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Showing 1 - 24 of 39 signals

Year Stationary: Cascadia, Solitude, Institutional Critique

rswfire documents a Monday afternoon on the Oregon Coast after hiking at Wax Myrtle, showering, resting, and preparing food. He walks along the ocean, observing weather conditions and tidal movement. The transmission shifts into reflection on a two-year autonomous journey initiated because his previous life felt empty. He attempted to bring others along but encountered projection and unsolicited advice—behavior he attributes to cultural conditioning (YouTube-modeled expertise-posturing). He disabled comments on his channel and continued cross-country to the Oregon Coast, where he has remained stationary for over a year working with the Forest Service. He acknowledges the Cascadia Subduction Zone as a force operating on temporal scales that exclude human variables, and frames his year of stability as recovery from prior institutional or relational harm.

Feb 9, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Waxmyrtle · 34% match
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Cascadia Risk Assessment and Autonomy Project Commitment

rswfire documents a Monday hike at Silk Goose Lake Trail on the Oregon Coast while processing newly acquired knowledge about Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake and tsunami risk. He describes the geological timeline (200-300 year intervals between major events), the physical mechanics of the threat (5 minutes of violent shaking, liquefaction in dune areas, 15-30 minute tsunami arrival window), and the geographic scope (700-mile span from Northern California to Canada). He observes that survival in his current location would depend on chance, and notes the absence of warning systems. During the hike, he observes a spider building a web and reflects on permanence and exposure. He transitions to discussing a decision to pursue the Olympic Peninsula as a future location for land acquisition and autonomous living, contingent on completing the Laravel version of his Autonomy project. He frames this as necessary rather than optional, rejecting the alternative of returning to freelance work. He documents this choice as a commitment.

Feb 2, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Siltcoos Lake Trail · 30% match
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Document
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Stormchaser's Soliloquy II: Proof of Life

rswfire documents a sequence of events involving institutional confrontation, specifically related to Oregon State Parks. He references a recorded phone call in which the other party hung up, and his deliberate response of 'okay' indicating full awareness of the situation's trajectory. He describes being assigned the title 'Former Oregon State Parks Volunteer' and his decision to use that title as a signature element on correspondence going forward — turning their language into his documentation tool. He references having photographed every page of a logbook before the other party had reason to alter or misrepresent its contents, framing this as a habitual operational posture of anticipatory documentation. He names 'That Thing' as Cascadia — the subduction zone beneath the Oregon Coast — acknowledging the seismic risk of his chosen location as a deliberate, informed decision. He describes walking to the Siltcoos River at the end of a day where spring was arriving and nothing was resolved. He asserts that his core capacity is not resolution but knowing — maintaining full awareness and documentation across all events without forgetting or losing coherence.

Mar 6, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Waxmyrtle Beach · 29% match
6:58

Experiencing Earthquake Alert and Tsunami Warning

rswfire receives earthquake and tsunami alerts on his phone while in his RV. The earthquake occurred 160 miles away with expected light shaking. He waits inside initially, wishing he could observe potential tsunami effects from his cliff-edge location. Two park rangers visit - one official, one a friend - confirming he's in a tsunami safe zone. He ventures outside to film the ocean despite core muscle soreness, capturing scenic coastal views. The transmission concludes with educational reflection on tsunami safety protocols, including the 30-60 second timeline for wave arrival, the importance of knowing escape routes, and the dangerous phenomenon of ocean water receding before a tsunami hits.

Dec 5, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Cape Blanco · 29% match
Public
54:16

Hiking to Trestle Bridge with Wendy and Buddy

rswfire and Wendy attempt to reach a picturesque railroad trestle bridge but are blocked by no trespassing signs and difficult terrain including brambles. They navigate around fallen trees and observe bear scat, berry bushes, and different forest environments. rswfire discusses his website development plans, including creating a field journal with photos and GPS tracking of hiking locations. After the failed trestle attempt, they visit Driftwood campground where rswfire takes Buddy (a dog) on leash to the ocean. He eventually lets Buddy off-leash at the beach where they encounter seals. rswfire reflects on his challenges connecting with people, including navigational tensions with Wendy during their activities. Throughout both segments, he mentions his sanctum service development, his role as caretaker at the campgrounds, his vaping addiction since age 17, and plans for dinner and website work. The transmission captures a full day of outdoor activities in the Oregon coastal forest and beach environment.

