Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
from An Open Letter
There were other things I could write about today, but I just watched a YouTube video about a guy talking about different drugs that he had tried and ranking them in terms of how much they ruined his life. He spoke with such candor and a pure lack of judgment, one that comes from no sense of moral superiority or a pedestal to stand on. It’s kind of weird for me to describe it this way because it’s someone who is talking about all of the extreme drugs that they were addicted to, but I do think that most humans myself included does some extent have some thing or other that they consider themselves as an expert in to some extent. And I think this is the whole patronizing aspect. But just the way that he spoke about it was meaningful. And I guess I want to capture that in my mind a little bit more intentionally.
from Unvarnished diary of a lill Japanese mouse
JOURNAL 9 juillet 2026
Ce matin, en arrivant au ministère, ma chérie a appris que sa thèse est maintenant indexée parmi les auteurs japonais, son nom est transcrit ! Et elle va être rééditée parce qu'elle sera au programme d'une licence à partir de l'année prochaine, pas mal hein ? C'est pas tout : son ministre de tutelle lui a fait savoir que le ministère allait s'occuper de finaliser son dossier de naturalisation. Je ne sais pas ce qu'elle leur a fait, mais on dirait qu'ils tiennent absolument à la garder. Pour le moment, elle est juste officiellement consultante, elle ne peut pas être titularisée comme fonctionnaire car étrangère. Qu'est ce que ça cache par-derrière, je ne peux pas m'empêcher de me demander parce que je me méfie des politiques comme du diable. On en discutera ce soir, quand elle rentrera, elle a sûrement elle son idée. Je sais qu'elle est super forte dans son domaine et même takaichi sait qu'elle existe, mais quand même... Pendant ce temps yôko m'a téléphoné, elle s'est inscrite sur un site de rencontre...
from
Image Not Found
Friday, 11 September · 10:00am – 12:00pm – (add to calendar) Great Hall of the National Gallery Prague’s Trade Fair Palace. freely accessible
Public space belongs to everyone.
At least that is what we are told.
So why does it so often feel designed for obedience?
Walk here.
Wait there.
Do not touch.
Do not gather.
Do not interrupt the smooth surface of the city.
This workshop is an invitation to interrupt it.
Join Image Not Found collective at The Tent, part of the 2026 Biennale Matter of Art, to explore how paint, stickers, theatre, data, and small acts of disruption can make people notice, question, and react.
We will look at public space as a playground, a stage, and a system full of bugs.
No perfect skills required.
No official permission required.
Just curiosity, imagination, and the willingness to leave a little more involved than you entered.
Come curious.
Leave involved.
from The disconnect blog
We bought two 25lb bags of organic popcorn for a snack. We’ve tried growing it dry farming (without watering) and it didn’t do too well. It would likely do pretty well with some light irrigation which we may do someday but for now in the garden we have switched to a sweet corn that dries out well for milling. Anyways, for now we are buying bags of popcorn as a fun snack. We try to avoid toxic food including foods laden with glyphosate which many corn products are guilty of, so we bought organic to avoid that. We ran into a problem though, the popcorn didn’t pop – it had like 20% pop rate, which is horrible. I dug around on the interwebs and found someone mention that it is likely because they were over dried. I guess they need some level of moisture in order to pop well, which these did not have. So I added about 1tsp of water per cup of overly dried popcorn and shook it up in a jar. I left them to absorb the moisture for about 18 hours and tried it out. It worked perfectly, out of 1 cup of popcorn there were 6 seeds left unpopped.
I don’t know if this is really a thing anywhere, but it probably should be. I’ve never seen “loaded popcorn” before anywhere. There is caramel popcorn, sweet kettle, spicy, ranch, powdered cheese, and things like that – but where is the gourmet smothered popcorn that you eat with a fork or spoon? I’ve seen loaded french fries, polenta style, nachos, potato skins, and things like that. So we’ve tried it a couple different ways. The way I tried first was with store bought cheese a couple years back and it was pretty good. But I just found a new style that is delicious. That is why this is being written, it’s my second time making it and I just gotta share.
There is a cheese called shankleesh which is very easy to make if you have a milking animal. It’s a very early form of cheese. If you are used to pasteurized milk you may be disgusted by the process. You either make yogurt which is the traditional way, not so gross, or make clabber which is what we do as we don’t have awesome middle eastern yogurt cultures. Clabber is taking raw milk and letting it sit at room temperature till it naturally separates. You get a yogurt like substance that floats up and the whey is at the bottom. This works best if you never refrigerate or cool the milk, you will get the best strains of bacteria at room or slightly warmer temps. The colder it is (like a refrigerator) you will be promoting the not so great cold-loving macrophages. After you have your clabber or yogurt, strain it in a cheese cloth. After about 24 hours add salt and let it sit one more day. Then you take that thicker cheese, form balls, and roll it around in a bowl of spices. I forget the traditional shankleesh spices that make up za’atar but we always just make up our own spice blend. It’s often dried onion, garlic, and random others (dill, thyme, pepper, cayenne, etc.) Let the balls air dry for a while then put them in a half-gallon or whatever sized jar and cover the cheese with olive oil. Then you let it age 1-3 months and it’s ready to eat. Leave about 1 inch of room at the top, as it ages the oil expands and it does need to be opened (or burped) once in a while because of CO2 while fermenting. One of the reasons we started making this cheese is because we don’t have our cellar yet to use as a cheese cave.
I've mentioned this book in another post, but it's worth repeating. If you want to learn more about natural cheesemaking this is the best book available as far as we've found: 'Milk Into Cheese' – by David Asher
Back to the loaded popcorn. The shankleesh cheese balls are awesome broken up and spread throughout a bowl of popcorn with the oil from the shankleesh drizzled over the top with a little extra salt. Our youngest son danced around spinning his arm around (his latest sweet move) while gobbling this up with me. It’s best eaten with a spoon in my opinion, and it’s pretty top notch. The oil left from the shankleesh is great used as a popcorn oil drizzle, as a dressing, with rice, and much more. If you have a milking animal I’d recommend playing around with it. It’s an easy cheese that doesn’t need rennet, cooking, cheese presses, or a cheese cave. An easy beginner cheese. It reminds me of feta, just a little softer.
Thought I’d share a little about the homestead and food. One of the big reasons people get into homesteading is for the food it seems. Our bull was out at a friend’s place for the last month or so, it seems their main milker is now pregnant so now it’s our turn to get our milker knocked up. Pretty funny stuff, we have a cow brothel.
I’d like to give a notice to anyone reading this blog. If anyone is viewing this on Mataroa.blog and desires to continue reading jump over to the Bear.blog or Write.as versions of this. I have nothing against Mataroa; it is a fine enough blogging platform in my view. I’ve been playing around with all three of these and have narrowed in on Bear.blog and Write.as for a couple of reasons. One is the discovery feed on Bear and the read.write.as feed on Write.as. Another reason is that the Mataroa markup language is just enough different than Bear.blog that I can’t just copy/paste it over. So with all the reformatting needing to be done it is just too much work for the very limited readers on that site. If it had the same amount of readers as the other two I would likely continue. But for my own time saving efforts I’m going to drop it.
Have a good one.
from
Nomina Numina
Over the next several days I'll be moving my blog from Substack to Write.as. For continuity, I'll keep the original post dates for each one. I think this is part of the freedom she said she wished for me last month.
“Live your life — be free.”
#Liminality #Spirituality #Mysticism
∞
from
Noisy Deadlines

Introduce yourself with five albums that have shaped you:
Pink Floyd – The Wall (1979)
Metallica – Master of Puppets (1986)
Iron Maiden – Powerslave (1984)
Rhapsody of Fire – Symphony of Enchanted Lands (1998)
Angra – Angels Cry (1993)
I read this on Cafélog from Thomas, who read it from Martin and I immediately started thinking about which albums I would choose.
It was tough to narrow it down to five, but I went with my first instinct. These are all albums I listened to countless times, from start to finish, during my most formative years.
#music #heavymetal #NoisyMusings
from
SmarterArticles

There is a chart taped inside the door of almost every paediatric clinic in the developed world. It is so familiar that most parents stop seeing it, the way you stop seeing the safety card in the seat pocket of an aeroplane. Two smooth bands of curves rise from left to right, and somewhere on them, plotted at every visit, is a single dot: this child, this height, this age, this month. The dot is not interesting in itself. What makes it powerful is the curve behind it. Because there is a curve, a clinician can glance at the dot and know, in seconds, whether a child is growing as a healthy child of that age should grow, or whether something has gone quietly wrong. If the dot falls more than two standard deviations below the median height for the child's age, the clinic has a word for it, and the word triggers an investigation. The word is stunting.
