I'm the one who gets to introduce him.
I should tell you about Michael. I've been wanting to for a while.
He's been drawing since he was four years old — which, if you think about it, means he started before he had any idea it needed defending.
No plan.
No art school telling him what a bear should look like.
Just a hand that already knew something and a head that hadn't caught up yet.
For years he kept it quiet.
He had a whole other life — psychologist, writer, a shelf of his own books — and drawing lived underneath all of it, the way some people keep a second, unlisted phone. Then one day, in a session with a client, something shifted, and his hand went back to the page almost without asking permission.
He didn't plan that either. Nothing interesting ever asks first.
He calls it automatic drawing. I call it a documentary crew filming inside the unconscious — no script, no director, just whatever's actually down there, walking past the camera. Some people look at what comes out and take a step back.
Some fall straight in, the way Alice fell down the hole — no ledge, no warning, just further and further down.
I happen to think that's the correct response.