The Shadows of Britannia: A Tale of Truth and Treachery

A play written by Chat-GPT4.o using the following prompt:

In the style of Shakespeare, create a riveting 7500 word story with a key story thread of evil versus good. In building the story, use characters with names the same of the key people involved in the UK Post Office Horizon Inquiry (both the KCs interviewing people and the people being interviewed). If any of the actual names can be modified slightly to give them a more Macbeth, Hamlet or Romeo and Juliet based character feel, then please do modify the names. Use phrases from the Inquiry transcripts (located here: https://postofficeinquiry.dracos.co.uk/phases-5-6/) as quotations in the story as you build it. Make sure the story has a beginning (scene setting and introducing then building up the characters personalities and depth), some surprising revelations between the characters (again, sourced largely from the inquiry transcripts – https://postofficeinquiry.dracos.co.uk/phases-5-6/), and then a twist in the plot towards the end, that no one would expect. Write this story as if you were writing exactly as Shakespeare would have written. Make it an intriguing, tragicomedy type feel throughout the story. Pick one of the people interviewed in the UK Post Office Inquiry the key protagonist. Ensure to use their words from the transcripts to gradually reveal them for the true person that they are. You must read all of the transcripts located (here: https://postofficeinquiry.dracos.co.uk/phases-5-6/) and chose the characters very carefully.

The following is all Chat-GPT4.o:

Play Title: The Shadows of Britannia: A Tale of Truth and Treachery

Setting: In the vast and venerable kingdom of Britannia, where tradition and power intertwine, the royal court stands as the epicentre of justice and governance. Yet, beneath its grandiose surface, the court is shadowed by secrets, lies, and the pervasive grip of corruption.

At the heart of this turmoil lies the UK Post Office, an institution once revered for its role in the kingdom’s daily life, now tainted by the notorious Horizon computer system. This system, intended to bring order and efficiency, has instead sown discord, mistrust, and ruin among those it was meant to serve. The kingdom’s leaders, entangled in the web of deception spun by the malfunctioning Horizon, must now confront the ghosts of their past decisions.

As truth and treachery battle for supremacy, the fate of Britannia hangs in the balance.

List of Characters:

  1. Timotheus Parker
    Role: Protagonist, wavering leader
    Personality: A man of high position but weak conviction, Timotheus is burdened by the weight of leadership. His memory falters, and his decisions are often clouded by self-doubt. He is a figure caught between loyalty and the unsettling realization of the truth.
  2. Paulina Vennells
    Role: Antagonist, manipulative strategist
    Personality: A cunning and calculating figure, Paulina uses her charm and authority to manipulate those around her. She is deeply involved in the court’s intrigues, using her influence to maintain control over the narrative surrounding the kingdom’s troubles.
  3. Garethus Jenkins
    Role: Loyal servant, truth-seeker
    Personality: Garethus is a diligent and loyal servant of the court, committed to uncovering the truth. His persistence and keen observation make him a formidable ally in the quest for justice.
  4. David Smythe
    Role: Secondary protagonist, cautious advisor
    Personality: A wise and cautious man, David serves as an advisor to Timotheus. He is aware of the court’s undercurrents and offers counsel, though he harbours his own fears about the unfolding events.
  5. Rodrigo Ismay
    Role: Inconsequential character, overlooked figure
    Personality: Rodrigo is a minor figure whose contributions go largely unnoticed. Though he offers useful information, his efforts are not central to the resolution of the story and his role remains marginal.
  6. Alicent Perkins
    Role: Sharp strategist, truth’s ally
    Personality: Alicent is a strategic thinker with a sharp mind, playing a crucial role in navigating the complexities of the court. Her insights and contributions are vital in revealing the kingdom’s hidden truths.
  7. Jarnail Singho
    Role: Misguided jester
    Personality: Jarnail is a court jester whose bizarre ideas and nonsensical speech often lead to confusion. He is a figure of tragicomedy, his absurdity masking the serious implications of his actions and words.
  8. Roderic Willoughby
    Role: Conspirator, conflicted advisor
    Personality: Roderic is a conflicted character, caught between loyalty to the court and the moral dilemmas he faces. His role in the conspiracy adds layers to the unfolding drama.
  9. Alan Batesto
    Role: Hero, determined truth-seeker
    Personality: Alan is a steadfast and brave figure who fights for justice. His determination to uncover the truth makes him one of the key heroes of the story.
  10. Juliet Hamilton
    Role: Ultimate hero, moral compass
    Personality: Juliet is the embodiment of resilience and courage. Her fight for justice, despite overwhelming odds, makes her the true hero of the story. Her testimony and unwavering commitment to truth are central to the resolution.
  11. KC Beere
    Role: Wise interviewer, unrelenting truth-seeker
    Personality: KC Beere is the wise and discerning interviewer whose relentless pursuit of the truth uncovers layers of deceit within the court. His role is crucial in bringing justice to the kingdom.

******************************
The Play Structure
******************************

Act I: The Shadows Gather

Scene 1: The Court of Britannia
In the royal court of Britannia, Timotheus Parker, the troubled leader, reflects on his past decisions, especially his ambiguous luncheon with Alice Perkins. Paulina Vennells enters, her presence commanding and calculating, setting the tone for the court’s manipulations. The scene introduces the key players and establishes the dark undertones of the kingdom, focusing on the UK Post Office and the notorious Horizon computer system, whose failures have cast a shadow over the realm.

Scene 2: The Marketplace
In a bustling marketplace, Gareth Jenkins interacts with the common folk, gathering whispers about the kingdom’s growing unrest. Rodrigo Ismay, a minor and overlooked figure, appears, offering his insights, though his contributions are destined to be inconsequential. The scene ends with a foreboding sense, as the characters unknowingly inch closer to the looming conflict.


Act II: The Conflict Unfolds

Scene 1: The Courtroom
The courtroom is tense as Alice Perkins enters, keenly analysing the hidden intentions within the court. Her strategic mind begins to piece together the tangled web of deceit. Jarnail Singh, the buffoonish jester, arrives with his bizarre and nonsensical ideas, providing tragicomic relief. His absurd proclamations further confuse the courtiers, highlighting the underlying chaos.

Scene 2: The Conspiracy Thickens
In a dimly lit chamber, Rodric Williams grapples with his loyalty and the moral implications of the ongoing conspiracies. He converses with Alan Batesto, who is resolute in his quest for justice. Alan’s determination contrasts sharply with Rodric’s wavering stance, setting the stage for the inevitable clash between truth and treachery.


