Consider the idea that “I” today am not precisely the same “I” that lived here yesterday. Our language casts us into implied continuity of identity, just as it implies our singularity. Again we come up against Hofstadter’s weirdness as he suggests that although there is surely a for-all-practical-purposes main, singular brain from which our individual “I” arises, that the copies of our loops out there in the world, though lossy, are actually multiplications of us, such that if we were to die, something of us would survive, or could be encountered, in the intimate memory of a friend, say, or in a piece of music we recorded and left behind for others to play.
Hofstadter also suggests that the notion (again hard to escape because it is basic to our language) that this body gives rise only to one “I” is also mistaken. Maybe psychological space is not as continuous as we commonly think. This is a distance question. Karinne Keithley Syers today is close to Karinne Keithley Syers yesterday but not as close to Karinne Keithley Syers a year ago and never mind the question about Karinne Madeleine Keithley who gave up part of her name and added a new part ten plus years ago? Why? Because my patterns have changed; my relations and place in the world have changed.
The idea that there are distances between our many “I”s, even though there is so much functional continuity (this body, my memory, however permeable and fallible it is, the habits that never seem to leave me) that for all practical purposes I don’t notice the gaps in continuity and identity, or think of the changes I do mark in myself as different “I”s. And maybe this amounts to nothing more than a different conceptual vocabulary for growth or change. Or maybe it is more, maybe it’s an invitation to consider the coherent, constant, identical self as an illusion, and to delight instead in the daily efflorescence of yet one more self, very much the same but slightly different. My name denoting the stochastic center of gravity amidst those many me’s.
Well maybe you like these head trips and maybe you don’t — we’re almost done with the strange loop portion of this excursion. But either way, here’s a translation to something I hope you find reasonably practical as a writing prompt:
Conjure a person in mind. Think of their character over time as a map of distances between points, perches, dots. Connect the dots, a constellation charted over time. That’s your portrait.
Maybe leave it at that today: make a connect-the-dots portrait. If you want to write, perhaps choose a subset of six or seven dots (the key stars in your constellation) and annotate each one with a single sentence. A life, in six or seven sentences. A life as a migrating path from center to new center.