Culture
How the sixteen values appear in film, TV, books, music, myth, history, and art.
I Will Survive
Gloria Gaynor. Rebuilding security from nothing after devastation. Safety rediscovered from the inside out.
Safe and Sound
Capital Cities. The feeling of having a place that holds, and someone who holds it with you.
Our House
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. Domestic security as love made real - two cats in the yard, life used to be so hard.
Home
Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros. Security as portable - home is wherever I'm with you. The radical reframe that safety lives in a person, not a place.
I Will Always Love You
Whitney Houston. Security as the promise that outlasts separation - the love that does not require presence to remain real.
Let It Be
The Beatles. Peace as the decision to release what you cannot control. Maybe the simplest and most profound piece of music they ever made.
What a Wonderful World
Louis Armstrong. Peace as the choice to see beauty in the world that exists, not the one you wish for.
The Sound of Silence
Simon & Garfunkel. The strange peace of a mind that has stopped fighting itself and begun simply listening.
Breathe (2 AM)
Anna Nalick. Permission to stop and exhale. One of the most direct invitations to peace in pop music.
Into the Mystic
Van Morrison. Peace as the feeling of being carried - the boat, the fog, and the soul arriving somewhere it cannot name but recognizes completely.
Bohemian Rhapsody
Queen. Freddie Mercury's impossible vocal range meeting Brian May's guitar architecture. Mastery deployed in service of something that shouldn't exist.
Eruption
Eddie Van Halen's solo on Van Halen's debut album. Two minutes that redefined what the electric guitar was capable of.
Clair de Lune (Glenn Gould)
Debussy's famous piano piece - the mastery of restraint, timing, and emotional precision in every note.
My Name Is Jonas
Weezer's guitar work on the Blue Album - Rivers Cuomo's obsessive studio perfectionism hidden inside something that sounds effortless.
Blowin' in the Wind
Bob Dylan asking the moral questions everyone is avoiding. Integrity as the refusal to pretend you don't see what you see.
Talkin' 'Bout a Revolution
Tracy Chapman. The slow boiling point of people who can no longer pretend the arrangement is acceptable.