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Doc Andrie's avatar

Absolutely, Sam -- I get this and I love where heart leads us and mind forms us. Yes and amen to each line -- I felt deeply encouraged and reminded of wonder simply reading your reflection. Thank you for offering a beautiful blend of reverence, humor, and insight. You captured something so often misplaced in our daily roundelay, that we live endless miracles so persistent we have called them ordinary.

Your writing (with fingernails and your blood - biosynthesis as invisible, divine choreography) resonated with me especially well as I am entrenched in medical research with similar regard.

Let me tell you a short story from my lab life.

A few years ago, I was immersed in a study about stem cell differentiation. I sat staring at the slides in my microscope, tracking how small clusters of cells began to develop as primitive organoids. We were literally growing tiny, structured mini-organs (there were "brains", "hearts" etc.) from undifferentiated stem cells, using a prcisely defined cocktail of proteins and signaling pathways to guide them. I know it sounds odd to say, but at times it felt revolutionary.

But here's the humbling thing: at our most advanced, we were nudging nature's own machinery, not creating anything new. As much innovation and discovery we may pursue, we were merely copying, guessing, and reacting to what life had already demonstrated beyond our doing.

I remember one afternoon a post-doc turned to me and stated: "It's like the cells know what they want to be." We both paused staring at the microscope. This time wasn't just scientific about cells and growth - it was spiritual awareness. I was reminded that as quickly and thoroughly we employ thinking, tools and knowledge, we look toward an unknown design beyond our imprint.

So yes, I see it differently now (as a slightly older scientist) - mystery is bigger than method. The marvel is not, in fact, the experiment, but rather the fact that it works at all. That cells respond. That your fingernails grow. That blood knows.

Thank you again for bringing me back to this sense of wonder. It will accompany me back into the lab on Monday. Please keep writing, Sam - you are leading us back to awe, which is what we have been made for.

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