The brain doesn’t just react — it anticipates
1/3 What this shows—beautifully, I think—is that your brain is always leaning slightly into the future. Not in a sci-fi way, but in a deeply practical, survival-and-meaning way. Every conversation, every step you take, every pause before someone finishes a sentence—your brain is quietly asking: “What’s most likely to happen next?” That’s why: You can catch a falling cup before you consciously “decide” to. You sense when a conversation is about to turn awkward. You feel something is “off” before you can explain why. It’s not intuition as magic. It’s intuition as patterned care—your brain protecting flow, safety, and connection. What I especially love here is the implication that prediction isn’t cold calculation. It’s embodied. These rhythms tie perception directly to action. The brain isn’t trying to be right in theory; it’s trying to be ready in time. Zooming out a bit: This supports a very humane idea of intelligence—biological or artificial—that intelligence isn’t about dominance or...