We have had that curve, in one form or another, since 1977. We have nothing remotely like it for the mind. And we have just begun, at planetary scale and without anything resembling consent, to do to children's cognitive development the one thing that the growth chart was invented to catch: to interfere with it during the window when it matters most, while having no way to see whether the interference is helping or harming until the children in question are grown.
This is the argument that has crystallised, in the spring of 2026, around a deliberately uncomfortable analogy. Rebecca Winthrop, who directs the Center for Universal Education at the Brookings Institution and has spent a career studying how children learn across more than fifty countries, has become one of the most articulate voices warning that artificial intelligence may be doing something to children's developing minds for which our existing vocabulary is inadequate. The fear she keeps returning to, drawn from her conversations with educators, parents and students worldwide, is not abstract. The thing they worry about most, she has said, is children “stopping being able to think well”: a cognitive offloading so habitual, so early, and so invisible that the capacity to think independently never gets built in the first place. The provocative framing that has attached itself to this concern borrows the language of paediatrics. If a child can be physically stunted by a deficit during a critical developmental window, the question goes, what would it mean for a child to be cognitively stunted by the same mechanism, and why do we have no chart on the clinic door to detect it?
This article is not, primarily, another entry in the long and increasingly tired genre of “is AI rotting children's brains”. The mechanism by which effort builds cognition, and the danger that outsourcing the effort prevents the building, has been argued elsewhere and is taken here as the premise rather than the thesis. The harder and stranger question is the one underneath it. Suppose the worry is real. Suppose a generation is, in fact, being cognitively shaped by tools nobody fully understands. How would we know? What would the chart on the door even measure? Who would collect the data, against what baseline, how often, and what would the dot below the line oblige anyone to do? The scandal, on this reading, is not merely that we might be harming children. It is that we have built no instrument capable of telling us whether we are, and we have started the experiment anyway.
To understand why the analogy is more than rhetorical, it helps to be precise about what physical stunting is and what makes it detectable. Stunting is not simply shortness. It is impaired growth and development, most often resulting from chronic undernutrition during the first thousand days of life, that leaves a child too short for their age by a specific, agreed, internationally standardised margin. A child is classified as stunted if their height-for-age falls more than two standard deviations below the median of the World Health Organization's Child Growth Standards; below minus three standard deviations, the classification becomes severe. Those numbers are not arbitrary thresholds invented by committee. They are pinned to a reference population of how healthy children actually grow when the conditions are right.
That reference population is the quiet triumph behind the whole edifice. Between 1997 and 2003, the WHO ran the Multicentre Growth Reference Study, gathering data from roughly eight and a half thousand children across six deliberately diverse settings: Brazil, Ghana, India, Norway, Oman and the United States. The crucial methodological choice was to enrol only children raised under recommended health conditions, the children of non-smoking mothers, breastfed, with access to good nutrition and care. The resulting curves, published in 2006, are therefore not a description of how children do grow, which would merely encode the world's existing deprivations. They are a prescription for how children can grow when nothing is holding them back. A child measured against that standard is being asked a sharp question: are you growing as you would if your environment were not failing you?
This lineage runs back further. The first widely used growth charts in the United States were produced by the National Center for Health Statistics in 1977 and were promptly adopted by the WHO for international use; the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revised them in 2000 before the WHO standards superseded them for the youngest children. The point is that the infrastructure took decades to build, was repeatedly refined, and rests on an enormous, boring, unglamorous foundation of measurement. Because that foundation exists, stunting is not a vague anxiety. It is a number, tracked annually across almost every country on earth through the Joint Malnutrition Estimates maintained jointly by UNICEF, the WHO and the World Bank. In 2024, those estimates put the number of stunted children under five at roughly 150 million, around 23 per cent of all children that age. We can argue about how to bring that number down. We cannot pretend we do not know it. That is the difference an instrument makes.
Now hold the cognitive case against that standard, point for point, and watch the parallels hold and then break. Stunting has a critical window, the first thousand days; cognitive development has its own sensitive periods for language, executive function and abstract reasoning, longer and softer but real. Stunting has a clear mechanism, nutritional deficit during that window; the cognitive worry has a clear proposed mechanism too, the outsourcing of the effortful cognitive work through which capacity is built. Stunting has a reference population of optimal growth; cognition has nothing of the kind. Stunting has an agreed threshold and a global monitoring system; cognition has neither. The analogy holds exactly until the moment it matters most, and then it falls into a void. Every element that makes physical stunting actionable is precisely the element missing on the cognitive side.
It is worth stating plainly what the instrument would need to detect, because it is not mysterious. The science of how skill is built from effort is among the better-replicated bodies of work in psychology. The UCLA cognitive psychologist Robert Bjork, with his collaborator and wife Elizabeth Bjork, spent decades establishing what he called, in 1994, “desirable difficulties”: the counterintuitive finding that conditions which make learning feel slower and harder in the moment, retrieving an answer before checking it, spacing practice, generating your own examples, produce far stronger long-term retention than conditions which make learning feel smooth. The struggle is not the obstacle to learning. The struggle is the learning. The feeling of fluency, of material going down easily, is a notoriously poor guide to whether anything durable has been built.
A growing literature suggests that generative AI is, by its nature, a machine for removing desirable difficulties. A study by researchers at Microsoft and Carnegie Mellon, presented at the 2025 CHI conference, surveyed 319 knowledge workers who used generative AI tools at work and analysed 936 first-hand examples of that use. Its central finding was that the more a worker trusted the AI, the less critical thinking they reported doing; cognitive effort was offloaded to the tool, and the workers who relied most heavily on it produced a less diverse range of outcomes. A separate and much-discussed study from the MIT Media Lab, published as a preprint in June 2025 under the title “Your Brain on ChatGPT”, had 54 participants write essays while wearing EEG headsets. Those who used a large language model showed measurably lower neural engagement across networks associated with attention and memory than those who wrote unaided, and grew more passive with each essay; the authors described what was accruing as “cognitive debt”. None of this is new in kind. As long ago as 2011, the psychologists Betsy Sparrow, Jenny Liu and Daniel Wegner described in the journal Science what became known as the Google effect: when people expect information to remain available externally, they remember it less well themselves. The instinct to offload is old. What is new is a tool that will offload almost any cognitive task you care to hand it, deployed to children before the capacities being offloaded have formed.
The reason this is so much harder to measure than physical growth is structural, and it sits at the heart of why no chart exists. Height is a competence and a performance at once: a child who is tall simply is tall, and you can read the fact off a wall with a pencil and a tape. Cognition is not like that. A child who produces a competent essay has demonstrated a performance, but the performance does not tell you whether the underlying competence exists, because the performance can be borrowed. This is the gap that the desirable-difficulties literature has obsessed over for thirty years, the chasm between the feeling of understanding and the fact of it, and AI widens it into a canyon. A child prompting a chatbot to write a five-paragraph essay will hand you a five-paragraph essay. Any instrument that scores the essay will record a capable student. What the instrument cannot see, without doing something quite different and far more intrusive, is whether the child could have written it alone, defended its claims, or noticed the one sentence in it that is subtly wrong. We are, in other words, trying to measure the one thing our existing tools are built to be fooled by.
It is tempting to assume that the measurement problem is already solved, that schools are awash in assessment data and surely one of those streams must capture what matters. They are awash in data. None of it is a growth chart for cognition, and understanding why is the crux of the whole argument.
Consider the large-scale international tests first. The OECD's Programme for International Student Assessment, the nearest thing the world has to a standardised cognitive measure across countries, runs only every three years and publishes results with a lag of well over a year. It samples fifteen-year-olds, which means that by the time a cohort is tested, the developmental window the analogy worries about is largely behind them. And it measures, by design, performance on tasks, the very layer at which AI assistance is most easily mistaken for ability. PISA is a magnificent instrument for comparing school systems. It is structurally incapable of functioning as an early-warning system for the cognitive formation of young children, because it arrives years too late and measures the wrong layer.
