite applause.

The younger brother, meanwhile, leaned against the counter, arms folded, eyes bright with mischief. He chewed thoughtfully on an apple—crunch, slow and theatrical—then wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, considering the speech as one might consider a particularly dramatic opuscule aria.

“My beloved maestro,” he said at last, his tone light as a skipped note, “forgive me, but you mistake enthusiasm for barbarism.”

The elder brother opened his mouth. The younger raised a finger.

“Ah—do let me finish, or the trio will riot,” he stepped closer, lowering his voice into mock reverence, “you speak of my stomach as though it were some fragile harpsichord, terrified of passion. But I assure you, it is a seasoned opera house. It has hosted tragedies, comedies, midnight kebabs, and one unforgettable incident involving street coffee and regret. Do you truly believe a few earnest vitamins will reduce it to tears?”

The elder brother frowned. The kettle clicked off.

The younger continued, warming to his performance.

“These capsules did not quarrel,” he said, “they leapt. They sang. They met one another and said, Ah! So you too have been summoned. And in that glorious confusion—yes, confusion, if you must—they formed a choir. Not your prim, punctual orchestra, but something far more human. A chorus. Loud, slightly drunk, and full of hope.”

He smiled, eyes glinting.

“And if a little of their promised strength is lost in the brawl, as you so poetically fear—well—perhaps strength was never meant to be hoarded so carefully. Perhaps it prefers to arrive in excess, all at once, kicking the door in, just to remind the body that it is alive.”

Silence settled between them, thick and surprised.

The elder brother stared. His prepared retorts—neatly stacked like sheet music—fluttered and fell apart. He closed his mouth. Opened it again. Closed it.

The younger took another bite of his apple. Crunch.

“At any rate,” he added solicitously, almost kindly, “if I am to perish by vitamin overdose, I should like it to be said that I died bravely, in bloody colour, and with excellent intentions.”

The elder brother exhaled. A reluctant smile betrayed him, small but undeniable, like a rogue note sneaking into a solemn hymn.

He said nothing.

This, in itself, was alarming.

The elder brother—who could normally subpoena an opinion at the fall of a spoon—stood frozen, as though some invisible conductor had raised a hand and suspended the entire ensemble mid-note. His fingers twitched. His jaw worked once, soundlessly, like a fish reconsidering philosophy.

The younger brother watched him with open delight, rocking gently on his heels.

“Well,” he said softly, “that silence has either killed you or improved you enormously.”

Still nothing.

The elder brother turned away, marched two paces, then spun back again with tragic urgency, as though about to pronounce a final curse upon the household. He inhaled. He lifted a finger. He dropped it.

Defeated, he reached for the abandoned vitamin bottle, stared into its rattling depths, and shook it once—twice—listening to the hollow clatter like bones in a maraca.

“You are impossible,” he said at last, weakly, which was worse than shouting.

The younger brother bowed—an extravagant, waist-bending bow—nearly knocking over the chair.

“Impossible,” he replied, “is merely misunderstood genius with good digestion.”

The elder brother groaned, sank into a chair, and covered his face with both hands, as though shielding himself from divine light.

“Go,” he muttered, “before you begin composing.”

The younger brother paused at the doorway, turned, and with angelic innocence tossed the final blow into the air: 

“Tomorrow,” he said brightly, “I’m thinking of adding probiotics.”

The door closed.

Somewhere deep within the elder brother’s chest, a laugh escaped—brief, traitorous, and utterly against his will.

The philharmonic, at last, applauded.