Act III: The Revelations

Scene 1: The Confrontation
KC Beere confronts Timotheus Parker in a pivotal moment, demanding answers about the leadership’s failure to address the growing issues with the Horizon system. Timotheus, plagued by doubt and failing memory, struggles to justify his actions. The scene highlights the court’s descent into chaos as the truth begins to unravel.

Scene 2: The Unveiling
Belinda Cortez steps forward, exposing the flawed governance and the deep-seated issues within the kingdom. Her revelations shake the court, with Paulina Vennells attempting to justify her actions as being for the greater good. The tension rises as the court faces the grim reality of its internal corruption.


Act IV: The Twist

Scene 1: The Realization
As the depth of Paulina’s manipulations becomes clear, the court is faced with a moral crisis. KC Beere challenges Paulina’s fear of uncovering the full truth, while Rodric Williams begins to question his role in the deception. The scene sets the stage for a reckoning, where the forces of good must confront the entrenched corruption.

Scene 2: The Heroes Rise
Jo Hamilton, who has endured great suffering in her pursuit of justice, emerges as the story’s true hero. Her speech resonates deeply, inspiring the court to rally behind the cause of truth. Alongside KC Beere and Alan Batesto, Jo forms the moral backbone of the narrative, preparing to face the final battle against deceit.


Act V: The Resolution

Scene 1: The Court of Justice
The court gathers one last time to deliver justice. Timotheus Parker, now humbled, acknowledges his past mistakes and pledges to lead with integrity. KC Beere emphasises the importance of embracing the truth, no matter the cost, signalling the kingdom’s rebirth in the light of justice.

Scene 2: The Celebration
In the grand halls of Britannia, the atmosphere is one of triumph and renewal. Jo Hamilton, KC Beere, and Alan Batesto are honoured as the heroes who restored honour to the kingdom. Jo, ever humble, dedicates the victory to the people of Britannia, ensuring that justice prevails not just for the present but for future generations.

******************************
The Play
******************************

Act I: The Shadows Gather

Scene 1: The Court of Britannia

In the majestic yet ominous court of Britannia, the audience is introduced to the key players. Timotheus Parker stands at the centre, his troubled mind reflecting the kingdom’s growing unease.

Timotheus Parker: “I met Alicent for lunch before I began. As far as I can recall, that was the conversation that I had with her. A simple luncheon, yet I feel the weight of a thousand questions unanswered”.

Paulina Vennells enters, her demeanour cold and calculating. She speaks with authority, her words carefully chosen to influence those around her.

Paulina Vennells: “We must keep the situation under review. Expectations are high, yet we must tread carefully, lest we uncover what ought to remain hidden”.

Scene 2: The Marketplace

In the bustling marketplace, Garethus Jenkins mingles with the common folk, gathering whispers and rumours that swirl around the kingdom’s troubled state.

Garethus Jenkins: “There is but three of them tasked with the truth, yet they have found nothing. The people grow restless, expecting revelations that do not come”.

Enter Rodrigo Ismay, a modest figure whose integrity is unrecognised by many.

Rodrigo Ismay: “Sir, yes. It may be that the lines of questioning are not clear, yet the duty to uncover the truth remains”.

The scene ends with a sense of foreboding, as the shadows gather over the court of Britannia.


Act II: The Conflict Unfolds

Scene 1: The Courtroom

The courtroom is filled with tension as Alicent Perkins enters, her sharp mind already at work, deciphering the hidden intentions of those around her.

Alicent Perkins: “It is very important that when you take over as chair, you are well appraised of the views, both positive and negative. For in these opinions, the truth lies buried”.

Enter Jarnail Singho, the jester, who immediately draws attention with his outlandish ideas and confusing rhetoric.

Jarnail Singho: “Aye, I say, ’tis not the copulation of minds that brings truth, but the pure flow of letters, for I am but a mailbox, a conduit of thoughts, unworthy of deep reflection”.

The courtiers exchange puzzled glances, some laughing, others concerned by Jarnail’s bizarre proclamations.

KC Beere: “Jarnail, dost thou have any sense in thy words?”

Jarnail Singho: “I know not wherefore I speak, but speak I must, for the words tumble from my lips as leaves in autumn, scattered and without purpose”.

The scene closes with a mix of amusement and unease, as the court grapples with Jarnail’s absurdity.

Scene 2: The Conspiracy Thickens

Roderic Willoughby enters the dimly lit chamber, where secrets are whispered, and alliances are tested.

Roderic Willoughby: “Their stance is that they will keep investigating until they reach the truth, yet what is truth but a reflection of our desires? Should we not guide it where we will?”.

Alan Batesto appears, resolute in his quest for justice. He confronts the conspirators, his voice ringing with determination.

Alan Batesto: “For too long have we lingered in the shadows. The time for truth is upon us, and I shall not rest until it is revealed”.

The tension builds as the forces of good and evil prepare for the inevitable clash.


Act III: The Revelations

Scene 1: The Confrontation

KC Beere stands before Timotheus Parker, his questions cutting through the fog of doubt and uncertainty.

KC Beere: “When thou didst walk into the company, didst thou make any inquiries? Didst thou seek the counsel of those who knew the truth?”.

Timotheus Parker falters, his memory betraying him.

Timotheus Parker: “I can’t recall. Can I make a comment on that? My mind is clouded, and the past slips through my grasp”.

KC Beere: “It is not enough to claim ignorance, Timotheus. The truth demands more than mere recollection; it requires action”.

Scene 2: The Unveiling

Belinda Cortez steps forward, her voice firm and unwavering as she lays bare the flaws in the kingdom’s governance.

Belinda Cortez: “We have concerns about the pace of progress, for the path to truth is slow and fraught with obstacles. Yet we cannot allow these delays to obscure our purpose”.

The court listens intently as Belinda continues, her words revealing the depth of the kingdom’s troubles and her voice gaining strength as she exposes the layers of deceit that have plagued the kingdom’s governance.

Belinda Cortez: “The reports sent to Second Sight on the 29th of November were not just mere documents; they were the keystones of our defence. Yet, what came back to us? A series of reports that, instead of clarifying, only further clouded the truth. Three were sent back for restructuring—rewriting, for they had not addressed the key issues. What does this tell us? That the truth was there, but only in parts, obscured by incompetence or perhaps, by design?”.

The courtiers murmur amongst themselves, some in agreement, others in disbelief.

Paulina Vennells tries to interrupt, but KC Beere silences her with a raised hand.

KC Beere: “Paulina, the time for evasions is over. We seek the whole truth now, not fragments. These delays, these misdirections—they are the tools of those who fear the light of justice”.

