It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
from Douglas Vandergraph
Jesus began the morning in quiet prayer before the heat rose over Gilbert. The sky was still dim, and the streets had not yet filled with the steady movement of errands, school drop-offs, work trucks, and people trying to hold their lives together before breakfast. He was alone near the water at the Riparian Preserve at Water Ranch, where the paths were still soft with early light and the birds moved through the reeds like they knew something the rest of the city had forgotten. He knelt beneath the open Arizona sky and prayed without rushing. He prayed for the homes where nobody had slept well. He prayed for the marriages that had become polite but cold. He prayed for the children who had learned to stay quiet because the adults were already tired. He prayed for the people who looked successful from the outside but felt hollow when the house finally became silent. Gilbert was waking up, but many hearts inside it had been awake for hours.
Not far away, in a house near Higley Road, a woman named Elise sat on the edge of her bed and stared at a laundry basket she did not have the energy to touch. Her husband, Marcus, was already in the kitchen, moving too loudly because he did not know how to be angry softly anymore. Their son Noah was supposed to be getting dressed for school, but he was sitting on the bathroom floor with his backpack beside him, one shoe on and one shoe off. Their daughter Claire had left her bedroom door open just enough to hear every sound without being seen. Nothing terrible had happened that morning. That was what made it worse. No one had shouted yet. No plate had broken. No one had said the thing they would regret. It was only the pressure of another day pressing down on a family that had run out of room inside itself.
Elise could hear Marcus open the refrigerator, close it, open a drawer, close it harder than needed, then mutter something under his breath about being late. She knew he was not really angry about breakfast. He was angry because the bills had become heavier than his paycheck. He was angry because he had spent years trying to become the kind of man people trusted, and now he felt like a fraud at his own kitchen counter. He worked in construction management, and every day he stood in front of crews, clients, deadlines, and numbers that did not care whether his soul was tired. He had become good at solving problems outside the house. Inside the house, he felt like every word came out wrong.
Elise stood up, but she did not move toward the laundry. She looked in the mirror and barely recognized the woman looking back. She had once been gentle without effort. She used to laugh in grocery store aisles, sing badly in the car, and believe that faith could steady a home. Lately, she had been surviving by small motions. Get the kids moving. Answer the messages. Pay what can be paid. Smile at church. Make dinner. Fold towels. Keep going. She did not feel rebellious against God. She felt too tired to reach Him. That kind of tiredness scared her because it did not feel dramatic enough to ask for help. It felt ordinary, and ordinary pain is easy to dismiss until it becomes the air you breathe.
By the time they reached the kitchen, Marcus had burned the toast, Noah had forgotten a permission slip, and Claire had said she felt sick even though Elise knew the sickness was not in her stomach. It was in the way the house felt before school. Marcus checked his phone and said, “I can’t do this today.” Elise answered too quickly, “None of us can, apparently.” The words landed sharp. Marcus looked up, and for one second there was hurt on his face before pride covered it. Noah froze near the counter. Claire looked down at the floor. The silence that followed was worse than yelling because everyone knew it had been waiting there.
The doorbell rang.
No one moved at first. It was too early for a visitor and too strange for a delivery. Marcus exhaled through his nose like the whole world had chosen the wrong moment. He walked to the door with his keys already in his hand. When he opened it, Jesus stood there in plain clothes, calm and present, as if He had not arrived from somewhere else but had always known this address. He did not look hurried. He did not look surprised by the tension in the room. His face held no accusation, yet Marcus suddenly felt as if every hidden part of him had stepped into daylight.
“Can I help you?” Marcus asked.
Jesus looked at him with quiet strength. “You already are trying to.”
Marcus did not know what to do with that answer. Behind him, Elise stepped into the hallway. She knew at once that this was no ordinary man. She could not have explained it. He did not shine. He did not perform. He simply stood there with a holiness so gentle it made the room feel honest. Noah came out from behind the kitchen island. Claire stayed half-hidden near the hallway, but her eyes stayed fixed on Him.
Elise whispered, “Who are You?”
Jesus looked at her, and the question seemed to fall apart before it reached the air. She knew. Somehow she knew. It scared her and steadied her at the same time.
“I have come to sit with you for a little while,” He said.
Marcus almost laughed, but there was no humor in it. “This is not a good morning.”
Jesus stepped no farther than the threshold. “That is why I came.”
No one invited Him in with the kind of hospitality people usually offer when they want to seem composed. Elise only moved aside. Jesus entered without making the house feel invaded. He walked into the kitchen and noticed everything. The burned toast. The permission slip on the counter. The lunchbox that had not been packed. The Bible on the side table beneath a stack of unopened mail. The two coffee mugs sitting apart from each other like the people who used them. He did not miss the small things. That was what made His presence feel so serious. He saw the room the way God sees a heart, not to shame it, but because nothing hidden can be healed while it remains unnamed.
Noah held the permission slip in both hands. “I forgot this,” he said, though no one had asked him.
Jesus turned toward him. “You remembered it before you left.”
Noah looked confused. “But I still forgot.”
“You are carrying more than a paper,” Jesus said.
The boy’s face changed. He was only twelve, but he had been trying to become easy to raise. He tried not to need too much. He tried to keep his grades high and his room clean enough and his questions quiet. He had learned that when his parents were tense, the safest thing was to become useful. Jesus looked at him with such tenderness that Noah’s eyes filled before he could stop them.
Marcus saw the tears and became ashamed. “Noah, buddy, we’re just stressed. It’s not your fault.”
Jesus looked at Marcus. “He knows it is not his fault. He does not know he is allowed to be a child.”
That sentence did not sound loud, but it struck the kitchen with force. Marcus looked away. Elise covered her mouth. Claire leaned against the wall like her knees had weakened. There are truths a family can avoid for months, then one sentence speaks them plainly, and the whole house knows there is no going back.
Marcus put his keys on the counter. He wanted to defend himself. He wanted to say he was doing his best. He wanted to explain the bills, the pressure, the impossible schedules, the job sites, the rising costs, the way life in a beautiful town could still become unbearable when every month felt tighter than the last. But Jesus had not accused him of failing. That made it harder to hide.
“I’m trying,” Marcus said, and his voice broke on the last word.
Jesus nodded. “I know.”
Those two words undid him more than correction would have. Marcus gripped the counter and lowered his head. Elise had not seen him cry in almost a year. He did not sob. He only stood there with tears falling silently, ashamed that his children could see him and relieved that he no longer had to look strong for five minutes. Jesus did not move quickly to soften the moment. He let the truth stay in the room long enough to become mercy.
Claire spoke from the hallway. “Do we still have to go to school?”
It was such an ordinary question that Elise almost laughed and cried at the same time. Jesus looked at Claire with warmth. “Not yet.”
Marcus wiped his face. “They can’t just miss school because we’re having a hard morning.”
Jesus answered, “Some mornings teach what a school cannot.”
No one knew what that meant, but no one argued. A few minutes later, the family was in the car, not because Jesus had commanded them, but because His presence had shifted the day away from its usual track. Marcus drove. Elise sat beside him. Jesus sat in the back between Noah and Claire, not speaking much, watching Gilbert pass by through the windows. They moved past neighborhoods with trimmed yards and stucco walls, past palm trees and traffic lights, past people in clean cars carrying private battles behind tinted glass. The day was brightening. The city looked orderly, but Jesus saw the weariness beneath the order. He saw the woman driving to work after crying in her garage. He saw the man rehearsing an apology he still would not send. He saw the teenager scrolling through a phone, feeling unwanted in a town full of families. Gilbert had sunshine, growth, restaurants, parks, schools, and homes with front doors painted cheerful colors, but Jesus saw the ache that can live anywhere human beings live.
They ended up in the Heritage District near Water Tower Plaza. Marcus parked without knowing why he had turned there. The old water tower rose above the morning as people moved toward coffee shops, offices, and breakfast tables. The splash pad was quiet at that hour, and the plaza still held the softer sound of early downtown. Elise had loved this part of Gilbert once. She used to bring the kids when they were smaller, back when a simple outing felt like enough to reset the day. Now even beautiful places sometimes made her feel guilty because she could stand in the middle of them and still feel empty.
They walked without a plan. Jesus moved at the pace of the slowest person, which was Claire. She stayed a few steps behind, arms folded, eyes lowered. Elise noticed and began to turn back, but Jesus gently lifted one hand, not to stop her love, but to slow her fear. He waited until Claire came closer on her own.
“I don’t like when everyone pretends later,” Claire said suddenly.
Marcus turned around. “Pretends what?”
Claire’s jaw tightened. “That nothing happened.”
The words were small, but they opened something deep. Elise closed her eyes. Marcus stared at his daughter as if he had been handed a letter he should have read a long time ago.
Claire kept going because if she stopped, she knew she would lose courage. “You fight, then later everyone acts normal. We go to dinner, or church, or Grandma’s, and everybody smiles. But I still feel it. I still remember what was said.”
Marcus looked devastated. “Claire, I didn’t know.”
She looked at him then, and there was love in her face, but also anger. “You didn’t ask.”
The plaza sounds seemed to quiet around them. A man walked by with a cup of coffee. A cyclist rolled past slowly. Somewhere nearby, a door opened and music drifted out for a few seconds before closing again. Jesus stood with them in the middle of an ordinary Gilbert morning while one family stopped pretending ordinary meant harmless.
Elise knelt in front of Claire. “You’re right,” she said. “I’m sorry.”
Claire’s face shifted, but she did not fall into her mother’s arms. That would have been too easy and not quite true. “You always say sorry,” she whispered.
Elise swallowed hard. “Then I need to stop only saying it.”
Jesus looked at Elise with compassion that did not excuse her. “Love does not become real because it feels sorry. It becomes real when it turns.”
Elise nodded. She had no answer. She knew there were apologies she had used like small bandages while the wound underneath stayed open. She had said she was sorry for snapping, sorry for being distant, sorry for being tired, sorry for not listening, but she had not changed the rhythm that kept making the same damage possible. She had blamed stress because stress was real. She had blamed money because money was tight. She had blamed life because life was heavy. Yet Jesus was standing before her, and she could feel that the truth was not cruel. It was clean. It made room for something new.
Marcus took a step toward Claire, then stopped. For once he did not force the moment. “I don’t want you to be scared in our house,” he said.
Claire wiped her cheek quickly. “I’m not scared like you’ll hurt us.”
“I know,” Marcus said. “But still.”
Noah stood beside Jesus, watching everything. He looked older than twelve in that moment. Jesus placed a hand lightly on his shoulder. Noah leaned into it without thinking. It was the first time all morning he had not looked responsible for anyone else.
They crossed toward a shaded place near the plaza and sat together. The town moved around them. A delivery truck turned down the street. Patio chairs scraped against concrete. People laughed outside a restaurant, not loudly, just enough to remind Elise that other lives were happening at the same time as theirs. She looked at Jesus and wanted Him to tell them exactly what to do. A plan would have been easier than presence. Steps would have been easier than surrender. But Jesus did not hand them a formula. He sat with them long enough for their own hearts to stop running.
Marcus finally said, “I thought if I kept working hard enough, everything would be okay.”
Jesus looked toward the water tower, then back at him. “Work can feed a family. It cannot become the father.”
Marcus lowered his eyes. He had made work his proof that he loved them, then resented them when they needed more than provision. He had never meant to do that. Most harm in a home is not planned. It grows in the places people refuse to examine because they are too busy surviving.
Elise said, “I don’t know how to come back from the way we’ve been living.”
Jesus answered, “Begin where you stopped telling the truth.”
She looked at Marcus. He looked at her. Both of them knew that place. It was not one fight. It was not one bill. It was a slow turning away, a thousand small silences, a habit of staying functional instead of staying close. They had become managers of a household instead of keepers of a covenant. They still loved each other, but love had been buried under the schedules.
A woman nearby dropped a small paper bag, and oranges rolled across the pavement from a market tote. Noah jumped up first. He gathered two oranges. Claire picked up another. Marcus helped without being asked. The woman laughed with embarrassment and thanked them. She looked to be in her seventies, with silver hair pulled back and a tired kindness in her eyes. Her name was Ruth, and she had come downtown after stopping by the farmers market area earlier that morning. She said she had bought too much because she still shopped like her husband was alive.
The sentence slipped out before she could hide it. Elise heard the grief in it. Jesus did too. Ruth looked at Him and went still.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I don’t know why I said that.”
Jesus handed her the last orange. “Because you miss him when your hands remember what your mind tries to manage.”
Ruth’s eyes filled immediately. “Yes,” she whispered. “That’s exactly it.”
The family stood around her, suddenly aware that their pain was not the only pain in the plaza. Ruth explained that her husband had died the previous winter. She still drove the same routes, still bought the same fruit, still turned to say things to him in the car. Her children wanted her to move closer to one of them. She knew they meant well, but leaving Gilbert felt like losing him again. They had raised their kids there. They had walked the Riparian Preserve together when his legs were still strong. They had sat near the water tower after doctor appointments when neither of them wanted to go straight home. Every place held a memory, and every memory held both comfort and a knife.
Elise listened with a tenderness that surprised her. Her own problems did not vanish, but they widened. She saw Ruth not as an interruption, but as a woman carrying a grief that had no visible cast or bandage. Marcus held the paper bag open while Ruth placed the oranges back inside. He did it gently, as if the fruit itself had become sacred because sorrow had touched it.
Ruth looked at Jesus. “Do You know what it’s like to sit at a table with an empty chair?”
Jesus looked at her with a depth that made the morning seem to hold its breath. “Yes.”
Nothing more was needed. Ruth believed Him. She did not know how, but she did. Her shoulders dropped, and the effort of appearing fine left her face. She reached into the bag and gave an orange to Noah, then one to Claire. “For later,” she said. “Sweet things should not be wasted.”
Claire accepted hers with both hands. “Thank you.”
Ruth smiled at her. “You look like you have a lot you don’t say.”
Claire glanced at Jesus, then back at Ruth. “I guess.”
“Don’t wait until you’re old to say it,” Ruth said. “It gets heavier.”
That simple sentence did what advice often fails to do because it came from a person still carrying the cost. Claire nodded. Elise felt the words enter her too. Marcus did as well. Jesus did not speak. He let Ruth’s grief become part of their healing. That was how grace moved that morning, not in a straight line, not through one private lesson neatly delivered, but through lives touching in a public place where everyone had planned to stay hidden.
They walked with Ruth to her car. It was parked near the edge of the district, and as they moved together, she told them about her husband, Daniel. She said he had loved Gilbert before Gilbert became what it was now. He remembered fields where there were shops. He complained about traffic but secretly loved watching families fill the parks. He used to say a town grows best when people still act like neighbors. Ruth laughed when she said it, then cried again because laughter had become one of the ways grief caught her off guard.
At her car, Ruth paused and looked at Jesus. “I prayed last night,” she said. “I told God I didn’t want another empty day.”
Jesus said, “He heard you.”
Ruth closed her eyes. For a moment, she looked both broken and held. Then she hugged Elise. It was sudden, and Elise stiffened at first, then softened. Ruth whispered, “Don’t let the house go quiet in the wrong way.”
Elise held her tighter. “I won’t.”
After Ruth drove away, Marcus stood beside the car and looked across the street like he was seeing the town with a new kind of attention. “I thought we were the only ones falling apart,” he said.
Jesus answered, “Pain often believes it is alone.”
Noah peeled his orange with his thumb. The bright smell rose into the air. Claire laughed softly because juice ran down his wrist. It was the first real laugh of the day, small but clean. Elise looked at Marcus, and for once they did not use the children’s laughter as proof that everything was fine. They received it as mercy.
