The following record traces a continuous thread of vitality through the ages, from the towering figures of antiquity to the very masters of my own lineage. It is a testament to the efficacy of our philosophy. Historically, those who dedicated themselves to this court craft lived an average of 18.9 years longer than the healthy…
The Architecture of Longevity: A Unified Theory of Court Craft and Biological Resilience The historical record reveals the masters of court craft—consistently outlived their peers by a significant margin. This paper posits that this longevity was not an accident of genetics or wealth, but a biological dividend of a shared 3-dimensional philosophy. Whether directing the…
To look at my family tree is to see a map of a London that has largely slipped away. In the 1960s and 70s, we weren’t just living near the City; we were the very people who kept its historic heart beating. From the markets to the livery halls, every member of the family practiced…
For forty years, a recurring dream visited my sleep with the regularity of a heartbeat. It was a strange, fragmented vision: a single flower resting on a conveyor belt—a small, fragile piece of beauty moving through a mechanical world. Then, a sudden, deafening bang would shatter the air. In the darkness that followed, I would…
In the autumn of 1977, London was a city of stark contrasts. I was a young boy just starting his first term at Sir Philip Magnus School, the world felt like it was expanding. The transition from primary school to the imposing corridors of secondary school was a rite of passage, marked by the rush…
In the wake of the ‘No Kings’ sentiment that surged through the United States in 2025, one is forced to ask a pragmatic question: Does the presence of a powerless, hereditary monarch actually serve as a vital safeguard for the common citizen? To the modern eye, the Crown appears an anachronism; yet, to the student…
When Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote Ozymandias in 1817, he was captivated by the news of a massive fragment of a statue of Ramesses II arriving at the British Museum. The poem he produced is perhaps the most famous meditation on the transience of power, yet for those who work with stone, the most compelling figure…
In the lineage of a creative life, there is often a single point of departure that defines the horizon. For me, that moment arrived over twenty years ago with my fourth masterpiece. It was a physical interrogation of Jacques Brel’s 1959 recording of “Ne me quitte pas,” rendered in marble. It represented a seismic shift…