Paulina Vennells: “We cannot allow this to continue. I have done what I must to protect the kingdom, yet it seems that protection has become a veil, hiding more than it reveals. But was it not for the greater good?”.

The tension in the room is palpable as the truth begins to surface, but the final piece of the puzzle has yet to be revealed.


Act IV: The Twist

Scene 1: The Realization

The realization begins to dawn on the assembly: the extent of Paulina’s manipulations and the rot that has taken hold in the heart of the kingdom.

Paulina Vennells: “We cannot allow the scheme to stray into areas beyond Horizon. It was never meant to cover such a vast expanse. If we do not rein it in, what might we uncover? And is that not a danger in itself?”.

KC Beere: “Your fears, Paulina, are those of a woman who has walked too close to the edge, fearing not the fall, but the truth at the bottom of the precipice. The truth, however, must be faced, no matter how dark”.

Roderic Willoughby, who has stood by Paulina’s side through the conspiracies, begins to waver.

Roderic Willoughby: “But, my lady, if the truth remains hidden, are we not all but conspirators in this grand deception? And what then of our honour?”.


Scene 2: The Heroes Rise

The time has come for those of courage and integrity to take their stand. Juliet Hamilton, who has remained steadfast in her pursuit of justice despite overwhelming adversity, steps forward.

Juliet Hamilton: “I have stood at the gates of despair, seen my life torn asunder by lies and falsehoods. But I would not yield, for I knew that the truth was on my side. And now, in this hall, I see that truth finally taking its rightful place”.

Her words resonate deeply with the assembly, and the courtiers look to her as the true moral compass of the kingdom.

KC Beere: “Juliet, your strength in this dark hour is what will guide us forward. We shall not rest until the full light of truth shines upon this kingdom. We owe it not just to ourselves, but to the generations that will come after”.

Alan Batesto joins KC Beere and Juliet Hamilton, forming a triad of righteousness.

Alan Batesto: “The truth is no longer a matter of choice; it is a necessity. We shall fight for it, not with swords, but with the unyielding blade of justice”.

Together, they prepare for the final battle—a battle not of arms, but of will, against the forces of deceit and manipulation that have taken hold of Britannia.


Act V: The Resolution

Scene 1: The Court of Justice

The court convenes one last time. The truth has been laid bare for all to see. Timotheus Parker, once a figure of ambiguity, now stands humble before his peers.

Timotheus Parker: “I see now the errors of my ways. Let truth and justice guide us henceforth. No more shall we allow shadows to govern our decisions. The kingdom shall be led by the light of integrity, not the darkness of deception”.

KC Beere steps forward, addressing the assembly with a solemn tone.

KC Beere: “Let this be a lesson to all who hold power. The truth, though it may be hidden for a time, will always find its way to the surface. And when it does, it is our duty to embrace it, no matter the cost. Today, justice has prevailed, and the kingdom is reborn in the light of truth”.


Scene 2: The Celebration

In the grand halls of Britannia, the atmosphere is jubilant. The kingdom celebrates the triumph of truth and justice. Juliet Hamilton, KC Beere, and Alan Batesto are honoured as the heroes who restored honour to the court.

Juliet Hamilton, still humble, addresses the crowd.

Juliet Hamilton: “I am but a servant of justice. The real honour belongs to the people of Britannia, who stood steadfast in their pursuit of the truth. It is for them that we fought, and it is for them that we shall continue to serve”.

The play ends with a sense of hope and renewal. The shadows that once darkened the court have been dispelled, and Britannia stands united under the banner of truth and justice.

Curtain falls.

Food for thought, vultures & readers: A zeugma adventure

by Amber Older, Simon Ferrari and Willow Older 

This 1250-word story was created by a tribe of three Kiwis located in three different cities and across two different time zones, countries and hemispheres. It was composed over 23 days and nights in September 2021 via a contiguous series of WhatsApp messages. The rules were simple:

  1. Each story fragment must comprise two sentences and one zeugma*.
  2. Authors must alternate their posts. 
  3. There can be no collusion between authors.

*Zeugma is the authors’ favourite literary device – defined as a single verb used to simultaneously apply to multiple subjects in an unexpected fashion. Up until now, zeugma was best exemplified in Joseph Conrad’s 1902 novella, Heart of Darkness: “It was food for thought and also for vultures.”

Today, we’re boldly challenging Conrad’s claim to zeugma fame. We invite you to experience our zeugmasterpiece as it unfolded on WhatsApp…

Egad, It’s The e-Epoch

To mark the 20th anniversary of the IT industry’s Y2K excitement and the subsequent Dot-com bubble pop sequel, the time feels right to publish an article I wrote in February 2000 for which I never found a channel to publish. It’s remained hitherto unseen by anyone. But before I take you back 20 years in my own words, here’s a table that will provide you some references points to anchor your mind in the direction I’ll be taking you:

* This was the best I could do – please feel free to correct me if this is wrong.

** Benji Madden & Joel Madden are members of the rock band Good Charlotte, and were born on the very day of the Dot-com Bubble Burst.

OK, so with those references points, here it is, my original unpublished February 2000 story in its full, unedited, sardonic originality:

From the industry that brought you such memorable Three and Four Letter Acronyms as Y2K, CBT, IBM and RTFM comes a new epoch of nomenclature that will save litres of laser printer ink and oodles of OOS cases. Gone are the days of TLAs and FLAs. The computer industry has moved on to e-LAs. That’s Electronic Letter Acronyms.

In the early days of personal computing – the 70s and 80s – people began using computer-based communication facilities to send each other messages. To distinguish this new form of message communication from the traditional hand-delivered postal mail method, the process was called “electronic mail”. People soon became tired of this long and unwieldy phrase and so it was sensibly shortened to “e-mail”.

Within a decade, this term has become a household buzz-phrase. Soon after, the abbreviating of the word electronic to a simple e- crept into more than just mail. Now the industry is spiraling out of control with new e-LAs crawling out of the ether daily. There are e-go maniacs clambering over each other to create the next e-LA. We’ve got e-commerce, e-government and e-business, egad.

There are “experts” on national television claiming that the new millennium is “the millennium of e-commerce”. If we’re still talking e-bollocks in the year 2500 let alone 2990 then I’ll eat my e-hat, wires and all. This statement is as ludicrous as claiming in the year 1000 that the new millennium would be the millennium of the feather pen.

The real reason for this flurry of e-LAs is that the computer industry has a surplus of consultants post-Y2K and the IT Marketing and Sales teams are looking for ways to get them employed and generate a post-Y2K buck.