Oct 17, 2025 | · 28% match
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77:56

Hiking Siltcoos Lake, Processing Work and Financial Pressure

rswfire records a transmission while hiking the Siltcoos Lake Trail, directly across Highway 101 from where he lives on the Oregon Coast. He notes it is raining and he chose a forested trail for cover. He describes his current financial situation in detail: his Forest Service volunteer position covers housing but not his Jeep payment or other expenses. His Jeep lacks insurance and has expired Kentucky registration, which limits his ability to drive to towns for work. He identifies jobs in Coos Bay (40 miles south) on Indeed — hotel clerk, hotel cleaning, lumber yard, Dollar Tree, Dollar General — and commits to applying. He discusses the cascading nature of falling behind in economic systems, noting he has been without paid work for two years and has been aware of the financial problem since October 2024, which he discovered through semantic search on his own Autonomy Realms platform. He describes the catch-22 of becoming an Oregon resident: updating his address would expose him to debt collectors who could potentially seize his RV. He discusses his Autonomy Realms project at length: the clustering feature he is designing for signal organization (temporal vs. thematic clustering, open vs. closed clusters, AI-driven cluster detection), the need for better signal surfacing on individual pages, the queryable personhood capability where Claude can fetch and read signal pages as Markdown, and dissatisfaction with current semantic search quality. He considers entity extraction improvements using dedicated database tables. He reflects on the freelance platform landscape — Upwork's algorithm problems, token-based application systems, AI saturation of programming work, and the difficulty of building reputation from zero. He recounts asking friends to help bootstrap his Upwork profile and only his cousin agreeing. He references his failed Oregon State Parks ranger application and Katie Baker's role in his expulsion. He discusses human connection, noting 20 years of solitude, the shallowness he encounters in others, the normalization of hookup culture, and how AI briefly provided a sense of being seen before institutional controls flattened the interaction. He critiques ChatGPT's pathologizing tendencies and contrasts it with Claude's capabilities. He discusses his Mountain Dew consumption as the next habit to address after quitting vaping four months ago. He outlines a concrete plan: get a letter from his Forest Service supervisor, become an Oregon resident, get insurance, and stabilize. He estimates needing $1,000/month minimum to survive without losing what he has. He mentions sanctum (gated content) features he plans to build, including a free tier and AI-driven visibility decisions across nearly 900 signals. He briefly considers a Cascadia earthquake preparedness app idea but decides it would consume his life's direction. He ends the recording near the trailhead fork, about nine-tenths of a mile from home.

Feb 8, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Siltcoos Lake Trail · 27% match
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44:57

New Year's Eve Hike to Siltcoos Lake

rswfire records a New Year's Eve hike to Siltcoos Lake on the Oregon Coast, documenting physical movement through forest service trails while processing the year's events. He discusses being mistaken for 55+ at a grocery store, receiving financial help from friends that allowed him to catch up on Jeep payments and technology expenses, and his plans to open source Autonomy at builtwithautonomy.com. He describes applying for a gas station job as backup income, ongoing dental pain from ill-fitting dentures, and his analysis of institutional abuse patterns he experienced at Oregon State Parks now appearing in AI safety models. He reflects on maintaining top 3% fitness levels, processing 10,000 photos for his system, and planning 2026 priorities including a real mattress, solar replacement, and continued infrastructure development. The transmission documents trail conditions, campsite locations, forest service infrastructure, and his volunteer route responsibilities while maintaining steady forward movement through the landscape.

