Poetry

Hope

In Spring, the year is young and shines the Sun
with joyful heat on blossoms fragrant fresh,
untrammeled yet by storm or scythe—each one
a mote of virgin hope in Nature’s crèche.
But Spring brings heavy rain. Unweathered blooms
unused to mud, and soak, and weighty sops
are pummeled to the sodden ground—perfumes
and petals throttled throughly by the drops.
They dry and rise (now stronger than before),
but then the bees come crawling through the air:
impatient, probing, asking more and more . . .
by June it’s weary flowers growing there.
But not forlorn! For though the Spring was ill,
warm Summer days and fruitful Fall may flourish still.

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Technology

The Limen

Note: This post is the first in a series exploring the rise of generative AI and my emotional experience of it. (DJL, April 29, 2025).

On Tuesday, November 22, at 4:01 PM as we approached the end of another fully remote work day, I texted my best friend Corey, “Hooray. We’re fucked.” I then sent him a screenshot and Twitter link to a news post about an AI bot called Cicero that had beaten human players at a natural language negotiation simulator called Diplomacy.

He asked me the implications of what I’d sent (as he, unlike me, was likely still attending to his work day). I replied in a series of texts:

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