Sunday, May 3, 2026

How to Accompany Someone Home


Other Articles on Death    <<< Previously


Reflections on Mortality

How to Accompany Someone Home

On endings, presence, and the quiet art of accompanying someone home

We check our phones over a hundred times a day. Not because we are waiting for something important — but because we are running from something. The silence. The void. The strange, unsettling awareness that we are, at some level, alone. And beneath all of it, if we look honestly enough, there is a deeper fear: the fear of death.

This is not a morbid observation. It is an invitation. Buddhism has long taught that the root of human suffering is attachment — the relentless grasping for things to stay as they are when everything, by nature, changes. Our relationship with death is perhaps the starkest expression of this: we know it is coming, for every one of us, and yet we have arranged our entire culture around never having to look at it directly.

For most of human history, death was woven into the fabric of daily life. People died at home, surrounded by family, in the rooms where they had lived. But within just a few generations, that has changed profoundly. Today, death happens behind closed doors — in hospitals, in intensive care units, at the end of long corridors we are not invited to walk. Our elders move into care facilities. Emergency teams perform last-ditch procedures. The medical system, admirably trained to save lives, is rarely trained to let them end with grace.

The result? 75% of people say they want to die at home. Only 25% actually do.

And because death is no longer part of everyday life, we have stopped talking about it. It has become a stigma — something to be deferred, avoided, whispered. Yet there is another way.

"If our end of life care were always lit by the sense of awe in the face of death — if we looked at life and death as an inseparable whole — and if we sought to make love and compassion the measure of our every act, what a revolution that would be."

— Sogyal Rinpoche, The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying

The Doula at the Threshold

The word doula comes from ancient Greek. Traditionally, it referred to a woman who helped another woman through childbirth — supporting the mother, caring for the newborn, tending to the family through the threshold of a new life. It is quietly profound that we are now using the same word at the other end of existence.

An end-of-life doula does not replace doctors or nurses. She does not perform procedures or prescribe medicine. What she offers is something the medical system rarely has time for: presence. Unhurried, compassionate, undistracted presence. She sits with someone who is dying. She adjusts pillows. She holds a hand. She makes sure there is no pain. She helps a person feel that they are not alone at the most solitary moment of their life.

The Dalai Lama has observed that when we arrive into this world as newborns, we are completely helpless — and it is the warmth and care of others that allows us to survive and flourish. The same is true when we leave. We become, once again, dependent. And in that dependence, what we need most is not a procedure. It is ease. It is the quiet reassurance of a human being who is not afraid to be there.

Patient Story I

The Woman Who Needed Someone to Get It

She was demanding. Exacting. She had strong opinions about how things should be done and she would tell you — repeatedly — exactly what they were. To outsiders, she could seem difficult. But underneath the sharpness was a woman who had done everything herself her entire life: raised a daughter alone, built a career, never once asked to be taken care of.

As she neared the end of her life and her body began to weaken, the thing she feared most was not death itself. It was the loss of control. The slow, humiliating retreat from independence. And she felt, profoundly, that no one around her truly understood what that felt like.

One afternoon, she said something unexpected: "I feel very safe with you."

She was not saying she felt safe because everything was comfortable. She felt safe because she was not being managed. She was not being patronized. She had found someone who understood that her demands were not weakness — they were the last dignified expression of a woman who had always been in charge of her own life, now negotiating its ending on her own terms.

Sometimes the most powerful thing an end-of-life companion can offer is simply this: to see someone clearly, and not flinch.

"Just as a midwife guides a woman through birth, we can help guide someone through the end of their life — so they can be unafraid, so they can be comforted, so they can be at peace."

Patient Story II

The Woman Who Chose Her Own Goodbye

She had a terminal illness. At some point, in consultation with her doctors, she made a decision: no more treatment. She was going home.

She had built a small cottage in her backyard — surrounded by trees, with a stream nearby, a little pond visible from the window, birds audible in the mornings. She moved into it and arranged her final chapter herself. Her art studio was nearby. Her pets were with her. Friends would come and visit; when she grew tired, they returned to the main house. Musicians came to play. The light through the trees was soft.

Her family wanted to be present — but as family, not as caregivers. They were already living through their own grief, their own anticipatory loss, and they did not want the logistics of physical care to replace the irreplaceable time they still had left with her. So they let someone else handle the practical, while they stayed fully human with the person they were about to lose.

At the very end, she chose to be with her sister. She had made her wishes known. Her affairs were in order. She had talked about everything that needed to be said. And she took her last breath quietly, without struggle, in a room filled with beauty — the fountain still running, the birds still singing outside.

This, too, is a way to die. And it is available to more people than we think — if only we begin the conversation early enough.

What Comes Through

There is one more thing worth sharing — a moment stranger and more luminous than anything that can be easily explained.