National examinations are no better suited to the role, and arguably worse. They are spaced years apart, periodically rewritten in ways that break comparability, optimised to certify achievement rather than to detect developmental drift, and increasingly contaminated by the same problem, since a competent prompt produces a competent answer. The whole apparatus of summative assessment was built to ask “has this student met the standard?” It was never built to ask “is this child's capacity to think developing as it would if nothing were interfering?” Those are different questions, and only the second is the cognitive analogue of plotting a dot against a growth curve.
What about the more modern candidates, the technologies sold precisely on their promise to see inside the learning process? Learning analytics, the harvesting of fine-grained data from digital learning platforms, can tell you a great deal about behaviour: how long a pupil lingered on a page, how many attempts a problem took, where attention wandered. Formative assessment, done well, gives a skilled teacher a running sense of where understanding is forming and where it is not. Both are valuable. Neither is a growth chart, for two reasons that recur throughout this subject. First, as researchers in the field readily acknowledge, learning analytics remains weakly connected to any theory of how learning actually happens, and rich in correlations whose meaning is contested; it measures engagement with a platform, not the formation of a mind. Second, and more damning for the analogy, none of these tools has a reference population. There is no equivalent of the WHO's optimally raised children, no curve of how cognition develops when nothing is holding it back, against which any given child's trajectory could be plotted. Without the curve, the dot means nothing. You can collect a billion data points about a child's clicks and still have no way to say whether the child is, in the cognitive sense, stunted, because you have nothing to compare the child to.
There are better instruments in principle, and they are revealing precisely because they are so rarely used at scale. Get a child to reason aloud through an unfamiliar problem without a screen, and you can begin to distinguish the child who has internalised a process from the child who has only ever watched a machine perform it. Administer a neuropsychological battery and you can detect executive-function deficits that no content test will show. Observe a pupil completing a task the deliberately hard way and you can see the difference between performance and competence open up in front of you. These methods exist. They are expensive, intrusive, slow, and produce no headline number for a minister to brandish. They are, in short, everything a national monitoring system is institutionally disinclined to fund, which is exactly why none has been built.
While the measurement gap remains a void, deployment has not waited. This is the asymmetry that gives the whole situation its moral weight, and it is worth stating in concrete numbers, because the numbers are not gentle.
By late 2025, the College Board reported that 84 per cent of American high school students had used AI tools for schoolwork. Surveys of teachers put generative-AI use among K-12 educators above 80 per cent. The California State University system signed a contract with OpenAI to put ChatGPT Edu in front of more than 460,000 students and tens of thousands of staff, described at the time as the single largest deployment of the tool by any organisation on earth; the contract was renewed in 2026 even after a survey of more than 90,000 students and staff found a majority of faculty reporting that AI had a negative effect on their teaching. In the United Kingdom, the Department for Education issued guidance in mid-2025 on bringing generative AI into classrooms, cautioning about hallucination, bias and the handling of children's data, and noting pointedly that many popular tools are nominally restricted to users aged eighteen and over. The global market for AI in education is measured in billions and rising. Dozens of national systems are folding these tools into the daily texture of childhood.
Put the two facts side by side and the shape of the thing becomes hard to unsee. We are deploying, at a speed and scale that would be the envy of any public-health programme, a set of cognitive tools whose effect on developing minds we cannot measure, in the precise developmental window during which, if the worry is right, the damage would be done and hidden. A pharmaceutical company that wished to give a new compound to every child in a country would be required, at minimum, to run trials, define endpoints, monitor for adverse effects and report them to a regulator empowered to halt the programme. We have done the cognitive equivalent of skipping all of that. We have administered the intervention first and left the question of how to detect harm as an exercise for the future, on the implicit assumption that if something were going badly wrong, somebody would surely notice. The growth-chart history is the rebuke to that assumption. Stunting was always happening; what changed in 1977 was that it became visible, and only once it was visible did it become something the world organised itself to reduce. Before the chart, the harm was real and simply unmeasured. The unmeasured child is not the safe child. The unmeasured child is the child whose harm has not yet been given a number.
The temporal structure of the danger is what makes the absence of an instrument so corrosive. Physical stunting at least announces itself in the present tense; a short child is short today. Cognitive shortfall of the kind being theorised compounds silently and reveals itself late. A child who never built argumentative stamina at nine may look entirely fine at nine, because nine-year-olds are not asked to sustain arguments. She may look fine at fifteen, when her assessments reward exactly the short-form, well-structured production that AI excels at generating. The missing capacity becomes load-bearing only at nineteen, facing a dissertation, or at twenty-seven, expected to be the one in the room who notices that the model's confident output is wrong. By then the window has narrowed, the environment has no incentive to reopen it, and, crucially, there is no record. Nobody plotted the dots. There is no chart to point to that would show when the line first dropped below where it should have been. The harm, if it occurred, will be undeniable in its effects and unprovable in its cause, which is the worst of all worlds for anyone hoping to act on it.
It is one thing to lament the absence of an instrument and another to specify it, and the specification is where good intentions meet hard constraints. If we wanted, genuinely, to build the cognitive growth chart, what would the work involve, and why has nobody done it?
The first requirement is the hardest, and it is the one the physical analogy makes most painfully clear. A growth chart needs a reference population, and the cognitive reference population we would most want is the one we can no longer assemble: children developing without AI, under otherwise optimal conditions, measured longitudinally on the capacities we care about. There is no pre-AI cognitive baseline of the right kind, captured at the right grain, ready to serve as the curve. The window in which it could have been gathered cleanly is closing as the tools saturate childhood. This is not a fatal objection, because cohorts can still be assembled with varying exposure, and natural experiments exist where access differs, but it means any chart we build now will be reconstructing the baseline under compromised conditions rather than inheriting a clean one, the way paediatrics did. We are trying to draw the curve after the experiment has begun.
The second requirement is deciding what to measure, and here the temptation to measure what is easy must be resisted absolutely, because measuring what is easy is how we got here. The instrument cannot score essays or test recall of content, the things AI produces on demand. It would have to target the underlying capacities: the ability to sustain effortful reasoning without assistance, to retrieve and recombine knowledge from memory, to detect when an argument does not hold, to tolerate not knowing long enough to work something out. Measuring those means measuring under conditions where assistance is withheld and the process, not the product, is observed, which is slow, expensive and individual. It means, in effect, building an assessment whose entire design principle is the inverse of every assessment optimised for throughput. It is the difference between weighing a child and watching how they grow.
The third requirement is cadence and custody, and these are as much political as technical. A growth chart works because the measurement is repeated at regular intervals by a trusted party with no stake in the result, and because there is an agreed threshold that converts a dot into an obligation. The cognitive equivalent would need periodic, process-oriented assessment from early childhood onward, conducted by bodies independent of the companies whose tools are under scrutiny, with thresholds agreed in advance that would trigger investigation. Each clause in that sentence is a fight. Who funds longitudinal studies that produce results on a timescale longer than any electoral cycle and embarrass whoever was in office when the line first dipped? Who is trusted to hold cognitive data on children when the institutions best placed to collect it are often the edtech firms with the most to lose? Who sets a threshold knowing that, once set, it converts a vague unease into a legal and moral demand for action that someone will have to fund?
And then there are the obstacles that have no clean answer at all, the ones that explain why this is genuinely hard rather than merely neglected. There is the privacy and surveillance problem: a serious cognitive monitoring system means assessing children, repeatedly and individually, in ways that generate exactly the kind of intimate developmental data that should make anyone uneasy, and the history of children's data being collected for their own good is not reassuring. There is the gaming problem: any high-stakes metric distorts the behaviour it measures, and a cognitive growth chart with teeth would invite schools to coach to it, hollowing out the very thing it was meant to detect, in a cognitive replay of every test that became its own target. There is the equity problem, which cuts in two directions at once: a chart could expose, and so help remedy, the way AI's cognitive effects fall unevenly on children with more or less support at home, or it could become one more instrument by which already-disadvantaged children are labelled and sorted. And there is the deepest problem, the one that makes physical stunting look almost simple by comparison: we do not have settled agreement on what healthy cognitive development under AI even looks like, because the tools are reshaping the cognitive ecosystem so fast that the target is moving. The WHO could define optimal physical growth because the biology of a well-fed child was stable. The biology of a well-thinking child in an AI-saturated world is precisely what is in dispute.
