On Feeling: The Resonant Field of Time is a lyric-philosophical essay in the ongoing On —ing series. Writing from the first person and then deliberately stepping back from it, the essay treats feeling not as private sentiment but as a mode of perception — a way of registering what the author calls the resonant field of time, the felt pattern that binds human lives into a "greater flow." It moves through synchronicity and the observer effect; the question of whether a charged moment is divine intervention or mere coincidence (answering "both, the dual reality"); and the recognition that a life is lived one small moment from death — a recognition the essay reframes as the doorway to presence and to gratitude rather than fear. Along the way it touches Maslow's hierarchy, the loss of a child's innocence to "adulterants," the limits of explanation before death and the Divine, and closes on connection: that we are, and always have been, one. The piece is offered as phenomenology rather than argument — a record of what inner alignment feels like from the inside — and is annotated with touchstones (Jung, Heraclitus, Bohr, Boethius, Spinoza, and others) chosen so that readers arriving from art, philosophy, science, or contemplative practice each find a door in.
Jamison Johsnon (Wed,) studied this question.