

I have learned a lot about the Creative Arts and Dance Movement Therapy in particular over many years as first a participant, then co-facilitator, then facilitator. I have come to know the far reaching effects that movement has in discovering one’s own thoughts and feelings. I have come to recognize others feelings by witnessing their movement as well.
In one situation I spend time directing a…


Government agencies rarely struggle because policies are missing.
More often, the real challenge lies in how those policies are interpreted.
Every day, officers across departments make important decisions based on acts, rules, circulars, notifications, and regulatory guidelines. These documents form the foundation of governance and guide how public administration functions.
Yet the day-to-day reality inside many government offices looks very different.
Policy information is often buried inside long PDF files and scattered documents. Officers spend a significant amount of time searching through regulations, trying to understand specific clauses, and making sure their decisions align with official rules.
In many cases, approvals depend heavily on how a particular clause is interpreted. Teams often escalate decisions to senior officials—not because escalation is necessary, but because they want to avoid making the wrong call.
Over time, this creates a familiar pattern across many government departments:
• Citizen services take longer than expected
• Policies are applied inconsistently
• Legal and compliance risks increase
• A small group of experienced experts becomes the primary source of guidance
Traditional dashboards cannot fix this issue. Dashboards are designed to present data, not interpret policy. Manual document review also becomes harder to sustain as regulations grow more complex and continue to evolve.
Today’s government environment is far more demanding than before. Regulations change quickly, accountability standards are higher, and decisions are frequently subject to audits and public scrutiny.
In this setting, consistent policy interpretation becomes essential.
This is where NeoroTalks introduces an AI-driven approach to Policy Intelligence for government operations.
NeoroTalks works as an Agentic AI operating layer built for regulated public-sector environments. The system securely processes acts, rules, circulars, and notifications, converting them into a structured knowledge framework that officers can easily search and interpret.
When officers ask questions, the system provides clause-level answers along with direct source references, ensuring that every response can be verified and traced back to the original policy. Role-based access controls help maintain secure information sharing across departments, while complete audit trails preserve accountability for every action.
Instead of spending hours searching through documents or escalating interpretation questions, officers can obtain verified answers within seconds.
The result is faster approvals, fewer interpretation errors, stronger compliance, and better knowledge continuity across government teams.
In modern public service, effective governance is not only about creating policies.
It is about ensuring those policies are understood and applied consistently, securely, and efficiently.

