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and in a stronger sense is the only way to consume properly if you want the most out of it. you're not passively receiving the response allowing it to discard itself, you're holding onto the data and writing it to your own database in preparation for proper internal reads for external writes
and that last part is not lost on me either!! not only is this the only way to properly consume the immediate object of consumption, but it is the only way to enable proper consumption of previous and future consumptions by comparison and aggregation!
i'm just totally living for the openness and brimming potentiality in the ambiguity of "other tables and entries". i used the phrases internal and external in a relative sense before as a fairly irresponsible expositing tool but part of makes his metaphor so compelling is how unstructured they are
the precise spatial location is entirely opaque; the continuity is lacking of where the databases are or who is in possession of what data at which moment, its just this swirling mass of associations that morphs itself as each sentence passes
i'm overwhelmed by the force of "you have to" that recurs. in one instance it is moderated by an "in order to", but it is all the more sturdy for that. the elliptical implications of the former expression are all the more punchy with the contrast of the latter's more full formulation.
the "you" in "you have to" is both personal and impersonal in a double sense. on the one hand it is a general statement applying to all "you"s that have the requisite relevant powers of consumption and production, but it is also a specifically audience-oriented "you" to the people listening.

i suppose another small wrinkle is that there are specific audience members that he has the foreknowledge will be watching this, so the expression can be seen as a furtherly personal, particularly with dedications. and yet theres still an impersonal character to the delivery in its distribution
its just a really beautiful piece that moved me a lot, i know i meandered a little by the end but it was just such a dense and inspiring way of thinking about the world
i didn't speak too much about how the visual and auditory elements played a role in the message but i'm okay to leave this to the experience itself for now, i'm not equipped for that type of task yet