Tuesday, April 14, 2026

The Little Book of Circle Processes: A New/Old Approach To Peacemaking

 


Architecture and Morality (2004)

I am drawn to the quiet strangeness of Architecture and Morality by Glenn Brown. The figure appears ordinary at first glance: a white collared shirt, neutral background, composed posture. It is the sort of presentation that signals legitimacy, professionalism, and participation in the structured world of adulthood. Yet where I expect to encounter a face, I instead find a dense cluster of chrysanthemums. The flowers are intricate and alive with movement, curling in layered complexity that resists easy interpretation. The substitution feels intentional rather than surreal. The painting does not show a person hidden behind the flowers; it shows a person who has become something else. The image suggests that identity can remain alive and expressive even when it is no longer organized around visibility or social accessibility.

The title invites interpretation before the viewer has fully made sense of the image. Architecture implies structure, design, reinforcement, and the invisible frameworks that make stability possible. Morality implies evaluation, judgment, and the process by which a life becomes legible to others. Together, the terms suggest that identity itself may be constructed according to expectations about what is acceptable, admirable, or trustworthy. The shirt presents a socially recognizable exterior, an outward conformity to institutional norms. The flowers present an interior life that is organic, layered, and difficult to read. The visible self appears orderly, but the living self is dense with growth that does not translate easily into familiar signals.

Chrysanthemums carry associations with endurance, reflection, and the passage of time. In some traditions they are connected to mourning, in others to longevity and resilience. Their petals multiply inward, forming structures that appear both delicate and intricate. Each petal contributes to the whole, yet no single element reveals the structure entirely. The density of the blossoms suggests a life that has grown inward rather than outward. Complexity replaces transparency. Expression replaces recognizability.

Growing up, I was always surrounded by friends. Sleepovers, bicycles scattered in driveways, basketball games in my grandparents’ backyard, church activities, and the steady rhythm of shared childhood experience meant that friendship was not something I had to construct deliberately. It was simply there. Proximity created belonging. The architecture of childhood made connection feel inevitable. Identity developed within a network of repeated encounters that required little effort to sustain. Friendship existed as a condition rather than an achievement.

College disrupted that structure. My high school friend group dispersed, and the continuity I had once taken for granted began to narrow. Relationships became more contingent upon circumstance and intentional effort. During my marriage, the circle constricted further. My wife preferred that our home remain private, and between professional responsibilities and graduate study, the available space for maintaining friendships diminished even more. Connections did not disappear abruptly; they thinned gradually, like paths that fade when they are no longer walked. Social presence gave way to focus, and focus gradually reorganized how relationships fit within daily life.

After the divorce, and then through the long isolation of COVID, I found myself largely alone. The structures that had once supported connection had changed, and I became aware of how much social life depends upon shared rhythms and overlapping commitments. Without those shared patterns, relationships require greater intentionality. Yesterday, I read an article suggesting that adults who have few close friends are not necessarily antisocial or unlikable. Many, it argued, learned early that vulnerability can produce pain, and over time they adapted by developing a greater sense of emotional independence. Distance becomes less a barrier than a boundary. The absence of constant connection does not necessarily indicate deficiency; it may indicate adaptation.

This perspective resonated with my own experience. Over time, connection ceased to feel inevitable and began to feel contingent. Relationships no longer formed simply because proximity made them convenient. Instead, they developed through shared disposition, mutual trust, and continuity across time. My brother and I rediscovered our relationship through travel, shared movement replacing casual familiarity. Traveling together created space for conversation that did not require performance. Shared experience became more significant than frequency of interaction. The rhythm of travel created opportunities for reflection that did not depend upon constant social engagement.

As I approach my mid-forties, I find myself content with fewer relationships, but relationships that feel more durable and more intentional. I do not have many friends. I do not go out often. I do not have children whose activities might connect me to peers in ways that create automatic social continuity. Yet I am grateful for the relationships that remain. My brother, my parents, and even the quiet companionship of my cats provide forms of continuity that do not require expansion in order to feel meaningful.

The article’s insight that some individuals come to understand vulnerability as costly helps explain why relational life may gradually shift from expansion toward discernment. When openness is not consistently met with understanding, it becomes reasonable to conserve emotional exposure. Selectivity becomes a form of stability. Over time, the self may develop structures that allow it to function without continual reliance on external affirmation. The desire for connection does not disappear, but the need for constant connection diminishes.

The flowers in Brown’s painting appear fresh. They have not withered. They have not withdrawn from life. They continue to offer beauty even while obscuring the features that would allow easy recognition. The distinction feels important. It is not that connection is rejected; rather, connection is no longer necessary in the same way it once was. Fulfillment no longer depends upon continual visibility.

I still maintain meaningful connection, though often in forms that might appear unconventional. I speak daily with friends through online games. The games themselves matter less than the shared presence they create. The structure of repeated interaction allows conversation to develop naturally, without pressure to perform identity in ways that feel artificial. The connection exists through continuity rather than intensity. The ritual matters more than the medium.

In many ways, I recognize in myself something like a monastic disposition. Monastic traditions have long suggested that stability may be found not through the expansion of relationships but through the cultivation of attentiveness. The monk remains part of a community, yet does not rely upon constant social interaction to maintain a sense of belonging. Monastic life does not eliminate relationship; it clarifies its purpose. Connection becomes structured by continuity rather than novelty. The individual remains present, but no longer depends upon continual affirmation in order to feel secure.

Brown’s painting captures a similar paradox. The figure is neither isolated nor fully accessible. Presence exists without full transparency. The flowers do not conceal the self so much as express the self differently than expected. They suggest that identity continues to grow even when it is not easily legible to others. Growth occurs in ways that are not always externally visible.

As I reflect on my own life, I do not experience this stage as loneliness. I experience it as consolidation. The architecture of my relationships has shifted from breadth to durability. Earlier stages of life emphasized proximity and frequency. This stage emphasizes continuity and trust. Fewer relationships remain, but those that remain feel less contingent upon circumstance and more grounded in mutual recognition.

The article suggests that independence often emerges not from indifference but from experience. Over time, individuals learn which forms of connection sustain them and which forms exhaust them. Adaptation gradually reshapes relational expectations. A smaller circle may allow for greater stability. A quieter social life may allow for greater coherence between inner and outer experience.

Perhaps the most compelling aspect of Brown’s work is that the flowers remain open. They do not withdraw from view, yet they do not reorganize themselves to meet expectation. They continue to offer form, color, and life without attempting to resemble a face. They are expressive, but not performative. Present, but not exposed.

I remain part of a community, even as I live somewhat apart from it. I remain connected, even as I no longer rely upon constant connection. Like the figure in the painting, I am still present. I am still growing. The architecture remains, but the structure has matured into something quieter and more durable. The flowers remain alive, even when they are not easily read.