Your KYC and AML process is holding you back, and your financial institution is probably aware of it.
It’s not common for banks to fail compliance audits because they’re not following the rules and regulations set by the government and other financial watchdogs. However, it is common for them to fail because their manual compliance process is unable to keep up with the ever-changing risk scenario.
For the majority of financial institutions across the world, the overall process of KYC and AML is still based on manual document-intensive processes and involves significant human intervention.
Is this efficient? No, it is not.
Is it efficient? No, it is not.
Is it efficient? No, it is not.
It is controlled operational complexity, and the regulators are becoming aware of it.
The implications on the business can be quite severe as any delay in the onboarding process means delayed revenue generation, and any inconsistency in the decision-making process can lead to increased risk and heightened regulatory issues.
However, the biggest challenge that the financial industry is facing is that public AI tools can never be used in the overall process without compromising sensitive financial information.
The harsh truth is that the overall compliance process was not built to handle the scale and complexity that the world is witnessing today.
For any financial institution operating across the world, the scale and the complexity that the overall process is experiencing today is huge, and the regulations and the rules that they need to adhere to are becoming stricter and stricter with each passing day.
This is where NeoroTalks introduces a new approach to KYC and AML intelligence.
Instead of adding another layer of dashboards for BFSI organizations to manage, NeoroTalks offers an Agentic AI Intelligence Layer designed for regulated BFSI environments.
The system can read and understand KYC and AML documentation, make decisions against internal Compliance Policies, assist Compliance Officers with Explainable Decision-Making, and record all steps for auditing purposes. It is deployed in on-premise or private cloud environments, ensuring data is fully under the control of the BFSI organization.
The operational difference is obvious.
Where traditional methods require manual review of documentation and time-consuming onboarding procedures, NeoroTalks offers AI-assisted Document Understanding and Compliance Validation. Compliance Officers are able to review structured summaries of documentation, and every decision is still auditable.
For BFSI leaders, the challenge is no longer simply how to meet regulatory requirements. It is how to build Compliance Operations that can scale safely, consistently, and efficiently across global environments.
In today’s financial institutions, Compliance is no longer about slowing growth; it is about protecting it.
We take remnants of our fragmented realities and build a brand-new, unified one. We heal the cracks between us, and slowly start to see the bigger picture — the exquisite mosaic the entirety of all our pieces create.
Whatever you were programmed to do or behave like as a child is something you grow up with, and eventually, you have to rewire your mind. You have to daily change and challenge your beliefs, and you have to be repetitious with yourself.
In school, they labeled me with ADD and a learning disability. I was made to feel stupid and incapable of doing things on my own. My special education teacher in seventh grade even helped me to cheat, so I learned that it was okay to cheat just to get the answers.
When I was 14, my mother started homeschooling me. The first thing I wanted to do when she wasn’t looking was go to the back of the book and copy the answers. That was what I had done in school; I honestly didn’t know how else to do the work because I hadn’t actually learned how to study, plus I was intimidated and overwhelmed by it. When my mom realized what I was doing, she told me it was wrong and warned me that if I continued to cheat, she would send me back to school.
One of the reasons she wanted to homeschool me was so that I would have to teach myself and learn to depend on myself. She wanted me to stop depending on adults because, in school, they were teaching me to be dependent, which made me feel incapable of doing anything for myself. At 14, my mom wanted me to feel independent.
Once you’ve been programmed, it’s really hard to change. It is hard to rewire your mind, especially if you don’t understand that you even need to, or how to. When you are just a young child in survival mode, you don’t know any better, and often no one is there to explain what needs to change and why.
Cheating on schoolwork goes beyond what’s right or wrong. It comes down to this: I wasn’t learning anything, therefore I wasn’t going to be any smarter. The cheating wasn’t just about breaking a law; it was the fact that I wasn’t helping myself get stronger mentally or academically.
My grandfather, who was my pastor all through my childhood, only made it to the ninth grade. He could barely read, but he taught himself to read the Bible later on in life. One of his life lessons he taught was: “If you stop trying to learn new things, then that’s all you’ll ever know. You won’t be any smarter.” Coming from a man who wasn’t a great reader, he would sometimes struggle with big words in the pulpit and pronounce them with a country accent. It was funny, but deeper than the pronunciation, he knew what those words meant. He knew the heart of the Bible, and you can’t take that for granted.
I’ve beat myself up most of my life, feeling like I failed myself by not trying to learn more when I was younger. But I was surviving. I was taking care of my grandmother who had dementia and helping to raise my brother‘s kids. All I knew was how to cook, clean, change diapers, and watch cartoons. Back then, I knew every show on Disney Channel, PBS Kids, and Nick Jr. It was wearing me down, but honestly, a lot of those were learning cartoons! I actually learned a lot from them—maybe that was the level I needed to be on at the time.
Sometimes you have to start back at the basics. You have to learn your ABCs and 123s all over again. I’m dead serious, because the foundation for your journey is everything. If you don’t have a good foundation, there won’t be anything there to catch you when you fall. Even when you hit your face, you still need that solid foundation to land on. That’s how you make it.
I know it’s a “survival of the fittest” and a “dog-eat-dog” world, but you have to get deeper than that. You absolutely have to find your footing and look at the heart of it all. Examine yourself. Stop comparing yourself to others but look deep down to find out what you’re made of. Find your flaws and weaknesses and use them to your advantage. Truly, use your vulnerabilities as your greatest strength.
Turn your pain into purpose. ⚓️🛡️✨🏹
3-02-26 at 10:23 a.m. (222)
AI-built marketing tools are spreading rapidly inside B2B organizations.
Custom GPT workflows.
Interactive calculators.
Micro-apps solving niche funnel problems.
But most teams are missing a critical layer:
Integration into CRM systems, attribution models, and unified customer profiles.
Without integration, AI tools generate activity instead of revenue intelligence.
In the new video and article, I break down:
• The Vibecoded Integration Maturity Model
• CRM integration strategies (API, middleware, tracking layers)
• Governance and risk considerations
• AI SEO and search visibility implications
• Sample code snippets
• A free integration planning template
If you’re building AI tools in marketing, integration architecture is no longer optional.
Watch the video, link above.
Download the free template from the article, link below.
Calligraphy is not confined to paper. Across Islamic architecture, walls, domes, portals, and friezes become monumental canvases for divine language.
The integration of calligraphy and geometry creates a spatial version of sacred text. Words wrap around domes, flow across minarets, or interlace with floral arabesques. This practice turns architecture into a living scripture.
Examples include:
• Aya Sofya’s monumental medallions
• Persian shrine epigraphy
• Mughal palace inscriptions
Calligraphy becomes architecture, and architecture becomes an act of devotion.
Visuals:
Calligraphic frieze on mosque iwan (https://www.alamy.com/architectural-detail-of-iwan-at-shah-mosque-also-known-as-imam-mosque-and-jaame-abbasi-mosque-isfahan-iran-quranic-calligraphy-written-in-thuluth-script-image377464723.html)
Mughal palace inscription panel (https://smarthistory.org/dado-panel-courtyard-of-the-royal-palace-of-masud-iii/)
Ottoman dome calligraphy (https://www.alamy.com/calligraphy-and-the-ottoman-art-on-the-inside-of-the-dome-did-by-mimar-sinan-on-the-suleymaniye-mosque-in-istanbul-image188148714.html)