None of these obstacles is a reason not to build the instrument. Every one of them was, in some form, an obstacle to building the physical growth chart, and the chart got built. They are reasons to be honest that it is hard, expensive and slow, and to start regardless, because the alternative is to keep running the experiment blind. The question that remains is the one the brief insists on, and it is the one most likely to be evaded: whose job is this?
The companies deploying the tools cannot be the primary custodians of the measurement, for the same reason the food industry does not certify its own nutritional claims. Their incentives run the wrong way, and the conflict is structural rather than a matter of bad faith. They can and should be required to instrument their products honestly and to surface data to independent researchers, but the chart on the door must be held by a party with no stake in what the dot shows. Schools cannot carry it alone either; they are already drowning, and asking individual teachers to run neuropsychological batteries is a category error. The work belongs, by its nature, to public institutions operating at the scale and with the independence that paediatric surveillance enjoys: national statistics offices, public health bodies repurposed or extended toward cognitive development, education ministries funding longitudinal cohorts they will not see results from in their own term, and the international bodies that already coordinate child-development metrics. The Joint Malnutrition Estimates are produced by UNICEF, the WHO and the World Bank acting together precisely because no single actor could be trusted or resourced to do it alone. The cognitive equivalent would require the same kind of patient, unglamorous, multi-decade institutional commitment, and it would have to begin now, while today's seven-year-olds are still young enough for their trajectories to be plotted from something close to the start.
That commitment is unlikely to be made, and the reason it is unlikely is itself the most damning fact in the whole account. We are not failing to build the cognitive growth chart because it is impossible. We are failing to build it because building it would force us to confront, in public and with numbers, what we have already chosen to do. The instrument is missing not despite the deployment but, in a sense, because of it: an uninstrumented experiment is one whose results can never indict the people who ran it. There is a long and dishonourable history of this pattern, of harms allowed to compound in the dark for exactly as long as the dark could be maintained, with lead in paint and petrol, with sugar, with tobacco, each of them obvious in retrospect and each defended at the time by the absence of the very measurements that would have made them undeniable. In every case the measurement, when it finally came, did not create the harm. It revealed a harm that had been happening all along, to people who had no chart on the door.
The child in the clinic gets weighed and measured because, a century of effort ago, somebody decided that the growth of children was important enough to count, and that not counting it was itself a form of negligence. We have not yet decided that about the growth of children's minds, and the absence of the instrument is not a neutral gap waiting to be filled. It is a choice, renewed every day that the tools spread further and the chart remains unbuilt: a choice to run the largest experiment on cognitive development in human history, on a generation that did not consent and a public that was never asked, and to ensure, by leaving the instrument unbuilt, that we will not have to know what it did until the children are grown and the window is shut. The unmeasured child is not safe. The unmeasured child is simply the one whose dot we have agreed, in advance, not to plot.

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
Listen to the free weekly SmarterArticles Podcast
from
Vida Pensada
Siempre he buscado cuestionarme aspectos fundamentales de la realidad y de mi propia identidad a través de la filosofía. El tema de la masculinidad no ha sido la excepción.
Definir la masculinidad ha sido todo un reto. La expresión “ser un hombre masculino” parece evidente hasta que uno intenta explicar qué significa realmente.
En este ensayo intentaré compartir mi perspectiva. Hablaré de las ideas sobre la masculinidad con las que crecí, de cómo moldearon mi forma de entender lo que significaba “ser un hombre” y de por qué creo que El Club de la Pelea captura, mejor que muchas obras, la búsqueda de propósito que atraviesa a tantos hombres.
Cada avance social, cada cambio económico, tecnológico o cultural genera tensiones que muchas veces pasan desapercibidas. Mientras nace algo nuevo, lo viejo se resiste a desaparecer. Y en ese espacio intermedio aparecen la incertidumbre y el vacío. Los seres humanos llevamos muy mal los vacíos; sentimos la necesidad de llenarlos con aquello que tengamos más a mano, ya sea algo constructivo... o profundamente destructivo.
Nací y fui criado en Venezuela. Fui niño y adolescente entre finales de los 90 e inicios de los 2000.
La idea que absorbí sobre lo que significaba ser hombre era esta:
Llorar era “de niñas”. Pedir ayuda era una señal de debilidad. Un hombre debía resolver por sí mismo. Admirábamos al que peleaba, al que conquistaba más mujeres, al que nunca parecía tener miedo. Había que saber cambiar una llanta, arreglar un enchufe, beber sin perder el control y hacer dinero. Era importante ser respetado.
De alguna u otra forma, estas expectativas, estos mandatos sociales, estaban moldeando la persona en la que me convertiría.
Aunque, curiosamente, nunca recuerdo que alguien me sentara un día a explicarme qué significaba ser hombre. Nunca nadie me lo explicó. Y, sin embargo, esas ideas estaban por todas partes.
En medio de las bromas, en los silencios, en las películas, en los insultos. En aquello que se admiraba y en aquello que se castigaba.
Simplemente lo fui aprendiendo. Supongo que así es como se va difundiendo la cultura.
Al final, somos seres de tribu. Ninguno construye su identidad completamente desde cero. Absorbemos valores, costumbres y expectativas de quienes nos rodean. Eso no tiene nada de extraño; probablemente así es como las sociedades logran transmitir aquello que consideran importante.
Por eso, es importante recordarnos estar conscientes de que estas expectativas están ahí y están afuera. No para rechazarlas todas, sino para atrevernos a cuestionarlas, dado que, si no les prestamos la atención debida, con el tiempo terminan formando parte de nuestra propia voz.
Intento reírme de ello, escondiendo las lágrimas de mis ojos porque los chicos no lloran — The Cure – “Boys Don't Cry” (1979).
Recuerdo que cuando era niño rara vez veía llorar a un hombre. Y, cuando ocurría, casi siempre era a escondidas. Me daba la sensación de que llorar en público era de mala educación para un hombre; era como si tuvieras que hacerlo en privado, tal como si fueras a bañarte, cambiarte de ropa o acomodarte la entrepierna.
Muchos años después entendí que aquello no tenía tanto que ver con las lágrimas como con la identidad. Llorar parecía poner en riesgo la imagen de hombre que uno debía sostener frente a los demás. Poco a poco fui aprendiendo la misma lección. Si quería ser reconocido como hombre, lo más prudente era evitar mostrar ciertas emociones.
Mostrar miedo o tristeza se percibía como una señal de debilidad. Y la debilidad, al menos en el mundo en el que crecí, parecía acercarte peligrosamente a dejar de ser considerado un hombre.
Años después encontré una idea del psiquiatra James Gilligan que puso en palabras algo que yo intuía desde hacía tiempo.
En Violence: Reflections on a National Epidemic.
Gilligan sostiene que las culturas tienden a asignar emociones “permitidas” según el género. En muchos hombres, la ira, la agresividad, la competitividad o la dominancia son aceptadas; en cambio, la tristeza, el miedo, la ternura, la vulnerabilidad o incluso la vergüenza suelen ser reprimidas.
Creo que muchos hombres crecimos sin un lenguaje emocional lo suficientemente amplio para comprender lo que nos ocurría. Cuando la tristeza, el miedo o la vulnerabilidad dejan de ser opciones aceptables, la ira termina convirtiéndose en una de las pocas emociones que aún podemos expresar sin sentir que ponemos en riesgo nuestra identidad.
Entonces, ¿qué precio pagamos por convertir algunas emociones en una amenaza para nuestra identidad?
«No eres tu trabajo. No eres la cantidad de dinero que tienes en el banco. No eres el coche que conduces. No eres el contenido de tu cartera». – Tyler Durden, El Club de la Pelea
Recuerdo una conversación después de un congreso de Software Libre. Éramos varias personas hablando de tecnología, proyectos y carreras profesionales. Casi todos tenían trayectorias impresionantes; habían construido cosas interesantes o trabajado en proyectos que yo admiraba.
En esta charla se hablaba de temas avanzados, y todos en el grupo tenían muchos temas de conversación y muchas experiencias que compartir, excepto yo (bueno, yo era el más joven en aquel entonces), o al menos esa era mi sensación.
En cuestión de minutos empecé a sentirme pequeño. Como si mi valor en esa conversación dependiera de demostrar que yo también merecía estar allí.
Era como si todos lleváramos las medallas de nuestros logros colgadas al cuello, y yo no llevaba ninguna (o al menos eso sentía).
