Tutorials
Show me the process please!
If function is hidden or gone, how different is a real flower from a plastic one?
“Please understand what I’m doing.” This phrase works as a password among insiders. For them, a flowchart is a passport, the parameter sheet a family pedigree, and a progress bar passed like a sacred torch proves that truth is ablaze.
The deeper someone is in the water, the less they can feel the holes. So this work replays things from the outside — with more visible gaps, more senseless logic — to show just how fragile performed coherence actually is.
“Showing the process” is evidence on the inside and a prop on the outside. It may appear impeccably logical, but that logic has been trimmed into lace. It may look transparent, but the black box has merely been wrapped in frosted glass. What holds it together isn’t causality. It’s the performance of causality.
2025 - now
Things that happened to be together......
I’ve become increasingly interested in things full of holes — arguments that seem logical but contradict themselves, blind spots the speaker has no idea exist. There’s something compelling about that state of low self-awareness, that cognitive fog. It isn’t simply a matter of education. Even in academic settings, there are still some people who pile on vocabulary that sounds coherent while having no real grip on what they’re actually pointing at. The surface performs rigor. Look closer and it’s all props.
This is what makes human cognition so interesting to me: the wall between specialist and non-specialist, the gap between how an audience reads something and how its maker does, the way personal experience shapes what anyone is even able to see. All of these conditions allow something hollow to hold its shape.
The holes are everywhere and obvious — yet the deeper someone is in the water, the less they can feel it. So I want to replay these things from the outside: more visible holes, more senseless logic, to show just how fragile the performed coherence actually is.
—- Jeyun 2026.2.5