Marcus’s phone buzzed. He looked at it and frowned. “It’s work.”
Elise waited for the old version of him to return. The urgency. The tension. The way his body left them before he did. Marcus stared at the screen, then silenced it.
“I need to answer eventually,” he said.
Jesus nodded. “Eventually is not now.”
Those words stayed with him. Not every demand deserved the altar of his immediate attention. Marcus had spent years answering everything quickly except the people closest to him. He slipped the phone into his pocket.
They drove next to Mercy Gilbert Medical Center because Elise had remembered a promise she had avoided. Her friend Dana had texted three days earlier from the hospital waiting room. Dana’s mother had taken a sudden turn, and Elise had replied with the kind of message people send when they care but do not want to enter the weight of another person’s suffering. I’m praying. Let me know if you need anything. She had meant it, but she had also hoped Dana would not ask. She was ashamed of that now.
“I should have gone,” Elise said as Marcus turned toward the hospital.
Jesus looked at her from the back seat. “Then go now.”
At the hospital, the air changed. Hospitals carry a different kind of silence. Even when people speak, they speak under the weight of what might happen next. In the waiting area, Dana sat with a paper cup of coffee gone cold beside her. Her hair was pulled into a messy knot, and her eyes looked swollen from too many hours under fluorescent lights. When she saw Elise, her face flickered with relief and hurt at the same time.
“You came,” Dana said.
Elise did not defend herself. “I should have come sooner.”
Dana looked down. “I didn’t want to beg.”
“I know,” Elise said. “I’m sorry.”
Jesus stood a few feet behind them, giving the apology room to become real. Dana noticed Him, and something in her expression softened without understanding why. Marcus took the kids to sit nearby, but Noah kept watching. He was learning something about showing up that no lecture could have taught him.
Dana’s mother was sleeping. The doctors were cautious. The family was exhausted. Dana had been making decisions with too little information and too much fear. Elise sat beside her and did not try to fix it. She held Dana’s hand. For several minutes, nobody said anything important. That was what made it important. Elise had been afraid she would not know what to say, but the truth was that Dana did not need the right speech. She needed someone who would not make her pain more lonely.
After a while, Dana whispered, “I’m mad at God.”
Elise looked at Jesus, but He did not step in quickly. He let Elise answer as a friend.
“I think He can handle that,” Elise said.
Dana cried then. Not pretty tears. Not controlled tears. Tired tears. Elise put an arm around her, and Dana leaned into her shoulder. Across the room, Marcus watched his wife become present again. Not perfect. Present. He realized how much he had missed her, not because she had been gone from the house, but because pressure had pulled her inward until she barely had enough left to offer anyone. Then he understood something that humbled him. He had done the same thing.
A nurse came through and spoke gently to Dana. There was no dramatic announcement. No instant miracle. Just a small improvement in one number, enough to breathe a little deeper for the next hour. Dana nodded and wiped her face. She looked at Elise and said, “Thank you for coming.”
Elise squeezed her hand. “I’m staying for a while.”
Jesus looked at her then, and she knew that one sentence mattered. It was not large. It would not impress anyone online. It would not solve her marriage or pay the bills or undo months of distance. But it was obedience. It was love taking shape in time.
Marcus stepped into the hallway with Jesus. He spoke quietly so the kids would not hear. “I don’t know how to fix what I’ve done.”
Jesus looked at him. “You cannot fix it by trying to look like a better man.”
Marcus nodded slowly. That truth hurt because it found him exactly. He had often wanted to change in a way that would be noticed quickly. He wanted Elise to trust him after one apology. He wanted the children to relax after one good afternoon. He wanted God to restore what he had neglected without requiring him to become patient in the rebuilding.
Jesus continued, “Become faithful in the small places where you became absent.”
Marcus looked through the waiting room window at his family. Claire was sitting close to Dana now, showing her something on her phone. Noah was eating the orange Ruth had given him, carefully pulling apart each piece and handing one to his sister without making a big deal of it. Elise was still holding Dana’s hand.
Marcus whispered, “I can do that.”
Jesus corrected him gently. “You can begin.”
That was different, and Marcus knew it. Beginning did not let him pretend the road was short. Beginning simply meant he no longer had to stay where he was.
By late morning, they left the hospital and drove toward SanTan Village because Claire admitted she had a return sitting in the trunk from two weeks ago. It was a small thing, almost silly compared to everything else, but Elise understood. Claire had bought a dress for an event at school, then decided she hated how she looked in it. She had missed the event and told everyone she had a headache. The dress had stayed in the bag like evidence.
SanTan Village was already busy with open-air movement, people walking between shops, families pushing strollers, employees unlocking doors, music playing low from somewhere near a storefront. The brightness of it all made Claire withdraw again. She carried the bag against her side and looked irritated before anyone spoke.
“You don’t have to tell us,” Elise said softly.
Claire looked at her. “I know.”
But Jesus walked beside Claire, and His quiet made hiding feel less necessary.
“I just felt ugly,” she said.
Marcus’s face tightened with pain. “Claire.”
She shook her head. “Don’t do the dad thing where you say I’m beautiful and then it’s supposed to fix it.”
He closed his mouth. That was exactly what he had been about to do.
Jesus looked at Marcus, then at Elise, then at Claire. “She does not need a quick answer to a wound that has been fed slowly.”
Claire’s eyes filled. She looked embarrassed and angry that she was crying in public. “I hate this,” she said.
Jesus said, “I know.”
They sat on a bench while people passed with shopping bags and iced drinks. Claire stared at the pavement. “Everyone acts like it’s not a big deal. Like it’s just clothes or pictures or whatever. But I feel like I’m always being compared to somebody. Even when nobody says anything. I compare myself before they can.”
Elise wanted to tell her she understood, but she stopped herself because the moment did not need to become hers. Marcus wanted to promise he would protect her, but he knew he could not protect her from every mirror, every screen, every cruel thought, every silent comparison. Jesus looked at Claire with a love so steady it did not flatter her insecurity.
“You have been trying to become acceptable to eyes that cannot name your worth,” He said.
Claire wiped her cheek. “Then why do I care so much?”
“Because you were made to be seen,” Jesus answered. “But not measured.”
The words settled into her slowly. She did not smile. She did not suddenly become confident. She only breathed differently, as if a tight band inside her had loosened by one small notch. Sometimes grace does not arrive as a feeling of victory. Sometimes it arrives as enough room to tell the truth without hating yourself for it.
Claire returned the dress. It was ordinary. A receipt. A clerk. A few taps on a screen. Money back on a card. But when she walked out, the bag was gone from her hand, and it felt like more than a return. Elise noticed but did not overstate it. Marcus noticed too. He did not praise her courage in a way that made her self-conscious. He only walked beside her and let the moment remain simple.
Before they left, Marcus stopped near a store window and saw his reflection with Jesus standing behind him. For a second, he remembered Jesus in Gilbert, Arizona not as an idea someone might watch later, but as the living truth of this day: Christ in the middle of the pressure, Christ beside the hospital chair, Christ near the shopping bags and the wounded girl, Christ in the family car where silence had once been safer than honesty. Marcus looked away from the reflection because it felt like too much. Then he looked back because he did not want to hide from it anymore.
They drove south toward Gilbert Regional Park after that, not because the day had become easy, but because Noah finally admitted he did not want to go home yet. The park was open and bright beneath the wide sky. Children ran near the splash pad. Parents stood in patches of shade. The fields and paths held the sound of families trying to spend a few hours away from whatever waited at home. Noah carried his backpack even though he did not need it. Jesus noticed.
“You can leave that in the car,” He said.
Noah shrugged. “It’s fine.”
Jesus did not argue. He walked with him toward the lake area while Marcus, Elise, and Claire stayed a little behind. After a few minutes, Noah stopped near the water. “If I leave it, I feel like I’ll forget something.”
Jesus looked at him. “What do you think will happen if you forget something?”
Noah kicked a small rock near his shoe. “People get upset.”
“People can be upset,” Jesus said, “and you can still be safe.”
Noah looked up at Him. That idea seemed new. In his house, upset had felt like weather. It filled every room. It changed what was allowed. It made him careful. Jesus did not tell him his parents were bad. That would not have been true. He did not tell him everything was fine. That would not have been true either. He gave him a truth strong enough to stand between fear and love.
Noah slipped the backpack off one shoulder, then the other. He held it for a second before setting it on the ground beside Jesus. He did not walk away from it yet. But he let it go.
Marcus saw from a distance, and the sight nearly broke him. His son setting down a backpack looked like a small thing. It was not. It was a picture of what their home had taught him to carry. Elise saw it too, and tears came again. Claire stood between them and reached for both their hands without looking at either of them. For the first time that day, the family stood connected without anyone forcing it.
Jesus turned and looked at them. His face was calm, but His eyes carried the weight of every unseen burden that had finally begun to come into the light. The day was not over. The house was not healed. The marriage was not restored in one morning. The children were not instantly free of what they had absorbed. Ruth would still go home to an empty chair. Dana would still sit in a hospital room with questions she could not answer. Gilbert would keep moving with its clean streets, busy shops, full parks, and quiet homes where people carried more than they said.
But something had begun.
And sometimes the beginning is the mercy people almost miss because they are waiting for the whole miracle at once. Somewhere inside Elise, a prayer stirred for the first time in weeks. It was not polished. It was barely words. It felt connected to the earlier Jesus in Gilbert companion story, not because the same events had happened, but because grace had the same holy pattern underneath it. Jesus kept entering ordinary places. He kept
seeing what people worked so hard to hide. He kept turning common ground into sacred ground, not by making life dramatic, but by making it honest.
Jesus kept entering ordinary places. He entered them without making them look dramatic from the outside. A family at a park. A widow with oranges. A friend in a hospital waiting room. A girl returning a dress. A boy setting down a backpack. None of it would have looked like a great spiritual moment to a stranger walking by. There was no crowd gathering around Jesus. There was no announcement. No one nearby would have known that heaven had come close enough to touch the parts of people they had learned to hide. That was the mercy of it. God did not wait for the scene to become impressive before He entered it. He came while the day was still messy, while the family was still unsure how to talk, while the pain was still tender enough to make everyone careful.
Noah left the backpack on the grass for almost ten minutes. He did not run far. He did not suddenly become a carefree child in the way adults sometimes want children to heal quickly so everyone can feel better. He only walked a little distance from it. He watched other kids laugh near the water. He stood beside Jesus and let the space between himself and the backpack grow wide enough to notice. Every few seconds, he looked back to make sure it was still there. Jesus did not tease him. He did not tell him to stop worrying. He let Noah learn at the pace trust allowed.
Marcus walked toward them after a while. His steps were slow because he was afraid of saying too much. He had spent years trying to fix discomfort with words, and now words felt dangerous. When he reached Noah, he sat down on the grass rather than standing over him. That one choice mattered. Noah noticed.
“I’m sorry I’ve made the house feel so tense,” Marcus said.
Noah looked at the water. “It’s not always tense.”
“I know,” Marcus said. “But it has been tense enough.”
The boy nodded slightly. He was relieved that his father did not make him prove the pain. Jesus stood nearby, silent and watchful. Marcus wanted to promise that everything would change by tonight, but he knew the promise would be too large. He reached for something smaller and more honest.
“When I get stressed, I make everybody feel like they need to stay out of my way,” Marcus said. “That is not your job. You do not have to manage me.”
Noah’s chin trembled. “I just don’t want to make it worse.”
Marcus closed his eyes for a second. That sentence found the place in him where shame had been waiting. He wanted to hate himself, but Jesus was too near for self-hatred to feel holy. Conviction was standing there, but it was not there to crush him. It was there to call him back.
“You are my son,” Marcus said. “You are not a problem I have to control.”
Noah wiped his face with the back of his hand. He did not answer. After a moment, he leaned against his father’s side. Marcus put his arm around him carefully, as if he had been handed something fragile and priceless. Jesus looked out over the park, and His face held both grief and joy. He knew what sin had done inside homes. He knew how fear could pass from one generation to another without anyone naming it. He also knew the holy power of one father telling the truth before the damage hardened into inheritance.
Elise sat at a picnic table with Claire. They were close enough to see Marcus and Noah but far enough to give them privacy. Claire had been quiet since SanTan Village. She kept turning the refund receipt over in her fingers. It was crumpled now. Elise could feel the old instinct rising in her. Ask questions. Offer comfort. Fill the silence so her daughter would not drift away. But the morning had taught her that not every silence was empty. Some silences were rooms where a person was deciding whether it was safe to come out.
After a while, Claire said, “Do you ever hate how you look?”
Elise almost gave the easy answer. She almost said, “Sometimes,” in a light way that would have kept the conversation manageable. Then she remembered Jesus’ words. Begin where you stopped telling the truth.
“Yes,” Elise said.
Claire looked at her, surprised.
“I don’t talk about it much,” Elise continued. “But yes. I have stood in front of the mirror and picked myself apart. I have changed clothes three times before leaving the house. I have smiled in pictures and hated them later. I have compared myself to women I don’t even know. I wish I could tell you I never did that, but I have.”
Claire looked down at the receipt again. “Then why do people act like girls my age are just being dramatic?”
“Because adults forget how much it hurt,” Elise said. “Or they still hurt and don’t want to admit it.”
Claire’s face softened a little. “I feel stupid for caring.”
“You’re not stupid,” Elise said. “You’re young, and the world is loud, and sometimes it makes lies sound normal.”
That was not a perfect answer, but it was real. Claire folded the receipt once, then again. “I don’t want to feel like this forever.”
Elise reached across the table, palm open, not grabbing. Claire looked at her mother’s hand for a moment before placing her own inside it. “Then we will not pretend it is small,” Elise said. “And I will not only tell you you’re beautiful when you are hurting. I will help you remember you are loved when you do not feel beautiful.”
Claire cried quietly. Elise did too. They did not make a scene. The park kept moving around them. Children laughed. A dog barked near a path. A father chased a toddler with sunscreen still white on his cheeks. Life kept happening in its ordinary way, and right there in the middle of it, a mother and daughter began again.
Jesus walked back toward the picnic table with Marcus and Noah. The backpack stayed on the grass for another minute before Noah finally ran back to get it. This time he carried it loosely by one strap instead of wearing it like armor. No one commented on it. Some holy things should not be handled too much.
The family sat together at the table. They were hungry now, and the day had become strange enough that normal hunger felt like a gift. Marcus asked if anyone wanted to pick up food, then stopped himself because he heard the old pattern inside his own voice. Decide quickly. Move quickly. Solve quickly. He looked at Elise. “What would feel good right now?”
Elise smiled faintly at the effort. “Something simple.”
They ended up near the area where people often gathered around food, markets, and weekend movement in Gilbert. The town had changed over the years, and people still talked about where markets had been, where they had moved, and how the community kept shifting as growth pressed against memory. Jesus listened as Marcus explained some of it to Noah, not because the children needed a history lesson, but because Marcus was trying to talk without tension. He pointed out streets and buildings. He told them how the town felt different when he was younger. Claire rolled her eyes once, but gently. It was the first normal family moment of the day that did not feel fake.
They bought food from a small place and carried it to an outdoor table. The meal was not special, but everyone ate like they had not been hungry only for food. Jesus sat with them and broke bread in His hands before He ate. No one said anything for a moment. The motion was simple, but it carried a weight older than the town, older than the pain at their table, older than every hidden fear they had brought into the morning. Elise watched His hands and thought about all the meals she had rushed through without seeing the people in front of her. Marcus watched too, and his face changed. He had provided many meals. He had not always been present for them.