In the final days of that same woman's life, she sat up suddenly in the night and looked around the room with an expression of pure delight. "Who are these people?" she asked. And then: "Your family is here. They are so happy."

She described, in detail, a person who had died more than twenty years ago — describing his temperament, his presence, his gentleness — alongside children she had never met, depicted exactly as they had looked decades earlier. She was radiant. There were tears.

Whether one understands this as a neurological phenomenon or as something less explicable, what it offered in that moment was not confusion — it was comfort. A sense that the door between this world and whatever lies beyond it is, in the end, permeable. That we do not go alone into the dark.

The Conversations We Keep Avoiding

There is a growing movement — sometimes gathered under the name Death Over Dinner — that encourages people to sit with their loved ones and speak openly about end-of-life wishes. Not morbidly. Not catastrophically. Just honestly.

There are things worth knowing about the people you love:

  • Do they have a medical proxy — someone who knows their wishes and will advocate for them?
  • Have they made a will? Are their practical affairs in order?
  • What kind of medical intervention do they want, or not want, at the end?
  • Where do they want to be? Who do they want around them?

These conversations are uncomfortable precisely because they are so important. And they become exponentially harder to have when the moment of crisis has already arrived. The gift of having them now — while there is time, while there is calm — is enormous. It is one of the most loving things you can do for someone.

It is my quiet conviction — my hope, really — that every person has the right to die with dignity: in the place they choose, surrounded by the people they love, and without fear. Death is not the opposite of life. It is the final act of it. And how we tend to it says everything about how fully we have learned to be human.

Next time you reach for your phone in an empty room, pause for just a moment. Sit with the silence. It is not as frightening as it seems.


Other Articles on Death    <<< Previously
Tags: Video,Psychology,Emotional Intelligence,

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Can I run my code in one environment and setup Phoenix in another new environment?

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can I run my code in one environment ("myenv") and setup Phoenix in another new environment ("arize_phoenix_env")

Yes, you absolutely can! In fact, keeping them in separate environments is a very "clean" way to work because it prevents dependency conflicts (where Phoenix might require a different version of a library than your main project).

Think of it like this: your code is the Broadcast Station, and Phoenix is the Television Set. They don't need to be in the same room; they just need a signal to connect them.

Here is how you set that up using the "Signal" (your local network).


1. Start Phoenix in its own environment

Open a new terminal window and set up your dedicated Phoenix environment.

Bash
# Create and activate the Phoenix environment
python -m venv arize_phoenix_env
source arize_phoenix_env/bin/activate  # On Windows: arize_phoenix_env\Scripts\activate

# Install and start Phoenix
pip install arize-phoenix
phoenix serve

Leave this terminal running. Phoenix is now "listening" for data on http://localhost:6006.


2. Configure your project environment (myenv)

In your original terminal where your project code lives, you don't need the full Phoenix dashboard installed—you only need the "Exporting" tools.

Bash
# Activate your project environment
source myenv/bin/activate

# Install only the OTel exporters and instrumentation
pip install openinference-instrumentation-openai opentelemetry-exporter-otlp

3. Connect the two via "The Pipe" (Environment Variables)

Since Phoenix is running in a different process/environment, your project code needs to know where to send the data. You do this by setting an Environment Variable in your project terminal.

In the myenv terminal, run:

Bash
# Tell OTel to send data to the Phoenix "listening" port
export OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT="http://localhost:6006/v1/traces"

(On Windows Command Prompt: set OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT=http://localhost:6006/v1/traces)


4. Run your code

Now, when you run your Python script in myenv, the OpenTelemetry library will grab the data and "shoot" it over to the port where your other environment (arize_phoenix_env) is listening.

Why this is a great approach for you:

  • Portability: Your educational SPAs and filtering scripts stay lightweight. They don't carry the "weight" of the entire Phoenix web server.

  • Stability: If you decide to update Phoenix to a newer version to get better RAG visualization, you won't risk breaking the specific versions of React or Python libraries you are using for your literacy apps.

  • Multi-project: You can have three different projects running in three different environments, and as long as they all point to localhost:6006, you can see all your work in one central Phoenix dashboard.

Are you planning to run these both on your local machine, or are you thinking about hosting the Phoenix dashboard on a separate server eventually?

See All Posts on Arize Phoenix

Can you suggest which one is better for observability: OpenTelemetry or Arize Phoenix

Comparing OpenTelemetry (OTel) and Arize Phoenix is not exactly an apples-to-apples comparison. In the modern observability stack, they are actually complementary rather than competitors.

The simplest way to look at it: OpenTelemetry is the "How" (the plumbing that collects data), while Arize Phoenix is the "Where" (the specialized UI and analysis engine for AI).


