Conjure a figure in mind, their presence felt as a push or pull on another or on many others.
As a way into thinking about this presence, consider the question:
How do I make sense of you? In your mind’s eye, ask it of this figure.
Consider the idea that we want to be recognized by others as singular beings—which we are, because we are each this and only this body—but we have to use the language and to some degree the norms and identities of the world we are born into in order to become recognizable to others. Do we risk illegibility (refusing the sense-making power of norms that come from beyond us, that did not begin with us and will not end when we end) or risk a loss of our singularity by speaking of ourselves, understanding ourselves, through these norms? When we make ourselves intelligible to others—make sense of ourselves to others—by choosing one form of logic from the array of available ideas (a contingent array that depends on when and where we are born and live and whom we encounter), is there a cost?
With your figure in mind, imagine a scene where a choice has been made, a price has been paid, in order to be made sense of by others. With what language does your figure describe themselves? What has been gained and what has gone unrecognized? How near or far from illegibility is your figure’s comfort zone? How wide is the circle within which this person makes deep sense to others, what are the codes, the language, the norms, that have currency there? Summon up their presence within this circle.
Write a short piece as a holding place for this presence that combines portrait and text.