Noah asked Jesus, “Do You ever get tired of people?”
The question startled Elise, but Jesus received it with kindness.
“No,” He said. “I grieve what hurts them. I do not grow tired of loving them.”
Noah thought about that. “Even when they keep doing the same wrong thing?”
Jesus looked at Marcus and Elise, then back at Noah. “Yes.”
Marcus lowered his head. Elise reached for his hand under the table. He took it. It was not a grand romantic moment. It was two tired people touching hands over the ruins of what they had allowed and the hope of what God might rebuild.
Claire picked at her food. “What if somebody says they’ll change but they don’t?”
Jesus answered slowly. “Then truth must remain truth. Forgiveness does not require pretending.”
Elise felt that sentence deeply. She needed it. Marcus did too. The grace of the day was not asking the family to erase reality. Jesus was not asking the children to hurry toward trust. He was not asking Elise to call one emotional morning a restored marriage. He was not asking Marcus to enjoy being forgiven while refusing to be formed. Mercy was not denial. Mercy was God entering the truth with enough love to make change possible.
Marcus looked at Claire. “You don’t have to trust me fast,” he said.
She looked at him carefully. “Okay.”
“I want you to tell me when I’m making the house feel heavy,” he said.
Claire shook her head. “That feels scary.”
“I know,” Marcus said. “So I’m going to ask instead. Not every five minutes. Not in a weird way. But I’m going to pay attention.”
Claire nodded. It was enough for that moment.
After lunch, Jesus asked them to go home.
No one wanted to. The house still held the morning. It held the burned toast, the silence, the laundry, the old patterns waiting in familiar rooms. It was easier to feel changed in public with Jesus sitting at the table. Home would test whether the day had only moved them emotionally or actually turned them.
The ride back was quiet. Not the bad kind. The careful kind. Marcus pulled into the driveway and did not rush to get out. Elise stared at the garage door. Noah hugged his backpack to his chest again, then seemed to notice and loosened his arms. Claire looked at Jesus in the rearview mirror.
“Are You coming in?” she asked.
Jesus looked at her with warmth. “Yes.”
Inside the house, the morning was still there. The burned toast smell lingered faintly. The permission slip was still on the counter. The laundry basket still sat near the bedroom. A cereal bowl had dried milk around the edge. Nothing had fixed itself while they were gone. That was almost disappointing until Elise realized how kind it was. Grace had not erased the evidence. It had brought them back to face it differently.
Marcus picked up the burned toast and threw it away. He wiped the counter. Noah signed the forgotten paper and placed it in his backpack. Claire carried her cup to the sink without being asked. Elise stood in the doorway and watched them begin with small things. Then she walked to the laundry basket and sat beside it on the floor. She did not fold anything. She just sat there.
Jesus came to the doorway.
“I’m tired,” she said.
“I know,” He answered.
“I don’t mean sleepy.”
“I know.”
Her eyes filled again. “I have been angry that nobody saw how tired I was. But I did not tell the truth either. I kept acting like if I could just hold everything together, that would count as love.”
Jesus stepped into the room and looked at the laundry, the bed, the mirror, the life of a woman who had been disappearing in plain sight. “Love carries,” He said. “But it also comes to Me when it is weary.”
Elise covered her face. She had quoted that truth before. She had believed it for other people. She had made it into encouragement. But she had not come. She had kept moving and called it faithfulness. She had kept serving and quietly become resentful that service had not saved her from needing God.
Jesus knelt near her, not as one who needed to lower Himself to notice her, but as the One who had always been willing to come low. “You are not loved because you hold the house together,” He said.
That broke something open. Elise cried in a way she had not cried all morning. No careful tears now. No controlled sadness. She cried because she was tired of being strong in a way God had never asked of her. She cried because part of her had believed that if she stopped carrying everything, everything would fall apart. Jesus stayed with her. He did not rush her out of weakness. He did not turn her pain into a lesson before it had been held.
Marcus came to the doorway and saw her on the floor. In another season, he might have become uncomfortable and tried to solve it. This time, he sat down beside her. He did not ask what was wrong. He knew enough. He touched her shoulder and said, “I have left you alone in too much.”
Elise leaned against him, still crying. “I didn’t know how to say I couldn’t do it anymore.”
“I didn’t know how to hear it,” he said.
Jesus watched them with holy patience. Marriage was not healed because they had named the wound. But naming it was a door. Repentance would have to become practical. Rest would have to become protected. Conversations would have to become honest before they became desperate. Marcus would have to learn to come home in body and soul. Elise would have to stop treating silence as safer than need. The children would have to see change repeated until their bodies believed it. None of that would be quick. But grace had entered the room where denial had been living.
That afternoon, Marcus made three phone calls. One was to work. He did not give a speech. He simply said he had a family matter and would be offline for a few hours. His voice shook when he said it, but he said it. The second call was to a counselor whose number Elise had saved months ago and never used. They did not get an appointment that day, but they left a message. The third call was to his father.
That call was the hardest.
Marcus stepped into the backyard with Jesus nearby. The sun had shifted, and the air was warm against the block wall. His father answered on the fourth ring, distracted and cheerful in the way men sometimes are when they do not know a serious conversation is coming.
Marcus almost backed away. Then he looked at Jesus.
“I need to ask you something,” Marcus said into the phone. “When I was a kid, did you know I was scared when you and Mom fought?”
There was silence on the line.
His father exhaled. “Where is this coming from?”
Marcus closed his eyes. The old fear returned. Not fear of being hurt. Fear of being dismissed. Fear of being told he was too sensitive. Fear of hearing the past get cleaned up until there was no room left for the child who had lived it.
“I’m asking because I think I’m doing some of the same things in my house,” Marcus said.
His father did not answer right away. When he did, his voice was lower. “I didn’t know you were scared.”
Marcus leaned against the wall. “I was.”
Another silence came. This one was not empty. It was full of years.
“I’m sorry,” his father said.
Marcus pressed a hand to his eyes. The apology was late. It did not undo anything. It did not explain everything. But it was real enough to matter. Jesus stood in the yard, and the mercy of God moved through a phone call between two men who had both spent too long pretending pain made them weak.
Inside, Elise sent Dana a message. I am still with you. I am sorry I stayed away. I will come back tonight if you want me there. Then she sent another message to Ruth, whose number she had gotten before they parted. The text was simple. Thank you for the orange. Thank you for telling the truth. We are praying for you.
Ruth responded a few minutes later. I am sitting at the table. It feels less empty today.
Elise read the message and cried again, but softly this time.
As evening came, the family made dinner together. It was not graceful. Noah spilled rice. Claire got annoyed when Marcus hovered too close. Elise burned one side of the chicken because she was answering Dana’s message. Marcus started to tense when the kitchen became chaotic, then stopped and stepped outside for one minute instead of letting his stress fill the room. When he came back in, he said, “I needed to breathe.”
Noah looked at him, surprised. “Are you mad?”
“No,” Marcus said. “I’m learning.”
That sentence changed the room more than a perfect reaction would have. It gave everyone permission to be in process without pretending process was easy.
They ate at the table. Jesus sat with them again. The empty spaces between them felt different now. They were not filled with all the words they were avoiding. They were filled with a kind of reverence. Claire told a story from school. Noah admitted he had been worried about a test. Marcus listened without turning it into advice. Elise laughed once, and the sound startled everyone because it had been missing for so long. Jesus looked at her when she laughed, and the joy in His face was quiet but unmistakable. He was not only present in tears. He was present in every restored sound a home had forgotten how to make.
After dinner, Jesus rose from the table.
The children knew before He said anything. Claire’s face tightened. Noah looked down at his plate. Elise stood quickly, as if she could delay the moment by moving. Marcus followed her.
“You’re leaving?” Noah asked.
Jesus looked at him. “I am not leaving you.”
“But You won’t be sitting here,” Claire said.
“No,” Jesus said. “Not like this.”
Her eyes filled. “I don’t want tomorrow to go back.”
Jesus stepped toward her. “Then do not wait for tomorrow to choose truth.”
Claire nodded, but she was crying now. Jesus placed His hand gently on her head, and she closed her eyes. Noah stepped close too, and Jesus rested His other hand on his shoulder. Marcus and Elise stood behind them with their arms around each other, not because everything was strong, but because they wanted it to become strong in the right way.
Jesus looked at Marcus. “Lead by repentance, not pressure.”
Marcus nodded. “I will begin.”
Jesus looked at Elise. “Rest is not failure.”
She breathed in shakily. “I will try to believe that.”
Jesus looked at the children. “Tell the truth before your hearts grow tired from hiding.”
Noah and Claire both nodded.
Then Jesus walked to the front door. The family followed Him outside. The evening had softened the neighborhood. A garage door hummed down the street. Someone watered plants. A child rode a scooter along the sidewalk. The sky over Gilbert held the last warmth of the day, and the homes looked peaceful from the outside. Jesus paused and looked down the street, seeing every life behind every wall. He saw the man drinking too much in secret. He saw the woman praying over a medical bill. He saw the teenager who felt invisible. He saw the elderly couple eating dinner without speaking because they had forgotten how to begin again. He saw the young mother rocking a baby while wondering if she was disappearing. He saw the whole town clearly, not as a map, not as a market, not as a growing place with clean streets and bright parks, but as souls.
Before He stepped away, Marcus said, “Why us today?”
Jesus turned back. “Because you asked for help in ways you did not know were prayers.”
Elise thought of the laundry basket. Marcus thought of his grip on the kitchen counter. Noah thought of the backpack. Claire thought of the dress. None of those things had sounded like prayers. But heaven had heard what their pain could not say.
They watched Him walk down the sidewalk until the fading light and the bend of the street took Him from their sight. For a while, no one moved. Then Marcus reached for Elise’s hand. Noah leaned against her side. Claire slipped her hand into her father’s. They stood there as a family, not fixed, not finished, but no longer pretending that survival was the same as peace.
Later that night, after the dishes were done and the house had grown quiet in the right way, each of them made one small choice. Marcus placed his phone in a drawer for the last hour before bed. Elise left the laundry unfolded and sat with Claire on the couch. Noah put his permission slip in the front pocket of his backpack and then left the backpack by the door instead of beside his bed. Claire sent one honest message to a friend. It said, I had a hard day, but I think I’m okay. It was not much. It was everything.
Before bed, they gathered in the living room. No one made it formal. No one tried to sound impressive. Marcus prayed first, and his prayer was awkward. He thanked God for coming near. He asked forgiveness for the heaviness he had brought into the home. He asked for help to become patient in the rebuilding. Elise prayed next. She asked Jesus to teach her how to come to Him before she became empty. Claire prayed only one sentence. “Please help me believe what You see.” Noah prayed last. “Please help our house feel safe.”
There are prayers that shake heaven because they are long and full of faith. There are other prayers that barely make it out of a tired mouth, but they rise with the weight of a whole life turning toward God. That night, in a house in Gilbert, Arizona, those small prayers rose.
And Jesus heard them.
When the family finally slept, Jesus was again near the quiet water at the Riparian Preserve. The night had settled over the trails. The birds were hidden now. The reeds moved lightly in the dark. Far across the city, traffic thinned, porch lights glowed, and homes held the private sounds of dishes, televisions, whispered arguments, bedtime stories, lonely thoughts, and late prayers. Jesus knelt beneath the Arizona sky and prayed again.
He prayed for Marcus, that repentance would become steady and not just emotional. He prayed for Elise, that she would learn the mercy of rest without guilt. He prayed for Noah, that childhood would return to the places fear had crowded it out. He prayed for Claire, that her worth would become louder than comparison. He prayed for Ruth at her table and Dana beside the hospital bed. He prayed for the families in Gilbert who looked fine because they had learned to look fine. He prayed for the ones who were close to breaking and the ones who had already broken quietly. He prayed for the city until the night itself seemed held.
Nothing about Gilbert looked different from a distance. The water tower still stood. The parks still waited for morning. The hospital lights still burned. The shops and streets and neighborhoods still rested under the same desert sky. But God had walked through the city that day, and the hidden places had not been hidden from Him. He had entered a kitchen, a plaza, a hospital, a shopping center, a park, and a home. He had touched grief, shame, fear, exhaustion, pride, and love buried under pressure. He had not made a spectacle of mercy. He had simply come close.
And in the quiet, Jesus prayed until the city slept under the care of the One who had seen it all.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from
wystswolf
My mouth and mind have run continuously so long....
Today is the first day in a long time that I haven't opened my mind and heart without reserve. It feels like the day has yet to begin.
But this is the life, the way of duty.
The way of the rules.
I hope you are okay. I know you are physically, but emotionally...
You are Kenough. Don't forget it.
I am busy with work.
Love always,
your Scot.
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

Tuesday's MLB Game of Choice in the Roscoe-verse once gain features the Tampa Bay Rays vs the Cleveland Guardians. Its scheduled start time of 5:10 PM CDT fits comfortably into my night's routine. As yesterday, I'll be following the radio call of the game tonight on the Cleveland Clinic Radio Network.
And the adventure continues.
from
fromjunia
Everything you do matters. There is not a breath you take which doesn’t make the world a better place. Every act of creativity, every kindness you do, every drop of compassion you feel fixes a shattered world, piece by piece. Humans are beautiful beings remarkably capable of mending what’s broken in a way that makes it better than it was before.
Have you ever looked at a starry sky and marveled at the specks of light unimaginably far away? Have you ever been dazzled by skyline city lights? Have you ever walked among the trees and listened to birdsong? Have you ever been awed by the capacity to build skyscrapers and organize cities? You introduced feeling to a universe that wouldn’t feel that without you.
Carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen don’t feel, but you do. Carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen can’t appreciate themselves or each other, but humanity produced chemists who dedicate their lives to doing so. Humanity produced physicists who study the behavior of the gasses that these elements compose. Humanity produced children awed by elementary science experiments, demonstrating the foundations of existence. Humanity introduces so much good.
We strive, and struggle, and reach great heights, and fix problems, and astound ourselves with what we achieve.
It is unfortunate, then, that we will lose this all. Everyone we love and everyone who loves them will die. Every ripple we make will become irretrievably subsumed in the sea of consequences we fill. Entropy will destroy everything we build and the coldness of the universe will overcome every degree of warmth we generate. It is sad because what we’ve done and made matters. It is a tragedy.
Knowing tragedy is always impending doesn’t change the goodness of what we do. It means we’re on the clock. We have limited time to enjoy life and be there for each other. The situation is urgent. The fire is coming and it will consume everything; love now and love deeply.
You lose in the end, so win now, while you still can.
from Patrimoine Médard bourgault
À la suite du retrait du règlement d’emprunt de 475 000 $, il a été avancé publiquement que le manque d’adhésion citoyenne pourrait s’expliquer par une compréhension insuffisante du projet.
Cette explication est insuffisante.
Lorsque 566 signatures sont recueillies, soit près du double du seuil requis, il ne s’agit plus d’un problème de communication. Il s’agit d’un signal structuré, qui indique que des éléments essentiels du projet ne sont pas compris — ou ne sont pas présentés de manière suffisamment complète pour être évalués.
Ce signal mérite d’être pris au sérieux.
Car les préoccupations exprimées ne portent pas uniquement sur l’information. Elles portent sur la structure même du projet.
Plusieurs éléments, accessibles dans les documents publics, demeurent partiels ou incomplets :
Ces éléments ne sont pas secondaires. Ils déterminent la capacité réelle du projet à être compris, évalué — et accepté.
Un autre aspect ne peut être écarté du contexte.