At a Glance: The Core Difference

FeatureOpenTelemetry (OTel)Arize Phoenix
RoleData Standard & Collector. A framework for generating and exporting traces, metrics, and logs.Analysis & Evaluation Platform. A specialized backend for visualizing and testing AI/LLM traces.
Best ForSystem-wide observability (Microservices, Databases, Infrastructure).LLM application development, RAG troubleshooting, and AI agent evaluation.
StandardIndustry standard (CNCF). Vendor-neutral.Built on top of OTel using the "OpenInference" semantic standard.
VisualsNone (requires a backend like Jaeger, Grafana, or Honeycomb).Deeply specialized UI for LLM traces (retrieval steps, tool calls, and LLM-as-a-judge).

1. OpenTelemetry: The Universal Plumbing

OpenTelemetry is a CNCF project that provides a unified way to instrument your code. If you want to ensure you aren't "locked in" to a specific vendor, you use OTel.

  • Pros: Works with almost every language and backend. It’s the standard for distributed tracing.

  • Cons: It doesn't "show" you anything. If you send your OTel data to a general-purpose tool like Jaeger, you might see a list of spans, but it won't understand what a "Vector DB retrieval" or a "System Prompt" is.

  • Verdict: Use OTel as your foundation so your data is portable.

2. Arize Phoenix: The AI Microscope

Phoenix is specifically designed for the AI Engineer. It uses OTel under the hood but wraps it in a UI that makes sense for LLMs.

  • Pros: * Trace Visualization: It groups spans into clear LLM "turns," showing you exactly what the prompt was and what the model returned.

    • Evals: Built-in "LLM-as-a-judge" tools to automatically score your responses for hallucinations or relevance.

    • RAG Insights: Specific views for seeing how your retrieval performed (e.g., did the right document come back from the vector store?).

  • Cons: While it can handle general spans, its UI is heavily biased toward AI workflows. It's not where you'd want to debug a slow SQL query in a non-AI service.

  • Verdict: Use Phoenix during development and for production AI monitoring to see the reasoning of your agents.


Which one should you choose?

You don't have to choose—you should use both.

Since you are building educational SPAs and working with datasets like TinyStories, here is the recommended workflow:

  1. Instrument with OTel/OpenInference: Use the OTel-based libraries (like openinference-instrumentation-langchain or llama-index) to instrument your app. This makes your code "observable" in a standard way.

  2. Point the data to Phoenix: During your current development phase (where you are refining CVC words and phonics logic), run phoenix serve locally. Send your OTel traces there to see exactly where your "Tiered Filtering Strategy" might be failing or how your LLM is classifying stories.

Summary: * If you need to monitor infrastructure (CPU, memory, database latency), OpenTelemetry + a tool like Grafana is better.

  • If you need to monitor AI logic (hallucinations, prompt performance, RAG quality), Arize Phoenix is significantly better.

See All Posts on Arize Phoenix    <<< Previously

How to setup my AI project for observability using OTel and Arize Phoenix

See All Posts on Arize Phoenix    <<< Previously  Next >>>

Guide me in layman terms in explanatory tone "how to setup my project for observability using OTel/Arize Phoenix"

Setting up observability for your AI project is like installing a "flight recorder" (OpenTelemetry) and a "mission control dashboard" (Arize Phoenix). Since you are already building SPAs and working with story datasets, this setup will help you see exactly how your logic flows.

Here is a layman’s guide to getting it running in your project.


The "Big Picture" Flow

  1. The Application: Your code (React, Python, etc.).

  2. The Instrument (OTel): A small piece of code that "listens" to what your app is doing.

  3. The Collector: The pipe that carries that info.

  4. The Viewer (Phoenix): The dashboard where you watch the traces.


Step 1: Start Your Dashboard (Arize Phoenix)

Before your app can send data anywhere, you need a place for it to land. The easiest way is to run Phoenix locally on your machine.

In your terminal, run:

Bash
pip install arize-phoenix
phoenix serve
  • What just happened? You just started a local server. You can now open http://localhost:6006 in your browser to see your (currently empty) dashboard.


Step 2: Install the "Flight Recorder"

You need to install the OpenTelemetry (OTel) libraries that specifically understand AI and LLMs. Since you're likely using Python for your story-filtering logic, you’ll want the arize-phoenix-otel helper.

In your project folder, run:

Bash
pip install arize-phoenix-otel openinference-instrumentation-openai

(Note: If you use LangChain or LlamaIndex instead of raw OpenAI, there are specific "instrumentors" for those too.)


Step 3: Turn on the "Auto-Recorder"

Now, you need to tell your code: "Hey, every time I talk to an LLM, record it and send it to Phoenix."