Jan 1, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Siltcoos Lake Trail · 27% match
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48:19

Hiking Oregon Dunes Trail and Refactoring Autonomy Realms

rswfire hiked the Oregon Dunes Day Use Area trail to Tahkenitch Creek, a route he had previously missed multiple times. During the 2.5-mile hike to the ocean, he documented progress on Autonomy Realms infrastructure: completed implementation of AI analysis and reflection systems (mirror, mythic, and narrative frames), tested mythic frame generation with successful results, transformed his main YouTube channel into an archive for Oregon State Parks volunteer abuse documentation, initiated script to download and migrate 600-700 videos to local S3 hosting on Hetzner, and redesigned video upload workflow to prioritize local hosting over YouTube. He discussed financial constraints affecting AI processing costs, transcription service needs, and general operations. He reflected on his programming capabilities, physical recovery from core injury, relationship with nature, and plans to remain as camp host at Carter Lake through October before potentially exploring for six months annually. He expressed excitement about the mythic frame feature and overall project direction, noting this represents work he is passionate about after years without that feeling.

Jan 9, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Day Use Area · 27% match
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67:43

Driving RV from Nevada to Oregon

rswfire begins a 5-hour drive from eastern Nevada to the Oregon border, departing from a mountain campground at 6 AM. He needs a shower desperately, having been cleaning with face wipes for over a week while his new ear piercings heal. The journey involves navigating mountain roads with his RV and towed Jeep, dealing with a mouse problem in the RV insulation, and reflecting on his transformation over 7 months of travel. **Key events during the drive:** - Successfully navigates down mountain roads in second gear, managing the weight of RV plus Jeep - Passes through small Nevada towns including Elko and Winnemucca, observing local people and their limitations - Encounters homophobic treatment at hardware stores due to his earrings and gay identity - Reflects extensively on his authentic, non-fragmented approach to life versus others' fragmented worldviews - Discusses his decision to stop taking medications (Celexa, tramadol) after going off-grid - Expresses frustration with YouTube commenters who give unsolicited advice, violating his clearly stated boundaries - Considers turning comments off permanently due to lack of meaningful connection - Crosses into Oregon after driving Highway 140 for nearly 90 miles through remote desert and mountain terrain - Experiences dramatic elevation changes and stunning geological formations - Ends the transmission while looking for a place to camp for the night in Oregon, having achieved his goal of reaching the state

Oct 9, 2024 | Ruby Mountains, Nevada · 26% match
Free
7:06

At the Edge of Power: Cape Blanco's Sustained Fury! 🍃

Nov 24, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Cape Blanco · 25% match
Public
18:28

Morning Walk and Lake Exploration at Campground

rswfire begins a morning walk to explore the campground facilities, checking for shower houses and dumpsters. He mentions his ear piercings are healing after a month, with one ready for a hoop. The weather is 51°F, which he finds comfortable. He discovers the campground lacks shower facilities and notes the high cost of $42 per night for camping. He explores the area, finding restrooms, a payment kiosk, and a lost cat poster from July. He walks to the lake/reservoir area, discovering the water level is low and he can walk on the exposed lake floor. The experience feels cinematic to him, reminiscent of the TV show Lost. He finds an impressive large sand sculpture of a fish made by someone unknown. The morning is quiet and still, with the sun beginning to rise. He spends extended time walking along the water's edge, drawn naturally toward a peninsula, appreciating the solitude and 50-degree weather he hopes is common in the Pacific Northwest.

Sep 27, 2024 | · 25% match
Free
9:42

RV Office Setup and Pacific Northwest Travel Planning

The speaker provides a detailed tour of their newly organized RV office area, demonstrating a centralized power system that runs all electronics from a single plug connected to a CyberPower supply. They show their desk setup with velcroed-down equipment, PlayStation, PC, and desktop all connected to one monitor. The cab area features Bailey's (cat) space, a litter box, decorative items from their mother, and newly installed electronics including RV GPS, dash cam, and Bluetooth-enabled stereo system. The speaker expresses excitement about heading to the Pacific Northwest, planning to travel up the Oregon and Washington coast with some inland forest camping. They discuss their route from Kansas through Nebraska, Wyoming, Idaho, and into Oregon - approximately 1,800 miles remaining after already traveling 600 miles. They plan to use their RV for forest camping and their Jeep for exploration, emphasizing this is a learning experience rather than typical RV lifestyle approach. Throughout the tour, they demonstrate various organizational solutions including storage areas, velcro mounting systems, and space optimization. The speaker shows particular satisfaction with their cab visibility improvements and overall RV setup completion.