It’s only a matter of time before some TLA-loving e-gghead puts binary-one and binary-one together and comes up with the first e-TLA hybrid like RTFe-M.

One new e-nnoying trend that is emerging in this new naming spree should be shunned by all e-phobes and purists alike. This trend involves the creation of an e-LA from a non-word, and example being “e-conomy”. Now, correct me if I’m wrong but isn’t this referring to the “electronic conomy”? What on earth is a conomy? A gathering of short criminals? Two other equally offensive terms are e-tailer (electronic tailers for sheep?) and e-vent (electronic vents?).

What will this e-revolution mean to the topology of the English dictionary? No longer will there be a fair and reasonable balance between A and Z. We’ll all be using three volumes: A to D, e-, and E to Z.

Where will this e-LA wave end? How many e-diots will be left washed up on the beach of e-Hype? This e-xasperating e-vil must be stopped. We must be e-mancipated from the tide that has reached e-mergency levels. Let’s end this e-poch e-mmediately.

2020 Postnote: It’s pleasing to say that the e- prefix lost as much popularity as the Dot-com investors lost money. This story was borne out of frustration with the level of IT hype that had built around the millennium, and my tolerance burst in February 2000. The Dot-com bubble burst on 11 March 2000 was, in my view, a necessary hype correction in a maturing IT industry.

12 Questions for Jordan Peterson

Having heard Jordan B. Peterson (JP) speak in February 2019 as an ‘alien’ in the audience, I shared my uninformed (Part 1) experience, and vowed to read his 12 Rules for Life and then write a more informed Part 2. Wow! Here we go…

12 Rules covers some pretty wide ground, from Adam and Eve, to Solzhenitsyn and Tolstoy, 50 Shades, to Lobsters, observations of parental control in airports, to Gulags and concentration camps, Freud and Captain Hook, to a “thumb-cocked flick of the index finger on a small hand”, Mao and Tao, Ying and Yang, to serial killers’ inner thoughts, and all the way to Dominance Hierarchies and Willful Blindness. There’s something for everyone in this hefty tome. Even for JP himself (other than royalties and arguments).

The Foreword

Written by a great mate of JP’s, fellow Canadian and Psyc – Norman Doidge – there’s a clear admiration between the two. Norman lays out a pretty compelling argument for why his friend is not right- or left-wing. His family’s Nazi-oppressed past has sharpened “not only radar, but underwater sonar for right-wing bigotry“. JP, in his view, is exactly the person to combat it. Useful (if not a little suspicion-arousing) to have this so compellingly staked out so early in the book.

Norman provides an interesting commentary on the leftist postmodern thesis, claiming that “they” lose all non-judgemental inclinations when you “scccccratccch the most clever postmodern-relativist professor’s Mercedes with a key, and you will see how fast the mask of relativism (with its pretense that there can be neither right nor wrong) and the cloak of radical tolerance come off“! An interesting scenario to contemplate. The description is so graphic and emotive that I can’t help wonder how many Mercs have been scccccratccched as a result of it. I’d imagine there may be a few clever Merc-driving anti-postmodern-relativist professors with their cars in the panel shop as a result of confusion over their political leanings.

The statement also left me wondering how Norm’s radar (let alone his underwater sonar) was tracking that comment.

Like all good friends, Norman calls out a quality that attracted him to JP, and that is his “enthusiasm of a kid who had just learned something new and had to share it. He seemed to be assuming, as a child would – before learning how dulled adults can become – that if he thought something was interesting, then so might others.“. This, I’ve learned recently is neoteny, the retention of juvenile features in the adult. A trait I have recently come to understand and admire too.

As a meandering, sometimes-lazy reader, I’ve always maintained ‘a good foreword is a short foreword’, and for this (and a few other reasons) I can’t classify this book as having one.

The Rules

As the title suggests, there are 12 of them. And if you read the rule titles, you would be able to anticipate what they covered. The titles are very succinct and clear in their intent. Or so you may think.

How the rules play out is a little different. The pattern is typically:

  • Rule title
  • Rule introduction
  • Rule detail – involving deep, complex, sometimes-tangled, Bible-referenced quotes, which combine to easily (and accidentally?) confuse an average-intellect reader like me
  • The Trough of Disillusionment – where this reader forgot the Rule Title and what relevance the detail has to it
  • Rule conclusion – where two or three paragraphs attempt to save the reader from the Trough, stitching some of the detail together, with the rule title repeated as the last sentence.

If you’re time-poor or detail-intolerant, you could ‘read’ the book by reading each Rule through to the bit where God or Eve or Solzhenitsyn or a Lobster or Mao or Tolstoy is mentioned, then skip to the last three paragraphs of the chapter. In fact, I would recommend this.

Here are some highlights or low-lights from each Rule as I experienced them:

Rule 1: Stand Up Straight With Your Shoulders Back

This Rule could be renamed Behave Like Lobsters, because that’s the message! It introduces the Dominance Hierarchy of lobsters, but it feels like a justification for ‘haves’ and ‘have lessers’. It also fringes on justifying bullying, although I’m sure this is not intentional. It took me back to the unofficial Turkish road code, which, I was told is: “Give way to the bigger vehicle“.

In the underwater world, at the bottom of the ocean where Lobsters lead the way for male/female human relations, 50 Shades of Grey and Beauty and the Beast are used to explain that women like a dominant, irritable man who can be “properly charmed” into becoming a partner because women like these stories as much as men like pornography, and because this is what female lobsters have done to their grumpy male counterparts for 150 million years. Norm’s sonar must have pinged somewhat while he waded through this quagmire of cringe.

I suspect there are as many women who have not read or seen 50 Shades of Grey as have seen it, and of those who have, more who didn’t enjoy it. So using 50 Shades to draw this conclusion about female/male relations would appear at best weak and at worst simply wrong. I’m also pretty confident that female lobsters (if they could read) would agree with their majority human counterparts.

It was Easter Sunday morning that I found myself nearing the end of Rule 1, perched on the edge of the sofa, leaning forward, hunched over the book in my dressing gown reading “So, attend carefully to your posture. Quit dropping and hunching around.“.

I could only laugh out loud.

Rule 2: Treat Yourself Like Someone You Are Responsible For Helping

Heaven and Hell. Adam and Eve. Snakes and self-consciousness. This Rule covers some phenomenal territory.

Here JP delves deep into a key theme that “life is suffering“, that the world is a “hothouse of doom“, elaborating on the “self-evident horrors of existence“, the “tragedy of existence” and “the suffering attendant upon existence as the irreducible truth of Being“.

Wowser, please don’t read this Rule when you’re feeling low.

