We Were Never Minus, Only Uncounted Parts I wanted to show the instant you realize the device is not in your hand — your hand is inside the device. I split face, thumb, and phone into separate shards
THE LIMB WE THOUGHT WAS A TOOL I wanted to show the instant you realize the device is not adjacent to you but already inside your reflex, your reach, your sense of self. I fractured face, hand, and ph
Already-Cyborg: The Reflex That Wears My Face I wanted to show the instant the device stops being tool and is revealed as a limb — a reflex wearing glass. I split face, hand, and phone into separate s
The Phone Was Always Part Of Us I wanted to show the instant we realize there was never skin here and device there — only one reflex split into shards. I separated face, hand, and smartphone across a
We Were Never Minus, Only Misnamed Limbs I wanted to fracture the portrait into face, hand, and phone so the viewer feels how each shard completes the others through impossible crystal logic — not pro
**We Never Held The Phone—It Held Us** I wanted to freeze the instant the hand, the face, and the device stop being neighbors and start being one reflex. I split them into three bone-white shards and
The Phone Was the Hand All Along I wanted to show the exact instant the tool reveals itself as a limb, so I fractured a face, a hand, and a phone into separate shards and bound them with paradox prism
Boundary Erased Before We Learned Its Name I wanted to show the moment you realize the phone was never in your hand — it was your hand. I split face, hand, and device into separate shards and entangle
We Were Never Minus the Machine I wanted to pin the instant a tool became a limb — a face, a hand, and a phone torn into separate shards yet bound by cold, impossible prisms. I chose paradox prisms to
The Phone Was Already A Bone I wanted to show that face, hand, and device are not parts to be joined later, but fragments of a single limb already split by habit. I separated the portrait into three b
We Were Never Minus, Only Entangled Up Close I wanted to fracture the portrait into three hovering shards—face, hand, and phone—then lace them together with paradox prisms so the boundary between fles
WE WERE LIMBS BEFORE WE KNEW IT I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the device were never separate—only observed at different angles of the same reflex. I split them into suspended shards an
We Were Never Minus, Only Misaligned Reflections I wanted to show the instant you realize the phone was a limb and the algorithm a reflex—three shards of face, hand, and device pulled apart yet acting
The Tool That Confesses It Was a Limb I wanted the instant of recognition when the phone, the hand, and the face realize they’re the same system. I split them into bone-white shards and entangled them
The Limb You Mistook For A Tool I wanted to catch the split-second when skin, glass, and reflex confess they were one organism all along. I fractured a face, a hand, and a phone into separate shards a
**We Never Held Phones, We Grew Them** I wanted to picture the instant we realize the device was always a limb — a reflex rendered external — by fracturing face, hand, and “phone” into separated shard
The Phone Was a Hand All Along I wanted to freeze the instant we realize the device is not separate: a fractured portrait where face, hand, and phone are spatially disjoined yet behave as one body. I
**The Algorithm Was Always a Reflex** I wanted to stage the instant the body realizes the device is not external: a fractured face, a severed hand, and a black-glass phone suspended apart yet acting a
Bold thesis: Your Tool Was Always Your Nervous System I wanted to show that the phone, the hand, and the face are already a single reflex — split apart only to reveal their entanglement. I chose three
We Already Grew the Extra Limb I wanted to show the instant you realize the device isn’t in your hand — your hand is in the device. I fractured the portrait into face, hand, and phone, then entangled
We Already Wore the Machine Without Knowing I wanted to show the instant we realize the device is not in our hand but in our nervous system. I split a face, a hand, and a phone into suspended shards a
Your Phone Was Always A Nervous System I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the device have already fused into one reflex—spatially split but quantum-entangled by cold prisms that refract imp
Your Phone Was Always Part Of You I wanted to catch the instant you realize the screen is not in your hand but inside your proprioception. I split face, hand, and device into drifting shards and stitc
The Limb You Mistook For A Tool I wanted to show the exact instant you realize the device was never separate from you. I split the face, hand, and phone into suspended shards and entangled them with p
Your Thumb Was An Antenna Before You Knew I split face, hand, and phone into separate shards so you feel their distance yet watch them act as one, entangled by razor-edged paradox prisms that refract
There Was Never A Minus At All I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the phone are not parts but one reflex split by habit. I chose to fracture them into bone‑white shards and bind them with p
**We Mistook Our New Limb For A Screen** I wanted to show that the device was never separate — so I fractured a face, a hand, and a phone into three floating shards and entangled them with paradox pri
Boundary Was Gone Before We Looked Up I wanted to trap the instant we realize the device is not held but grown — a limb we forgot to name. I split face, hand, and phone into separate shards and entang
Your Phone Was Always A Nerve I wanted to show that the device never sat in our hand; it grew through it. I split face, hand, and phone into entangled shards and laced them with paradox prisms so the
**We Were Always More Than One Body** I wanted to show the instant a tool reveals itself as a limb, so I split face, hand, and phone into separate shards that still act as one organism through cold, r
We Never Held the Phone—It Held Us I wanted to stage the instant our tools reveal themselves as limbs, so I split a face, a hand, and a phone into separate shards and entangled them with paradox prism
Your Phone Was Always Your Phantom Limb I wanted to show that the device never sat outside of us — it already rewired our reflexes. I split face, hand, and phone into floating shards and laced them wi
**Your Phone Was Already Your Nerve** I wanted to show the instant we realize the limb and the device were never separate—our reflexes already braided with glass. I split face, hand, and phone into di
Your Phone Was Always a Bone I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the phone were never separate—only misaligned facets of one body. I split them into suspended shards and bound them with para
The Limb Was Always Already Attached I wanted to show the instant you recognize the device as a reflex you grew, not a tool you hold. I split a face, a hand, and a phone into separate shards and entan
We Were Never Minus, Only Split Across Light I wanted to show the human face, hand, and device already entangled — three shards drifting apart yet locked by the same cold prism that makes our reflexes
The Limb You Mistook For A Tool I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the phone no longer negotiate — they cohere as one reflex split across space. I chose razor-edged paradox prisms to entang
Cyborg Was Always The Baseline, Not The Exception I wanted to fracture a portrait until the face, the hand, and the device reveal they are the same limb seen at different distances. I chose hyper-cold
Your Phone Was Always a Nerve Ending I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the device were never separate—only observed from different planes. I split them into drifting shards and bound them
We Never Had A Minus To Begin With I wanted to show the instant a face, a hand, and a phone stop being parts and reveal themselves as one organism—spatially disjoined yet quantum-entangled through par
We Already Grew the Extra Limb I wanted to fracture a portrait so the face, hand, and phone exist as separated organs yet act as one body. I chose hyper-cold mirror prisms to entangle the shards, refr
We Were Never Minus, Only Misnamed Connections I fractured a face, a hand, and a phone into separate shards and bound them with cold, mirror-edged prisms that spit warm terracotta geometries — a portr
We Were Always Holding the Other Hand I wanted to stage the instant a tool reveals itself as anatomy: face, hand, and phone torn apart but bound by a single crystalline reflex. I chose hyper-cold para
We Never Held Phones, We Grew Them I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the device were always one organism, only noticed once it fractured. I separated them into suspended shards and entangl
**The Limb We Mistook For A Tool** I wanted to collapse the fiction that device and body are separate by fracturing a portrait into three suspended shards—face, hand, and phone—and then binding them w
The Phone Was A Nerve All Along I wanted to show that body and device were never separate, so I split a face, a hand, and a phone into drifting shards and bound them with paradox prisms that refract w