On Monday, we returned home from a twelve-day Airstream journey to Western North Carolina. I had been getting the best sleep. But, for whatever reason, my first night back in Raleigh was a sleepless one. My own magic formula didn’t work.
Well, it didn’t work for falling asleep, but it did make my time in bed productive. During the reflection, I did a Rose-Thorn-Bud exercise on Living From The Airstream.
Roses
Thorns
Buds
In the spirit of the season, I wrote one of my favorite stories to tell. In 1999, I walked into a Durham movie theater believing The Blair Witch Project was a real documentary.
I walked out questioning what “real” even means.
From found footage to deepfakes, I explore how our sense of truth can be edited — and how I learned to write the script for my own reality.
I recorded the episode at Mama Gertie’s Campground in Swannanoa, North Carolina, surrounded by mountain views and morning fog.
Read the story on Medium: I Thought The Blair Witch Was Real
Watch or listen on your favorite platform:
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Highlight Essay of the Week
This week’s featured essay comes from Melinda Fargo aka Dear Flamingo. In “63-Year-Old Teenager Revisits Her College Application Essay and the Question of Masking,” she looks back on a lifetime of performing for approval — then asks what’s left when the masks finally come off.
It’s a beautiful mirror to this week’s Authbition episode. While my story wrestles with what’s real in a world of found footage and deepfakes, Melinda’s explores what’s real within ourselves after decades of adaptation. Both point to the same truth: authenticity isn’t a single act, it’s a lifelong unmasking.
Thank you for taking the time to read, listen, and watch Authbition. I appreciate you.
Sharing Authbition with your friends and letting me know what resonates is the energy that keeps this podcast journey exploring deeper.
Thank you for reading.
Health, happiness, kindness, respect
for every being and all things.
— Andrew