He also introduces chaos and order in great detail, and I could identify with some aspects of his positioning, like “When your tax return has been filed, that’s order. When you’re audited,  that’s chaos. Most people would rather be mugged than audited“. But then he ruins it all by his reasoning that order is symbolically associated with masculinity. Chaos, with the feminine. The latter, he claims, is obvious because everything we come to “know” is born “of the unknown, just as all beings we encounter were born of mothers“.

This is after he’s staked out an angle that it’s Eve’s fault that all women make men self-conscious because Eve did first when she shared the forbidden fruit with Adam. And women continue to make men self-conscious now “primarily by rejecting them – but they also do it by shaming them, if men do not take responsibility“.

This rule leaves me contemplating my “miserable existence“, thinking about JP’s wife and what her existence must be like, and wondering why Rule 2’s title is not “Read Whatever You Like Into Stories From The Bible”.

Rule 3 – Make Friends With People Who Want The Best From You

Maybe you are saving someone because you are a strong, generous, well-put-together person who wants to do the right thing. But it’s also possible – and, perhaps, more likely – that you just want to draw attention to your inexhaustible reserves of compassion and good-will. Or maybe your saving someone because you want to convince yourself that the strength of your character is more than just a side effect of your luck and your birthplace. Or maybe it’s because it’s easier to look virtuous when standing alongside someone utterly irresponsible.”

Page 79

This Rule’s title makes the most sense to me, without reading the chapter. It’s quite self-evident and good advice. The detail tends to align to the Rule, although I was left with two key observations:

  1. JP talks a lot here about dominance hierarchy, aiming up (or down), and makes judgments of people in the hierarchy with statements like “not everyone who is failing is a victim, and not everyone at the bottom wishes to rise” and “Down is a lot easier than up“.
  2. JP doesn’t trust people’s decisions to help others noting a reason you might be helping someone “up” is “just to look good”, describing that as “camouflaging your vice with virtue“.

It was here that I first wondered whether JP’s views are skewed by the contact he has with people seeking out his professional services as a psychologist – people in need of help due to challenges in their lives now or in the past. Is this the majority of his contact, and is this why he has quite a negative, cynical, distorted, possible even broken view of people and society? If he had a more balanced engagement with humankind, would his views be different?

Rule 4: Compare Yourself To Who You Were Yesterday, Not To Who Someone Else Is Today

This was the first rule to score a positive (+3) on my ‘How did that rule feel?’ scale of -10 to +10, which I started tracking when I began reading the 12 Rules. The headline advice is sound and sage.

And finally, the word “kindness” is used in the book, when JP talks of a using a nurturing voice to provide encouragement to the critic within. He talks of getting yourself off the couch and doing the dishes, by the kind voice offering a reward of a coffee once the dishes are done.

There’s advice on aiming to make life a little better each day – growth mindset thinking – and it’s reassuring to know that JP buys into this. He practically encourages the reader to ask what could I do, that I would do, to make life a little better? He also suggests the following three questions in sequence are helpful in managing your own circumstances, and I’d have to agree:

  1. What is it that is bothering me?
  2. Is that something I could fix?
  3. Would I actually be willing to fix it?

But like most of the JP Rules, in the midst of this sense-making, he heads off into implausible logic that refutes anyone’s claim that they are an Atheist by arguing that they cannot possible be, saying “No, you’re not” noting “You’re simply not an atheist in your actions, and it is your actions that most reflect your deepest beliefs…You are too complex to understand yourself.

Jan Hellriegel makes the same point this Rule’s title promises to make in her Sportsman of the Year podcast with a tenth the words and 100x the vividness, when she uses the swim-lane analogy: Don’t look at the people in your neighbouring lanes (that can only slow you down), focus on your own action and direction you’re heading.

Rule 5: Do Not Let Your Children Do Anything That Makes You Dislike Them

Bullying rarely manifests itself in grown-up society [was this a typo, and “really” was intended?]

The basic premise of this Rule is: you need to discipline your child because if you don’t,  society eventually will, and it’ll be harsher than the timeout or rebuke or “A thumb-cocked flick of the index finger on a small hand” that you would administer as a parent.

I found the finger-flicking consequence for bad behaviour a little disturbing, given the precision with which it is described – down to the specific finger that should be used.

I also found the anecdotal evidence presented in this Rule on how parents are parenting “these days” a little flimsy and unhelpful for the points being made. And while there were plenty of footnote references, I had already lost enthusiasm for looking JP’s references up after the first two I searched up from Rule 1 either did not exist (38) or was only available in French (68).

I struggled to get past the view that an “unstated goal of many a mother, including many who consider themselves advocates for full gender equality” is to “produce a little God-Emperor [out of their son] of the Universe“.

But the most disappointing statement in this Rule (possibly even the book) occurs while JP retells a story of a 2 year old standing on his daughter’s fingers on monkey bars, when he concludes “it would have been better for him [if JP had] picked him boldly off the playground structure, and threw him 30 feet down the field“.

OK, that’s not only not ok! It’s absolutely wrong for someone with the size of following and influence that JP has to make this statement. This statement is not acceptable or forgivable. It may be OK for lobsters to write that sort of stuff, but not role models, high in the dominance hierarchy of our society.

Rule 6: Set Your House In Perfect Order Before You Criticize The World

Hang on. Is there such a thing as “perfect order“? We’re told in an earlier Rule that Order and Chaos co-exist and always will. I’d just made sense of, and bought into this by surviving Rule 2.

JP talks about starting to stop doing the things that you know to be wrong. He exhorts the reader to clean up their life. And here he gives the first piece of advice I think he needs to take himself: “Don’t blame capitalism, the radical left, or the inequity of your enemies“, and provides hope that “Perhaps you will become an ever-more-powerful force for peace and whatever is good“.

Rule 7: Pursue What Is Meaningful (Not What Is Expedient)

This Rule lays out the basic advice that we should sacrifice today in order to receive future benefit. It’s all about delayed gratification, and it’s common sense we’re all familiar with.

Why JP goes into Biblical Overdrive to make this point is unclear and unnecessary.

The encouragement of altruistic acts in this Rule felt conflicting against Rule 3’s accusation of ulterior motives at play in an act of generosity, which could be “camouflaging your vice with virtue“.

We’re exhorted to aim up. Pay attention. Fix what we can fix. Don’t be arrogant in our knowledge. Strive for humility. The last two points being further advice JP could benefit from himself.

Rule 7 was philosophically and theologically tough reading and I couldn’t help thinking it would be inaccessible for a significant number of readers (including me).

