Not every part of this work needs to arrive wearing a tie.
Alongside the more formal Fieldnotes material, there is also a quieter companion strand: reflections on attention, signals, humour, rhythm, story, and the ways serious ideas can sometimes be carried more gently.
This page brings together the current lighter-side materials: the living guide of The Gospel According to Pip the Lentil, a director’s cut commentary beside it, the early world of Beauty & the Bean, and a short note about the author and the thinking style behind the project.
The Gospel According to Pip the Lentil is a gentle companion guide on listening, internal signals, rhythm, steady attention, and what might be called everyday epistemic hygiene.
It is being shared as a living guide rather than a finished publication. People have already found it useful, so the current version is available now and may continue to change over time.
Current working version. Updated from time to time as the guide continues to develop.
The director’s cut sits alongside the guide and explains how it is intended to be read: slowly, with attention to cadence, prosody, drift, return, and the small pauses by which understanding often forms.
The guide is not a manual. It is better understood as a quiet companion text that notices how human attention behaves when it begins to stabilise again.
Tone: unseriously serious self-discipline.
Beauty & the Bean is the story-world strand of the wider project. It allows themes such as care, patience, belonging, co-development, and conditions before outcomes to appear in gentler and more playful forms.
Figures in this world include Beauty, Pip the Lentil, Petite Pois, and Lillie Legume, with the garden acting as a place where warmth, curiosity, steadiness, and growth can meet.
The stories are not designed to preach. They simply allow ideas about attention, care, rhythm, friendship, and becoming to emerge through small adventures and everyday acts.
Sometimes the lighter side of systems thinking is simply a lentil, a pea, a garden, and a morning task shared properly.
M. J. Anderson writes practice-based reflections on how human systems behave when experienced from within. His work connects lived experience, systems observation, and everyday attention.
One useful metaphor for Anderson’s thinking is that of a house with many floors. The foundations lie in lived experience. Above this sit observations about systems and institutions. Between them are quieter reflective spaces where meaning begins to form.
And occasionally, new ideas appear during a walk in the garden.
The lighter side of the project exists because not every serious idea needs to be delivered solemnly. Some are better carried by humour, rhythm, story, and the quiet companionship of a lentil.
If you arrived here feeling a little tired, you are very welcome.
You may pause for a moment if you like.
The lentil will be ready when you are.