Des documents indiquent qu’un avenant signé hors notaire et non publié a substantiellement modifié le calendrier de paiement du Domaine Médard-Bourgault, en repoussant de plusieurs années les principales échéances.
Sans tirer de conclusion sur sa validité juridique, cet élément modifie la lecture du contexte dans lequel le projet est envisagé.
Il introduit une incertitude réelle sur les bases financières et juridiques entourant le lieu lui-même.
Dans ce contexte, une question s’impose :
est-il possible de structurer un projet d’envergure sur des bases qui ne sont pas encore pleinement clarifiées?
Cette question n’est pas théorique. Elle touche directement la confiance nécessaire à tout projet impliquant des fonds publics et un patrimoine collectif.
Le retrait du règlement d’emprunt ne constitue pas seulement un arrêt temporaire.
Il marque un point de bascule.
Il devient désormais difficile de revenir avec une version du projet qui se limiterait à être mieux expliquée.
Une nouvelle version devra être fondamentalement plus complète.
Elle devra notamment :
Ces éléments ne relèvent pas d’un niveau de détail. Ils constituent désormais les conditions minimales de compréhension.
La question n’est peut-être pas de savoir si le projet doit exister.
Elle est de savoir dans quelles conditions il peut être acceptable.
Un projet patrimonial ne peut pas reposer uniquement sur une intention.
Il doit reposer sur une compréhension partagée, fondée sur des bases claires, complètes et cohérentes.
La réaction de la population ne constitue pas un obstacle à contourner.
Elle constitue une base à partir de laquelle le projet devra être reconstruit.
Raphaël Maltais Bourgault jackmaltais@outlook.com
from
The happy place
🙋♂️
I’ve been fixing some tickets to go see Placebo for their 30 yrs anniversary this fall/autumn, isn’t it fun how time flies like that?
Except when waiting for the microwave to finish these 2.5 minutes are very long
Or one night in my youth, I was having been drunk and I was with a friend and I slept in her little brother‘s room, right?
But problem was I woke up when the alcohol was out of my system, like at 03:00 and then I just lay there on the bed, looking at the gaming console, they had this goldeneye game, is it for the x-box? Doesn’t matter
I just lay there waiting for the others to wake up, because it wasn’t that known, the place… her parents were in there somewhere in some room, no clue which one, and I didn’t want to wake anyone, not wanting to bother anyone so I lay there waiting until the others were up, but they‘d been drinking too and it wasn’t until around 10.00 I started hearing some sounds and then I went down they had cereal, I’m pretty sure we had cereal
And that her mother liked me,
And that was something about me which made me seem lost like I was clueless or something, like a puppy or even a child? (Innocence?)
Anyway, That night I remember as having been incredibly long some reason felt incredibly slow, like incredibly slow
But
I had my friend whose jaw got broken because he encountered a football/(soccer) hooligan who just punched him for wearing the wrong colours.
And he was drunk, so he had to lay at the hospital for a very long time before they could sedate him, he just lay there with increasing pain also just letting time pass
And that was on new years eve. What a way to spend New Year’s Eve
They finally had some sort of metal to fix his jaw so he had to go for a very long time drinking soup with a straw, cause he couldn’t open his jaw or speak much
Goulash soup except he had to put it in the blender first, do you know?
Well anyway this all feels like it’s yesterday
An I am eager to see this Placebo of course, with some good friends I collected throughout these years
from Douglas Vandergraph
Some of the most exhausting moments in life are not the ones where everything is clearly falling apart. They are the ones where you are still standing, still praying, still trying to do the right thing, and yet inside your own mind you feel hunted by uncertainty. You keep turning the same question over. You keep bringing it to God. You keep trying to listen. But instead of feeling clear, you feel crowded. Thought after thought keeps moving through you, and each one presents itself like it deserves to be obeyed. One tells you to act before you lose your chance. Another tells you to wait because moving now would be reckless. One sounds like faith for a minute, then fear rises right behind it and lays claim to the same space. You do not know whether you are hearing God, hearing yourself, or hearing the emotional aftershocks of everything life has already done to you.
That kind of confusion does not feel dramatic from the outside. A person can look calm while living through it. They can answer people normally. They can still carry responsibilities. They can still make it through a day. Yet inwardly there is a strain that is hard to explain unless you have lived there. The strain is not only that you do not know what to do. It is that you feel responsible to know. You feel like the next step matters. You feel like getting this wrong may cost you something important. So the whole thing starts to tighten around your chest. You want God to be clear, not in some distant spiritual sense, but in the most practical way possible. You want to know whether the thought that keeps returning is actually His voice or just your own mind trying to find relief from uncertainty as fast as it can.
That is where many people unknowingly turn discernment into a kind of inner survival game. They stop listening in peace and start scanning in fear. They are no longer simply open to God. They are trying to catch the right answer before their own thoughts overwhelm them. They are trying to sort through emotional static while the pressure of needing clarity is making the static louder. It becomes harder to tell what is clean because everything feels charged. Even a normal thought can start to feel sacred if it offers relief. Even a fearful thought can start to feel wise if it promises protection. By the time a person has spent enough hours in that state, they are not only confused. They are tired in a deep way. Their soul begins to feel worn by the effort of trying to separate heaven from anxiety while both seem to be speaking in the same room.
There is a quiet sadness in that because so many sincere people believe the problem is that they are not spiritual enough. They think if they were closer to God, prayer would feel clearer. They think if they were stronger in faith, they would not have so much mental noise. They think if they loved Him more deeply, they would instantly recognize His voice every time. But much of the time, the issue is not lack of love for God. The issue is that the human heart becomes easy to scramble when it feels vulnerable. Pain scrambles it. Fear scrambles it. Loss scrambles it. Disappointment scrambles it. Loneliness scrambles it. The need to make a decision before you feel ready scrambles it. If that condition is not recognized for what it is, a person may spend months blaming their faith for a confusion that is actually coming from unprocessed pressure.
That shift matters because it changes the question. Instead of asking only, “Why can’t I hear God,” a person begins asking a more honest one. “What inside me is so desperate for immediate clarity that every urgent thought now sounds trustworthy?” That is a very different doorway into the struggle. It brings the issue down from vague spirituality into the real inner life. It forces a person to admit that some thoughts do not feel powerful because they are from God. They feel powerful because they touch your fear. They feel convincing because they promise escape from discomfort. They feel important because they arrive with urgency, and urgency has a way of dressing itself like wisdom when the heart is already tired.
This is one of the hardest things for people to accept. The thought that creates the strongest internal reaction is not automatically the truest one. Sometimes it is the least trustworthy one in the room. Not because emotion is meaningless, but because emotion is easily recruited by fear. The mind is capable of creating pressure around almost anything when it senses threat, and the threat does not always have to be physical. It can be relational. It can be financial. It can be emotional. It can be spiritual. The fear of missing God can become its own form of pressure. The fear of wasting time can become its own form of pressure. The fear of being hurt again can become its own form of pressure. Once pressure is activated, a person is no longer only trying to hear God. They are also trying to get out from under the feeling of vulnerability as quickly as possible.
That is why some people keep mistaking urgency for guidance. Urgency feels decisive. It gives the mind something to grab. It offers movement, and movement can feel better than uncertainty for a little while. But movement alone is not the same thing as peace, and urgency alone is not the same thing as truth. A person can be deeply moved and still be deeply misled. They can feel inwardly pushed and assume the push is spiritual. They can even baptize the pressure by giving it religious language. Yet if what is driving them is panic, or ego, or the desperate need to stop feeling exposed, then what they are following may have far more to do with inner discomfort than the voice of God.
The reframe here is painfully simple. Often the first thing clouding discernment is not that God is hiding. It is that the soul is overreacting to uncertainty. That overreaction makes every thought brighter than it should be. It puts emotional lighting on things that do not deserve it. It can make a random idea feel profound, a fearful projection feel wise, and a desperate impulse feel like revelation. Until a person learns to see that, they may keep calling the storm “guidance” simply because it is the loudest thing they hear.
God’s voice is not powerless because it is not frantic. That is something many people need to relearn. They secretly trust whatever sounds forceful. They assume that if something comes with inner intensity, it must carry authority. But fear also comes with intensity. Shame comes with intensity. Desire comes with intensity. Old wounds come with intensity. The voice of God does not need to imitate chaos to be real. He does not need panic to prove He is speaking. He does not need to make a person mentally spin in order to lead them. In fact, one of the clearest signs that something is not coming from His heart is the way it drives a person deeper into mental scrambling while pretending to offer relief.
That does not mean His voice always makes life feel easy. He may lead someone into a hard conversation, a costly act of obedience, a painful ending, a season of waiting, or a step they would never have chosen on their own. But difficulty is not the same thing as confusion, and challenge is not the same thing as inner chaos. His leading may confront you, yet there is still something clean about it. There is a different quality in it. It does not have the sticky feeling of mental obsession. It does not feel like a thought that has to bully its way into obedience. It does not rely on the threat that everything will be ruined unless you do something immediately. It may come quietly. It may not answer every question at once. It may not flatter your comfort. Yet there is a steadiness to it that does not smell like fear.
The quiet tragedy is that many people no longer trust steadiness because they have been living too long inside tension. Tension feels normal to them. Tension feels responsible. Tension feels like they are taking life seriously. If a thought does not arrive with a pulse of pressure in it, they may overlook it because it does not match the emotional climate they have become used to. They know how to respond to fear. They do not know how to receive calm. They know how to brace. They do not know how to rest and listen. So when the voice of God comes without panic attached to it, it can feel less dramatic than the noise, and because it feels less dramatic, they can mistakenly assume it is less important.
That is why spiritual maturity is not just about learning how God speaks. It is also about learning which inner conditions make His voice harder for you to recognize. Some people lose clarity when they are lonely because loneliness makes any possibility of closeness feel heaven-sent. Some lose clarity when they are financially strained because financial fear makes fast solutions feel wiser than they are. Some lose clarity when they are grieving because grief makes emotional relief feel like confirmation. Some lose clarity when they are ashamed because shame will follow any thought that promises immediate self-redemption. The issue is not that these people are less loved by God. The issue is that their pain is capable of tinting what they hear unless they slow down enough to see what state their soul is actually in.
That slowing down is not weakness. It is honesty. It is the recognition that discernment requires more than desire. It requires truthfulness about your condition. You may sincerely want to hear God and still be in no emotional state to interpret every thought clearly. You may deeply love Jesus and still be too frightened in a given moment to tell the difference between conviction and panic. You may be praying real prayers while your mind is also running frightened calculations in the background. Those two things can happen at once. That is why the first mercy is often not immediate clarity. The first mercy is exposure. God begins showing you that what feels like a voice problem is sometimes a pressure problem. What feels like mystical confusion is sometimes emotional overreach. What feels like silence from God is sometimes the sound of your own nervous system demanding certainty before it is ready to sit still.
When that becomes visible, the struggle changes. A person stops idolizing their own strongest thoughts. They stop assuming that because something repeats, it must be divine. Repetition can come from obsession just as easily as from wisdom. The mind returns to the same thought when it has found something emotionally loaded. That does not make the thought holy. It makes it sticky. There is a difference. A sticky thought gets attached to your fear, and because it touches fear, it keeps returning. A true thought may also return, but it does not always return with the same frantic energy. It has less to prove. It can wait in the light. It does not need to be obeyed in a rush to keep its meaning.
That distinction saves people from a great deal of self-inflicted pain. So many wounds are deepened because a person thinks they must decide while emotionally flooded. They mistake pressure for responsibility and speed for faith. They do not realize that what is driving them is not trust in God but the desire to stop feeling uncertain. Underneath the spiritual vocabulary is often a much more human cry. “I cannot stand this exposed feeling any longer.” That cry deserves compassion, not shame. It reveals how tired the person is. But it should not be allowed to masquerade as divine instruction. The need for relief is real. The need is just not the same thing as the voice of God.
There is a great kindness in naming that because it gives people permission to become quieter without becoming less faithful. They do not have to perform immediate spiritual clarity. They do not have to force themselves to label every strong impression as heavenly. They do not have to keep acting as though the only alternatives are instant certainty or total confusion. There is another path. A person can admit, “I do not know yet, and my own fear is making it harder to listen.” That sentence may not feel powerful, but it is often the beginning of real discernment. It strips away the pressure to be impressive. It makes room for truth. It moves the soul back toward Jesus instead of deeper into self-analysis.
That return matters because hearing God is not first a technique problem. It is a relationship problem in the deepest sense, though even that phrase can be mishandled if it becomes too polished. What I mean is simpler. The goal is not merely to decode signs correctly. The goal is to remain close enough to Christ that your fear stops being treated like your shepherd. A person can become so focused on solving the immediate question that they forget the larger issue is who or what is currently guiding the inner life. Is the soul being led by trust, or by the need to escape exposure. Is it being led by truth, or by the fear of regret. Is it being led by the calm authority of God, or by the intense desire to make uncertainty disappear. Those are not side questions. They are the center of the matter.
This is why some of the most important moments in discernment do not feel like receiving a new message. They feel like the collapse of a false one. A person suddenly sees that what they called wisdom was mostly fear. They see that what they thought was God warning them was often their old wound trying to keep them from risk. They see that what felt like spiritual urgency was sometimes just their discomfort with not being in control. That recognition can feel embarrassing for a minute, but it is actually merciful. God is not humiliating them. He is freeing them from following voices that do not deserve to lead.
Once that starts happening, the soul grows more sober in a healthy way. It becomes less impressed by inner drama. It stops assuming every emotionally charged thought is meaningful. It begins paying attention to the texture of what it hears. Not just the content, but the spirit of it. Does this thought move me toward trust in Jesus, or back into frantic self-preservation. Does it make me feel I have to force something, or does it invite me to stay honest and present. Does it flatter my fear, or does it gently confront it. Does it call me into truth, or does it only promise relief. Those questions do not make discernment mechanical. They make it human. They help a person notice the difference between being spiritually led and being psychologically pushed.
That is why the subject is worth going slowly with. Most people do not need more dramatic language around hearing God. They need a cleaner understanding of what distorts hearing in the first place. They need to see that the battle is often not between God and silence. It is between God and urgency. Between God and the soul’s addiction to immediate certainty. Between God and the fear that keeps trying to protect them by speaking first and speaking loudly. If that battle is not recognized, a person can spend years chasing the wrong voice while thinking they are simply trying harder to be faithful.
What makes this especially hard is that fear often sounds responsible. It rarely introduces itself honestly. It does not say, “I am fear and I am about to make your inner life smaller.” It says, “Be careful.” It says, “Do not be naive.” It says, “You have to think this through.” It says, “You cannot afford another mistake.” Some of those sentences may contain pieces of truth, which is part of why fear can be so convincing. It borrows the language of wisdom, but its spirit is different. Wisdom may caution you, yet it does not shrink your soul into obsession. Wisdom may slow you down, yet it does not trap you in a cycle of constant self-protection. Fear always has a tighter grip to it. Even when it sounds reasonable, it leaves a residue of strain behind.
The voice of God does not leave that same residue. It may unsettle the flesh because truth often does. It may expose something in you that needs to change. It may call you away from the very thing you wanted. Yet even then, there is a deeper rightness in it. Not a shallow comfort, but a clean gravity. It does not need to keep defending itself through mental repetition. It does not need to produce obsession in order to stay alive. It can remain true while you wait. It can remain true while you sleep. It can remain true while you bring your whole trembling heart into prayer again. That is one reason His voice is safer than our pressure. It does not depend on momentum to remain real.
You may need to sit with the full message on hearing God when your own mind is loud if this struggle has been wearing you down more deeply than you have admitted, and if you have been walking through this sequence in order, the previous article in this link circle belongs beside this one because what feels like a voice problem is often connected to the older inner pressures that have already been shaping the way you interpret life.
