Live View - Axis Fix -

This is a chilling mirror of our digital lives. We spend hours in the “Live View” of screens—Instagram, TikTok, X—where the axis of reality is deliberately broken. A friend is happy, then devastated, then wealthy, then destitute, all in 15 seconds. The algorithm thrives on axis drift because disorientation increases engagement (the user keeps scrolling to find stable ground).

This essay argues that the “Axis Fix” is not merely a constraint, but a liberation. In an age of infinite scrolling, relative truths, and cognitive vertigo, the deliberate fixation of a reference point is the only way to achieve genuine, dynamic engagement with reality. Before the “Axis Fix,” there is chaos. Consider a ship at sea without a compass or a gyroscope. Every wave redefines what “down” means. The horizon spins, the stars wheel, and the navigator succumbs to sensory vertigo. This is the condition of modern information consumption: the “Live View” of social media, news feeds, and digital discourse is a relentless torrent of unmoored data. Live View - Axis Fix

But beneath this dry, utilitarian instruction lies a profound philosophical paradox: This is a chilling mirror of our digital lives

This requires a kind of beautiful rigidity. The danger, of course, is rigor mortis. A fixed axis that never recalibrates is a tyranny. The gyroscope is useless if it is welded in place; it must be allowed to precess (shift slowly) in response to the Earth’s rotation. The algorithm thrives on axis drift because disorientation