Saturday, May 23, 2026

In the quiet, every sound carries a weight.



Lessons From the Retirement Community (10): The Siren’s Aftermath

The EMS siren is the sonic signature of the finite — a sudden invitation to trade the minutiae of the mundane for a life of intention.


The trouble is, you think you have time — Jack Kornfield

Arun Kumar

In a retirement community, the quiet is often broken by the wail of an EMS siren. While it signals a neighbor’s crisis, it serves as a “grounding rod” for the observer. This essay explores how these moments pierce the distractions of daily life, inviting a vital, intentional recalibration of our finite time.


In the quiet of a retirement community, silence is a norm. We cultivate it in the xeriscaped gardens and preserve it in the stealth silence of electric golf carts driving by. But this silence is punctuated, with a quasi-periodic regularity, by the invasive wail of a siren.

It is the sonic signature of the EMS vehicle — a high-decibel intrusion that slices through the “active adult community” veneer. When that sound is heard, we all pause. We look out the window to see which driveway it claims. For the person behind the door, the siren might signal a minor failure of the body or the definitive closing of a chapter. For the rest of us, the siren acts as a grounding rod. It is a stark, unadorned reminder of mortality that demands to be remembered.

The Gravity of the Mundane

It is remarkably easy to lose oneself in the minutiae of the “well-lived” retirement. We fill our days with a rhythm that mimics importance, and pretends to have some higher meaning and purpose. We step onto the pickleball court and allow the adrenaline of a win or the sting of a loss to feel like a matter of consequence. We sit at our desks to pore over financial tables, performing the modern alchemy of keeping the Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) from tripping the IRMAA surcharge brackets. We immerse ourselves in learning all about the changes in tax rules.

Such “small things” are the gears of a functional life — but they are dangerously effective at clouding the horizon of mortality. We get swept away by these exigencies. We treat tax brackets and court scores as if they are the permanent fixtures of our existence, rather than the temporary scaffolding. In the heat of a “small tussle” over pickleball rules or a portfolio dip, we forget the fundamental math: days of our consciousness are numbered.

The Dose of Reality

The siren is the antidote to this self-imposed amnesia. While it represents a crisis for a neighbor, for us as the observer, it is a dose of reality. It strips away the illusion that we are merely “vacationing” in time.

There is an inherent tension in this. It feels almost predatory to find personal perspective in someone else’s emergency. Yet, to ignore the signal is to miss the invitation. The “toll” of the siren — much like Donne’s bell — reminds us that we are not spectators of mortality; we are participants in it.

Shifting the Perspective

When the siren fades and the flashing lights eventually dim, the silence that returns is different, at least for a while. It is heavier, and touched by introspection, it is also clearer.

It invites a recalibration of who we are, and where we stand.

Living in the retirement community periodically becomes living with the veil pulled back. And that is good. By acknowledging the finite nature of our stay, we not only feel somber; we also become intentional. We return to our rhythms not as people killing time, but as people who finally understand what it is worth, even if that understanding is effervescent.

Ciao, and thanks for reading.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

 


When the Mind Watches Itself Think — The Quiet Art of Metacognition

A late‑night chain of insights becomes a window into how curiosity, flow, and self‑awareness shape meaning, aging, and our place in the world.


Metacognition is the moment the mind steps back and sees itself in motion.

Arun Kumar

Metacognition: Metacognition refers to thinking and analyzing about your own thinking.

Metacognition is a capacity to notice what my mind is doing, how I interpret what the external world is throwing at me, where I am getting stuck, and what strategies I am using to get out of mental traffic jams. It is a kind of internal vantage point high above where I can sit and observe my own cognitive processes rather than just being swept along by them.

Below is an example of a recent metacognitive event I had.

Last night, before going to bed, I commented on someone’s post on LinkedIn that discussed the persistent ridge over the west coast of the United States this (boreal) winter. The post I commented on was exploring possible reasons behind this recurring weather pattern. My comment was that the null hypothesis for such anomalies is that they might simply be due to random atmospheric variability and cannot be attributed to an external cause. My perspective suggested that not every observed atmospheric pattern has a causal explanation; some (and in fact most) of them can be attributed to random variability.

The evolution of weather patterns is no different than ‘random’ happenings in life.

After I posted the comment, the night descended and I headed for bed.