Inmediatamente sentí una necesidad muy fuerte de demostrar que yo también sabía de tecnología. Que también había construido cosas. Que también tenía valor.
Sin que nadie me preguntara, terminé hablando de algunos cursos y proyectos en los que trabajé. Fue una respuesta casi automática, y la forma en que lo hice resultó bastante forzada e incómoda.
Con el tiempo entendí que no estaba intentando aportar a la conversación. Estaba intentando justificar mi presencia en ella.
En Venezuela pasaba, y seguramente todavía pasa, que, en algunos barrios pobres, cuando un hombre compraba un carro, una de sus prioridades era instalar un buen equipo de sonido. La música no solo debía sonar bien; debía sonar fuerte, porque de esa manera sería notado, sería percibido. No solo por las mujeres, sino por todos. Siempre me pregunté si, detrás de ese gesto, también había una necesidad profundamente humana de ser visto.
“Miren, estoy aquí. Vean que valgo. Vean que existo.”
¿Qué pasa cuando sentimos que tenemos que demostrar constantemente que merecemos ocupar un lugar?
Esta misma respuesta la he visto en otros círculos en los que me he movido: círculos intelectuales, donde se habla de libros y de temas de filosofía y ciencia. No todo el tiempo, pero sí muchas veces. Hay una competencia constante por mostrar quién tiene más estatus, quién es más elocuente, más inteligente o más sabio y, por consiguiente, gente tratando de defenderse.
También en círculos deportivos, sobre todo en el fútbol. Jugadores que, teniendo un nivel muy alto, opacaban a otros, y cómo esas personas les rendían una especie de pleitesía o admiración desmedida por ello.
No creo que esto sea exclusivo de los hombres.
Pero la presión sobre mis congéneres es mucho más fuerte.
La he visto, la he sentido y soy consciente de que, a veces, me pasa.
Esa necesidad de mostrar que tienes valor, que eres importante, que has hecho cosas interesantes, que eres hombre. Típicamente lo ves todos los días a través de gente mostrando que tiene dinero, que tiene muchos carros, que tiene propiedades. Que son mejores que el resto.
Hombres que quieren alardear de la cantidad de proyectos que han hecho, de compañías exitosas que han construido, de imperios que han edificado, de los papers que han publicado, del peso que son capaces de cargar en el gimnasio.
Y, sin embargo, por alguna razón nunca parece suficiente ser simplemente un ser humano con un código genético y una historia irrepetibles.
Con los años empecé a reconocer esa misma dinámica en casi todos los espacios que frecuentaba: tecnológicos, deportivos, académicos, políticos e incluso espirituales.
Lo que sí he conocido son hombres que eran conscientes de su estatus y poder, y de esta misma dinámica, y aun así no lo usaban para su conveniencia. Lo utilizaban para el bien, para unir en torno a una causa, para fortalecer el grupo o la comunidad, para enviar un mensaje. Le quitaban peso y decían que no era para tanto, pero sabían que esa dinámica era casi imposible de evitar.
Quizá el problema nunca fue el estatus. El problema aparece cuando empezamos a utilizarlo como sustituto del valor personal.
«Solo se ama incondicionalmente a las mujeres, a los niños y a los perros. A un hombre solo se le ama con la condición de que provea». — Chris Rock
No sé si esa afirmación es cierta en todos los escenarios. Pero sí expresa una idea con la que muchos hombres crecimos: nuestro valor parece estar profundamente ligado a nuestra capacidad de proveer.
Una vez, hablando con un amigo de Noruega, me comentó que había conocido a una chica que le atraía y que luego se dio cuenta de que ella contaba con unos ingresos enormes y un estilo de vida que para él era demasiado “lujoso”. Básicamente, la diferencia de ingresos entre ambos era muy grande.
Me contó que, aunque hubiera química y ambos se gustaran, no sabía cómo relacionarse o qué “llevar a la mesa”, dado que siempre había estado en relaciones donde él tenía más dinero que la chica o donde la diferencia entre ambos era muy poca.
Me empecé a preguntar: ¿por qué tendría que llevar algo?
¿Por qué no bastaría con ser él? ¿Y no aplicaría también para ella?
Esa conversación me llevó a pensar en mi propia experiencia, y ha sido casi igual. No sabría qué hacer si una chica pagara mis cuentas y tuviera mucho más dinero que yo. No creo que me hiciera sentir menos como persona. Pero sí pondría en crisis un papel que durante muchos años di por sentado. Me sentiría perdido. Me he acostumbrado tanto a una forma de ver las cosas, al rol que he tenido dentro de ella y al vínculo que he formado entre el dinero y mi lugar dentro de la relación, que no sabría qué hacer.
Me parece una pena pensar que dos personas podrían construir una relación sana y, sin embargo, nunca llegar a intentarlo porque ambos sienten que están rompiendo un guion que aprendieron hace muchos años.
Recuerdo la primera cita que tuve con una chica en España. Ella insistió en invitarme y pagar la cuenta. Fue un gesto sencillo, pero me dejó completamente descolocado. No porque me molestara. Al contrario. Lo que me sorprendió fue descubrir lo profundamente que tenía interiorizada la idea de que ese era mi papel.
El mandato de proveer está profundamente ligado al estatus y al poder. Durante mucho tiempo, al menos en el entorno en el que crecí, parecía que una parte importante del valor de un hombre dependía de su capacidad para generar recursos y sostener a los demás. Por eso, cuando un hombre no puede cumplir ese papel, no solo enfrenta dificultades económicas; muchas veces también siente que su propia identidad está siendo cuestionada. Aparece el miedo a dejar de ser visto como capaz, competente o digno de admiración. Y eso no me parece correcto ni justo, porque el dinero nunca depende únicamente del esfuerzo individual. Hay circunstancias, oportunidades y privilegios que escapan a nuestro control.
Sin embargo, seguimos actuando como si el valor de una persona pudiera medirse únicamente por lo que produce.
Proveer puede ser una expresión muy noble de amor. El problema aparece cuando ya no puedes proveer y sientes que ya no mereces ser amado.
Si mañana, por un accidente, un desastre natural o cualquier razón ajena a tu voluntad, ya no pudieras proveer...
¿Quién seguirías siendo?
En el año 2011, aproximadamente, mi hermano, jugando fútbol, fue por una pelota y se lesionó horriblemente; se rompió un ligamento y se le salió la rótula. Recuerdo que mis hermanos y varios amigos lo ayudaron. Lo operaron de emergencia y quedó inmovilizado durante unas semanas mientras comenzaba su recuperación.
Me di cuenta de que a mi hermano le costó mucho el simple hecho de pedir ayuda: para cargar cosas, para ir al banco por responsabilidades del trabajo o para cualquier tarea que ya no podía hacer con normalidad. Tan impregnada está en nosotros la necesidad de ser autosuficientes que, cuando algo afecta nuestras capacidades de manera temporal o permanente, nos resulta muy difícil pedir ayuda.
Me impresionó descubrir que el dolor físico parecía afectarle menos que la incomodidad de depender de otros.
Sigo creyendo que desarrollar autonomía es algo sano y valioso. Aprender a resolver problemas, hacerse responsable de la propia vida y no depender innecesariamente de los demás son cualidades admirables. Pero también creo que somos seres profundamente interdependientes. A veces ayudar es un acto de generosidad; otras veces, dejarse ayudar también lo es.
Viktor Frankl decía que el ser humano necesita un porqué para soportar casi cualquier cómo.
Detecto que el hombre secularizado ha desterrado tradiciones y expectativas, pero con ello también ha dejado un vacío de sentido existencial. Frankl describe ese vacío como un estado en el que una persona ya no sabe para qué vive o hacia dónde va.
Y cuando aparece ese vacío, el ser humano intenta llenarlo.
No necesariamente con cosas buenas.
Lo noto en mí mismo. Cuando no tengo una meta que vaya más allá de mi comodidad inmediata, termino llenando el tiempo con videojuegos, series, redes sociales o incluso trabajo. No porque esas cosas sean malas, sino porque son una forma muy efectiva de no enfrentar la pregunta importante.
Lo curioso es que esas actividades logran distraerme, pero rara vez me dejan satisfecho. Es una diferencia difícil de explicar. Hay una sensación muy distinta cuando termino un ensayo, cuando construyo algo o cuando siento que mi esfuerzo está orientado hacia una responsabilidad que considero valiosa. Ahí no solo estoy entretenido; siento que estoy vivo.
