A human orientation point inside the field


Some forms of fragmentation cannot fully be understood from outside the system itself.

For a long time, I tried to understand why coherence between people so easily disappears, even when intelligence, knowledge, or good intentions are present.

Something deeper seemed to happen beneath communication itself.

I began noticing how modern systems often separate people from direct experience.

Language drifted away from what was actually felt.

Attention became increasingly fragmented.

And many forms of disconnection appeared long before conflict became visible on the surface.


I did not begin by trying to create a framework.

At first, I was simply trying to understand what I kept observing across relationships, organizations, education, health, and within myself.

Why some interactions restore coherence.

And why others slowly lose the ability to feel one another.


Over time, a different way of seeing began to emerge.

Not as a fixed ideology.

But as an ongoing exploration into relational coherence, fragmentation, attunement, and the conditions under which systems begin to learn again.

That exploration eventually became known as Plasia.


I do not experience Plasia as something I invented alone.

It often feels more accurate to say that it slowly emerged through observation, lived experience, tension, integration, and years of trying to remain close to what felt fundamentally true beneath surface structures.


This work remains open.

Still learning.

Still listening.

Still becoming.