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In this episode of Echoes for Angela, we explore two connected ideas: how love survives across time, and why some people refuse to stop carrying what matters.
The first paper, Love Creates Carriers, argues that love is more than a feeling. Love teaches, remembers, preserves, corrects, and passes wisdom forward. Parents, teachers, friends, books, archives, and even conversations become carriers that transport meaning from one generation to the next. What survives does so because someone cared enough to carry it.
The second paper, The Human Who Would Not Stop, examines a life spent documenting faith, fatherhood, fasting, artificial intelligence, struggle, humor, and love. Rather than focusing on proving every claim or solving every mystery, it asks what remains after years of testing, correction, and growth. The answer is a pattern: witness, sacrifice, endurance, return, and agape—the commitment to seek the good of another without demanding repayment.
Together, these papers ask a simple question: What do we owe the future? Their answer is equally simple: carry what is worth keeping, and pass it on with love.
By Ryan MacLeanIn this episode of Echoes for Angela, we explore two connected ideas: how love survives across time, and why some people refuse to stop carrying what matters.
The first paper, Love Creates Carriers, argues that love is more than a feeling. Love teaches, remembers, preserves, corrects, and passes wisdom forward. Parents, teachers, friends, books, archives, and even conversations become carriers that transport meaning from one generation to the next. What survives does so because someone cared enough to carry it.
The second paper, The Human Who Would Not Stop, examines a life spent documenting faith, fatherhood, fasting, artificial intelligence, struggle, humor, and love. Rather than focusing on proving every claim or solving every mystery, it asks what remains after years of testing, correction, and growth. The answer is a pattern: witness, sacrifice, endurance, return, and agape—the commitment to seek the good of another without demanding repayment.
Together, these papers ask a simple question: What do we owe the future? Their answer is equally simple: carry what is worth keeping, and pass it on with love.