In February 2026 I was invited to present my work within the Vision Lab Salon Series, an international interdisciplinary forum for contemplative practice, artistic research, and philosophical inquiry. Vision Lab is a research and arts collective founded at Harvard Divinity School exploring the intersections of symbolic thought, creative practice, and lived experience.
The presentation, “Lineage, Continuity, and Myth-Making at a Cultural Threshold,” examined reincarnation and soul continuity as symbolic and experiential frameworks rather than fixed metaphysical claims. The talk situated my ongoing research into recurring identity patterns, archetypal roles, and narrative structures that appear to re-emerge across lifetimes and cultural epochs.
A central thread of the session explored what I describe as soulgroup dynamics: the recurring observation that individuals often experience strong recognition, shared themes, and complementary roles within particular relational constellations. These patterns were approached as narrative and symbolic structures through which continuity, affinity, and creative collaboration can be interpreted.
The session engaged broader questions of time, myth, and continuity, considering how symbolic systems shape human self-understanding during periods of cultural transition, destabilization, and re-orientation. Particular attention was given to how myths function as organizing structures of meaning, and why symbolic frameworks periodically lose coherence as lived experience shifts.
Rather than advancing conclusions, the presentation framed continuity itself as a field of inquiry — asking how identities, roles, and creative impulses circulate across time, and how emerging cultural narratives might be consciously re-imagined.