You can do this with just two lines of code at the very top of your main script:

Python
from phoenix.otel import register

# This sets up the plumbing and points it to your local Phoenix server
tracer_provider = register(project_name="my-story-app", auto_instrument=True)

Why this is cool:

By setting auto_instrument=True, you don't have to manually write "Start Recording" and "Stop Recording" around every function. The OTel library "wraps" your LLM calls automatically.


Step 4: Run Your Code and Watch

Now, run your script (e.g., the one filtering your TinyStories dataset).

  1. Perform an LLM action (like classifying a story).

  2. Go back to http://localhost:6006.

  3. Magic: You will see a "Trace" appear.


How to use this for your specific projects:

If you are working on...Focus your Observability on...
Phonics SPAsLook at the Latency. How long does it take for the phonics sound logic to return? Is it fast enough for a 5-year-old’s attention span?
TinyStories FilteringLook at the Inputs/Outputs. If a story was classified as "Fantasy" but it's clearly "Real Life," you can click the trace to see the exact prompt you sent and why the model got confused.
Classroom GamesLook at Session Tracking. You can group all actions from one "Game Session" together to see if the game crashed or slowed down after 10 minutes of play.

Pro Tip: If you want to move from your laptop to a "real" setup later, you just change the Endpoint URL in your code to point to a cloud version of Phoenix. The code itself stays exactly the same!


See All Posts on Arize Phoenix    <<< Previously  Next >>>

Can you suggest which one is better for observability -- OpenTelemetry or Arize Phoenix


See All Posts on Arize Phoenix    <<< Previously    Next >>>

Can you suggest which one is better for observability: OpenTelemetry or Arize Phoenix

Comparing OpenTelemetry (OTel) and Arize Phoenix is not exactly an apples-to-apples comparison. In the modern observability stack, they are actually complementary rather than competitors.

The simplest way to look at it: OpenTelemetry is the "How" (the plumbing that collects data), while Arize Phoenix is the "Where" (the specialized UI and analysis engine for AI).


At a Glance: The Core Difference

FeatureOpenTelemetry (OTel)Arize Phoenix
RoleData Standard & Collector. A framework for generating and exporting traces, metrics, and logs.Analysis & Evaluation Platform. A specialized backend for visualizing and testing AI/LLM traces.
Best ForSystem-wide observability (Microservices, Databases, Infrastructure).LLM application development, RAG troubleshooting, and AI agent evaluation.
StandardIndustry standard (CNCF). Vendor-neutral.Built on top of OTel using the "OpenInference" semantic standard.
VisualsNone (requires a backend like Jaeger, Grafana, or Honeycomb).Deeply specialized UI for LLM traces (retrieval steps, tool calls, and LLM-as-a-judge).

1. OpenTelemetry: The Universal Plumbing

OpenTelemetry is a CNCF project that provides a unified way to instrument your code. If you want to ensure you aren't "locked in" to a specific vendor, you use OTel.

  • Pros: Works with almost every language and backend. It’s the standard for distributed tracing.

  • Cons: It doesn't "show" you anything. If you send your OTel data to a general-purpose tool like Jaeger, you might see a list of spans, but it won't understand what a "Vector DB retrieval" or a "System Prompt" is.

  • Verdict: Use OTel as your foundation so your data is portable.

2. Arize Phoenix: The AI Microscope

Phoenix is specifically designed for the AI Engineer. It uses OTel under the hood but wraps it in a UI that makes sense for LLMs.

  • Pros: * Trace Visualization: It groups spans into clear LLM "turns," showing you exactly what the prompt was and what the model returned.

    • Evals: Built-in "LLM-as-a-judge" tools to automatically score your responses for hallucinations or relevance.

    • RAG Insights: Specific views for seeing how your retrieval performed (e.g., did the right document come back from the vector store?).

  • Cons: While it can handle general spans, its UI is heavily biased toward AI workflows. It's not where you'd want to debug a slow SQL query in a non-AI service.

  • Verdict: Use Phoenix during development and for production AI monitoring to see the reasoning of your agents.


Which one should you choose?

You don't have to choose—you should use both.

Since you are building educational SPAs and working with datasets like TinyStories, here is the recommended workflow:

  1. Instrument with OTel/OpenInference: Use the OTel-based libraries (like openinference-instrumentation-langchain or llama-index) to instrument your app. This makes your code "observable" in a standard way.

  2. Point the data to Phoenix: During your current development phase (where you are refining CVC words and phonics logic), run phoenix serve locally. Send your OTel traces there to see exactly where your "Tiered Filtering Strategy" might be failing or how your LLM is classifying stories.

Summary: * If you need to monitor infrastructure (CPU, memory, database latency), OpenTelemetry + a tool like Grafana is better.

  • If you need to monitor AI logic (hallucinations, prompt performance, RAG quality), Arize Phoenix is significantly better.


See All Posts on Arize Phoenix    <<< Previously    Next >>>