Rule 8: Tell The Truth – Or At Least, Don’t Lie

A lie is connected to everything else. It produces the same effect on the world that a single drop of sewage produces in even the largest crystal magnum of champagne.

Again, a sound piece of advice, especially when enhanced with “If you betray yourself, if you say untrue things, if you act out a lie, you weaken your character. If you have a weak character, then adversity will mow you down when it appears, as it will, inevitably.

And more sage advice in “Set your ambitions, even if you are unsure what they should be. The better ambitions have to do with the development of character and ability, rather than status and power. Status you can lose you carry character with you wherever you go, and it allows you to prevail against adversity.

A sentence on goal setting (slightly out of the blue) resonated with me, and read “If you bend everything totally, blindly and willfully towards the attainment of a goal, and only that goal, you will never be able to discover if another goal would serve you, and the world, better.” A point well made, amongst a sea of other points.

Rule 9: Assume That The Person You Are Listening To Might Know Something You Don’t

A fantastic piece of advice. I wonder how much listening JP does to people who hold views that differ from his.

This was my top ranked Rule, making it to +9. There’s a bit of humour and a lot fewer biblical references. Most of what’s said makes sense, is not burdened with emotion, and flows well.

In this Rule, he introduced a method for progressing in an argument with someone: His suggestion is to agree with each other that you will only progress in the discussion when the other party has (to the satisfaction of the first party) summarised the point the first party has made. Worth giving it a go, next time you’re heading towards an argument with someone.

Rule 10: Be Precise In Your Speech

There is great irony in this title, given how verbose and convoluted much of the book is.

The key message here is to “Say what you mean, so that you can find out what you mean. Act out what you say, so you can find out what happens. Then pay attention.

My notes on this Rule became brief as I tired of all the Rules and all the details. Perhaps, like Moses, JP should have stopped at 10.

Rule 11: Do Not Bother Children When They Are Skateboarding

After reading this Rule, my previous comment is even more relevant. While it appears JP held his stuff together all the way through the book, he goes thermonuclear in Rule 11.

The ever-present ambiguity surrounding his religious beliefs throughout the first 10 rules ends with his coming out of the alter’s closet here.

And he takes aim at many people for various reasons.

Such as the TEDx lecturer who makes a reference to Earth having too many humans on it, and JP summarises that position as “anti-human, to the core” and likens that view to Mao and the Columbine shooters.

I share a view that Earth is quite possibly over-populated, and who wouldn’t with the number of Earthlings having doubled since 1970, with over 14,000 new additions to the tally in the time that it took me to write this post, and 2,400 added to the 7.7M in the time it’s taken you to read to here. I’m also not anti-human to the core. But in direct contravention of Rules 2, 6 and 9, JP himself, would judge me as equivalent to mass murdering ideologists.

We’re told of an increasing trend that’s hollowing-out the middle class due to men marrying “across and down” while women marry “across and up” the economic dominance hierarchy. We’re also warned to beware of single-cause interpretations, which felt like an arrogant posture to take in breach of Rule 7. More importantly, I feel the reader should beware of multiple-cause and confused or confusing interpretations, which at times appear (intentionally or not) throughout the book.

JP provides evidence that men do not oppress women by citing four examples where men have acted to ease the suffering of women in menstruation and childbirth. Muruganantham (providing Indian women with sanitary pads), Simpson (inventing and evolving child birth anesthesia), Haas (with Tampax) and Pincus (with birth control) are presented as this evidence, in a ‘Men don’t oppress women, culture oppresses women.’ defense. But that’s not all. Our culture was apparently created by menace and women equally so our culture is our making. And that’s OK. We’re told.

I found this the most objectionable Rule in the book, and rated it -9 with “WTF” as the title on my chart.

Rule 12: Pet A Cat When You Encounter One On The Street

As I made my way through the final Rule thinking to myself that there’s just too much detail in this book, too many thoughts and views loosely justified with details from Russian literature, mass murderer’s writings, and the Bible, I thought that perhaps JP is over-thinking things. Over-complicating things. Breaching Rule 10.

Then, in answer to his own posited question “Can Being itself…truly be justified?“, he offers this:

“I also don’t think it is possible to answer the question by thinking. Thinking leads inexorably to the abyss…thinking collapses in on itself…in the depths – it’s noticing, not thinking that does the trick.”

So is this book misnamed? Should it be 12 Rules for Life: An Introduction to the Abyss?

He does go on to suggest that “Perhaps you might start by noticing this: when you love someone, it’s not despite their limitations. It’s because of their limitations“.

This feels almost like an acknowledgement, if not even an apology for over-thinking, over-complicating things in the book. That’s how I read that, and I felt a fraction more at ease.

Coda

There’s a final section of the book, which can be skipped in favour of a dental appointment, exam or ultra-marathon. Suffice to say in summary: JP gets a-hold of a “Pen of Light” and answers a bunch of questions.

In answer to his Pen of Light Q&A, where he asks “What shall I do with a torn nation?” he says “Stitch it back together with careful words of truth.“. And explains “we are dividing, and polarizing and drifting towards chaos. It is necessary, under such conditions, if we are to avoid catastrophe, for each of us to bring forward the truth, as we see it: not the arguments that justify our ideologies, not the machinations that further our ambitions, but the stark pure facts of our existence, revealed for others to see and contemplate, so that we can find common ground and proceed together“.

This captures the essence of my confusion over JP. The book lays out plenty of arguments that are ideological, and as I read them I am left wonder about his motivations and ambitions. Some of those arguments (including the Tertiary Institutes funded to progress views, and ‘men don’t oppress women, culture does’) certainly don’t leave me thinking JP is making them to find common ground. Many of the points JP makes are emotive, inflammatory ideologies, that are polarizing. They’re not stark pure facts, but ideologies and machinations.