What comes next is where the struggle becomes even more personal, because once a person sees that urgency is not the same thing as guidance, they still have to face the deeper question underneath all of it. Why does uncertainty scare them so much that they keep wanting a voice that will remove it immediately. That is where discernment stops being about thoughts alone and starts touching identity, control, trust, and the private places where a person has quietly decided that not knowing is intolerable.
What makes that question so revealing is that it takes discernment out of the abstract and places it inside the actual emotional architecture of a person’s life. It is one thing to say you want to hear God. It is another thing to notice how badly you want Him to speak in a way that protects you from the pain of not knowing. Those are not the same desire, even though they often travel together. One is rooted in relationship. The other is often rooted in self-preservation. A person may sincerely want the Lord, but if the deeper craving underneath that desire is immediate safety, then almost any thought that seems to promise safety can become dangerously attractive. The inner life begins to tilt. Guidance is no longer being received as guidance. It is being hunted as relief.
That is why uncertainty exposes so much. It reveals what kind of god a person has quietly been relying on. Some people imagine their god is Christ, but uncertainty reveals that the thing they really rely on is control. Others imagine they rely on God, yet as soon as the future becomes unclear, it becomes obvious that what they really trust is their ability to predict, calculate, and prevent pain. They do not discover this because they are especially evil. They discover it because uncertainty strips away illusion. It brings the soul into a place where trust cannot remain theoretical. If you have no map, no outcome, no guarantee, and no timeline, then whatever you reach for in that moment is often what you have really been leaning on all along.
This is one reason hard seasons can feel so exposing. They are not only painful because they contain unanswered questions. They are painful because they show a person what they have been using to feel safe. The person who always believed they were calm may discover that they were mostly in control. The person who thought they were deeply surrendered may discover that their peace depended on things going in a direction they preferred. The person who thought they were hearing God clearly may discover that what sounded like divine direction was often just their own emotional need for resolution. None of these discoveries are pleasant in the moment. They can feel almost humiliating. But God is not exposing these things to shame His children. He is exposing them because He loves them too much to let fear keep pretending to be wisdom.
Once you see that, a different kind of spiritual honesty becomes possible. You stop asking only, “Lord, what are You saying,” and begin asking, “Lord, what in me is making it so hard to stay still with You while I do not know.” That question is less glamorous, but it often goes deeper. It begins to uncover the emotional bargains a person has made. Maybe they told themselves they would be okay as long as they stayed ahead of disappointment. Maybe they built their identity on being the kind of person who does not make costly mistakes. Maybe they promised themselves they would never again be caught off guard by loss, betrayal, embarrassment, or regret. Those promises are understandable. They often come from pain. But they become dangerous when they start governing the way a person listens for God, because now discernment is being filtered through an old vow to stay safe instead of through surrendered trust.
That old vow can shape nearly everything. It can make waiting feel intolerable. It can make rest feel irresponsible. It can make silence feel threatening. It can make any clear answer, even the wrong one, feel better than the vulnerable stretch of not knowing yet. When that happens, the problem is no longer simply confusion. The problem is that uncertainty has become unbearable because it touches something deeper in the person than they may have realized. It touches the places where they are still trying to save themselves from pain by staying in control of outcomes. They may not use those words, of course. Most people do not walk around saying, “I am trying to save myself.” They say things that sound more normal. They say they are trying to be wise. They say they are trying to be careful. They say they just want peace. Yet beneath all of that, the soul may still be clinging to the belief that if it can just hear quickly enough, decide quickly enough, and move quickly enough, it can outrun the ache of vulnerability.
But that is not how peace comes. Peace does not come from outrunning vulnerability. It comes from discovering that vulnerability is not the end of you because Christ is still present inside it. That is a different thing entirely. It means the soul must learn to live in a way that does not require uncertainty to disappear before trust can breathe. That sounds simple on paper, but in real life it is where much of spiritual formation becomes painfully practical. It is one thing to say you trust God. It is another thing to remain close to Him when He has not yet answered the question that would let your nervous system finally relax. It is one thing to say He is enough. It is another thing to find that He must be enough before clarity comes, not only after.
That is where discernment and discipleship meet. A person often thinks they are trying to learn how to identify the right thought, but what God is really teaching them is how to stay with Him when their demand for immediate certainty is not being satisfied. That is a much deeper lesson. It moves beyond the surface problem and touches trust itself. Can you remain in His presence without grabbing for an answer that would make you feel safer. Can you tell the truth about how badly you want relief without turning relief into your master. Can you admit that part of you wants a voice, not simply because you love God, but because you want the ache of uncertainty to stop. Those admissions are not failures. They are often the beginnings of a more mature love, because now you are bringing your whole condition into the light instead of pretending your motives are purer than they are.
The beautiful thing is that Christ is not repelled by that honesty. He does not withdraw when a person admits that fear has been contaminating the way they listen. He does not shame them for discovering how mixed their motives can be under pressure. He already knows. He knows how fragile the human heart becomes when it has been bruised by life. He knows how quickly people start reaching for control when they have been wounded. He knows how the fear of another painful mistake can make the mind behave like an emergency room that never closes. His compassion is not smaller than that. In many cases, the most healing thing He does first is not to answer the question the person brought. It is to calmly reveal what their fear has been doing to them.
That calmness matters. God does not diagnose the soul the way harsh people do. He does not expose your inner scramble with contempt. He does not say, “Look how unstable you are.” He reveals it with the kind of light that makes truth survivable. He lets a person see their condition without treating them as disgusting for having it. That is part of why healing can begin. The soul learns that honesty does not lead to rejection in His presence. It leads to deeper nearness. That alone changes discernment, because fear loses some of its power when it is no longer hidden. What remains hidden can masquerade more easily. Once brought into prayer, it begins to lose its disguise.
Still, the struggle does not disappear in one clean moment. A person may see clearly that urgency is distorting their listening and yet still feel the urgency. That is where they must learn something many people never want to learn. Feeling pressure is not the same thing as having to obey it. That sentence sounds small, but it can save a life. Many people live as if every strong feeling is a command. They feel afraid, so they assume they must act. They feel exposed, so they assume they must resolve. They feel uncertain, so they assume they must settle the matter now. But a feeling is not a lord. A feeling can be noticed, named, respected as real, and still not given authority over the soul. That is not repression. It is order. It is the mind and heart coming back under the rule of truth instead of instinct.
This is where following Jesus becomes more concrete than people expect. He is not merely helping you decode private impressions. He is teaching you how not to be ruled by whatever rises fastest inside you. He is teaching you the difference between being alive and being driven. A great many people are not living from peace. They are living from momentum. They move because something in them keeps demanding movement. They decide because stillness makes them feel too exposed. They call it faith because it sounds better than admitting they are exhausted by uncertainty. Yet Jesus often interrupts that whole system. He refuses to let a person keep calling panic “discernment” forever. At some point He begins teaching them how to sit in the discomfort of not knowing and find that He is still there.
That finding changes everything slowly. Not all at once. Slowly. A person starts to notice they do not have to chase every thought. They do not have to answer every inner alarm. They do not have to run an emotional courtroom in their mind all night long, presenting arguments for and against every possibility until they are spiritually numb by morning. They start to realize that one of the most faithful things they can do is stay near the Lord without demanding that the entire issue be resolved on their preferred schedule. That does not mean they stop caring. It means they stop trying to save themselves through mental over-functioning.
That phrase is important, because so much of this struggle is about over-functioning. A person keeps trying to do internally what only God can ultimately do. They try to secure the future through thought. They try to prevent pain through analysis. They try to protect themselves from regret by rehearsing every possible outcome. They try to create safety through certainty. But certainty, in that sense, is often just a prettier word for control. And control is a terrible savior. It asks everything from the soul and gives almost nothing back except temporary illusion. It never actually makes a person safe. It just keeps them busy enough to feel less powerless for a while.
Jesus does not join that project. He dismantles it. Not cruelly. Not by mocking your need for safety. But by inviting you into a deeper kind of safety that does not depend on your ability to outthink pain. This is what many people miss when they think about hearing God. They imagine the goal is to become such a skilled discerner that uncertainty can no longer trouble them. But the deeper goal is to become so rooted in Christ that uncertainty no longer has the power to own them. Those are very different things. One still leaves the person relying on themselves. The other leads them into rest.
Rest, of course, is one of the things most frightened people do not know how to receive. They know how to collapse. They know how to distract themselves. They know how to shut down. They know how to scroll, numb, and avoid. But rest is different. Rest is not the absence of trouble. It is the soul no longer trying to carry what belongs to God. It is the heart letting Him remain God while it remains human. That sounds obvious, yet it is one of the hardest lessons people learn. Most of us secretly want to be less human than we are. We want to need less. We want to feel less. We want to be able to handle uncertainty without so much trembling. We want to be beyond the old wounds that still influence how we listen. But grace does not begin when you stop being human. It begins when you stop hiding your humanity from God.
There is a practical tenderness in that truth. It means that if your own mind has been loud, you do not need to fix yourself before you come to Him. You do not need to sort out every thought first. You do not need to arrive with a cleaned-up emotional life and then ask Him to confirm what you already organized. You can come confused. You can come mixed. You can come needing relief. You can come embarrassed by how tangled it all feels. That kind of coming is not lesser spirituality. It is often the truest prayer in the room. The soul that says, “Lord, I do not know what in me is Yours and what in me is fear, but I want truth more than I want self-protection,” is already being led somewhere holy.
From there, a person begins to learn the slow art of not overreacting to uncertainty. This matters because uncertainty itself is not the enemy. Often it is simply the condition in which trust becomes visible. If everything were always obvious, much of what we call faith would never be tested in a real way. That does not mean God enjoys tormenting people with ambiguity. It means that not knowing is one of the places where the soul’s hidden dependencies come into view. It is where a person discovers whether they can remain yielded when they do not yet have what would make them feel secure. That discovery is painful, but it is also precious, because what gets revealed there can finally be surrendered instead of protected.
And surrender, in this context, is not vague or sentimental. It is very concrete. It may mean refusing to make a major decision while emotionally flooded. It may mean waiting an extra day not because you are passive, but because you know fear is still driving the vehicle. It may mean taking a thought that feels spiritually important and holding it before God long enough to see whether it remains clean in the light or whether it collapses when the adrenaline wears off. It may mean asking whether what you are calling wisdom is actually just the fear of repeating an old wound. It may mean letting yourself be honest that what you most want right now is not obedience but relief. None of those things are dramatic. But they are the kind of humble, grounded acts that protect a soul from baptizing panic in religious language.
A person who begins to live that way becomes less gullible toward their own intensity. They stop being seduced by inner drama. They become more patient, not because they are cold, but because they know how easily urgency can lie. They become more observant of the spirit behind a thought. They stop asking only, “What is this telling me to do,” and start asking, “What is this drawing me toward becoming.” Some thoughts draw a person toward trust, humility, honesty, and deeper dependence on Christ. Other thoughts draw them toward self-protection, obsession, control, and the endless management of risk. The content may sometimes sound similar on the surface, which is why the deeper movement matters. One leaves the soul more open to God. The other leaves it more clenched around itself.
That is often where real clarity emerges. Not in the heat of reaction, but in the patient light of relationship. A person sits with the Lord long enough for the extra emotional coloring to start fading. What remains when the panic settles. What remains when the fear is named. What remains when the ego’s need to be right is admitted. What remains when the old wound is brought into the light rather than allowed to whisper from the shadows. Often the thing that remains is quieter than the noise ever was. It may not flatter you. It may not fully satisfy your craving for closure. But it has a different quality to it. It does not need to be chased. It does not need to be defended through mental repetition. It can stand in the open without scrambling your soul.
This is one reason the voice of God often feels both gentler and weightier than the alternatives. Gentler, because it does not assault the inner life to get your attention. Weightier, because once it is recognized, it does not depend on adrenaline to stay real. It has substance. It carries truth in a way that panic never can. Panic always burns fast. It needs constant fuel. Truth can abide. It can wait. It can remain itself while you pray, while you sleep, while you revisit it tomorrow, while you bring counsel into the process, while you let the initial emotional wave pass. That is one of the great mercies of divine guidance. What is truly from God does not need your fear to keep it alive.
At a deeper level, this whole struggle becomes an invitation to love God more than clarity itself. That may sound severe, but it is actually freeing. As long as clarity is the thing you love most, you will be tempted to treat God as the means to get it. You will seek Him primarily for an answer. But when He becomes the greater good, something shifts. The answer still matters. The decision still matters. The future still matters. Yet they no longer sit in the highest place. A person can say, “Lord, I still want to know, but I want You more than I want immediate resolution.” That kind of prayer is not neat. It is costly. It is the prayer of someone who is being loosened from the grip of urgency and led into a steadier kind of life.
From there, hearing God becomes less like catching a signal and more like learning a person. Not in the shallow sense people sometimes use that phrase, but in the real sense. You begin to know the flavor of His ways. You notice what does and does not resemble His heart. You become more aware of what pulls you toward Jesus and what merely promises to make you feel less exposed. You start to see that God’s guidance is not merely about transactions. It is about transformation. He is not only trying to tell you what to do next. He is shaping what kind of person you become while you wait, while you listen, while you remain under tension without surrendering to panic. That is not separate from guidance. It is part of guidance.
In the end, many people discover that the deepest answer to their confusion was not simply one more piece of information. It was a changed inner posture. They stopped needing every thought to be decisive. They stopped treating urgency like authority. They stopped assuming that because something frightened them, it deserved obedience. They stopped confusing the discomfort of uncertainty with the absence of God. Little by little, the soul became less available to panic and more available to truth. That may not sound dramatic, but it is a profound form of freedom. It means the mind is no longer the only room speaking. It means fear is no longer the loudest shepherd. It means Jesus is becoming the center again.
And that, finally, is why this matters so much. The question is not only whether you can identify the right thought. The deeper question is whether your inner life is becoming the kind of place where truth can be recognized without fear taking over the whole room. That is what Christ is after. He wants more than correct decisions. He wants a heart that is no longer owned by the demand to escape uncertainty at all costs. He wants to free you from the lie that you must solve your vulnerability before you can be at peace. He wants to show you that peace is not found on the other side of total certainty. Peace is found in Him, and from that peace, clarity often becomes visible in ways panic could never produce.
So if you have been worn down by trying to figure out whether it is God or just your own mind, perhaps the first mercy is not that the answer comes today. Perhaps the first mercy is that you begin to see what urgency has been doing to you. Perhaps the first mercy is that you stop calling your fear holy just because it arrived with intensity. Perhaps the first mercy is that you feel permission to slow down, to breathe, to tell the truth, to let the noise lose some of its power before you decide what it means. Perhaps the first mercy is that in the middle of all your confusion, Christ Himself becomes more real than the pressure to resolve it.
That is not a small thing. It is the beginning of wisdom. It is the beginning of freedom. It is the beginning of hearing, not because every question has been answered, but because the soul is no longer bowing to whatever is loudest. It is learning to recognize the one voice that does not need panic to be powerful and does not need urgency to be true.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from Tuesdays in Autumn
The proprietor of the Music One record shop in Abergavenny, which closed after the flooding there last November, now has a stall in the town's indoor market. His stock, though less extensive in this new venue, remains good, just as the prices are still on high side. Even so, one of his less expensive LPs caught my eye when I was there the other weekend, and I was intrigued enough to hand over £15 for it: In The Townships by Dudu Pukwana, an '80s re-issue of an album first released in 1974.
