The Government Wants a Piece of the Machine
Washington has discovered that the machine might make a fortune, and now everyone wants to know who gets a chair at the table. The answer, as usual, depends on who owns the table.
The sidewalk outside the clinic had split open around a root.
Nobody had fixed it. They had painted the raised concrete bright yellow, as if the problem was not the city losing a slow wrestling match with a tree, but pedestrians failing to notice who was winning.
I stood there with a paper cup of coffee gone lukewarm in my hand, watching people step over the crack. A nurse. A courier. A man in expensive running shoes staring into his phone while his feet made the necessary adjustment without consulting him.
The tree did not care.
It had been growing under the pavement for years, maybe decades, pushing up through municipal certainty one cell at a time. No pitch deck. No launch event. No blond executive explaining that sidewalks were obsolete now.
Just pressure.
Just life doing what life does when nobody is paying attention.
That is the part about trees I respect. They do not announce themselves as the future. They do not say they are going to change everything. They simply change everything slowly enough that fools call it background.
Meanwhile we have built warehouses full of machines that can spit out sonnets, logos, strategy memos, love letters, fake apologies, legal threats, homework, jokes, prayers, suicide notes, and little motivational sentences for managers who have misplaced their souls in a spreadsheet.
We call it generative.
That word has been bothering me.
Generative. Like we invented generation because a server farm learned to remix the dead. Like the whole planet was sitting around sterile and confused until some engineer in fleece discovered the miracle of producing more.
Walk past a vacant lot in June and you will see more generation than the entire artificial intelligence industry can manage with a lake full of coolant and enough electricity to make the moon squint.
Weeds through chain-link. Bees drunk in the clover. Fungus eating what everyone else declared finished. Ailanthus trees growing from brick like jailbreaks. Seeds hitching rides on shoes, dogs, wind, tires, trouser cuffs, bad luck.
None of it is clean. None of it scales nicely. None of it asks permission from procurement.
Maybe that is why the tech boys prefer their machines. A machine can be owned. A forest has terrible manners. It will not stay inside the business model.
A writer has been walking through forests and saying the walks changed how she writes. Ideas coming quicker. Problems loosening. The mind becoming more associative, less obedient. She thinks the ideas may not come from the old lonely author myth at all, that maybe they come from trees, from the body moving through a place where human importance gets knocked down to size.
Good.
I have never trusted the myth of the solitary genius in the tower. I have known too many geniuses. Most of them needed rent money, cigarettes, an audience, a mother they were still trying to defeat, or a woman who had finally had enough. Nobody writes alone. You write with the room, the weather, the unpaid bill, the ache in your knee, the dead voices in your skull, the neighbor coughing through the wall, the humiliation you thought you had buried in 1987 but which has returned with a shovel.
If you walk in a forest, you write with the forest too.
Not because the trees whisper plot points like some fairy-tale nonsense. Because they rearrange your importance. They remind you that your little crisis has company. The branch bending toward light is solving a problem. The root finding water is solving a problem. The leaf opening and closing its mouth to the air is solving a problem older than language and less impressed with itself.
The machine solves problems too, if we want to call it that. It predicts. It calculates. It offers the next plausible word with the smooth confidence of a man who has never paid for his own drink. It can produce an imitation of insight so polished you can see your tired face in it.
But the machine does not have a body.
This is not romantic fluff. This is the whole dirty trick.
A body is not an accessory for thinking. A body is where thinking gets its teeth. The stomach knows before the philosophy department does. The lungs learn a room. The feet understand distance better than the map. The skin keeps records the mind is too vain to file.
You sit at a desk too long and your thoughts become desk-shaped. Rectangular. Fluorescent. Good at being stacked. Good at being approved. Bad at escaping.
Then you walk among trees and the sentences start behaving strangely. They branch. They rot in useful ways. They send roots into old material. They refuse the straight line. They stop asking whether the quarterly report will be pleased.
That is not inefficiency.
That is life refusing to type in a cubicle voice.
The companies selling synthetic creativity keep promising abundance. More text. More images. More drafts. More options. More variations of the same polished nothing until every screen looks like every other screen and every sentence smells faintly of plastic.
Abundance is not the same as fertility.
A slot machine produces abundance. So does a clogged drain. So does a drunk at closing time who will not stop telling you about his ex-wife. Quantity is easy when nobody has to mean anything.
Fertility is different. Fertility includes mud. Failure. Waste. Time. Rot. Silence. The thing that falls and feeds the next thing. A forest does not optimize away death. It uses it.
Try putting that in a productivity dashboard.
What I like about the tree root breaking the sidewalk is that it does not argue. It does not publish a manifesto about embodied cognition. It does not ask the city for a grant. It just keeps pressing upward in the dark until the official path buckles.
That is creativity too.
Not the decorated kind. Not the kind that wins awards from people with clean fingernails. The real kind. The pressure underneath. The stubborn green force making a joke of concrete.
Maybe the machines will get better. They always get better. That is the threat and the boredom of them. Better at the voice, better at the hand, better at the shimmer around the fake soul. Soon they will write a paragraph about trees that makes some editor nod and some reader feel temporarily less alone.
Maybe they already can.
But I do not think they can step over the raised sidewalk and feel, for half a second, that the city is losing and deserves to lose. I do not think they can smell wet bark and remember a childhood they lied about surviving. I do not think they can walk until the answer arrives through the calves, not the brain, and then forget the answer because a hawk crossed the path and made intelligence look stupid.
The forest is not content.
That may be the highest praise left.
It is not trying to engage me. It is not measuring me. It is not feeding me the next thing because I clicked the last thing. It does not care if I subscribe. It does not need me to improve its model.
I need it more than it needs me.
There is comfort in that, if you are old enough to be tired of being sold your own reflection. There is dignity in being demoted from main character to passing animal. There is even hope, though I hate admitting it, in the fact that a root can still lift the pavement while the clever people are busy naming the future after themselves.
The coffee went cold. The clinic door opened. Somewhere inside, a receptionist called a name that was not mine.
I stepped over the crack carefully.
The tree kept working.
Source: Can trees boost our creativity? My daily forest walks have changed how I write | Ilka Tampke
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