What kind of growth actually lasts? What becomes larger without becoming corrupt? Three unlikely subjects converge on an answer - James the Greater, sequoia trees, and #Bitcoin - each illustrating the same underlying pattern: durable transformation starts small, grows slowly, and compounds through open networks. James the Greater shows how meaning spreads relationally, one connection at a time, with no guarantee of immediate success. The lesson is that consequential change travels through human-scale transmission, not viral broadcasts. Sequoias embody consistency over spectacle. They become immense through gradual accumulation - ring by ring, season by season. They're robust (able to withstand stress) and generative (they contribute to renewal beyond themselves). Their strength cannot be faked or rushed. Bitcoin reveals how openness and distributed participation create robustness at scale. No single owner, no permission gate, no point of failure. Voluntary participation and public verification create feedback loops where more network activity increases utility, which attracts more participants - a compounding, non-linear dynamic. These systems share a recognizable shape. They're grounded in openness - which permits correction, adaptation, and learning - and they produce what the I call "goodness" in systemic terms: robustness and generativity. Closed systems can be efficient, but they become brittle. Open systems stay alive by remaining capable of evolution. The deepest changes don't announce themselves. They begin quietly, compound patiently, and endure by staying open. image

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Sat’s Oil 's avatar
Sat’s Oil 6 days ago
This really resonates. Lasting growth seems to follow the same pattern everywhere: quiet beginnings, patience, openness, and compounding over time. Whether in people, nature, or networks, what endures isn’t what grows fastest, but what remains open enough to adapt and evolve. Beautifully articulated 🌱