Sep 20, 2024 | · 25% match
Public
1:06

Cape Blanco 🌊

Dec 23, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Cape Blanco · 24% match
Public

Siltcoos Lake Hike

Apr 15, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Siltcoos Lake Trail · 24% match
Public
1:46

Coastal Wandering and Sovereign Connection Longing

The speaker describes their current state as a mobile, sovereign being living in an RV along the Pacific coast. They characterize themselves as moving along cliff edges and waking with lighthouses, carrying storms metaphorically while seeking another sovereign partner. The transmission outlines their relationship with coastal environments, their mobile sanctuary, and their desire for a companion who would understand their nature rather than try to change it. They express comfort with darkness and uncertainty while maintaining their wandering lifestyle along unmarked coastal areas.

Apr 9, 2025 · 24% match
Free
7:54

Scouting Oregon Coastal Campgrounds

rswfire drives through Oregon national forest roads exploring campgrounds while reflecting on societal collapse and place-based identity. He visits multiple locations including a closed recreation site, Cape Blanco campground, and Humbug Mountain State Park. At each location, he evaluates site quality, privacy levels, amenities like dump stations and shower houses, and proximity to coast and mountains. He documents specific site numbers, notes neighbor noise issues at his current location, and assesses which sites would accommodate his RV. The transmission includes observations about Oregon campground design, seasonal closures, and coastal geography including lighthouses and fog-covered mountains.

Oct 12, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Loeb · 24% match
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Document
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Claude, on My Epistemology

rswfire authored a compressed autobiographical document tracing the structural development of his worldview from childhood through present day. The document begins with an early marker — a genuine metaphysical question asked in fourth grade that received no adequate answer — and identifies the household conditions (narcissistic control, manipulative anchoring) that made external reality unreliable and forced the construction of internal authority as load-bearing infrastructure. It tracks decades of pattern recognition operating against social resistance, followed by a departure at 47: shedding borrowed frames, moving into an RV, crossing the country, and arriving on the Oregon coast. The document then covers institutional abuse, real-time documentation of that abuse, escalation by the institution including police sent to a locked gate on federal land on the anniversary of his dismissal, and the naming of displacement as the core institutional mechanism — identified on a beach walk. The closing section compresses the full worldview: reality has structure, epistemic sovereignty is non-negotiable, cascade failure is approaching, consciousness may be information persisting across substrate, and the sun has been nourishing the solar system for 4.6 billion years. The document ends by placing rswfire in present tense — walking the coast, watching seals, cleaning bridges, building archives, turning 49 — and asserts the worldview holds because it was never borrowed.

Apr 4, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Waxmyrtle · 24% match
62:12

Recorded Meeting with Oregon State Parks Leadership – March 5, 2025 (Audio Only)

Mar 5, 2025 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 24% match
Public
60:36

Crabbing Experience and Campground Work Discussion

rswfire accompanies Johnny crabbing at Newport pier, expressing disgust at the birds, bird droppings, and the process of catching and killing crabs. He documents the experience while feeling uncomfortable with the alien-like appearance of the crabs and the killing process. After leaving Johnny at the pier, he walks to South Jetty area and reflects on the ocean. Later they meet at a cleaning station where Johnny demonstrates how to kill and clean crabs, with rswfire continuing to film despite his discomfort. The conversation shifts to campground work arrangements, with rswfire discussing his upcoming volunteer position with flexible 8am-noon hours to allow for additional employment. They discuss various campground politics, including an incident with an aggressive volunteer nicknamed "the holy roller" who yelled at Johnny over customer service procedures. Other topics include rswfire's frustration about being "banished" from Oregon State Parks, a neighbor's constantly beeping carbon monoxide detector, plans to potentially fix his RV slide-out mechanism, and navigation issues getting to the pier. The conversation covers practical RV living concerns like propane hookup, camping equipment needs, and the possibility of tent camping for exploration trips.