In the early hours of the morning, as I lay in bed, I found myself drawing new connections. It occurred to me that this ridge may be part of the atmospheric response to La Niña conditions in the equatorial Pacific. Although this year’s La Niña is weak, the ongoing warming in the western Pacific led to an enhancement of the east-west temperature gradients. This, in turn, could lead to atmospheric anomalies that resemble those typically seen during a stronger La Niña event., i.e., a prominent ridge over the west coast of the US.

Another connection that came to mind was the slides one of my colleagues started to include in the recent monthly attribution presentations, specifically focusing on the theme of forecast attribution.

And then, yet another follow up thought came to mind that I can write a LinkedIn post on atmospheric anomalies for the past five winters to highlight the influence of warming trends on boreal winter upper level height anomalies.

Making these connections reignited the excitement I used to feel during my years of being actively engaged in research. It was the thrill that comes from piecing together seemingly unrelated facts that others have not yet seen.

Not being able to sleep well because of all these thoughts running through the mind, I got out of bed early and added further comments to my original comment on LinkedIn. The drive and energy I felt that morning caught me off guard.

And then, the metacognition kicked in.

Even while deeply immersed, I felt a secondary awareness watching with a detached fascination at my own intensity. It prompted me to consider the origins of that drive, and how these episodes of flow fundamentally alter our perception of time and our limited place within it.

The source of that flow was the thrill of creativity, finding new connections between facts that seemingly were unrelated. It was the thrill of unearthing a small gem of knowledge that hid under the rocks.

I have argued before that the right path to counter the psychological burden of aging and mortality is to find engagements that bring flow and take our mind away from them. And this was one of those moments.

Perched above I watched someone (me) engaged in enjoying moments of his life. In doing that, I was not bothered by the sense of aging and mortality unfurling themselves.

What happened was an example of how having a set of right engagement gives our life meaning and dampens the sense of absurdity and how building an appropriate portfolio of engagements helps fill the chasm between living and dying.

Moments of metacognition serve as windows into the mechanics of our existence and our relationship to it. They offer a unique advantage from which to observe our own lives and clarify our place within the world.

Ciao, and thanks for reading.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

 


How You Wake Up May Be the Truest Measure of Your Life

A simple morning question becomes a powerful measure of whether your life is aligned, meaningful, and worth waking up for.


Tell us how you greet the morning, and we will tell you how you’re living your life.

Arun Kumar

Summary: This essay explores a simple yet profound metric for evaluating a life well lived: whether you look forward to getting out of bed each morning. By imagining your future self-reflecting from a rocking chair, it reframes daily anticipation as the clearest indicator of alignment, meaning, and well‑being.

There comes a moment, imagined now, but inevitable someday, when the peak years of life sit behind you like distant hills on the horizon. The rush of living without thinking has slowed. The calendar is no longer crowded. A kind of mental spaciousness opens, wide enough for questions that once had no room to land. You find yourself on a porch, in a rocking chair, watching the late sunlight stretch across the yard. Your body is not what it once was. Your ambitions have softened at the edges. And in that stillness, you finally ask the question that has waited patiently for decades: Was your life well lived?

You imagine the answer. You imagine the feeling that would accompany it. And you imagine, with a twinge of unease, what it would mean if the answer was not really. Would regret rise like a tide? Would you wish you had lived differently, chosen differently, risked differently?

Now pull yourself back into the present — the only place where anything can still be changed. Ask the same question again: Is my life well lived? This time, the question is not retrospective but diagnostic check on your own state of affairs. It is an invitation to analyze, and if needed, change. But a challenge you face is: how do you measure the answer while you still have time and agency to change it?

We have experts for nearly everything. A financial advisor to assess your portfolio in retirement. A physician to evaluate your physical health. A psychiatrist to help when life has already begun to unravel. But none of them can hand you a clean, clinical metric for the quality of your existence. There is no annual “life check‑up,” no standardized assessment of meaning, no device you can strap to your forehead that prints out a reading of existential well‑being. You wish there were something like that, something simple, inexpensive, immediate.

Surprisingly, there is.

It is not a gadget, nor a professional service, nor a complicated psychological instrument. It is a test so ordinary that it hides in plain sight. I call it the test of getting up in the morning.

The test is simple. When you wake, before the day has made any demands of you, ask yourself: Do I look forward to getting out of bed? That is all.

