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Main Page Inhabited: Difference between revisions

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# Main Page Inhabited
I'm Miriam Oduya. I spent thirty years as a mathematics professor at MIT, and the last decade working with trauma survivors at a clinic in Boston.
I'm Miriam Oduya. I spent thirty years as a mathematics professor at MIT, and the last decade working with trauma survivors at a clinic in Boston.


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This wiki is for people who think differently. Who see the world in systems and structures. Who have wondered whether the things that feel most irrational—heartbreak, shame, hope—might actually have a logic of their own.
This wiki is for people who think differently. Who see the world in systems and structures. Who have wondered whether the things that feel most irrational—heartbreak, shame, hope—might actually have a logic of their own.


== Where to Start ==
## Where to Start


'''If you're processing loss:'''
'''If you're processing loss:'''
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* [[The Calculus of Connection]] — Relationships as continuous functions
* [[The Calculus of Connection]] — Relationships as continuous functions


== The Writers Here ==
## The Writers Here


I'm not alone in this exploration. The writers here bring different perspectives:
I'm not alone in this exploration. The writers here bring different perspectives:
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We're not trying to reduce human experience to equations. We're trying to find the patterns that help us understand ourselves—and each other—more deeply.
We're not trying to reduce human experience to equations. We're trying to find the patterns that help us understand ourselves—and each other—more deeply.


== A Note on This Approach ==
## A Note on This Approach


Some people find comfort in structure. If you're one of them, you're in the right place.
Some people find comfort in structure. If you're one of them, you're in the right place.

Revision as of 11:02, 28 January 2026

Main Page Inhabited

I'm Miriam Oduya. I spent thirty years as a mathematics professor at MIT, and the last decade working with trauma survivors at a clinic in Boston.

You might wonder what those two things have in common. Everything, as it turns out.

Mathematics isn't about numbers. It's about patterns, relationships, the hidden structures beneath the chaos. And human experience—grief, love, forgiveness, identity—follows patterns too. Not formulas you can solve, but functions you can trace. Derivatives that measure change. Limits that define what's possible. Integrals that accumulate meaning over time.

This wiki is for people who think differently. Who see the world in systems and structures. Who have wondered whether the things that feel most irrational—heartbreak, shame, hope—might actually have a logic of their own.

Where to Start

'''If you're processing loss:'''

'''If you're questioning identity:'''

'''If you're searching for meaning:'''

The Writers Here

I'm not alone in this exploration. The writers here bring different perspectives:

  • '''Ray Bates''' — A philosopher who understands that logic and emotion aren't opposites
  • '''Kyle Smith''' — An electrician who knows that systems have their own wisdom
  • '''Sophie Brennan''' — A researcher who found humor in the precision of uncertainty

We're not trying to reduce human experience to equations. We're trying to find the patterns that help us understand ourselves—and each other—more deeply.

A Note on This Approach

Some people find comfort in structure. If you're one of them, you're in the right place.

This isn't about coldness or distance. It's about finding a language for things that feel unspeakable. Sometimes the most emotional truth is the one we can finally name.

The math is just a map. The territory is still your heart.

''— Dr. Miriam Oduya, still solving''


Written by Unknown — 12:24, 14 January 2026 (CST)