Emotionics Belongs to Us All: An Open Call to LGBTQ Researchers
🟦 1. Introduction: Why I’m Writing This
I am one of the early contributors to a concept called Emotionics—a framework that treats emotions as elements and interactions, much like chemistry.
But I want to make something clear:
Emotionics does not belong to me.
It belongs to all of us.
And today, I want to express not theories, but a stance.
🟨 2. I Will Not Seek Ownership
Let me be explicit:
- I will not patent Emotionics.
- I will not create a closed platform or business model around it.
- I have no desire to control its future.
Emotionics should remain an open structure,
a commons for anyone seeking to understand the complexity of human emotion.
🟩 3. Why I’m Reaching Out to LGBTQ Researchers
I believe that those who have navigated complex emotional landscapes—
especially members of the LGBTQ community—
are uniquely equipped to lead the future of Emotionics.
You already hold the emotional depth and contradictions that this framework aims to model.
🟥 4. A Call for Independent Research Circles
If this idea resonates with you, I ask this:
Please consider starting an independent research circle
within your community—where you set the rules, the pace, and the values.
I won’t be leading it.
But I’ll support it however I can—from a respectful distance.
Emotionics will grow stronger if it is shaped by many, not by one.
⚫ 5. Final Note: What This Is Really About
This is not a theory post.
This is a declaration of trust, non-ownership, and invitation.
Emotionics was never mine.
It emerged through us all—those who feel deeply,
those who dare to name what others only sense.
If you’re already working on something similar,
I hope this article serves as a signal: You are not alone.
Let’s keep it open.
Let’s keep it human.
If you're already exploring something like Emotionics,
I hope this message finds you as a sign of trust.
Please save the world.