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Most of us move through our days labeling experiences so quickly that we never actually sit with what is happening before the label arrives. In his book A Mason's Work, Brian Mattocks argues that the tools of Freemasonry offer practical frameworks for exactly this kind of self-examination. This episode opens a week-long exploration of conscious awareness by mapping the five classical orders of architecture onto stages of human consciousness, starting with the Tuscan.
The Tuscan stage is pre-evaluative. It is the sensation of brightness before you call it sunlight, the feeling of cold before you name it cold. Brian makes the case that cultivating this baseline level of awareness, without imposing labels or judgments on top of it, functions like calibrating an instrument. The more you practice sitting with raw sensation, the more sensitive you become to the subtleties and nuances that higher-order thinking tends to smooth over. The week's arc moves toward what Brian calls integrated agency, where pure awareness and conscious choice finally operate together.
There is also a clear warning here. Staying at the Tuscan level indefinitely is not enlightenment. Without the evaluative layers that come later, awareness alone leaves you in a state of perpetual reaction, with no real ability to choose your response. This episode lays the foundation everything else this week builds on.
If you want to understand where your interpretations of experience come from, you first have to get beneath them.
By Brian MattocksMost of us move through our days labeling experiences so quickly that we never actually sit with what is happening before the label arrives. In his book A Mason's Work, Brian Mattocks argues that the tools of Freemasonry offer practical frameworks for exactly this kind of self-examination. This episode opens a week-long exploration of conscious awareness by mapping the five classical orders of architecture onto stages of human consciousness, starting with the Tuscan.
The Tuscan stage is pre-evaluative. It is the sensation of brightness before you call it sunlight, the feeling of cold before you name it cold. Brian makes the case that cultivating this baseline level of awareness, without imposing labels or judgments on top of it, functions like calibrating an instrument. The more you practice sitting with raw sensation, the more sensitive you become to the subtleties and nuances that higher-order thinking tends to smooth over. The week's arc moves toward what Brian calls integrated agency, where pure awareness and conscious choice finally operate together.
There is also a clear warning here. Staying at the Tuscan level indefinitely is not enlightenment. Without the evaluative layers that come later, awareness alone leaves you in a state of perpetual reaction, with no real ability to choose your response. This episode lays the foundation everything else this week builds on.
If you want to understand where your interpretations of experience come from, you first have to get beneath them.

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