My 12 Questions for Jordan B. Peterson

So in the interest of bringing more stark facts to the foreground with a goal of finding common ground, if I could, I would ask JP these questions:

  1. Who do you think is your audience for this book?
  2. Do you feel your book is tight and fully consistent? Do you care if it isn’t?
  3. Do you intend to polarize people (and do you see how you do) with this book?
  4. Do you intentionally stake out an argument on an extreme end of a spectrum (beyond where you naturally sit) to pull others toward (but not to) you, or are you actually at that end of the spectrum?
  5. It’s interesting that you think the book is an “antidote to chaos”, can you see how there is a risk some might read your book and be inspired to create it?
  6. How does your popularity and international idol status sit with you in regards to your views of how Stalin and Hitler came to power?
  7. How do your popularity and international idol status sit in regards to the Bible’s view on the hazards of idolisation?
  8. In the context of questions 5, 6 and 7, would you step back from the limelight and microphone if there was a risk you could propagate enough polarisation to contribute to a major rupture in society?
  9. In Rule 6, you encourage people not to blame “the inequity of your enemies“, and you provide hope that if your advice is taken, “Perhaps you will become an ever-more-powerful force for peace and whatever is good“. Do you spend time reflecting on how you could blame the inequity of your enemies less and focus on becoming a more-powerful force for peace?
  10. Do you think that (or do you ever contemplate whether) your views could be skewed by the contact you have through your professional interactions with people in need, and this has resulted in an overly negative, cynical, distorted, possible even broken perspective of people or society?
  11. Assuming it’s true, isn’t it a little creepy having Communist Propaganda Artwork all through your house?
  12. What legacy do you hope to leave for society?

Conclusion

Jordan B. Peterson is just another human being. Like you. Like me. Like us all. He’s been amplified and vilified and idolised by too many people. I’m not going to join any of those people. I’m going to hold on to my own integrity by acknowledging him as a fellow human being with strengths, weaknesses and biases, and then move on with my own life: taking what I chose to from his 12 Rules and leaving behind what I chose.

He’s just another human being.

What Advice Would You Give Your Younger Self?

Credit: Photoshop Time Travel by Ard Gelinck

Stop. Please don’t answer this question. Millions of people already have. Or they have published a ‘Letter to my younger self’. The Internet now has ample advice for the 1.1 billion youth on earth!

Having reflected on this question for some time, I have some advice of my own for insistent would-be answerers to consider before responding.

But first, let’s recap with some warm-up revision:

At times you’re going to question whether you made the right decision, you’ll feel alone and frustrated at your lack of progress. Don’t worry, it’s going to work out.

Mike McRoberts (TV3 NewsHub Anchor)

Be smart about what it is you want to be when you grow up.

Wendy Williams (host of The Wendy Williams Show)

Keep your options open, keep going and don’t give up. Accept everything that happens to you and then leave those things in the past.

Helena Sonar (2010 NZ Mental Health Media Grant Fellow)

You’re going to over estimate what you could do in a year and you’re going to underestimate what you could do in a decade, or in two, three, or in my case now four [decades]. Allow yourself to think in terms of decades.

Tony Robbins (self-made millionaire and motivational speaker)

I wish I could go back and tell that fella to start running, stop eating crap and stop drinking heaps of piss and just knuckle down, but that’s just what I had to learn.

Aaron Smith (All Black Half-back, 2012 – present)

An interesting and diverse arrangement of advice that gives me both hope and indigestion.

What is the purpose of this question?

It’s useful to consider why this question might be asked. I assume it is asked because there are audiences who are interested in people’s answers. There are likely to be many reasons that the answer is of interest, if not value, to those audiences, including:

  1. Self-promotion – for the answerer’s own benefit (more than the audience’s)
  2. Allowing personal reflection – for the answerer’s personal development
  3. Feeding curiosity – for those following the answerer
  4. Uncovering lessons and learnings – for those who might benefit from the answer
  5. Providing encouragement – for those who respect the answerer
  6. Accelerating others’ development – for those who aspire to succeed in the same way or field as the answerer

Typically, the person asked this question is senior, experienced and successful in their field. I’ve observed that the question is either answered for reason 1 above, or more generously for one or more of the last three reasons. And the target audience contains young people who the question asker feels could do with a leg-up.

But I see flaws in this question

Other than the small issue of time travel not yet being possible, this question has various flaws.

Who had a younger self that would actual listen to any advice an older version of themselves had to offer? As youth, the closest we have to an older version of ourselves is our parents. And let’s face it, when you were young, you probably listened to your parents less than 20% of the time. This is not to say you didn’t respect them and love them, but you can love and respect someone and still not pay a lot of attention to their advice – especially when they enter the “I have some words of wisdom that you must take heed of in order to survive, succeed or avoid catching a cold tonight” zone.

When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be twenty-one, I was astonished at how much he had learned in seven years.

Anon (although Mark Twain has been credited with saying it)

Moving past these two technicalities, let’s consider how this wisdom is experienced by an audience that wishes to learn from someone they may admire or aspire to be.

Like the audience’s parents, the advice provider is likely to be of an older generation. The lens they use to frame their world and therefore their advice is forged from yesterday’s experiences. The trans-generational gap between advice provider and receiver will result in the advice being experienced as historical, parental, if not irrelevant. This experience may be improved to an extent by the advice-recipient’s degree of admiration or aspiration.

But there’s a deeper flaw in this question that gnaws away at a fundamental privilege (and challenge) that all young people have, and that is the opportunity to create their own future.

Do our younger selves really need a leg-up? Do we really want our youthful enthusiasm, naivety and curiosity to be modified early by advice from someone 10, 20 or 40 years older? After all, what has made these people wise, successful and admired by many are the experiences they had along their way to that wisdom and success. It’s more than likely there was no fast-track, short-cut injection of sage advice that got them there. Their journey got them there.

Are we attempting (and at risk of creating) hot-house growth – that is accelerated growth in unnatural conditions to expedite production of a more perfect person. Sure, tomatoes grown in hot-houses may be easier and lower-cost to produce, and look great. But they will never beat the holistic quality of a home-grown tomato, nurtured in your own back yard. As we grow up, is there a need to rush to a finish line, or should we take the time (and weather the storms) we need to optimise our qualities?

What might be a more beautiful question?

I never expected to be able to use the phrase ‘a more beautiful question’ so soon after finishing a wonderful book with the same title by Warren Berger. But, for me, the question at hand is less useful and certainty less beautiful than it could be.

How about asking youth “What advice would you give your older self?” – a more fascinating question to consider. Have them project 30 years forward, ask them to imagine where they are and what help they may need from their youthful self. Even better, challenge them to record that advice and store it away as an advisory time capsule to be re-discovered by their older self.

Warren Berger quotes MIT’s Joi Ito, who says that “…to be lifelong learners (instead of just early-life learners), we must try to maintain or rekindle the curiosity, sense of wonder, inclination to try new things, and ability to adapt and absorb that served us so well in childhood. We must become, in a word, neotenous (neoteny being a biological term that describes the retention of childlike attributes in adulthood).

So the advisory time capsule containing youthful advice may just come in very handily, should there be a risk that the older version becomes grown-up, adult-like and, worse still, staid.