Achieve Enterprise Integration Excellence with Automated Migration
Learn how Boomi RPA and Jade Global’s Automation Accelerator are helping enterprises streamline integrations and enhance operational efficiency. With automated migration, you can accelerate time-to-value, reduce complexity, and drive innovation across your enterprise. Read the blog here: Why to Migrate Boomi











AI-built marketing tools are exploding across B2B organizations.
Custom calculators.
AI chat workflows.
Micro-SaaS style tools built in days.
But most teams are missing the bigger question:
How do these tools integrate into CRM systems, attribution models, and unified customer data layers?
Without integration, they create engagement, not revenue intelligence.
In the full article, I cover:
• The Vibecoded Integration Maturity Model
• CRM integration patterns
• Middleware vs API approaches
• Governance risks
• AI-driven search implications
• Code snippet examples
• A free integration planning template
If you’re building AI marketing tools, integration strategy is no longer optional.
Read the full article and download the free template.





“Questo mondo è come un arcobaleno o un giardino fiorito. Ogni nazione dona colori diversi. Tribù, religione, razza, lingua, tradizioni e culture diverse, ecc. Le differenze rendono questa vita più bella. Cosa succederebbe se la Terra contenesse solo il nero o solo il bianco? Arcobaleni con un solo colore. Giardini fioriti con un solo tipo di fiore. Siamo tutti i colori della vita e viviamo insieme in armonia per rendere questo mondo più bello e dare felicità a tutti.”
“This world is like a rainbow or flower garden. Each nation donate different colors . Tribe, religion, race, language, traditions and different cultures,etc. The differences make this life be more beautiful. What would happen if the earth only contains black or white only. Rainbow with one color. Flower gardens with one kind of flower. We are all the colors of life and we live together in harmony to make this world more beautiful and give happiness to everyone.”
― Andry lavigne
A year ago, I was asked this question and I truly couldn’t answer it:
“10. How can I integrate and embrace my shadow aspects to cultivate self-acceptance and growth?”
At the time, I didn’t understand how to integrate trauma and I was lacking motivation and self-love. I simply hadn’t learned to love myself yet.
I spent 2025 really sitting with the pain. I even wrote a song that said, “I’m making friends with the pain.” It wasn’t my most fun song to write, but it was honest. I had to accept the impact of everything I’ve ever gone through.
Facing the Truth
Part of my “Shadow” was accepting things that felt embarrassing. I had to accept that I’ve been a sexual person since I was a little girl, and that I had an addiction to porn since I was 15. I realized that shaming myself only made it worse.
I studied the psychology of it and realized I was using it to regulate my emotions and escape. When I would try to process trauma, my body would feel aroused as a way to protect me from the pain. It wanted pleasure because the reality of healing was so painful to face.
Cleaning the Wounds
Talking about my past felt like opening old wounds, but I realized I was cleaning them out—scraping out the poison so I could finally make peace and let go.
Forgiveness has been a process within a process. Being neurodivergent (ADHD and Autism), my mind never shuts off. I used to feel so much guilt at church when they preached about forgiveness, wondering why I couldn’t just let go of the people who hurt me.
Learning to Forgive
I had to learn to forgive myself. Daily, I told myself: “I forgive myself, and I forgive my exes.” When I would make a mistake, instead of saying how bad I was, I told myself that I was just learning how to regulate my emotions and process trauma. By not shaming myself and telling myself it’s okay to be learning, things suddenly got easier. I gained more self-control by understanding my impulsive nature.
Walking the Walk
I learned that you can’t just intellectualize the trauma; you truly have to feel everything. You have to bring yourself understanding when no one else does. The abuse wasn’t my fault, and I’m not going to let it make me a cold person.
I told myself I have to lead by example. If I’m going to do the talk, I have to do the walk—and the walk is the hardest part. It’s embarrassing to walk out the shame, but that is the true integration: accepting that yes, I’ve been sexual, I’ve had trauma, and I was a people-pleaser. That is who I was, but it’s not who I’m always going to be.
Patience in the Process
I am working on myself every day, and I’m not doing it alone. I’ve prayed for forgiveness of my sins countless times and for help to be a better person. I’ve learned that I just need to be patient with God, with others, and especially with myself.
Patience is one of the hardest lessons because we want things to happen instantly. We get that surge of energy to be happy, and then feel frustrated when it doesn’t happen that second. But I am learning. I hope this helps somebody.
2-17-26 at 8:28 a.m. (222)
Healing is not just a decision, it’s a process. But the cultural emphasis on ‘healing’ is wildly over-stated; it may be a new language but a grounded, integrated approach is the only way to look at it. It’s not magic.