Befriending Achilles
Yessentuki Every Hero Has a Heel
Achilles was the greatest warrior Greece ever produced.
He could run faster than the wind off the Aegean. He could fight longer than any man alive. He brought Troy to its knees. And he died from an arrow through his heel, the one spot his mother forgot to dip in the river Styx.
We all have that spot.
Most people spend a lifetime avoiding it. We build around it. We explain it away. We call it bad luck or bad timing or somebody else’s fault. The heel stays hidden. The arrow finds it anyway.
The first step is paying attention to the pattern.
Not the event. The pattern. A man loses his temper once and it is an incident. He loses it the same way, in the same circumstances, for thirty years. That is a heel. A woman drinks too much at her sister’s wedding and it is a story. She drinks too much at every family gathering for a decade. That is a heel. The pattern is the diagnosis.
Kurduvādi Ask yourself where you keep getting hit.
Relationships. Money. Health. Work. The same argument with different people. The same job that ends the same way. The same bill that comes due every few years with interest. Most people can name it if they sit still long enough. The trouble is sitting still.
Talk to the people who know you longest.
Not the people who love you the most uncritically. The ones who have watched you long enough to see the pattern from the outside. A childhood friend. A sibling. A former colleague who still speaks to you honestly. Ask them where they have seen you stumble. Ask them what they have been waiting for you to figure out. Brace yourself. They probably know.
Look at what you protect.
The heel is often hiding inside something that looks like a strength. The most generous person in the room sometimes cannot say no. The hardest worker in the building sometimes cannot stop. The life of the party sometimes cannot be alone. Strengths and heels grow from the same root. Pull on the strength long enough and the heel comes with it.
Consider the family catalog.
Achilles heels run in bloodlines the way blue eyes and bad backs do. Not because destiny is fixed, but because we inherit patterns along with furniture and recipes. A father’s rage becomes a son’s anxiety becomes a grandson’s need for control. The shape changes. The root stays. Look at what the people before you carried. Somewhere in that inventory is information about what you are carrying too.
Name it plainly.
This is the hardest part. Not a clinical term. Not a euphemism. Not a story that makes you the victim of it. A plain sentence. My weakness is my temper. My weakness is the bottle. My weakness is that I run when things get serious. My weakness is that I stay when I should run. Plain language does something poetry cannot do. It makes the thing real enough to work with.
Then comes the part nobody talks about.
You befriend it.
Not excuse it. Not celebrate it. Befriend it the way you befriend a difficult neighbor, with clear eyes, firm limits, and the understanding that you are going to be living next to each other for a long time. The heel does not go away. Achilles did not grow new tissue. He learned to keep moving.
He went to Troy anyway. He fought anyway. He became the thing they still write about three thousand years later.
The arrow was always coming. He did not let it be the whole story.
Neither should you.
Evidentialism and Math

Math is the best we have. So far.
That is not a small thing. Math put men on the moon. It predicted black holes decades before we photographed one. It traces the arc of a thrown stone and the curve of spacetime with the same precision. No other tool humans have built comes close.
But a telescope is not the sky.
This is the question Evidentialism asks. Not whether god exists. Not whether science works. Those arguments are settled, or should be. The question is whether the instrument we use to measure reality can measure all of it.
So far, the evidence suggests it cannot.
The math breaks at the singularity, the point inside a black hole where gravity crushes matter into a space so small the equations return infinities. Not large numbers. Infinities. The formulas that track planets and bend light reach that boundary and stop describing reality.
It also breaks at the other end of the scale. At the quantum level, particles occupy multiple states until observation forces a result. Cause and effect blur. The outcome depends on the act of measurement.
General relativity explains the very large. Quantum mechanics explains the very small. Both work. They refuse to fit together.
Something is missing.
Evidentialism does not fill that gap with scripture. It calls on the search for deeper depth. The commitment to keep looking is the faith itself.
Evidentialism is a faith, though it looks different from the old ones.
There is no book. No prophet. No sanctuary walls. But there are figures who bend the human mind toward the unknown. Newton. Einstein. Hawking. People who read the universe the way earlier ages read sacred texts.
And the text they read is mathematics.
The evidence shows a deep mathematical order running beneath everything we see. Fibonacci spirals appear in nautilus shells, sunflower seeds, and galaxies. Pi runs forever without repeating. The golden ratio turns up in faces, raptor flight, and the structure of DNA. Nobody placed those patterns there. We discovered them.
And at the edge of that order, the math runs out.
That is a reason to keep looking. In Evidentialism, that is what faith means.
Call it Spinoza’s God, or Einstein’s cosmic religion-adjacent. Evidentialism lives near that territory. The difference is practical. Evidentialism is a belief system, and belief systems receive recognition. And recompense.
Churches pay no taxes. They occupy valuable land and receive federal protections because society grants belief systems institutional respect.
Yet the belief system that eradicated smallpox, sequenced the human genome, and placed machines on Mars survives on grants and budget fights.
That deserves examination.
Think of it this way. For centuries astronomers mapped the sky with the naked eye and did remarkable work. They charted planets. They predicted eclipses. Their models held for generations.
Then someone ground a lens and the universe exploded into detail. New moons. New galaxies. New questions.
The sky did not change. The tool did.
We may be living in the naked-eye moment of mathematics.
Math is the best we have. It may not be the best there is. And that is the beauty of it.
That is the reason to believe.