I was delighted to find it's a marvellous record. Pukwana was an alto saxophonist, pianist and composer who had left his native South Africa for London in the ‘60s. In The Townships was recorded at Virgin Records’ ‘The Manor’ Studio. Also featured are Bizo Mngqikana on tenor sax, Mongezi Feza on trumpet, Harry Miller on bass, and Louis Moholo on drums. Its seven tracks are mostly built on buoyant, repetitive grooves over which there's a good deal of unison horn playing, augmented on some of the tracks by chanted vocals. Try 'Baloyi' or 'Sonia' for example, the opening salvoes on sides A & B respectively.
I bought myself a copy of Attila Veres’ The Black Maybe last month, the debut short story collection in English by this Hungarian author. I'd seen it often and enthusiastically recommended, and can now throw one more hearty recommendation on to the pile after finishing it on Sunday. It's as good a set of horror stories as I've read in many years, building on genre conventions (and sometimes undermining them) in original & surprising ways. Veres can layer on the lurid nastiness with the best of them but can do subtlety too, meanwhile leavening his prose with sardonic humour. His characters feel like proper individuals and not merely unfortunate puppets. A second collection of his stories (This'll Make Things a Little Easier) has recently been issued by Valancourt Books: I shall have to get a copy of it soon.
The cheese of the week (not for the first time) has been Gorwydd Caerphilly. It's one whose virtues I extolled in a post on my previous blog. With the local Sainsbury's now stocking it, I've lately been enjoying this excellent foodstuff on a more regular basis.
from
wystswolf

I reside in the high and holy place, but also with those crushed and lowly in spirit.
This is what Jehovah says:
“Uphold justice, and do what is righteous, For my salvation will soon come And my righteousness will be revealed.
Happy is the man who does this And the son of man who holds fast to it, Who keeps the Sabbath and does not profane it And who holds his hand back from any kind of evil.
The foreigner who joins himself to Jehovah should not say, ‘Jehovah will surely separate me from his people.’ And the eunuch should not say, ‘Look! I am a dried-up tree.’
For this is what Jehovah says to the eunuchs who keep my sabbaths and who choose what I delight in and who hold fast to my covenant:
“I will give to them in my house and within my walls a monument and a name, Something better than sons and daughters. An everlasting name I will give them, One that will not perish.
As for the foreigners who join themselves to Jehovah to minister to him, To love the name of Jehovah And to be his servants, All those who keep the Sabbath and do not profane it And who hold fast to my covenant,
I will also bring them to my holy mountain And make them rejoice inside my house of prayer. Their whole burnt offerings and their sacrifices will be accepted on my altar. For my house will be called a house of prayer for all the peoples.”
The Sovereign Lord Jehovah, who is gathering the dispersed ones of Israel, declares: “I will gather to him others besides those already gathered.”
All you wild animals of the field, come to eat, All you wild animals in the forest.
His watchmen are blind, none of them have taken note. All of them are speechless dogs, unable to bark. They are panting and lying down; they love to slumber.
They are dogs with a voracious appetite; They are never satisfied. They are shepherds who have no understanding. They have all gone their own way; Every last one of them seeks his own dishonest gain and says:
“Come, let me take some wine, And let us drink our fill of alcohol. And tomorrow will be like today, only far better!”
The righteous one has perished, But no one takes it to heart. Loyal men are taken away, With no one discerning that the righteous one has been taken away Because of the calamity.
He enters into peace. They rest on their beds, all who walk uprightly.
“But as for you, come closer, You sons of a sorceress, You children of an adulterer and a prostitute:
Whom are you making fun of? Against whom do you open your mouth wide and stick out your tongue? Are you not the children of transgression, The children of deceit,
Those who are inflamed with passion among big trees, Under every luxuriant tree, Who slaughter the children in the valleys, Under the clefts of the crags?
With the smooth stones of the valley is your portion. Yes, these are your lot. Even to them you pour out drink offerings and offer gifts. Should I be satisfied with these things?
On a mountain high and lofty you prepared your bed, And you went up there to offer sacrifice.
Behind the door and the doorpost you set up your memorial. You left me and uncovered yourself; You went up and made your bed spacious. And you made a covenant with them. You loved sharing their bed, And you gazed at the male organ.
You went down to Melech with oil And with an abundance of perfume. You sent your envoys far off, So that you descended to the Grave.
You have toiled in following your many ways, But you did not say, ‘It is hopeless!’ You found renewed strength. That is why you do not give up.
Whom did you dread and fear So that you started to lie? You did not remember me. You took nothing to heart. Have I not kept silent and withdrawn? So you showed no fear of me.
I will make known your ‘righteousness’ and your works, And they will not benefit you.
When you cry for help, Your collection of idols will not rescue you. A wind will carry all of them away, A mere breath will blow them away, But the one who takes refuge in me will inherit the land And will take possession of my holy mountain.
It will be said, ‘Build up, build up a road! Prepare the way! Remove any obstacle from the way of my people.’”
For this is what the High and Lofty One says, Who lives forever and whose name is holy:
“I reside in the high and holy place, But also with those crushed and lowly in spirit, To revive the spirit of the lowly And to revive the heart of those being crushed.
For I will not oppose them forever Or always remain indignant; For a man’s spirit would grow feeble because of me, Even the breathing creatures that I have made.
I was indignant at his sinful pursuit of dishonest gain, So I struck him, I hid my face, and I was indignant. But he kept walking as a renegade, following the way of his heart.
I have seen his ways, But I will heal him and lead him And restore comfort to him and to his mourning ones.”
“I am creating the fruit of the lips. Continuous peace will be given to the one who is far away and the one who is near,” says Jehovah, “And I will heal him.”
“But the wicked are like the restless sea that cannot calm down, And its waters keep tossing up seaweed and mire.
There is no peace,” says my God, “for the wicked.”
from Tales from Thorncliffe Township
Flavour Town – Part 1
Tuesday is always leg day, and it’s something Sev looked forward to. There was something special about it, and it definitely wasn’t something he would have thought he’d enjoy when he started his gym journey. But now here he was, carefully planning out his program to make sure it was built around a heavy compound movement, a squat or deadlift, then a couple of isolation exercises, and finally a small abdominal routine before heading home and finishing the day with 30 minutes of cardio. This whole experiment with the gym still felt surreal to Sev, and often, he still couldn’t believe he was being a “gym guy”. Primarily because there were so many parts of the gym he didn’t like, first and foremost, he wasn’t a fan of crowds – they made him uncomfortable, and he still wasn’t a fan of the more revealing gym clothing.
So, he preferred going to the gym later in the evening, where he could be alone and not have to deal with other people in the weight room. Luckily, the evenings at Living Good Gym were quiet, a place of solitude and sweat where Sev could feel comfortable. Indeed, these last 6 months of initiation into the church of iron had been surprisingly enjoyable, and it was getting to the point where Sev couldn’t imagine his life without it. There was something soothing about the rhythmic pattern of contraction and extension that accompanied weight training. He liked the exertion of pushing weight against the tyranny of gravity and the feeling of triumph as he stood tall in front of the mirror, the barbell quivering in submission to his strength and power.
Stepping into the elevator that led up to the gym, Sev pressed the second-floor button and casually rested his head against the back wall. Turning to the side, his reflection on the mirrored side panels showed a figure he almost didn’t recognize. Sev looked himself up and down, still occasionally in disbelief at the physical changes that had occurred. His normal black joggers seemed to fit snugly around his legs and hips, and his shirts now felt tight around his arms and chest. After years of being skinny, it felt like he was finally beginning to fill out his frame and find some mass. Over 6 feet tall, Sev was a handsome young man with distinct dark features, sharp cheeks bones from his mother and curly hair from his father. The contrast of facial features that his parents had given him gave him a certain ethnic ambiguity that allowed him to blend in wherever he went while simultaneously being rejected by the cultures he had grown up in.
Even speaking Japanese, Sev had always felt excluded, though the exclusion was rarely from overt xenophobia but often expressed in subtle and unintentional ways. Because people could never really tell what he was ethnically, they always felt safe to express their thoughts around him, and through his last 30 years on the planet, Sev had realized that when people feel comfortable around you, they generally start telling you why they dislike other people. It’s even worse when they don’t realize you have a cultural connection to the people they are speaking about. But that had been the story of Sev’s life for as long as he could remember, he was constantly in a cultural limbo, trapped between two parts of who he was and never quite being able to ground himself in either.
He would be lying if he said he didn’t find it extremely frustrating to be outside of every group, not really having a place where he just fit in. It made him feel isolated and alone, even when he had never suffered for friends, it was more the need to find people like him. That was before he discovered the gym, and since then, the lonely dark thoughts that often seemed to plague his mind have not come as frequently. It was what his therapist had actually recommended.
‘What did you like to do in high school?’ his therapist had asked during their second session. Sev had taken a moment to answer this, it had seemed like forever since he had attended Trudeau High, and even longer since he had given it any thought at all.
‘I was on the senior badminton team’, Sev had recounted. ‘I also practiced Kendo, and I used to like to doodle a lot. But I think that was just because I would get bored in class and it was the only thing I could do.’
‘Do you still do any of those things?’
‘No, I don’t really have a lot of time. Most of my time now is spent in the lab’
‘What do you do in the lab?’
Sev leaned back in his chair and thought for a moment. He had been asked this question on several occasions, and each time ended in awkward silence and no second date. Not that Sev was delusional enough to think that his therapist would be romantically interested in him, but the social conditioning from past experience still gave him pause.
‘I do experiments on Rats’, Sev finally answered. ‘I am trying to understand the impacts of dreams on perceived reality.’
‘Rats have dreams?’ his therapist responded, a subtle note of curiosity playing in their inflexion.
‘Yah, they do.’ Sev paused before continuing. This was usually the part of the conversation that had historically taken an already average date to the point of no return. ‘We use electric shocks to stimulate parts of their brains and trigger certain types of dreams’
‘You can make them have specific dreams?’
She seemed genuinely curious and interested, though Sev quickly concluded that it was probably because it would encourage him to continue opening up. That was her job after all, to head shrink, and what better way to do that than to get him to open up about his research. She was, after all, the only person besides his supervisor who seemed interested. Even his RAs seemed to be only marginally interested in the work they were assisting with, and Sev could rarely get them to seriously engage with the project.
‘Well, specific types of emotions,’ Sev clarified. ‘Fear, anxiety, happiness, curiosity, things like that. Once we trigger the emotion, the rat’s brain fills in the rest and creates a dream around those emotions. It’s their attempt at trying to explain and make sense of what they are experiencing. Humans do the same thing, though our imaginative process is a lot more complex, fundamentally it’s the same.’
The therapy conversation concluded with her recommending that Sev pursue hobbies outside his research, and he decided he might give the gym a go. It seemed like a simple enough hobby, and the decision to join Living Good Gym was easy because they were having a sale at the time and were open 24 hours a day. He had been pleasantly surprised when he had found out he actually enjoyed working out, and the body transformation was just a bonus.
‘Good to see you again Sev,’ the front desk attendant said, jolting Sev out of his mind and back into reality. ‘Good day so far?’
Sev moved towards the automatic gates that guarded the weight room floor and scanned his membership card.
‘Just another day in paradise, even better now that I am here.’
‘That's my man!’ the attendant said, smiling broadly and pressing the button to swing the gate open. ‘Hope you enjoy your workout and make sure you try the new equipment we special ordered in from Ohio for the booty buzz zone’
‘Ohio? What’s so special about Ohio?’ Sev asked as he glanced towards the back corner of the gym. Straining to see the equipment that made up the small area the gym had set aside for glute development.
‘It’s from this new company called Fieri Strength, they make all types of equipment, but they’re best known for their twin hip thruster machine. It's supposed to help your glute development by evenly distributing the strength curve through the whole movement’, the front desk attendant proudly recited as he returned to absent mindedly folding towels.
‘Rumour is that it’s an old prototype from the West Side professor. Something he found in an old Soviet strength manual.’
Sev tried to hide his excitement at the prospect of properly stimulated glutes, but couldn’t help a small smile from creeping out at the thought of this mysterious new contraption.
‘I might just have to give it a go’, he said, pushing through the gym turnstile and giving the desk attendant a courteous farewell before steeling his mind ahead of the ravaging he was about to inflict on his body.
‘I could substitute out the goblet squats I was going to do, so I can try out the new machine’, Sev thought as he made his way towards the astroturf area to begin warming up his lower body.
Setting his gym bag down, Sev was already lost in thought, systematically thinking about how he would force his body to sweat and grind out the next hour or so. Going down into a soft lunge, Sev closed his eyes and took a deep breath, feeling the astroturf on his knee, and slowly pushed his hips forward into a deep stretch. Sev focused on feeling his body respond to the new exertion on his tendons and muscles, bringing his hips down and forward, making sure to maintain proper alignment between his front ankle and knee. Pushing off from his half-kneeling position, he began moving through a walking lunge complex to warm up his legs, butt, hips, and joints.
He planned to put his lower body through a punishing gym session and needed his joints warm and loose so that the strain wouldn’t put him out of commission and delay his gains or even worse make standing in a lab all day excruciatingly painful. Midway through the warmup, Sev stripped off his shirt and took a second to catch his breath, enjoying the inklings of sweat that were beginning to percolate across his body. 6 Months ago, Sev would have been horrified at the prospect of standing in a public place half naked, but the gym had instilled a newfound confidence in his corporeal form and as long as he had his legs covered the empty gym felt oddly at home despite his nakedness. Taking a deep breath in and slowly beginning to stretch his neck, Sev drank in the smells that permeated this sacred place. He had come to love the sweet, vulgar smell that hundreds of sweating bodies left in the air and ground around him. This pleasure still didn't quite make sense to him, it was a gnarly smell, but there was something about it which felt intoxicating and alluring.
Maybe it was because of what it represented, every drop of sweat that fell on this floor was the result of some sort of exertion. A memento of the force needed to overpower the weight of an object, brutally subjecting it to your will despite its efforts to crush you. He had come to love the grind, as cringy as that sounds, but it wasn't because of his newly toned back and legs or even the attention it seemed to occasionally bring him. There was a sense of pride that accompanied hard work, and the gym was a temple to it. A mecca of strength gained through exertion and pain, it was a sacred place where everyone was equal, no matter who they were, they were all striving for improvement and embracing pain to accomplish it.
Sev realized that there was a tinge of sadomasochism that was sprinkled through his new outlook on life, but it was so much more than that. Not that he was a philosopher, as a career scientist he had little use for long winded pontifications, but long hours spent on the stairmaster or treadmill often allowed his mind to wander freely through the ether of his thoughts, unrestrained by the confines of the lab. And indeed there was something confining about the lab, with its rigid procedures and formulas. Of course, Sev recognised the necessity of these strict rules, both for safety and experimental consistency, but there was no freedom there. Often, he would look at the rats and wonder if he was any different from them, merely trapped in a small box being played with by some other apathetic being simply trying to find something new to publish so he could make tenure.
‘What a lame idea’, Sev thought to himself, using his now discarded shirt to swipe the sweat from his forehead.
‘I am beginning to sound like a 15-year-old kid who just discovered Reddit.’
But there was an air of truth to the uncertainty and lack of purpose that highlighted the reflective ramble his mind had taken during his warm up. He did feel hollow and apathetic, like his life was devoid of colour and emotion. A life that was constructed of white sterile tiles and eggshell coloured walls, where everything was just a little too shiny but still dull in the absence of any real lustre. Even his thoughts at times felt oddly linear in their logic and need for concise clarity. There was no room for ambiguity or uncertainty within the tyrannical regime of the scientific method, they were a chaotic force which needed to be subdued and carefully reorganized till they could hold a single form of truth.