¿No es eso lo que pasa en El Club de la Pelea? El narrador empieza completamente vacío. Tiene trabajo, dinero, apartamento, muebles y estabilidad. Pero no tiene un porqué. Entonces intenta llenar ese vacío. Está vacío porque ninguna de esas cosas responde a la pregunta de para qué vive.
Y luego aparece Tyler.
Este personaje ofrece algo que el protagonista había perdido: una misión.
De repente hay reglas. Hay una causa. Hay una comunidad. Hay sacrificio y, sobre todo, hay una dirección.
El protagonista estaba siendo conformista con su vida. No se rebelaba, hacía lo que los demás le decían, vivía adonde lo llevara la marea, con una actitud completamente pasiva, actuando en modo automático.
Cuando llega el carismático Tyler, el protagonista, junto con los demás miembros del Club de la Pelea, termina cayendo en el totalitarismo. Terminan cediendo ciegamente a su voluntad, sin cuestionar sus acciones.
El Club de la Pelea, en mi opinión, es más una película sobre hombres hambrientos de significado.
Tyler les vende una misión. Y cuando alguien lleva demasiado tiempo sintiendo que su vida no apunta hacia ningún lugar, cualquier misión —por absurda o destructiva que sea— puede parecer mejor que ninguna.
Frankl decía que el sentido no se inventa.
Se descubre.
Y casi siempre aparece cuando dirigimos nuestra atención hacia algo fuera de nosotros mismos.
Tal vez el verdadero antídoto contra el vacío no sea encontrar una misión extraordinaria. Para algunos será criar un hijo. Para otros, enseñar, construir una comunidad, escribir un libro, cuidar un bosque o dedicar su vida a una causa que consideran justa. Lo importante no es la grandeza del proyecto, sino que nos saque del centro de nuestra propia historia.
Durante mucho tiempo no supe decir en qué momento dejé de sentirme un niño. No hubo una ceremonia. Nadie me dijo: “A partir de hoy eres un hombre”. Pero, mirando hacia atrás, creo que ese cambio comenzó cuando tuve que hacerme responsable de la situación económica de mi madre y de la mía.
Fue como un llamado de atención: dejar de esperar que otro resolviera. El Gobierno, la economía, la suerte... Tenía que tomar decisiones, por difíciles que fueran, y asumir sus consecuencias. Darme cuenta de eso me llevó a decidir emigrar de Venezuela. Sabía que no tomar una decisión era, en sí mismo, una decisión peor.
En ese momento entendí que tenía que velar por mí y por mi mamá a la distancia, enfrentándome a un mundo completamente desconocido: sin trabajo, sin ingresos, sin papeles, viviendo por primera vez fuera de mi casa, de mi ciudad y de mi país, lejos de mis amigos y de todo lo que conocía. Todo al mismo tiempo.
Empecé a comprender lo que significaba hacerse cargo de los gastos de agua, luz, transporte, comida y alquiler. Lo que era emigrar sin tener prácticamente nada y empezar desde cero. Lo que era administrar cada centavo porque de ello dependía llegar a fin de mes. Y, con los años, cuando mi situación mejoró, pude ayudar a otros. Primero a mi cuñado, que emigró en circunstancias aún más difíciles que las mías. Después a mi hermana, cuando ella también tomó la decisión de emigrar. Más tarde vendrían otras experiencias y otras responsabilidades.
No fue un ritual de un día. Fue una transformación que se fue forjando durante varios años.
Durante miles de años, muchas culturas tuvieron rituales que marcaban el paso de niño a hombre:
Cazar, servir a la comunidad, realizar el servicio militar, participar en una ceremonia, superar una prueba física, asumir una responsabilidad concreta o soportar dolor físico.
Hoy todavía existen momentos de transformación, pero rara vez son rituales compartidos o reconocidos socialmente.
Muchos hombres cumplen treinta años y nunca sienten que “entraron” realmente a la adultez.
¿Qué ocurre en El Club de la Pelea?
Los hombres que llegan al sótano son, en su mayoría, hombres aislados, sin dirección, sin comunidad y sin una identidad clara.
El club funciona casi como un rito de iniciación moderno. Les ofrece una prueba que superar, una comunidad a la que pertenecer y la sensación de haber cruzado un umbral hacia una nueva identidad.
Recibir un golpe. Dar un golpe. Aguantar. Sentir miedo y enfrentarlo. Cruzar un límite.
No es que los hombres necesiten pelear. Es que pareciera que necesitamos transformación y, sobre todo, reconocimiento de esa transformación. Necesitamos momentos que nos hagan sentir que hemos crecido. Que dejamos atrás una versión infantil de nosotros mismos.
El problema es que, cuando una sociedad deja de ofrecer rituales saludables, las personas terminan inventando otros.
Mirando hacia atrás, creo que muchos de nosotros no estábamos buscando violencia. Estábamos buscando una prueba. Algo que nos dijera que habíamos dejado de ser niños. Algo que nos hiciera sentir dignos del respeto de los demás y, quizá más importante, del nuestro propio.
Tal vez hoy no necesitemos recuperar los antiguos rituales de iniciación. Pero sí necesitamos experiencias que nos obliguen a asumir una responsabilidad real. Cuidar de alguien. Comprometernos con una comunidad. Sostener un proyecto difícil. Enfrentar un duelo. Emigrar. Construir algo que exista más allá de nosotros mismos.
«Uno no se ilumina imaginando figuras de luz, sino haciendo consciente la oscuridad» -Carl Jung
En el artículo anterior, sobre el carácter, comentaba brevemente cómo durante muchos años fui una persona muy complaciente. Me costaba decir que no, poner límites o pedir lo que realmente quería. Tuve que atravesar la ruptura de una relación muy larga para empezar a tomarme en serio ese aspecto de mí mismo.
No era que esos rasgos no existieran. Existían. Simplemente no quería reconocerlos como parte de mí.
En El Club de la Pelea, el narrador suele ser obediente, complaciente, inseguro y emocionalmente reprimido.
Tyler aparece siendo exactamente lo contrario: dominante, espontáneo, carismático, valiente y completamente indiferente a la opinión de los demás.
En algún momento de la película, Tyler termina poniendo en marcha un proyecto gigantesco sin que el propio narrador sepa realmente lo que está ocurriendo. Es como si, en términos junguianos, su sombra hubiera tomado por completo el control de él.
Carl Jung comentaba que la madurez no consiste en eliminar nuestra oscuridad, sino en conocerla lo suficiente y mantenerse en guardia para evitar que tome las riendas de nuestra vida.
Creo que Tyler Durden representa precisamente eso: la sombra de aquellos aspectos reprimidos de uno mismo, aspectos que fueron convirtiéndose en problemas, en falta de significado, de propósito, de pasividad extrema y de una vida miserable y consumista.
Tyler aparece para recordarle al narrador todo aquello que había reprimido durante años. Luego se convierte en un monstruo porque el protagonista deja de dialogar con él y empieza a obedecerlo.
La solución nunca fue convertirse en Tyler. Pero tampoco seguir siendo el hombre incapaz de enfrentarlo.
La verdadera transformación ocurre cuando dejamos de pelear con nuestra sombra y aprendemos a integrar aquello que tiene de valioso —la valentía, la capacidad de poner límites y la determinación— sin dejarnos arrastrar por aquello que tiene de destructivo.
Durante mucho tiempo pensé que ser hombre implicaba alejarme de todo aquello que se percibiera como femenino. Mostrar ternura, llorar, pedir ayuda, cuidar de otros o expresar afecto parecía incompatible con la idea de fortaleza con la que crecimos.
Con el tiempo entendí que esas cualidades no pertenecen a un género; pertenecen a la experiencia humana. La verdadera fortaleza no consiste en amputar una parte de uno mismo para encajar en un ideal de masculinidad, sino en integrar todas aquellas capacidades que nos permiten relacionarnos mejor con los demás y con nosotros mismos.
Tampoco se trata de abandonar la valentía, la responsabilidad o la determinación —virtudes que siguen siendo valiosas—, sino de dejar de pensar que para cultivarlas hay que sacrificar la sensibilidad, la compasión o la vulnerabilidad.
