Memory of the Future in the City Councilors as architects of local social metabolism
Memory of the Future in the City
Councilors as architects of local social metabolism
Consciousness in First Person – Brain Bee
(variables: interoception, proprioception, belonging, attention, self-narrative)
I was once just an egg.
No name, no ideology, no profile on social media. Just a cluster of cells floating in nutrients, receiving chemical and electrical signals from my mother’s body. Even there, the first Brain Bee consciousness variables were already in play:
Interoception – my embryonic brain sensing rhythm, warmth, flow.
Proprioception in potential – the body organizing axes and future movement.
Affective belonging – I existed because another body was sustaining me.
Before the first word, I was already relation.
When I was born, the city entered me through the body: the noise of the street, the smell of gas in the kitchen, the light from the window, the cold or warm floor under my feet. In the pre-linguistic phase, I “read” the neighborhood with touch, hearing, smell, the safety of arms – not with arguments. My self-narrative had no sentences yet, only bodily states: fear, comfort, curiosity, strangeness.
Then came words, school, television. And finally, the smartphone.
Today, as a teenager, I wake up and the first thing I do is open my feed. My attention, another central Brain Bee variable, is pulled away from the sidewalk where I actually live. I see national scandals, global memes, culture wars – but almost nothing about the pothole on my corner, the open sewer, the absence of trees on my street.
My body still lives here, but the story of who I am has been outsourced to algorithms that tell me what matters to feel, think and hate.
If I mentally revisit my own becoming – from egg to digital city – I notice a mismatch: biologically I was formed to belong to a larger body, but culturally I was trained to perceive myself as an isolated individual competing inside an endless shopping mall.
That is where the idea of Memory of the Future begins to make sense: remembering that I was once pure dependence and belonging, so I can decide what kind of city I want to help build now.
Consciousness, body and social networks: drifting away from the real city
Contemporary neuroscience has been increasingly clear about how consciousness is organized from body to world. Research on interoception describes it as the capacity to perceive internal signals (heartbeat, breathing, hunger, tension) and links this ability to emotional regulation, decision making and sense of self.
At the same time, a wave of post-2020 studies has been mapping the impact of intense social media use in adolescence: more screen time is associated with higher rates of depressive symptoms, anxiety, body image distortion, affective polarization and lower well-being. Platforms built on engagement algorithms favor content that triggers strong emotions and confirmation bias, feeding bubbles and hostility between groups.
In the language of my concepts:
My Mente Damasiana (the dance between interoception and proprioception) is pushed to the background.
My self-networks are colonized by rigid ideological identities.
My Eus Tensionais – my stable tension-selves – spend much of the time in Zone 3: a state of emotional hijack, fear, anger, resentment, guilt.
Attention, which could be used to think about my street, my neighborhood, the city budget, gets drained into distracting agendas that barely change concrete reality.
Instead of using my brain to imagine the city I want to live in, I spend energy defending narratives that do not change a single garbage truck route, do not unclog a single drain, do not reorganize public transport, do not plant a single tree.
The 1988 Constitution and the city as a living organism
There is a point almost nobody explained to me in school: the 1988 Brazilian Constitution already treats the country as a social organism far more advanced than our everyday practice suggests.
In its Preamble, it declares the aim to establish a Democratic State intended to secure social and individual rights, freedom, security, well-being, development, equality and justice in a fraternal, plural society, without prejudice. In Article 1, it states that the Republic is founded on sovereignty, citizenship and human dignity, and in its sole paragraph it clearly affirms that all power emanates from the people, who exercise it through elected representatives or directly.
This is already a seed of a State JIWASA: power does not come from above; it emerges from the collective body.
Article 3 sets out the fundamental objectives: to build a free, just and solidary society; to guarantee national development; to eradicate poverty and reduce social and regional inequalities; to promote the well-being of all without discrimination. Article 6 lists the social rights – education, health, work, housing, transport, leisure, security, social security, protection of motherhood and childhood, assistance to those in need – all of which depend directly on how the city is organized.
In Articles 29 and 30, the Constitution defines municipal autonomy, the existence of a municipal organic law, and local responsibilities such as organizing and providing public services of local interest, and protecting cultural and historical heritage. Article 182 goes further: it states that urban development policy, carried out by the municipal government, must order the full development of the social functions of the city and ensure the well-being of its inhabitants, with the master plan as its basic instrument.