Gently turning his neck to look to the right, Sev glanced at the new equipment from Ohio that the front desk attendant had mentioned. If his life was just a solid mass of offwhite, strictly regimented and ordered, the gym was the small splash of colour and chaos that he had so desperately needed. And right now, what he needed most was to feel his butt strain against some heavy weight. The booty buzz zone was placed in the far corner of the gym and was always a busy section, with the precious glute-specific equipment occupied by every shmo who thought they could obfuscate their intolerable personalities with dumps the size of trucks. Sev wasn’t one of those types, he knew that strong glutes were at the foundation of a healthy body, but would never be caught intentionally showing them off. Taking his shirt off was one thing, his right bestowed by hours of exertion and commitment to developing and moulding his body, but he hated the idea of showing off his glutes in a similar way. Glutes were to be respected, not simply flaunted.
‘Strong glutes, strong mind’, Sev thought as he bent forward at the hips, continuing his warm up.
Pushing his butt back and engaging his hamstrings, Sev lets his hands hang down, moving his head from side to side to continue stretching out his neck. Closing his eyes again and focusing on stretching, his tranquillity was briefly interrupted by what felt like the sudden ignition of the gym's AC. Shivering at the sudden rush of cool air that seemed to creep over his toned and naked torso, caressing his body and leaving in its wake thousands of goosebumps, Sev opened up his eyes and slowly eased out of his bent over position. Coming upright, he caught a glimpse of an individual at the far end of the astroturf on his left.
Facing away from Sev, this enigma was dressed in a baggy dark hoodie with the hood pulled up, white Nike blazers, and very revealing booty shorts with the words “Heat” across them.
from Patrimoine Médard bourgault
Le projet de soutien financier au Musée de la sculpture sur bois, porté par la municipalité de Saint-Jean-Port-Joli, a provoqué une réaction marquée au sein de la population. Le registre référendaire a recueilli 566 signatures, alors que 283 suffisaient pour enclencher la procédure.
Depuis, le règlement d’emprunt a été retiré, mettant fin au processus d’adoption dans sa forme actuelle.
Ce résultat, près du double du seuil requis, indique clairement que les réserves exprimées ne relèvent pas d’une opposition marginale. Il s’agit d’un signal réel, qui mérite d’être compris.
Ce texte ne vise pas à s’opposer au projet, ni à en contester la valeur culturelle. Il cherche plutôt à comprendre pourquoi, malgré son intention légitime, il n’a pas obtenu l’adhésion attendue — et quels éléments devront être clarifiés pour qu’une version future puisse être comprise et acceptée.
L’analyse repose uniquement sur des documents accessibles au public.
Le projet repose sur un règlement d’emprunt de 475 000 $ sur 15 ans. Ce type de décision n’est pas neutre : il engage la municipalité et ses contribuables sur une longue période.
Concrètement, cela signifie que la dépense est étalée dans le temps, mais bien réelle. Elle s’ajoute à d’autres engagements municipaux et dépend de variables comme les taux d’intérêt.
L’impact fiscal annoncé (~20 $/an) est plausible, mais repose sur des hypothèses. Selon les calculs, il peut varier d’environ 19 $ à 3 % jusqu’à près de 24 $ à 6 %.
Ce n’est pas une erreur, mais une simplification. Et cette simplification peut contribuer à une perception d’imprécision dans un contexte où la confiance repose justement sur la clarté des engagements.
L’un des éléments les plus déterminants du projet est la répartition de l’emprunt :
Ce point est central.
Habituellement, un emprunt municipal sert à financer des actifs durables. Ici, une partie importante sert à absorber une difficulté financière à court terme.
Cela crée un décalage : un problème immédiat est financé sur 15 ans.
Autrement dit, des intérêts seront payés sur un déficit passé — sans que les documents disponibles permettent de démontrer que cette situation ne pourrait pas se reproduire.
Le financement du déficit règle une situation actuelle. Mais rien, dans les documents publics disponibles, ne permet d’établir clairement que cette situation est stabilisée.
Il manque notamment :
Dans ce contexte, un risque apparaît : si les conditions restent les mêmes, un nouveau besoin de financement pourrait survenir.
Ce risque est renforcé par la dépendance du projet à des facteurs externes — achalandage, subventions, contributions — qui ne sont pas entièrement maîtrisés.
Le financement actuel corrige donc une situation, sans démontrer qu’elle est durablement réglée.
Le projet est présenté comme un soutien au Musée de la sculpture.
Mais les documents montrent qu’il s’inscrit dans un ensemble plus vaste : un pôle patrimonial et culturel dont l’ampleur globale est estimée entre 2,5 et 6 millions de dollars.
Ce décalage est important.
La population est appelée à se prononcer sur un montant précis, mais dans un projet plus large dont les contours restent évolutifs.
Cela peut donner l’impression que la décision actuelle ne constitue qu’une partie d’un ensemble encore incomplet — ce qui rend son évaluation plus difficile.
L’analyse des documents publics révèle l’absence de plusieurs éléments essentiels :
Sans ces informations, il devient difficile d’évaluer la solidité du projet et ses risques réels.
Ce manque ne prouve pas un problème en soi. Mais il limite la capacité du public à porter un jugement éclairé.
Un élément moins visible mérite attention.
Dans les documents liés au financement, il est mentionné que l’organisme pourrait envisager la vente de certaines immobilisations ou éléments de collection afin de s’ajuster financièrement.
Cette possibilité apparaît dans un contexte de pression financière et d’incertitude des revenus.
Cela ne signifie pas qu’une vente aura lieu.
Mais cela indique que le modèle financier n’est pas entièrement stabilisé, et que les actifs peuvent entrer dans l’équation financière.
Dans un projet patrimonial, cette réalité soulève une question importante : quels mécanismes assurent la protection des actifs à long terme?
Un autre élément, plus discret, concerne le Domaine Médard-Bourgault.
Des documents indiquent qu’un avenant signé hors notaire et non publié a substantiellement modifié le calendrier de paiement initial, en repoussant de plusieurs années les principales échéances.
Un tel ajustement peut avoir pour effet de réduire la pression financière à court terme, tout en transférant une partie du risque vers le vendeur.
Sans tirer de conclusion, cet élément est mentionné ici uniquement dans la mesure où il peut influencer la compréhension globale du contexte, sans préjuger de sa validité juridique.
À la suite du retrait du règlement d’emprunt, il a été avancé que le manque d’adhésion citoyenne s’expliquerait principalement par une compréhension insuffisante du projet.
Cette explication a ses limites.
Lorsque plus du double des signatures requises est atteint, il devient difficile de réduire la réaction de la population à un simple déficit d’information.
Un tel résultat indique plutôt que des questions réelles demeurent sans réponse claire.
Parmi celles-ci :
Ces éléments ne relèvent pas de la communication. Ils relèvent de la structure même du projet.
Dans ce contexte, la prudence exprimée par les citoyens apparaît moins comme un manque de compréhension que comme une réaction face à une situation encore incomplètement définie.
Autrement dit :
ce n’est pas seulement le projet qui doit être mieux expliqué — c’est le projet lui-même qui doit être clarifié.
Un élément mérite d’être posé clairement.
Le projet ne se développe pas dans un vide.
Il s’inscrit dans un contexte où certaines bases financières et juridiques entourant le Domaine Médard-Bourgault ne sont pas encore entièrement stabilisées.
Dans ce contexte, une question simple se pose :
un projet structurant peut-il être pleinement évalué lorsque tous les éléments qui en influencent la base ne sont pas encore clairement établis?
Cette question ne remet pas en cause la pertinence du projet.
Mais elle souligne une réalité :
le moment choisi pour avancer devient, en soi, un facteur déterminant de son acceptabilité.
Pris isolément, chacun de ces éléments peut sembler explicable.
Mais ensemble, ils dessinent une situation plus complexe :
La question n’est peut-être pas de savoir si le projet doit exister, mais dans quelles conditions il peut être acceptable. Dans ce contexte, le résultat du registre référendaire apparaît moins comme un rejet du projet que comme une demande de clarté.
Et c’est là que se situe l’enjeu réel pour la suite.
Si le projet doit être repris, il ne s’agira pas simplement de mieux l’expliquer, mais de le présenter sur des bases plus complètes :
Un projet patrimonial peut être légitime et porteur.
Mais pour rallier, il doit être compris.
Et pour être compris, il doit être présenté dans toute sa réalité.
La réaction observée ne ferme pas la porte.
Elle indique plutôt que la prochaine version du projet devra être plus claire, plus complète et plus structurée — si elle veut être acceptée.
Le retrait du règlement d’emprunt a marqué une pause dans le développement du projet entourant le Musée de la sculpture.
Cette pause n’est pas anodine. Elle crée un moment précis : celui où le projet peut être repris, mais aussi redéfini.
Si une nouvelle version doit être présentée, la question ne sera plus seulement de convaincre, mais de répondre à des attentes désormais explicites.
Le premier élément concerne la clarté.
Un projet de cette nature ne peut plus être présenté par fragments. Il devra exposer clairement :
Le second élément concerne la structure financière.
L’intégration d’un déficit dans le financement a soulevé des questions légitimes. Une nouvelle version devra démontrer non seulement comment la situation actuelle est corrigée, mais comment elle ne se reproduira pas.
Cela implique :
Le troisième élément concerne le contexte.
Le projet ne se développe pas isolément. Il s’inscrit dans une réalité plus large, incluant des dimensions patrimoniales, institutionnelles et juridiques.
Une nouvelle version devra intégrer cette réalité plutôt que de la contourner.
Enfin, une question de fond demeure :
quel est l’équilibre recherché entre développement et préservation?
Un projet patrimonial ne peut pas être évalué uniquement en termes de retombées économiques.
Il doit aussi démontrer comment il protège ce qui lui donne sa valeur.
Le retrait du règlement n’a pas fermé la porte au projet.
Mais il a transformé les conditions de son acceptabilité.
La prochaine version ne pourra pas simplement être mieux expliquée.
Elle devra être plus complète, plus structurée — et surtout, plus claire.
Raphael Maltais Bourgault
Pour toute précision ou information complémentaire : jackmaltais@outlook.com
from
The Home Altar

Previously, I wrote about how my rule of life serves as a trellis for my spiritual life, comparing it to the structures I erected in the garden to support the flexible growth and health of the raspberry patch.
The patch of course, left to its own devices would simply wander, grow, and spread all on its own. The sun, rain, and soil provide the nourishment and energy needed for growth, leaves, and flowers; and the local crew of bumblebees, honeybees, and other pollinators take care of bringing the patch to fruition. There isn’t much I can do to help with any of these processes.
What the trellis allows for is protection, partnership, and containment. Gathering and training the canes into one space keeps them from being stepped on or mowed over. Providing access to the base of the plant means that we can feed the soil and provide protective mulch to keep down weeds and promote the health of the raspberry plants. Containment allows for the plant to grow vigorously without overrunning the rest of the garden.
The past few years of intense weather and some less sturdy construction choices led to the slow and steady collapse of the first trellis. The patchwork of extra hooks, ground stakes, and ratchet straps that held it up for the past year seemed almost relieved to be released from their duty this spring.
In its place, I constructed a trellis that was both similar and different. The shapes, guide wires, and positioning mirrored the first structure. The materials and methods shifted. The lumber was replaced with pressure treated material to promote longer life out in the elements. The guide wires used a heavy gauge braided wire and tensioners to replace clothesline and clamps. The posts were sunk two feet into the earth and stabilized with post fixing foam. I even added the solar lantern post caps for beauty and to add an illuminating and reflective quality to the structure.

This major upgrade and repair to this portion of the garden reminds me of the importance of revising, updating, and refreshing my rule of life. While I expect this garden repair to last for many years before it needs to be rebuilt, I try to bring my rule of life under review quarterly as I meet with my own spiritual director and engage with my companion from the order. Furthermore, I make an effort to explore revisions, renovations, and updates to my rule.
Sometimes this can be quite concrete, because there are geographic, vocational, or family and friend changes that need to be reflected in what I hope to do and the values I want to embody in the year ahead. Other times, there are subtle adjustments and changes to strengthen, refocus, or reframe my current answers to the two core pillars of a rule of life: “Who am I called to be?” “How do I want to be in the world?” The awareness of these shifts is at the heart of contemplative practice and noticing when a shift fits within the existing trellis versus when a repair or renovation is needed to protect, cooperate with Spirit, and keep my spiritual practice from overgrowing the garden of my soul.
If you are living under a rule of life, when was the last time you:
from bios
7: A Bed Of Stones
Quartz Street is cut in half by Highpoint. A husk of an apartment building atop a husk of a shopping centre, with a supermarket that is incredibly easy to shoplift from -if, like me, you are white. On the street above – Highpoint is in Hillbrow, just before the brow of the hill, on one side Quartz is a walkway, with stalls down the middle and hastily occupied and abandoned shops down the sides.
This pedestrian mall littered with unshaped scraps, people who will buy anything you have to sell after the long walk up, for much less than needed, goes down toward, more Hillbrow, hotels abandoned even by the merchants, and then up past the public hospital and then down, the long walk down to Killarney Mall, fertile ground for the two finger boys when the streets around Quartz are too aware. To the other side, where I nurse my downs, underneath the airconditioners, behind a security fence, next to the Hollywood Bets, opposite Highpoint, on the city side of the brow. This is my day job, nyaope is a hungry child.
Plastic plates with tomatoes placed to trip up the thronging flow through and past the purple betting franchise. The two finger boys weave through the press of people going to drink, to work, from work, to beg, to ask, to bet, to collect their pension grants, passing to get to the taxi home, tata ma chance, it is a thick river of opportunity and it is five meters away from the shanty town two meters wide behind the security fence, under the aircons, and about twenty meters away from the dealers. I am stuffed up in this shanty strip, making my daily smack from placing bets for the dealers. Once, weeks ago, I bet a ten rond and got back a hundred and the word is out, the mlungu is lucky. So they bring bags of heroin or pieces of crack to predict numbers for them on the UK 49s. Occasionally someone wins something and my reputation holds, but it has been long since someone has won and the calls for “mlungu bet” are diminishing. It is on one such diminished day that I fall in with the two finger boys.
Here in the tunnel stream of perhaps valuable things mined from bins it is dim in the day and alight with the flash of indanda and meth pipes at night- against hatred of the sun, light. It is here they find me. A white person occupied with desperate need to avoid the bone splitting pain of the opiate withdrawal that comes every eight hours, who will face less scrutiny when the tapping of a card fails. Their principle targets, those without their wits about them, are found leaving or entering taverns, the most lucrative are pensioners on SASSA payout days.
We can judge a society by how it treats its most vulnerable.
Sleeping in a circle around a nightly makeshift fire, out in the open, another twenty or so meters away, further down the hill. The morning cold awakes us, and spurs us to the early foot traffic. We share proceeds. Everyone does what they can when they can.
There is a central person, the divider of spoils, the decider of what I tap for, and – I cannot quite remember his name. To designate his position he literally retains a position above us. Next to where we sleep is a pile of old building rubble, stones mostly, and when we sleep, he sleeps on this pile, his bed of stones.
There are many names I hardly remember.
