An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 16 – Final Exam Week – Part 7: Summary – Have you stopped to breathe today?

Wu Wei doesn’t mean “do nothing.” It means stop fighting the current. It means acting with reality instead of against it. Listening before pushing. Pausing before reacting. Meditation isn’t about escaping life. It’s about finally showing up for it. Breathing is the original philosophy. Before arguments. Before systems. Before words. It reminds you: You’re alive now. Not later. Not when things are fixed. Not when you’re better, smarter, calmer, more certain. Now.

Read the letter →

An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 16 – Final Exam Week – Part 6: How old are you in star years?

In star years, your job isn’t to conquer the universe. It’s to notice it. To add a little kindness to the brief chapter you occupy. To pass the light forward, however you can. You don’t have to matter forever to matter now. If you really are the universe looking back at itself for just a moment, what would you like to see before you go?

Read the letter →

An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 16 – Final Exam Week – Part 5: Have you hugged someone today?

A hug doesn’t fix everything. But it reminds the nervous system that it doesn’t have to face everything alone. It reminds the mind that it’s safe enough – just for a moment – to soften. We don’t have relationships. We are relationships. Every word you speak, every silence you choose, every kindness or cruelty rewrites the invisible web you’re standing in. Connection isn’t a distraction from life… it is the point where life happens.

Read the letter →

An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 16 – Final Exam Week – Part 4: Have you pinched yourself today?

This isn’t a dream. It’s the thing itself. Your thoughts matter because they shape your next move. Your actions matter because they ripple outward in ways you’ll never fully see. You’re not watching life; you’re in it. Your presence matters because this moment literally does not exist without you in it. Every choice you make—whether it’s kindness, cruelty, or the courage to show up—matters. This isn’t a dress rehearsal where mistakes don’t count. Mistakes teach. Effort costs something. Love risks loss.

Read the letter →

An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 16 – Final Exam Week – Part 3: Have you laughed at yourself today?

Laughter is what happens when the ego trips over reality. It’s not about belittling yourself; it’s about forgiving yourself. It’s the pressure valve that releases the tension of our overinflated selves. Wanting peace while compulsively checking email. Seeking meaning while losing your keys. Laughter turns rigid beliefs into flexible ideas and reminds us that wisdom doesn’t always sound profound. Sometimes, it sounds like a snort-laugh at your own nonsense. And that’s freedom.

Read the letter →

An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 16 – Final Exam Week – Part 2: Have you looked at yourself today?

Not the quick glance. The kind of looking that doesn’t rush. The kind that notices before it judges. Self-examination isn’t about criticism—it’s about self-recognition. The goal isn’t to change; it’s to notice. To become aware of who you already are, and see the patterns, the contradictions, the softness, and the blind spots. How are you showing up these days? And when was the last time you really saw yourself… without flinching?

Read the letter →

An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 16 – Final Exam Week – Part 1: Introduction – Have you been practicing?

No trick questions. No Scantron. Just: Have you been practicing? Philosophy was never meant to sit in your head like forgotten furniture. It’s meant to be lived, in how you speak, listen, recover, and think. It’s not about getting it right—it’s about showing up again tomorrow, every time you fall or miss, and trying again. Have you been practicing? The mat is still here.

Read the letter →

An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 15 – Meaning of Life – Part 7: Summary – Would you like this dance?

The meaning of life isn’t something to be figured out or discovered at the end. It’s something we practice in every moment. The music is already playing. The clock is counting down. And you, dear reader, are already in it. So the real question isn’t philosophical—it’s personal: Would you like this dance? How are you going to move?

Read the letter →

An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 15 – Meaning of Life – Part 6: What time is it on the sun?

Asking “What’s the meaning of life?” is like asking what time it is on the sun. The answer isn’t waiting to be discovered; it’s made through how we show up in life. Meaning isn’t found. It’s lived. Through love, through relationships, and by being present. Instead of searching for an answer, we’re meant to step into life. The meaning of life is life itself, and the meaning we create shows up in the connections we make.

Read the letter →

An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 15 – Meaning of Life – Part 5: Do you prefer the roller-coaster or the merry-go-round?

Life isn’t meant to be a test or a march toward the end—it’s meant to be a ride. Whether you’re gripping the bar in fear or throwing your hands in the air and screaming with joy, the experience is what matters. You won’t get extra points for playing it safe. At the end of the ride, it’s not about how untouched you were, but how fully you lived. So, are you riding, or just circling? Life is waiting for you to take the plunge.

Read the letter →