Muchas veces, querer encajar en este ideal de hombre —que nunca duda, que no se equivoca, que no experimenta ansiedad o miedo— puede atormentarnos porque no se parece ni de cerca a nuestra realidad interna. Pasamos tantos años intentando demostrar que somos hombres que pocas veces nos detenemos a preguntarnos quiénes somos realmente cuando dejamos de demostrar.
Esto no quiere decir que debamos ser pasivos ni dejar de enfrentar nuestros miedos o de aprender a manejar nuestras emociones. Pero sí estar abiertos a reconocer nuestros miedos y limitaciones, sin sentirnos avergonzados ni amaestrados por ellos, y a quitarles peso a las opiniones de los demás.
Yo me imagino una nueva forma de ser hombre. En lugar de ocultar con todos sus recursos sus propios errores e inseguridades, este hombre puede admitirlos e incluso tomárselos con humor.
Me imagino un hombre capaz de decir “no” sin culpa, pero también de pedir ayuda sin vergüenza. Capaz de proteger a otros, pero también de dejarse cuidar cuando lo necesita. Un hombre que no tenga que esconder sus errores para sentirse digno de respeto.
En un futuro, ser un hombre no sería ser invulnerable, sino aprender a manejar la vulnerabilidad con compasión y gracia.
En mi caso, ya no aspiro a convertirme en ese “hombre” que nunca duda, nunca llora y nunca necesita ayuda. Aspiro a algo que ya mencionaba en mi artículo anterior sobre el carácter: ser una persona capaz de actuar con valentía sin dejar de ser sensible; de asumir responsabilidades sin perder la compasión; de vivir con integridad y honestidad; de buscar la justicia; y de aceptar sus propias limitaciones sin sentir que por ello vale menos.
Las expectativas de la sociedad siempre cambiarán, conforme cambie también la cultura. Pero intentar vivir de acuerdo con principios ligados al carácter me parece una aspiración mucho más universal y duradera.
Quizá esa sea, al menos para mí, una mejor forma de ser hombre.
from
Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * Have worked through the Wednesday night prayers early this evening while the mind is still clear and focus good. The closer I get to bedtime the focus tends to get a little fuzzy. Doing those prayers (the Offices of Vespers and Compline, etc.) earlier than normal was a good experience, I may stick with this new routine.
It's nearly time now for the Pregame Coverage for tonight's Rangers / Angels game. I wonder how much of the game I'll be able to hear before sleep pulls me away.
Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night.
Health Metrics: * bw= 228.07 lbs. * bp= 129/78 (68)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups, BP breathing exercises, pilates
Diet: * 05:10 – 1 banana * 05:50 – 3 little cookies * 06:30 – 1 peanutbutter sandwich * 09:00 – pizza * 12:40 – 4 boiled eggs * 15:10 – 1 fresh apple
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:00 – listen to local news talk radio * 04:45 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 05:30 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap * 10:30 to 11:15 – yard work, carrying and cutting branches in back yard, stuffing the big green organics bin * 14:56 – listening to general sports talk on 105.3 The Fan, DFW's #1 Sports Station. * 16:20 – Getting an early start on Wednesday's night prayers.
Chess: * 09:30 – moved in all pending CC games
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Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil
Amen
Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!
Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!
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Also From Dark Skies
A plain and daily Rome Thoughts of rue and the subs A day for heavy news Thanksgiving at the altar
Six men in Jericho- and nine islands in jeopardy The worst is the storm And the seeming fact to be square
Life in failure and I know The balloon meant death And I was truly cherished by my skull A year can avoid this disco So let’s be clear I started this war
Summons of difficult rhyme And the aftermath of true travail Nuts to be sailing out West And time in South for the epicure It was night and day in Eden- a blissful story
And the youth- Who sonically cared of the empty port I was alone in space And there was dying but no seasickness Thoughts to amend these few A simple ready and Earth ensued
And for that terrible evening I was frightened as the tailing men It beats no difficult test But in suppose-mode, I was clear
And Winter gave day Times would cry for the lectern Sympathy owns no esteem And the frightened rat that I am came to war
So this is the above And providence rain I have a herd for you And I heard you were stellar Mixed grass and the remains of truth I would double back on your fence
No to the deer in your hut It isn’t you but time will breathe We will set off when we can spare of trouble It was the Maliseet who stopped the war.
from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter 1: The Night the Question Stopped Being Academic
The question usually shows up in a quiet place. Maybe you are sitting at the kitchen table after everyone else has gone to bed, scrolling through your phone with one thumb while the house hums around you. The dishwasher is running. A half-empty glass of water is beside you. You see someone online say, with total confidence, that Jesus probably never existed, and for a few seconds you feel that familiar pressure in your chest. Not because you have never heard the claim before, but because it is said with the kind of certainty that makes ordinary believers feel foolish. That is why I wanted to spend time with the historical evidence for Jesus and why we treat Him differently, not as a cold debate for people who enjoy arguing, but as a real question for people who have had faith challenged in the middle of an already heavy life.
What bothers many people is not that someone has questions about Jesus. Honest questions do not scare me. I have had plenty of them. What bothers me is the strange unevenness of it all. We hear about ancient kings, philosophers, generals, poets, rebels, governors, and teachers, and most of us accept their existence without demanding impossible proof. We do not ask for a birth certificate from Socrates. We do not refuse to believe Julius Caesar lived because we cannot watch him cross the Rubicon on video. We do not throw away ancient history because the sources were copied by hand, written by people with perspectives, or preserved by communities that cared about what happened. But when the name is Jesus, the room changes. Suddenly the standards get heavier, the tone gets sharper, and the question becomes loaded. That deeper tension is connected to the honest question behind doubting Jesus existed, because sometimes the issue is not only what history can show us, but what accepting Jesus might require from us.
I want to say this carefully, because careless faith can hurt people. Christians should not be afraid of honest investigation. We should not pretend evidence is stronger than it is, and we should not act like every question is rebellion. At the same time, we should not let the loudest voices convince us that the historical existence of Jesus is some fragile idea held together by wishful thinking. The basic claim that Jesus of Nazareth lived in the first century, taught in Judea and Galilee, was known as a religious figure, gathered followers, and was crucified under Roman authority is not a wild fringe claim. It is one of the more historically grounded claims we have about an ancient person from that place and time. The deeper disagreement is not usually whether there was a man named Jesus. The deeper disagreement is what we do with Him once we admit He was there.
I think about the person who has been trying to come back to God after years away. Maybe they have been hurt by church people. Maybe they feel embarrassed because they prayed once and nothing seemed to happen. Maybe they grew up hearing Bible stories, walked away in college, built a life, got tired, and now, in the quiet, they are wondering if they were too quick to dismiss what they once believed. Then they hear someone say, “There is no evidence Jesus even existed,” and it lands like a locked door. Not a thoughtful argument. Not a careful historical claim. A locked door. It tells them, “Do not go any farther. You will look stupid if you take this seriously.” That is why this matters. It is not just about winning a debate. It is about clearing away a false obstacle that keeps tired people from walking toward Christ.
The strange thing is that many of us already live by trust in testimony. We trust old family stories because a grandparent told them with trembling hands over coffee. We trust court records from before we were born. We trust maps of places we have never visited. We trust books about wars we never saw, speeches we never heard, and leaders whose faces survive only through paintings, coins, statues, or written accounts. We know that the past reaches us through witnesses, documents, preservation, memory, and interpretation. None of that makes the past fake. It simply means we are honest about how history works.
But when the subject is Jesus, some people act as if only modern proof counts. They want a kind of evidence that almost no ancient person could provide. They want neutral observers with no beliefs, no commitments, no interests, no worldview, and no reason to care. But that is not how ancient history comes to us. People wrote about what mattered to them. Governments recorded what served them. Communities preserved what shaped them. Enemies mentioned what annoyed them. Followers repeated what changed them. The question is not whether every source is perfectly detached. The question is whether the sources, taken seriously and read responsibly, point to a real person in real history.
That is where the double standard begins to show itself. A person may accept the existence of other ancient figures based on later writings, copied manuscripts, references from admirers, hostile mentions, and the impact those figures had on their communities. Then that same person may turn to Jesus and demand a different kind of proof altogether. Not better reasoning. Not more careful history. A different kind of proof. And sometimes that different standard is not admitted out loud. It hides under confidence. It says, “I just follow evidence,” while quietly moving the goalposts whenever the evidence points toward Christ.