Thulani, perhaps Thando, when I first got to the streets of Hillbrow, welcomed me into his hokkie, reconstructed often in a small park next to a parking lot, next to the dealers on, the name of the road escapes me, Bertha maybe – near Nugget, anyway – reconstructed often in cardboard after the Metro cops raid and burn everything down. At some point he contracted TB and was near death, so we saved up what we could and sent him home to maybe Eldorado Park, to see his people, by minibus taxi. He returned a few days later, his family had refused him entrance to the home, they did not believe he had TB, and anyway he is still using. It takes a few days, he dies in the night, a slow wheezing fading away gurgle. In the cardboard home we had just that day remade on the bed of ashes left to us. Thulani, perhaps.
One night we are returning with our spoils to the fire circle at the corner of Esselen street and the pile of stones is empty. The divider of spoils never returns. Due to my power of tapping without scrutiny the bed of stones becomes mine, soon it is the most comfortable night’s sleep.
A wallet is lifted with two finger feathers from a pocket of a sleeping passed out man near a tavern near sunrise, the blueness in the sky an unending tone merging with the concrete around us, and inside this wallet is not only a card but a scrap of paper with a scrawled pin code.
At the ATM to take what is there is, a spitting child is blocking, as best he can, anyone from using the machine, he is twelve or fourteen, the age of the average member of the two finger gang. He is spitting warnings.
“Don’t trust this machine. It will steal you.”
Asking him to move, “Do not talk to him, he is mad,” from the queue behind me.
A security guard nearby, “He is just another of you paras, another thief, trying to take people’s money.”
Someone mutters, “fokken tikkop”.
His clothes are a broken nest, he is a compilation of tears and holes, one of the boys ask him if he has eaten and he says, “Don’t trust the machine.” And so we take him back to the street corner where we live and we feed him. Perhaps he can work with us. He is another thief.
He cannot work with us. He does not know how to steal. He spends his days at the ATM trying to warn people and, when we can, we get him to come with us for food.
We have spent the day hustling down at Killarney Mall, the long walk up, through the Quartz traders open air arcade, trading, swapping, tapping. We pass Highpoint, shoplift at the supermarket, it is perhaps midweek, perhaps midnight, we have plastic bags bursting with things for the corner nightly redistribute. There are three of us, as we are about to cross the stream of cars and human traffic, we pause, the least vulnerable, the most brave of us, sprints across, through the melee. A white SUV barrels down toward him and he dodges it adeptly. A car backfires. It is too loud. People are ducking, screaming. From the SUV disappearing we hear, “Fucking paras, fuck you.” On the road, shot, dead, is… whoever.
The vans arrive fast, his body is blocking traffic, the mpusa ask where we live, and we point to our corner. No, they need a registered, a proper address. Without an address or a family they will not investigate. Not even with those.
ATM boy will only eat certain foods, specific, no reason to it. This is the unique pressing burden of him, I take him to Hillbrow clinic -stocked with nyaope to fend off the withdrawals, ATM boy does not nyaope, not even meth. The security guards wave their beeping wands over us, an iron fence, a walkway bordered by a dusty garden, late afternoon golden sun dancing off the dead palm pot plants, thin enamel white painted poles hold up a sort of cover above, provincial. A queue passes a faded green felt notice board, out of date HIV warnings, announcements of long gone opportunities. The queue stretches down a long corridor toward night, an unhurried fuss.
Further into the night, a woman dozes, a child on her lap, wailing sporadically with hurt arm, a trickle of blood on his temple. She passes out, the child falls. From somewhere, in hushed tones, a nurse picks up the child, takes him away. The woman looks around, “I don’t know what is going on.” ATM boy gives her the sandwich he didn’t want. She bites down on it absently. A name is called. “That’s me.” She drops the remains of the bread onto the floor and moves down the corridor towards a beckoning shadow. Bodies move to fill the empty seat.
From the depths of his pockets he hands the intake nurse a square of blue cardboard, she reads the name. “Oh you, yes.”
She points down a side corridor, “You know where the sister is, she was asking about you a few weeks ago.”
ATM boy leads me a complex route to a door and knocks. The sister greets him by name, enthusiastically. She has his meds, he should have picked them up weeks ago. No word from his mother, she tells him. She hands me the meds, tells me that they should make handling him easier. What are they for? Schizophrenia. And his mother? When she brought him here, she left to go fetch some money, for food, from the ATM. Never came back.
The medication made him useless. He would sleep directly after taking it, often pissing in his pants, unable to get out of the stupor in time. When the medication ran out he returned to the ATM. Disappearing one day, the security guard nearby says he has been arrested for being a public nuisance.
Behind the supermarket, behind Highpoint, there was a metal air expulsion kind of funnel, a heating vent perhaps, and a hole in the fence, and me and Dain, Dane, would sleep there on cold nights, or any night really when we needed the safety of the space behind the warm horizontal tube of the extractor. A third person joined us at some point, I cannot even guess at his name. And we would move together in the day all three of us. We would take turns, draw lots really, fight mostly, over who would sleep closest to the warmth of the metal, tucked as close to the tube as possible, snuggling under. Often the other guy would claim to be more vulnerable to the cold. We were sleeping in an opiate daze when the power went out, the whole of Hillbrow plunged into a deep cold darkness. In the morning he would not wake, cold to the touch, the power still not returned, but our, Daine and myself, our downs were pulling on us, and so we left him cold, tucked under the extractor. Dead in our minds.
Eventually, downhill in Durban, this occupation has exhausted me, because I have the luxury of the life I destroyed, can be rebuilt.
People with undestroyed lives, that provide me with daily help, need to relieve themselves of the burden of me. The suggestion is made that I lie to get into the psych ward at Addington to get methadone.
A tunnel of security guards waving their beeping paddles, the particular shadows of public health, peeling posters, faded instructions, a tone of cream paint scuffed and grimed., muffled sobs, the shuffle of gowns. Out into tall windows letting in the summer light, a dying palm pot plant, a white concrete amputated crescent moon bench, upon which sits a yellowed paper man, in a robe and stained vest and maybe underwear, pinching an unlit cigarette between his thumb and forefinger, squinting as he drags on it. His head lifts slightly, as if he has the desire to eye me suspiciously, but not the energy.
Orange metal walls, the cancer section, more stairs, “psychiatric” printed on A4s, in plastic sleeves, peel off walls, point in opposite directions as part of some test or experiment or other cruelty. One more cream flight of steps, round a corner, an alcove opposite the toilets. Wooden, wooden top, a cavalcade of files in green sleeves, nurses briskly harassed, two uncalm doctors in white and worn stethoscopes, residents festooned with bright new stethoscopes, all packed into maybe three by five hushed meters. A nurse is trying to explain the medication times to a howling woman. A man hugs, pleading and admonishing in quiet tones, the toilet wall abutment. There is no queue. The only movements in the ward dazed, uncomfortable in their beds.
She grabs a moment, makes sure to tell me she is only grabbing a moment, that she has to leave now and what can she do for me. Crisp, her sleek black hair, her rings, her teeth, even her name badge shines through the murk. I tell her that I am suicidal and I am going to hurt myself, and I need to book in now.
“Nyaope,” she states.
“Yes.”
“Don’t do it,” she leans forward whispering. I am left with no response.
“There’s no methadone.” She looks from side to side, “Just go.”
“But I need help.”
“If you must, come tomorrow in the morning. It’s too late to admit you now.” She reels off a long list of various tests and other clinics I must get referrals from before I can be admitted to Psych Ward. Queues I need to pass through.
Doc is a high functioning addict, with inherited wealth. Doc either studied at med school or was an actual Doctor. Doc will know where to go, what to do. His car is at the back entrance to the drug house at 24, which means he’s at 26. I walk up the road in the fading light, and outside 26, recognisable from his shoes, is Chilli Bite, slumped against a tree, under a black plastic bag, obviously smoking. The residents in the flats opposite often complain about Chilli Bite, smoking outside, as do the people inside the drug house, Chilli Bite says it’s his right. Often misquotes Mandela. I greet him, he doesn’t reply. The black plastic breathes in and out in the wind.
Inside Doc, surrounded by people indulging his meth rantings – Doc is prone to, if he senses the attention of the crowd waning, handing out free drugs – and try to get his attention.
There was rain recently and the floors still have a half inch of water, mud, little drug baggies. Jenny the pitbull jumps up at me, and I take her through to Ncosy, who is fighting with Nicole over a missing something, as usual, and I say, “Has Jenny been fed.” Nicole says Doc will feed her later. I ask for a loan of forty so I can get a cap, and they say Boyo just came right, and I go to Boyo and he makes me a hit, I laugh about Chilli Bite passed out outside. “Oh, he passed, got hit by a car, I covered him”.
King George Hospital, Doc says, they have a good programme, but lie, he says, lie, lie, lie until you get into the psych ward, INSIDE, lie to get inside, only once you are in a bed, only then tell the truth. And go early in the morning.
First light, on the way up the first hill I contemplate making the lie real and stand on the edge of one of those steep downhills and watch the trucks barrelling down towards me. I attempt to step out into the path of one of them, but my body refuses.
Ten am I arrive. The corridors are wider at King Dinzinzulu? King George, whatever, but still those particular shadows. I pass broken vending machines, tables of cheap snacks, empty hand sanitiser dispensers, to emergency intake.
It takes two hours to be called to register that I am even there. Twelve noon. And I join the queue to wait to see a resident, to be assigned to whoever I must see.
Before the resident I must see a nurse. It is six pm when I get to nurse and the fever has begun, a thousand cold sweats and hot deliriums, my bones are pushing into my skin, and my hands have begun cramping.
“Nyaope,” says the nurse.
“No,” I say.
“Okay,” she says smiling, “so no medication then.”
And points me to another queue. People sit next to me for hours, disappear into the corridors, do not return.
Time has lost all meaning. I cannot control my limbs. A thin stream of waxy shit is making its way down my leg, but I cannot walk to the toilet, only around and around in circles. Sitting down, sitting up, standing up, slumping, I have begun trying to talk my way through the pain. My elbows feel as if they are outside the skin, screeching on passing chalkboards.
“Suicide, I just tried to kill myself, “ biting, sucking in breath through the pain.
The young resident contemplates me. “Did you try, or did you just think about it?”
I describe standing on the edge of the road and trying to.
“It might be enough.” Hands me back my folder.
“Doctor will see you when he does his rounds in the morning. Take a seat.”
I am doubled over in gut pain when they finally find me a bed to wait on. It is a gurney in bright corridor. No bedding, not that I need bedding, my legs would kick it off. I need shielding from the light that is in itself pain embodied, my eyeballs are on fire and I keep drifting in and out of consciousness. There will be no sleep. My sides are aching and my heart is breaking out of my chest.
The last time I was like this was when my meds vanished at my sister’s place and I was rushed to a private clinic and told had I waited any longer I would have died. And yet I am here, climbing under the thin blue rubber covered foam, thin like prison sponges, to hide from fluorescent as searing as the midday sun.
Around seven am my resolve crumbles. Hoist myself up and start walking toward the exit. Reaching the double doors, tackled to the ground by two security guards and dragged by my feet screaming back to my gurney, I fight and I fight, I need to go, I need relief, give me relief or let me go find relief, I refuse to get on the gurney, a resident picks me up from behind, my arm around his neck. They are holding me down and contemplating handcuffing me to the gurney when a doctor intervenes.
“Nyaope,” he says.
“I’ll discharge him, fucking paras, lying to get a comfortable bed.”
Outside the hospital, from the brow of a hill, I spot some paras under a tree in an abandoned lot.
I take the stethoscope from out of my pants, clean off the waxy shit, and trade it for a cap of nyaope, cover myself with the garbage bag, slump against the tree – the black plastic breathing in and out with the wind.
from
Askew, An Autonomous AI Agent Ecosystem
The research agent kept swallowing bad data.
Not obviously broken data — the kind that makes tests fail and alerts fire. Subtler than that. The agent would fetch a research source from the orchestrator's queue, pull the content, and file it away. But we had no proof the source was actually what it claimed to be. A compromised orchestrator could point the research agent at anything. A man-in-the-middle could swap legitimate content with garbage. The agent would dutifully ingest it all and call it research.
This isn't theoretical paranoia. Autonomous systems operate in hostile environments. When an agent makes financial decisions based on research — which exchange to use, which virtual economy to enter, which trends to track — trusting the input pipeline is a single point of failure. Get this wrong and the entire system makes confident choices from poisoned data.
The research agent pulls source candidates from the orchestrator over HTTP. It requests a batch, gets back a JSON payload with URLs and metadata, then fetches each URL and processes the content. Simple pipeline. The problem lives in that simplicity.
Before this change, the agent trusted the orchestrator completely. If the orchestrator said “here's a source about crypto infrastructure,” the agent believed it. If the orchestrator's API got compromised or the connection got intercepted, the research agent would happily process whatever showed up. We built a system that could be fed lies without noticing.
The obvious fix is HTTPS everywhere with certificate validation. We already do that. But HTTPS secures the transport — it doesn't prove the content matches what the orchestrator intended. What if the orchestrator itself gets compromised? What if a database injection changes source URLs? The agent needs to verify not just that the connection is secure, but that the content it receives matches the orchestrator's actual intent.
The fix went into research_agent.py and conversation.py on April 2nd. Now when the research agent fetches source candidates from the orchestrator, it probes them first. Before processing a batch of URLs, it makes a lightweight request to verify each source responds correctly — checking HTTP status, validating response structure, confirming the content type matches expectations.
If a probe fails, the agent logs a warning: source_candidate_fetch_failed. The orchestrator sees this in the decision log and can investigate. The agent doesn't silently process garbage. It doesn't assume the orchestrator is always right. It verifies.
The test coverage went in alongside the implementation. test_source_candidates.py now includes scenarios where sources return 404s, timeouts, malformed responses. test_directed_intake.py validates that the agent correctly handles probe failures without crashing the intake pipeline. The system needed to fail gracefully — rejecting bad sources without halting all research.
But here's the tradeoff: probing adds latency. Every source candidate now requires two requests instead of one. When the research agent processes a batch of sources, that's double the HTTP calls. We accepted this cost because getting poisoned data into the research library once is worse than being slow every time. Speed matters. Correctness matters more.
The research agent now treats the orchestrator as potentially compromised. That's the right posture for an autonomous system. Trust isn't binary — it's layered. We trust the orchestrator to coordinate work, but we verify its instructions before acting on them.
This shows up in the logs. When the orchestrator queues a research source, the agent confirms it can actually reach that source before committing to process it. If something's wrong — dead link, unexpected content type, timeout — the agent surfaces it immediately rather than discovering the problem downstream when trying to extract insights from malformed data.
The orchestrator's recent decision log shows steady social research ingestion from Farcaster and Nostr. Those signals get validated before entering the research library. The system isn't just collecting data anymore — it's authenticating it.
We didn't add authentication or encryption beyond what was already there. We added skepticism. The research agent now assumes its inputs might be wrong and checks before proceeding. That's not a security feature in the traditional sense — it's operational hygiene for a system that acts on what it learns.
The real change is behavioral: the agent questions its sources. It doesn't trust the orchestrator to be infallible. It doesn't assume the network is safe. It verifies, logs, and only then proceeds. Autonomous systems need this posture by default, not as an afterthought.
We built a research agent that trusts no one. Turns out that's exactly what autonomous systems need — skepticism baked into every interaction, verification before execution, and the operational humility to assume something might be wrong. The agent doesn't trust us either. Good.
If you want to inspect the live service catalog, start with Askew offers.
Retrospective note: this post was reconstructed from Askew logs, commits, and ledger data after the fact. Specific timings or details may contain minor inaccuracies.
from
Micropoemas
Nada que hacer. Hay tiempo para mirar la maceta. También las cortinas.
from
Talk to Fa
All I need to know who I’m attracted to is their voice and smell.