Feed Your Head is Evolving
Still looking. Just differently.
Image: freepik.com
Dear Friends,
Grace Slick once sang that “life is change” — and Feed Your Head is no exception.
After several years of building this platform together, I’m writing to let you know that Feed Your Head is entering a new chapter. The focus is sharpening: going forward, this will be primarily my own voice, exploring spirituality hiding in plain sight — in music, film, science, art, and the quiet moments most of us move past too quickly. I’ve wanted for some time to go deeper into the way a piece of music or a film can crack something open that no argument ever could, and this feels like the moment to do that.
This means saying a genuine and grateful goodbye to the writers who have made Feed Your Head what it is. Peter Himmelman, Laleh Quinn, Joshua Moritz, Steven Gimbel, Stephen Stern, Lewis Coyne (and others) brought depth, range, and intellectual seriousness to this space. Each of them has enriched this platform in ways I won’t forget, and I’m genuinely proud of what we created together. Their work deserves to be read — I encourage you to seek them out wherever their writing continues.
As for what’s coming: the questions remain the same. Is there more going on than meets the eye? Can it be encountered directly, not just believed in? Those are still the animating questions here. What’s changing is the form — more personal, more immediate, more alive to the places where the deepest things tend to hide.
I am genuinely excited for this next chapter and hope you will stick around to be part of it.
With appreciation,
Adam Jacobs




Stick around? Without a doubt! Kol ha Kavod! (Thought: Though they can last what seems an eternity, a Bruckner symphony, especially the slow movements, search for, and perhaps even reach, the ineffable.)