Here’s a short chain of propositions that lead to today’s prompt:
1) Proposition that pattern—the emergence of pattern and the capacity of pattern to sustain itself—underlies the thingness, the realness, of what we call a self, an “I.”
2) Proposition that when the thing we call a self makes another thing (let’s, for now, stick with clearly made things like a piece of music or art or writing or a recipe), the made thing is to some degree imbued with the pattern, the pattern thinking, of the one who made it—a signature of sorts. Take the example of a piece of music that is written down or otherwise possible for a new person to play (say shared through devotional youtube dissections).
3) Proposition that when another person experiences that made thing—with the example of music, say one person plays a song written by another—that to some degree they (the player) get to temporarily share in the pattern of the self (the maker) who made it. Call it ghost hosting. Call it multiplication or hybridization. Playing their song, we feel a print of their experience in our own bodies.
Summon a person to mind, their presence felt through the patterns of their thinking, doing, or making.
Write a short piece as a holding place for that presence, that combines portrait and text.
If you are writing memorial, inventory a remnant pattern of that person to create a short remembrance. The remnant may be in you. The remnant may be in something they left behind.
If you are writing a fiction and inventing a character, conjure them backwards: first, invent a pattern left behind in the world. Write a short inventory of them, via this trace, then turn your mind’s eye toward the living version of your character—try to catch a glimpse of them, and use this vision for a portrait.
MORE OPEN VARIABLES
Pattern: I’m drawing this word from Hofstadter; it may hit your ear wonderfully, but it may sound weirdly abstract and mathy and far off from your sense of what a who is. Think of pattern as occurring at a meeting place between habit and intention—something that’s not merely automatic. A way of putting things together, a way of seeing things, a way of acting based on a way of seeing things. Perhaps pattern is easier to grasp as a way of interacting with a tangible medium, whether that’s a creative medium in a formal sense (the heat of a person perceptible in their poem), or a social or domestic medium (the way they inhabit their home, their day, the kinds of gifts they think to give).
Portrait: If I am writing a memorial, say remembering a person through the trace of them I can still access in my own body as I sing their song or say their words, whose portrait do I write or draw? Maybe it is of me, as I try to make contact with this thing left in me of them. Maybe it is of them, as I remember them in relation to this feeling I still hold in myself.