A strange loop is a feedback loop that perceives itself. Its strangeness comes from the feedback’s level-hopping attribute, with causal chains moving from microscopic to macroscopic levels and through a twist back at itself (self-perception), looping back into the “lower” levels without ever reversing the direction of the loop by moving backwards. Up up up leads up the stairs to the aviary and then up to the basement, up the stairs, up to the basement, up the stairs… The loop is effected through the capacity of the system to look at itself, to perceive itself as an entity. It is a closed system that is infinitely expandable. It is a paradox. Or should I say you are a paradox.
How to draw these concepts close to the realm of writing character, I’m not sure yet, in part because the microscopic, in the case of the human strange loop, is not a region available to intention or design. Maybe instead to think about the portion of the feedback loop that constitutes the emergence up a level: the appearance of something. Something that appears has to appear at a perceptible scale, which is why appearance is part of the movement up the chain. Perception occurs as a macro phenomenon, in the thing we call thinking.
Two relevant notes: first, appearance, in this strange loop hierarchy sense — visibility — legibility as a thing (even if the thing is not understood), has to do with economically condensing a vast amount of pattern or happening into something graspable (an idea, a sentence, a name). So appearance not only makes visible, it also makes compact.
Second: every human-order strange loop (i.e. a person with a sense of self) has a place in the world; the closure of the loop is inextricably related to the work of locating the loop (person) in relations to the world and to others.
Maybe these two things (appearance and relation-location) are always concurrent? The appearance occurs in a context, and context is just a word for a set of relations. But the awareness, the locating, isn’t simply an interior event; it’s also patterned by what in the environment recognizes, pressures, interacts with, or understands the one who has appeared. Yes, the loop closes, but something about it remains unbordered. Paradox.
Now slough off whatever from the above consideration is junky in your mind, and either start from blank or carry along whatever’s vivid or interesting into the prompt:
Conjure a person in mind. Write them a short scene of appearance that combines portrait and text. This scene might be an appearance to others or an appearance of themselves to themselves in a sudden expansion or clarification of self-understanding. Whatever it is, make the appearance a moment of compaction. In honor of appearance’s necessary relation-location, perhaps add a symbolic bat to the scene, an echolocating patron for the day.