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Once you can notice a sensation without immediately categorizing it, the next question becomes: what happens the moment you do categorize it? That is the territory of the Doric stage. Building on the Tuscan foundation introduced earlier in the week, this episode examines the layer of consciousness where the mind starts doing what it is designed to do, sorting experience into named, functional categories and drawing the boundary between self and world.
Brian describes this as the construction of the self's operating system. The Doric is where you stop sensing brightness and start recognizing the sun. It is structurally strong and functionally necessary, but like the Doric column itself, it is heavy and plain. The same categorization process that lets you navigate the world efficiently is also where misconceptions get locked into the system. If you misidentified a Tuscan-level sensation early in life and gave it the wrong Doric label, that mislabeling will distort every layer of analysis built on top of it.
The episode closes with a practical exercise: notice moments in your day when you move from raw sensation to a named experience. Sit with the gap between those two things. That gap is where the Tuscan ends and the Doric begins, and understanding it is what makes later stages of development possible.
Structure is not the enemy of growth, but structure that goes unexamined eventually becomes a cage.
By Brian MattocksOnce you can notice a sensation without immediately categorizing it, the next question becomes: what happens the moment you do categorize it? That is the territory of the Doric stage. Building on the Tuscan foundation introduced earlier in the week, this episode examines the layer of consciousness where the mind starts doing what it is designed to do, sorting experience into named, functional categories and drawing the boundary between self and world.
Brian describes this as the construction of the self's operating system. The Doric is where you stop sensing brightness and start recognizing the sun. It is structurally strong and functionally necessary, but like the Doric column itself, it is heavy and plain. The same categorization process that lets you navigate the world efficiently is also where misconceptions get locked into the system. If you misidentified a Tuscan-level sensation early in life and gave it the wrong Doric label, that mislabeling will distort every layer of analysis built on top of it.
The episode closes with a practical exercise: notice moments in your day when you move from raw sensation to a named experience. Sit with the gap between those two things. That gap is where the Tuscan ends and the Doric begins, and understanding it is what makes later stages of development possible.
Structure is not the enemy of growth, but structure that goes unexamined eventually becomes a cage.

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