Sustaining Curiosity
May 13, 2025
3-Item Status
Current Location: Milwaukee, WI
Reading: A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennett
Listening: Churning by Katerina Pipili
If you have a moment, reply with your own 3-Item Status.
New Work
This week’s Let’s Know Things is about 2026 UK Local Elections
This week’s Brain Lenses essay is about Ord Clouds & the pod is about Yawning
I recently released a new iOS/macOS word-tracker app (for projects like books, but also writing rituals): Truly Simple Word Tracker
Sustaining Curiosity
Especially at paradigm-fracturing moments when it feels like the ground is shifting, the world has changed, and our previously stable grip on “the way of things” has softened, it’s important to focus on exploration, understanding, and interest.
As technologies, cultural norms, economic systems, and the myriad impacts of these larger forces on our day-to-day begin to disrupt our momentary rhythms and future plans, there’s an understandable tendency to ignore, deny, or push back against these forces; not because we think it’s possible to put the toothpaste back in the tube, but because accepting the new reality they’ve instigated is more than we can currently handle.
At such moments, it can be helpful to reorient away from knee-jerk (if perhaps justified) disavowal and denegation, and instead aim for a humble sort of curiosity.
Not approval, not acceptance: a genuine interest in the spiraling variables triggering the tumult.
This alternative perspective allows us to see the things (even those that unnerve us) more clearly, and it pushes us to understand these forces more completely. As we come to better grok these perturbations, we may find there are facets of them we appreciate and perhaps even celebrate. We might also find they are even more poisonous than we assumed, but because we’ve taken the time to more fully understand them, we also have a better sense of how to combat and counter them.
Whatever the ultimate outcome, a considerate, deliberate, open stance will almost always be the ideal response to reflexive defensiveness in the face of novelty.
Curiosity nudges us away from easy bias toward hard-earned knowledge and, counterintuitively, maintaining our inquisitiveness through turbulent times is one of the more intellectually and emotionally sustaining things we can do at such moments.
If you enjoyed this essay, consider supporting my work by becoming a paid subscriber, buying me a coffee, or grabbing one of my books.
Interesting Links
If you want more links to interesting things, consider subscribing to Aspiring Generalist.

What Else
I’m in the process of updating several components of my online presence.
It wasn’t that long ago that social media was a vital aspect of one’s digital self, but now I find (for me and a lot of people I know, anyway) it’s a bit of an afterthought. That’s mostly because of the (de)evolution of these platforms into parasocial networks, I suspect, but it’s possibly also because lot of the more interesting building is occurring away from these platforms, these days.
Say Hello
New here? Hit reply and tell me something about yourself!
You can also fill me in on something interesting you’re working on or something random you’re learning about.
I respond to every message I receive and would love to hear from you :)
Prefer stamps and paper? Send a letter, postcard, or some other physical communication to: Colin Wright, PO Box 11442, Milwaukee, WI 53211, USA
Or hit me up via other methods: Instagram, Threads, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, or ASCII characters.