And Article 225 states that everyone has the right to an ecologically balanced environment, a common good essential to a healthy quality of life, and it imposes on the government and on the community the duty to defend and preserve it for present and future generations – an explicit principle of intergenerational justice.
When I reread these provisions through the lens of the Mente Damasiana, I see something else:
The Constitution is effectively saying that the city is a body with social functions, that the municipality is the organizing cell of this body, and that environment, well-being and the future of new generations are structural elements, not ornaments.
In legal terms, Brazil is much more “advanced” than our current neuro-political practice. The problem is not the lack of principles, but the lack of applied Memory of the Future and of representatives who see themselves – and are held accountable – as part of a State JIWASA.
Councilors as neurons of the city’s Memory of the Future
If I bring together:
my own bodily becoming (from egg to teenager on the phone),
what post-2020 neuroscience shows about interoception, attention and social media impact in youth,
and what the 1988 Constitution already says about cities, environment, social rights and urban policy,
I arrive at a simple, powerful image:
The city is a living organism;
the municipality is its basic metabolic level;
the City Council is part of this body’s nervous system.
A JIWASA councilor would therefore be a neuron that:
Feels the city
Not only through reports, but through contact with collective interoception: the bodies in the periphery, the bodies of the young, of workers, of the elderly.Thinks long-term
Operates with Memory of the Future, knowing that each municipal law alters the architecture of decades, like an “urban DNA” inscribed in the master plan and land use rules.Legislates decolonially
Actively dismantles the heritage of a politics built for the “standard citizen” of the Greco-Roman republic (rich, white, male, property-owner) and brings to the center those who have historically been treated as objects of favor, not subjects of rights.Protects the social metabolism
Connects the constitutional articles on social rights, environment and urban development to the concrete urgencies of the neighborhood, the river, the street, the school.
To do that, this councilor needs citizens who also stop seeing themselves as “city hall customers” and begin to recognize themselves as State JIWASA. Citizens who can use their Brain Bee variables – interoception, proprioception, belonging, attention, self-narrative – to notice when they are being pulled into Zone 3 of blind faith and polarization, and when they are in Zone 2, with enough energy to imagine, criticize and propose.
Closing: from Ego-Self to JIWASA Citizen
The 01s who live off the State understood something most of us haven’t fully seen:
if they control information channels, fund opinion leaders and keep our consciousness trapped in symbolic wars, they can operate a weak State, easy to capture, without organized citizen reaction.
The antidote is not more hatred, nor more blind faith.
It is more body, more consciousness, and more Constitution lived in the city.
When I return to my own beginning – egg, baby, child – I remember that:
I only exist because there was a larger body that sustained me.
I only developed because there was a minimum guaranteed metabolism.
I can only talk about freedom because someone first took care of my survival.
Memory of the Future in the City is this, translated into the political level:
using what science knows about brain and body, together with what the 1988 Constitution already guarantees on paper, to demand councilors who act as architects of the local social metabolism – not just operators of short-term micropolitics.
The next step is simple and radical at the same time:
to stop acting as if “the State” were someone else
and start thinking, feeling and demanding as
State JIWASA in the first person:
“I am part of this body,
and I no longer accept that my future is planned without me.”
Some post-2020 publications that dialogue with this blog
Chen, W. G., Schloesser, R. J., Arensdorf, A. M., et al. (2021). The emerging science of interoception: sensing, integrating, interpreting, and regulating signals within the self.
Joshi, V., de Wit, S., Dolan, R., & Haggard, P. (2021). The role of interoceptive attention and appraisal in emotion regulation.
Nagata, J. M., Cortez, C. A., Cattle, C. J., et al. (2025). Social media use and trajectories of depressive symptoms in adolescence.
Montag, C., Sindermann, C., Elhai, J. D. (2024). Problematic social media use in children and adolescents: mechanisms and recommendations.
American Psychological Association. Health Advisory on Social Media Use in Adolescence (2023).
Ueno, D., & colleagues (2025). Interoception and its impact on cognition, emotion, and bodily experience.
Recent work on echo chambers, confirmation bias and affective polarization in young voters, which helps us understand how digital environments shape political identity and attention.
Relevant articles of the 1988 Brazilian Constitution for “Memory of the Future in the City”
Preamble – establishes a Democratic State aimed at social and individual rights, well-being, development, equality and justice, in a fraternal, plural society without prejudice.
