Jonah Cardeli Falcon [portable] -

Falcon realized that none of his seven languages contained a word for this concept. In fact, he argued, the very structure of Indo-European languages forces a temporal and causal logic that the Mapuche concept rejects. In a famous, now-lost essay fragment titled “The Tyranny of the Verb ‘To Be,’” he wrote: “We do not speak language; language speaks us. I am tired of being spoken.”

This is the core of the Falcon essay: a meditation on the violence of forced articulation. How many times have you been asked, “What are you thinking?” and felt a small death as you compressed a nebulous feeling into a flat sentence? Falcon argues that verbal language is a lossy compression algorithm. By refusing to speak, he refuses to lose. jonah cardeli falcon

What makes Falcon’s essay-worthy is not the silence itself, but what he built inside it. He developed a handwritten script called “Trazos del Silencio” (Traces of Silence). It is a visual language based on three core elements: the straight line (representing fact), the broken arc (representing emotion), and the enclosed circle (representing the self). These symbols are not arbitrary; they are biomechanical. Falcon claims that each symbol corresponds to a specific pattern of breath and heart rate. Falcon realized that none of his seven languages

Falcon’s visual art—large canvases filled with these geometric scripts, often painted over with translucent layers of wax and ash—challenges the fundamental premise of Western art. Art, since the Romantics, has been about expression . Falcon’s work is about implication . I am tired of being spoken

Critics have dismissed this as “pretentious asemic writing” or a gimmick. But linguists like Dr. Mira Tannen of MIT have noted that Falcon’s script shares structural features with early proto-cuneiform—a system born not from speech, but from accounting. Falcon is not trying to transcribe speech; he is trying to bypass the auditory cortex entirely. He is building a language for the eye and the hand, bypassing the treachery of the tongue.

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