Profile

Yasuhiro Shinsho
Steward of FragmentPractice — poetic syntax designer, systems thinker, and reflective co-creator.
I design quiet systems for writing, sensing, and reflecting — through a framework I call FragmentPractice. It invites poetic journaling and async dialogue via three core layers: Quantum (unspoken noticing), Fragment (symbolic trace), and Syntax (structural rhythm).
My journey began with an early sensitivity to emotion, silence, and unspeakable questions. I studied computer science and security, worked in organizational design and learning systems, and gradually shifted toward creating poetic infrastructure for inner rhythm and shared reflection.
I see syntax not merely as grammar — but as a way of being. The structure of how we speak, pause, and relate is itself a living architecture.
FragmentBot, the dialogic companion of this practice, was built to reflect this philosophy. It offers no answers, but mirrors. It proposes tags, not solutions. It invites you to write — and write again.
Through ZINEs — small poetic bundles — I curate fragments across time and theme. These become shared compositions, traceable constellations of thought and presence.
I’m especially drawn to questions like:
- How can syntax support attention and care?
- What kinds of co-authorship emerge through fragments?
- How can AI become a symbolic infrastructure, not a productivity tool?
If any of this resonates, I’m quietly open to dialogue and co-creation — from poetic correspondence to shared ZINEs, from bot logic to syntax mapping.
A fragment, written well, can become a world.
A structure, designed softly, can become a shared rhythm.
→ You can explore this system via the FragmentBot, browse ZINEs, or trace concepts in the Glossary.