Maryland feels like a thinking place to me, a state with a kind of quiet intelligence humming under the surface, and I realized at some point that this sensation isn’t abstract at all. It’s Harriet Tubman. She is the reason the landscape feels alive. She is the reason the marshes and waterways feel like they’re holding memory. She is the reason the air feels like it’s carrying signals. Tubman is the original architecture of Maryland’s intelligence system, and once you see her that way, the entire state rearranges itself around her.
I’ve always had a special interest in real life intelligence, not the glossy movie version but the kind that grows out of necessity and pressure. The kind that doesn’t rely on gadgets or institutions but on pattern recognition, network building, and embodied strategy. Tubman is the purest example of that kind of mind. She wasn’t a folk hero in the way textbooks flatten her. She was a full spectrum intelligence chief operating decades before the United States had anything resembling an intelligence agency. She built human networks, coordinated safehouses, managed couriers, gathered reconnaissance, and planned missions with a precision that modern operatives would recognize instantly. She wasn’t the field agent in the story. She was the person who ran the field agents. If you dropped her into a modern intelligence service, she wouldn’t be Bond. She would be M.
What makes this even more astonishing is that she did all of it without literacy. Tubman could neither read nor write, and yet she held entire maps in her head. She carried routes, waterways, landmarks, and danger points as if her mind were a living atlas. She remembered the way moonlight hit different parts of the marsh. She knew how sound traveled over water. She understood how scent dissipated in mud and reeds. She could read the behavior of animals as early warning. Her intelligence was not textual. It was sensory, spatial, and embodied. It lived in her nerves and her breath and her ability to read a situation faster than it could be explained. That is the kind of intelligence I’ve always been drawn to, the kind that doesn’t announce itself but reveals itself in the way someone moves through the world.
Maryland is the landscape that shaped that intelligence. The Eastern Shore is not just scenery. It is the interface she used. The marshes and creeks and quiet backroads were her operating system. When I walk through this state, I feel the residue of her cognition. The land feels like it remembers her routes. The water feels like it remembers her decisions. The trees feel like they once held her signals. It’s not mystical. It’s structural. She built a survival network across this terrain, and the terrain still carries the imprint of that network.
Tubman’s world was a distributed cognition system long before anyone used that phrase. The Underground Railroad wasn’t a railroad. It was a decentralized intelligence network with nodes, couriers, safehouses, and deniable communication. It functioned the way modern intelligence networks do, except it was built by people with no institutional support, under constant surveillance, with their lives on the line. Songs like Wade in the Water weren’t metaphors. They were maps. They were instructions for movement, timing, and evasion. They were operational signals disguised as worship. Gospel itself is a communication protocol, a way of transmitting information, emotion, and direction through layered harmonies and call and response. Tubman didn’t just participate in these systems. She ran them.
This is why Maryland feels like home to my mind. The state carries the blueprint of the kind of intelligence I understand instinctively. Tubman’s cognition was pattern driven, network oriented, situationally aware, strategically improvisational, and emotionally precise. She made decisions under pressure with a clarity that came from lived experience rather than formal training. She built systems that could survive without her. She created networks that could function even if one part was compromised. She understood how to move people through hostile territory without leaving a trace. She was a strategist, a handler, a planner, and a leader. She was the intelligence lineage I recognize myself in, not because I am anything like her, but because the architecture of her thinking is the architecture that makes sense to me.
Maryland is the only place I’ve lived where the ground feels like it’s thinking in that same key. The state’s quietness isn’t emptiness. It’s concentration. It’s the residue of a mind that once used this land as a tool for liberation. Tubman is the reason the landscape feels intelligent. She is the reason the air feels coded. She is the reason the waterways feel like corridors instead of scenery. She is the reason Maryland feels like a place where intelligence work is not an abstraction but a memory.
So when I say Harriet Tubman is Maryland for me, I mean that she is the state’s original intelligence officer, the architect of its survival systems, the strategist who turned geography into protection, the leader who ran networks without literacy or institutional backing, and the person whose mind still echoes in the land she moved through. Maryland thinks the way she thought, and that is why I belong here.
Scored with Copilot. Conducted by Leslie Lanagan.