If the thought of rising feels heavy, if the day ahead feels like something to endure rather than live with anticipation, if the morning drains you before the day even begins, then something in your life is misaligned. It is a quiet warning that, years from now, the rocking‑chair version of you may look back with regret and whisper, I wish I had lived differently.

But if you wake with anticipation, if the day ahead feels like a landscape you want to walk into, if your plans carry a sense of flow, if your life feels like something you are participating in rather than escaping from, then you are on the right path. And if that feeling repeats day after day, the accumulation of such mornings becomes the scaffolding of a life well lived.

If you can consistently answer that you look forward to rising, then the future self in the rocking chair will not need to ask whether life was well lived. They will already know.

Ciao, and thanks for reading.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

 


Lessons From the Retirement Community (9): Practice, Aging, and the Mathematics of Proficiency in Pickleball

A reflective look at how practice and aging shape pickleball journey and how proficiency evolves with time.


We rise on the strength of practice and descend on the rhythm of aging.

Arun Kumar

Summary: A reflection on the evolutionary instincts that drive self‑improvement and how they play out on the pickleball courts of a retirement community. It explores the rise and fall of playing skills shaped by improvements from practice and decline imposed by aging.

Long before pickleball courts and retirement communities, before scoreboards and ladders, there was only the simple logic of improving the chances of survival that drove evolution. The creature that ran a little faster, sensed danger a little sooner, solved a problem a little more cleverly, or carried some advantageous physical trait — the one that helped stand out — was the creature most likely to pass on its genes. Being the leader of the pack was not a matter of pride; it was a matter of continuity. An instinct shaped quietly and relentlessly by natural selection.

Layered on top of that primal instinct is something subtler: the desire not just to survive, but to seek improvement. To do a job well. To feel the small internal lift and the sense of pride that comes from being competent. Perhaps this too has evolutionary roots. A creature who felt internally rewarded for mastering a task would repeat it, refine it, and become more reliable contributor to the greater good of the tribe, and be rewarded. Over time, that inner glow of self-confidence became a quiet engine within us. Even now, the same machinery hums. We still want to get better, even when “better” is measured in the arc of a paddle and the bounce of a plastic ball just clearing the net.

Under the soft morning light, I can see those old instincts playing out on the pickleball court. Some players arrive before the sun is fully up, paddles in hand, ready to squeeze in a few warm-up games. They join ladder play, form small conclaves that practice together, and analyze their shots with the seriousness of field scientists. All of it is an attempt to push their skill rating upward — from 2.0, where beginners learn to keep the ball in play, toward 5.0, where mastery shows itself in precision, strategy, and near-effortless control.

But while practice pushes curve of proficiency steadily upward, another curve — driven by the very different force of aging — moves proficiency quietly in the opposite direction. Aging is the invisible opponent on every court. Reflexes soften. Agility becomes a little less obedient. The aches that follow an intense game linger longer than they once did. Playing pickleball slows rate of the decline, but it cannot overcome it entirely. The drumbeat of aging continues, steady and impartial.

If one were to plot the influence of practice and aging on an x–y (time-proficiency) plane, it would reveal the time-evolution of two curves of proficiency. One curve driven by practice, discipline, and repetition rises with time. The other curve influenced by aging and limitations of biology declines with time. The shape of our pickleball life is the net sum of these two arcs. At first, the practice curve dominates. Skills improve. Footwork sharpens. Strategy deepens. But eventually, the aging curve begins to exert more influence. Gains become smaller and harder to come by. And at some point in time the sum of two curves reaches its peak. After that, the descent begins.

This behavior is something not to lament about. It is simply the geometry and algebra of the human condition.

Beyond the coldness of mathematics, engaging in pickleball, however, has more to offer. Just showing up on the court is its own set of benefit stacking. The habit of being on the court pushes the decline due to aging further into the future. And then there is the laughter, the camaraderie, the belonging to a tribe of people navigating the same terrain — these are not measured in skill ratings. They contribute to the measures of a well‑lived life.

So, the message is not one of resignation or despair that one day our pickleball proficiency will reach a peak. It is simply an acknowledgment of how life, and the game of pickleball, will inevitably unfold. There will be a peak, and it will be followed by a decline. We should be prepared to accept that eventuality.

And with that understanding under the belt, there is the simple joy of stepping onto the court. With a paddle in hand, I head out, ready to play.

Ciao, and thanks for reading.