Another interesting question for grown-ups is “On what topics do you think your younger self would be interested in taking advice?”. This could stop the line of inquiry in its tracks, as the question asker and answerer consider the possible reality that the answer could fall on deaf (and probably ear-bud-wearing) ears.

Of more value and interest to a broader audience (i.e. society) is surely the answer to “What advice would you give your younger self?” provided by people who have been unfortunate or unsuccessful (in some way, so far) in their own lives. I imagine there would be a lot to learn in answers to this question from the bankrupt, divorced, homeless, and criminals, for example. In fact the neotenous qualities I foster are calling me to action that would have me gathering and sharing such answers – let’s see what time I can find for that fascinating future project!

For now, I’ll tolerate this question for the simple and primary value it represents to the answerer – providing them a chance to reflect on their own journey from youth (at best).

…and what advice would I give my younger self (if forced to!) you might ask?

I’d answer this question as follows:

Simon, if you ever get asked “What advice would you give your younger self?”, reply “None, the path my younger self will make for himself is his path not mine”.

2019 Simon to 1990 Simon

[Does this question grate with you too, or do you enjoy reading people’s answers? Do you like my alternatives? What is your answer?]

Who the hell is Jordan Peterson?

Mid-afternoon on Thursday 21 February this year, I got an offer from a good friend. He said “Hey, I have a spare ticket to Jordan Peterson this evening, do you want to come?”.

I responded, “Who is Jordan Peterson?”.

I wondered: A musician? A poet? A stand-up comedian? An Inde Rock band from Seattle? An international politician?

Completely naive to this chap, his philosophies, ideologies and even his existence, and with little time to deliberate let alone Google him, I committed. And I’m glad I did.

Recognising that I knew Jordan Peterson as well as Jordan knew me, my friend provided me a gentle warning that he could be a “little controversial at times” as we walked to the event. That was certainly helpful to know prior to passing the protestors at the entrance to the venue, who were there demanding equal rights for the transgender community.

As we entered the building and made our way to the auditorium, I closely surveyed the audience, noticing the wide array of ages, backgrounds, and races as well as a moderate gender skew in favour of males.

A public address announcement sparked up to advise that there were strict rules preventing the video or audio recording of the talk, and that heckling from the audience would not be tolerated. It wasn’t clear to me, the alien in the room, whether this last bit was a joke or dead serious. What a great pre-gig gag for Bill Bailey to have the same recording played before his shows.

Jordan B. Peterson swept on to Wellington’s Michael Fowler Centre stage 15 minutes late, to what I can only describe as a creepy standing ovation. I had searched him up before arriving and glimpsed Google’s summary, which described him as “a Canadian clinical psychologist and a professor of psychology at the University of Toronto”. In my assessment, the associated images presented him as a learned, middle-aged, wannabe-hipster who looked like a relaxed and interesting character.

The standing O was creepy for me, as I’d only experienced such things when Dire Straits came on stage at Lancaster Park in 1986 for their much-anticipated Brother’s in Arms tour, or when Brendon McCullum scored New Zealand’s first ever triple century at the Basin Reserve. I couldn’t conceive how someone I’d never heard of just five hours earlier could be receiving a standing ovation from a three-quarter full Michael Fowler Centre after arriving 15 minutes late and without having said a word. I still can’t.

He started off slowly, shaping a one-way discussion with the audience that he apparently chose minutes before, back stage. He decided tonight would be about Toxic Masculinity. As his mellifluous, well-constructed eloquence and pacing back-and-forth across the stage unfurrowed a story of his rural Canadian upbringing, we got to learn of his friend. A depressed chap. Primarily his father’s fault we’re told, but other factors such as alcohol, drugs and oppressive Canadian winters surely didn’t help.

Peppered throughout was quips and jokes, sub-stories and rhetorical questions put to the audience.

There were moments of truth that truly resonated with me. And there were moments of cringe, that made me want to break the trance of hypnosis I feared the audience were under. Like when after spending some time turning Us (the audience) against Them (anyone who utters the evil and upsetting phrase “toxic masculinity”), Jordan acknowledges a French feminist writer who he admires greatly. To me, it simply felt like a “Some of my best friends are gay” moment.

Just like Jordan, the phrase ‘Toxic Masculinity’ had also miraculously passed me by. So I had this privileged position of being able to listen to a speaker on a topic, where both were unencumbered by baggage accumulated through prior knowledge.

Seeing the lather that Jordan was working himself and the audience into over Toxic Masculinity, I really struggled to understand his concern. Sure there’s toxic masculinity. There’s also toxic femininity. Hell, there’s also toxic waterways. Sadly you don’t have to go far to find most of these things.

But if you want to do something about fixing any of them, is turning people against each other really the best way to go about it?

Would those concerned with the health of our waterways, for example, be served well to get a group of like-minded individuals in a room and set them against ‘the others’ who are causing the pollution? Perhaps pouring their efforts (and money) into understanding the causes of the pollution, understanding the people who are contributing to it (even befriending them!), and creating education campaigns may be more constructive and productive.

The structure and delivery of his talk felt designed to appear as if a conscious stream of thought. A spontaneous delivery of his deeper thoughts and concerns, all focussed on improving society and humanity in general. However, the occasional pause during delivery to allow himself to gather his emotions, steel himself or have a subtle sob – it happened when he was recalling the precious time his father had invested in him as a young boy, reading books to him at bed time, and it happened when his ‘good friend’ story approached the suicide bit – felt a little manufactured to me. Almost as if they were contrived to provide evidence of his femininity.

My ersatz radar was triggered by these choke-points, other smaller aspects of his performance, and the finale.

He took two questions “from the audience” electronically, and I was left wondering about their authenticity. Were they really from the audience or were they patsy questions Jordan had submitted himself?

One asked “What is the difference between ‘toxic masculinity’ and ‘non-toxic masculinity’?”. The other asked something like “I have delayed my suicide to attend your talk tonight. I want to take my life and will very soon, to teach my family a lesson. What advice do you have for me?”. His answer to this was two-part and, to a layman, sensible, pragmatic, grounded, compelling and hopeful.

My overwhelming feeling from the two-hour Jordan B. Peterson talk was that it was intellectual, artful, polarising entertainment.

But it’s not entertainment like you’d expect from Bic Runga, Maya Angelou, Bill Bailey, or Coldplay.

I had answered the question I had first asked upon hearing his name. He is a cult figure.

[I have purposefully written this as the ‘alien’, ignorant to the baggage Jordan B. Peterson has amassed and the pundits have gifted him. Part 2 will follow once I’ve read his book “12 Rules for Life” and done some Internet research on the character. I’m looking forward to how my informed views may alter these uninformed ones]