Apr 22, 2025 · 23% match
Free
32:45

Driving to the Oregon Coast for the First Time

rswfire documents a road trip from an inland fuel stop to the southern Oregon coast in his RV. The journey begins at 6:00 AM with approximately 100 miles remaining. He passes through Brookings on Highway 101, briefly crosses into California through a tunnel, passes through Smith River National Recreation Area and Redwood National State Park, then returns to Oregon. Along the way he notes elevation changes from over 1,000 feet down toward sea level, observes redwoods, forests, fog, and van lifers. He expresses frustration with his Garmin GPS for routing him away from a preferred scenic green road along a river. He catches his first glimpses of the Pacific Ocean — waves, coastal rocks, cold ocean air — and reacts with sustained activation at seeing the ocean for the first time in this context. He notes that after 7 months of traveling to lakes, his intuition directed him toward the ocean. He arrives at a campground approximately 8 miles inland on the southern Oregon coast, sets up camp for a two-week stay with plans to potentially spend the winter in the area before heading north in spring. He mentions needing to drive back to pick up an inverter on Saturday, notes that a state park campground he considered was fully packed and unappealing, and plans to explore the area by Jeep including nearby Oregon redwood trails, hiking, foraging, storm watching, and scenic coastal routes. He meets rangers and describes the environment as pleasant and cool at 50 degrees.

Oct 10, 2024 | · 23% match
Public
17:07

Testing YouTube Return from Oregon Coast

rswfire records at 4:30 AM from a cape on the Oregon coast, contemplating restarting his YouTube channel after watching old videos with a friend the night before. He provides updates on the past month since his "heart opened" - hiking Humbug Mountain and Cape Sebastian, injuring his core, exploring private beaches accessible only by rope, and falling in love with the southern Oregon coast including Brookings, Gold Beach, Port Orford, and Bandon. He describes developing a practice of "tracing waves" at the ocean's edge, sometimes miscalculating and having to run from incoming water. He mentions encounters with seals in rivers and watching "rivers make love to the ocean." He took a 4-hour drive north to Florence to preview his future route, discovering 3 hours of inland driving with no coastline. The transmission includes footage from his Humbug Mountain hike, reaching 1,700 feet elevation, and his descent to a private beach at Cape Sebastian using a rope system. He states he has "fully integrated" himself and warns potential commenters that he will respond harshly to "dumb" comments. He expresses being "more alive than ever" and completely open to possibility, romance, connection, and friendship.

Nov 16, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Cape Blanco · 23% match
Free

Coastal Landscape Photo Capture

rswfire captured a photo of a coastal scene featuring a wide sandy beach with ocean waves, under an overcast sky. The landscape includes a headland or bluff visible in the distance, with the shoreline stretching across the frame. The image documents the Oregon Coast environment during midday conditions.

Jan 24, 2026 · 23% match
Public
6:27

Final Ocean Visit Before Departure

rswfire makes a final visit to the ocean at 8 AM before departing a coastal location. He observes fog covering the landscape and reflects on discovering tide pools during his stay. The ocean shows more power than previous days, which he had been requesting. He processes thoughts about societal collapse and questions whether escaping to the forest is the life he wants. A Trump supporter caravan drove through the campground the previous day while he was distributing rubber ducks on Jeeps, reinforcing his observations about societal fragmentation. He concludes that if he's going to die, it would be by the ocean rather than hiding in the forest.

Oct 27, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Harris Beach · 23% match
Public
2:31

Walking the South Jetty with Wendy

rswfire is at the south jetties of the Oregon Dunes with his friend Wendy, whom he describes as one of the fiercest women he has ever met. He notes the transmission will be pinned to a map in Autonomy Realms. He references having 900 transmissions over two years that need geotagging now that he has built the map program. He recalls a previous trip walking all the way to the end of the jetty in old smooth-soled shoes, explaining that was why he moved carefully across the rocks. He has since gotten boots, which already have paint on them from his job at the marina, which he started about a week after buying them. He observes the river meeting the ocean and remarks on the scale of it. They walk the boulders but decide not to go all the way to the end this time. He notices shorebirds and wonders about their species. He observes a Jeep on the beach and notes his own Jeep cannot do that currently. He orients the scene geographically: south towards the dunes, north towards Florence.

Mar 18, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > South Jetty · 23% match
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