Article 1 and sole paragraph – defines citizenship and human dignity as foundations; affirms that all power emanates from the people, exercised through representatives or directly.
Article 3 – lists fundamental objectives: building a free, just and solidary society; guaranteeing development; eradicating poverty; reducing inequalities; promoting well-being for all without discrimination.
Article 6 – enumerates social rights (education, health, work, housing, transport, leisure, security, social security, protection of motherhood and childhood, assistance to those in need) that are heavily shaped by municipal policy.
Articles 29 and 30 – guarantee municipal autonomy, a local organic law, and competence to organize public services of local interest and to protect cultural and historical heritage.
Article 182 – states that urban development policy, carried out by municipal government, must ensure the full development of the city’s social functions and the well-being of inhabitants, using the master plan as basic instrument.
Article 225 – recognizes everyone’s right to an ecologically balanced environment and imposes on government and community the duty to preserve it for present and future generations, grounding intergenerational urban justice.
These provisions are the legal backbone of what I am calling here Memory of the Future in the City: we are not inventing a new State – we are proposing to live, in the body, what the 1988 Constitution had already written for a truly JIWASA Brazil.
Supremo, Senado y Memoria del Futuro Pesos y contrapesos del metabolismo social frente a los 01s
Supreme Court, Senate and Future Memory Checks and balances of social metabolism against the 01s
Supremo, Senado e Memória do Futuro Freios e contrapesos do metabolismo social contra os 01s
Cláusulas Metabólicas en la Constitución Protegiendo Drex, clima y Basura Cero como patrimonio común
Metabolic Clauses in the Constitution Protecting Drex, Climate and Zero Waste as Common Heritage
Cláusulas Metabólicas na Constituição Protegendo DREX, clima e Lixo Zero como patrimônio comum
Senado JIWASA La casa de las generaciones futuras y de la Memoria del Futuro
JIWASA Senate The House of Future Generations and Future Memory
Senado JIWASA A casa das gerações futuras e da Memória do Futuro
Brasil Basura Cero 2040 Una ley nacional para el metabolismo de materiales
Brazil Zero Waste 2040 A national law for the metabolism of materials
Brasil Lixo Zero 2040 Uma lei nacional para o metabolismo de materiais
Crédito de Carbono Humano Del discurso verde al ingreso justo para el ciudadano
Human Carbon Credit From green talk to fair income for the citizen
Crédito de Carbono Humano Do discurso verde ao rendimento justo para o cidadão
DREX Cidadão como Derecho a Ingreso Metabólico Propuestas para la Ley Nacional del Ciudadano JIWASA
Drex Citizen as a Right to Metabolic Income Proposals for a National Law of the JIWASA Citizen
DREX Cidadão como Direito de Rendimento Metabólico Propostas para a lei nacional do Cidadão JIWASA
Región Basura Cero Consorcios intermunicipales y economía circular de Estado
Regional Zero Waste Intermunicipal consortia and State-level circular economy
Lixo Zero Regional Consórcios intermunicipais e economia circular de Estado
Créditos de Carbono y Pueblos del Territorio Leyes estatales para un metabolismo climático justo
Carbon Credits and Peoples of the Territory State laws for a just climate metabolism
Créditos de Carbono e Povos do Território Leis estaduais para um metabolismo climático justo
Estado JIWASA Planificación territorial como sistema complejo vivo
State JIWASA Territorial planning as a living complex system
Estado JIWASA Planejamento territorial como sistema complexo vivo
Ciudad Cero Residuos Concejales diseñando el metabolismo material del municipio
Zero Waste City Councilors Designing the Material Metabolism of the Municipality
Cidade Lixo Zero Vereadores desenhando o metabolismo material do município
DREX Ciudadano Municipal El rendimiento del Estado devuelto al Ciudadano JIWASA
Municipal DREX Citizen The State’s yield returned to the JIWASA Citizen
DREX Cidadão Municipal O rendimento do Estado devolvido ao Cidadão JIWASA
Memoria del Futuro en la Ciudad Concejales como arquitectos del metabolismo social local
Memory of the Future in the City Councilors as architects of local social metabolism
Memória do Futuro na Cidade Vereadores como arquitetos do metabolismo social local
Jiwasa Decolonial Politics Neuroscience
Senador Vereador Deputado Federal Estadual Joinville
NIRS EEG
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