Woven Outcomes
Wildflower presses left rhythmic indentations on the farmer’s final pages, a tactile accounting of weather experienced directly rather than simply observed. These dense impressions propose a system of mutual alteration: each touch both records and *is* a response, collapsing distance between observer and environment. This embodied interaction suggests an ethics valuing relational change over static knowledge—a practice akin to what Merleau-Ponty described as inhabiting the world through perception. Such sustained somatic resistance dissolves boundaries, weaving self into a continuous cloud of experience.