Making the Invisible Visible: Feynman Diagrams and Visual Storytelling
We often think presentations are made of slides, but they are really made of connections. Like quantum diagrams, the most powerful stories are revealed not in the parts, but in the space between them.
Me and Leona. Stories of invisible voices
A story about Leona Woods Marshall, the invisible voice behind the first nuclear reactor, and what she teaches us about the unseen work that makes presentations truly powerful.
Can you tell two truths… as long as you don’t tell them together?
Sometimes two ideas are both true; just not at the same time. In presentations, clarity doesn’t come from saying “everything,” but from choosing which truth matters right now. When we force ideas to overlap, they blur. When we separate them, they shine.
Why does no one talk about loneliness in a world built on connections?
We live surrounded by messages, voices, and signals; yet sometimes the deepest loneliness appears when we share something meaningful and hear nothing back. Connection isn’t always loud. Sometimes, it begins in silence.
You had me at the tone: How fragility creates stronger presentations
Tone is the invisible thread that holds a presentation together. Like quantum coherence, it’s fragile; one wrong note and the story collapses. Here’s how to protect it, and why a bit of vulnerability makes it stronger.
What does it really take to create a quantum leap in a presentation?
A true leap in presentations doesn’t happen slide by slide. It happens when your perspective shifts and your story moves from information to transformation. Here's what it really takes to create a quantum leap in how you present.