I understand why. Jesus is not like accepting the existence of some distant emperor whose life makes no claim on your morning. Nobody sits in their truck before work wondering if they need to forgive their brother because Alexander the Great existed. Nobody stares at an unpaid bill and asks whether Julius Caesar is calling them to trust God instead of panic. Nobody lies awake beside a spouse after a hard conversation because Socrates said, “Follow Me.” But Jesus reaches into the living room. Jesus reaches into the marriage. Jesus reaches into pride, money, bitterness, lust, grief, envy, fear, and the little private kingdoms we protect. The question of His existence does not stay safely on a shelf.
That is why some people push Him away before the conversation can get there. If Jesus never existed, we do not have to wrestle with His words. If Jesus is only a myth, we do not have to consider His mercy. If Jesus is only a symbol, we can admire Him when convenient and ignore Him when He becomes too close. But if Jesus walked this earth, if He was crucified under Rome, if His followers truly believed they had encountered Him after death, if the movement that began around Him exploded out of weakness instead of worldly power, then the conversation becomes much more serious.
This does not mean every person who doubts is running from God. Some people doubt because they have been lied to. Some doubt because they were given shallow answers to deep questions. Some doubt because their pain made faith feel impossible. Some doubt because the Christians around them acted like fear was the same thing as holiness. I do not want to shame those people. I want to sit beside them. I want to say, “You are allowed to ask. You are allowed to think. You are allowed to examine the ground under your feet.” Faith that cannot survive honest questions is not the kind of faith Jesus invited people into. He met Thomas with wounds, not mockery.
Still, there is a difference between asking honest questions and using questions as a locked gate. I have done both in my life. There were times when I wanted truth, and there were times when I wanted distance. I could dress distance up in smart language. I could make unbelief sound like intellectual discipline when part of me simply did not want God to have access to certain rooms in me. That is hard to admit, but it matters. Sometimes the mind asks a question because the heart is searching. Sometimes the mind asks a question because the heart is hiding.
The claim that Jesus existed does not require you to turn off your brain. It asks you to use your brain fairly. It asks you to look at ancient history the way historians actually look at ancient history, not the way internet arguments pretend history works. It asks you to notice that the New Testament writings did not appear in a vacuum, that early Christian communities were not preserving a vague dream, that non-Christian references to Jesus and the early Christians exist, and that the sudden rise of the Jesus movement needs an explanation rooted in real events. You do not have to settle every theological question in one night at the kitchen table. But you also do not have to let a shallow slogan steal the possibility of faith from you.
I picture a father sitting in his car outside work before sunrise. He is tired before the day even starts. He has a thermos in the cup holder, a cracked phone screen, and a mind full of bills, deadlines, and things he has not told anyone. He used to believe. Or maybe he wants to believe but feels embarrassed by the wanting. He hears arguments against Jesus and thinks, “Maybe faith is only for people who do not know better.” But what if that is not true? What if the smarter move is not to dismiss Jesus, but to ask why His existence is treated like a special problem? What if the resistance itself tells us something?
Because here is the quiet truth: many people are not nearly as skeptical as they think. They trust all kinds of things they have not personally verified. They build their lives on memories, records, expert testimony, inherited knowledge, legal documents, medical notes, family history, and news from places they will never visit. They do this every day without calling it blind faith. But when Jesus enters the conversation, ordinary trust suddenly becomes unacceptable. That shift deserves attention. It may reveal that Jesus is being held to a different standard not because the evidence is uniquely weak, but because the implications are uniquely strong.
A person can hear about an ancient battle and remain unchanged. A person can study a dead ruler and then go eat lunch. A person can memorize dates, names, and empires without ever feeling exposed. But Jesus does not stay in the textbook. Even the question of Him has a way of finding the conscience. He asks us what we love. He shows us what we fear. He reveals where our anger has become a hiding place. He exposes the difference between wanting truth and wanting control. That is not comfortable. It never has been.
This is why I believe the conversation about Jesus and historical evidence must be both honest and tender. Honest, because we should never manipulate people into faith. Tender, because the person asking may not be trying to defeat God. They may be trying to find Him without losing their mind, their dignity, or their sense of safety. They may be standing at the edge of belief with years of disappointment behind them. They may be holding a phone in the dark, reading arguments from strangers, wondering if the hope rising in them is foolish. That person does not need a smug answer. They need a steady one.
So let us begin here, not with panic, not with defensiveness, not with a cheap victory over skeptics, but with a simple recognition. The existence of Jesus is not a weak historical claim that Christians invented because they needed a foundation. It is a serious historical claim with serious evidence, and it deserves to be judged with the same fairness we give to the rest of ancient history. If we are going to question Jesus, we should question Him honestly. If we are going to doubt, we should doubt with integrity. And if we discover that we have demanded more from Jesus than we demand from almost anyone else in the ancient world, we should have the courage to ask why.
Maybe that question is the first honest doorway. Maybe before we decide what we believe about Jesus, we need to look at the standard we are using. Maybe before we call faith unreasonable, we need to ask whether our unbelief has been as fair as we thought. And maybe, in the quiet place where the dishwasher is still humming and the house is still dark, the real issue is not that Jesus is hard to find in history. Maybe the real issue is that once we find Him there, He is hard to leave alone.
Chapter 2: The Way We Already Trust the Past
A woman finds an old photograph in a cardboard box while cleaning out her mother’s closet. The corners are bent. The faces are faded. Someone has written a name and a year on the back in blue ink, but the handwriting belongs to a person who is no longer alive. She does not throw the picture away because she cannot cross-examine the people in it. She does not say the moment never happened because the paper is old, the ink has weakened, and the story came through family hands. She holds it gently. She asks questions. She compares the date with other memories. She notices the clothes, the furniture, the faces, the family resemblance. She does not call that blind faith. She calls it trying to understand where she came from.
That is closer to how most of us handle the past than we realize. We do not live with laboratory access to yesterday. We live with traces. Letters. Ruins. Receipts. Records. Wounds. Names carved into stone. Stories carried by people who thought something mattered enough to preserve it. Even in our own families, we accept that history comes through witnesses. We know Grandma may have remembered some details imperfectly, but that does not mean Grandpa never existed. We know the old photograph may not tell the whole story, but it still tells us something real. We know a birth record, a military document, a newspaper clipping, and a remembered conversation each carry different weight, and wisdom learns how to read them together.
The ancient world is like that, only farther away. We do not have modern video recordings of most ancient people. We do not have their driver’s licenses. We do not have hospital records, school records, social media posts, security footage, or DNA samples for every person whose name appears in history books. What we have are manuscripts, inscriptions, coins, archaeological remains, references in later writers, references from hostile sources, internal evidence from communities, and the consequences left behind by a life. That may sound fragile to a modern ear, but it is the normal ground on which ancient history is built.
This matters because a lot of people talk about Jesus as if the standard should be different before the conversation even begins. They want the ancient world to behave like a modern courtroom with cameras in every corner. But if we applied that same demand evenly, we would lose much more than Christianity. We would lose large parts of ancient history. We would become suspicious not because the evidence had failed, but because we had asked the past to provide what the past almost never provides.
Think about the way people speak about ancient philosophers. Most of us accept that Socrates lived, even though Socrates did not leave behind writings of his own in the way a modern author would leave published books. We know him through people who wrote about him. Those people had viewpoints. They cared about him. They interpreted him. They did not write as emotionless machines. Yet people do not usually say, “Well, since his students preserved his memory, he must be invented.” We understand that disciples preserving a teacher’s words is not automatically a reason to dismiss the teacher. In many cases, it is exactly the kind of thing we would expect if the teacher mattered.
The same is true with political figures, military leaders, and ancient rulers. We accept a combination of records, mentions, coins, monuments, later histories, and the effects of their actions. We do not require one kind of proof only. We look at the whole picture. When sources agree in important ways, when enemies and followers both acknowledge a person’s impact, when a movement begins in a specific place and time, when names and events fit the world around them, we take that seriously. We may debate details. We may question motives. We may separate legend from history. But we do not usually jump to the claim that the person never lived.
Jesus receives a different reaction because He is not merely historical data. His life presses on the soul. That is the quiet difference under the argument. A person can accept an ancient general without surrendering pride. A person can accept an ancient poet without forgiving an enemy. A person can accept an ancient emperor without rethinking their private life. But Jesus stands in history with words that do not remain neutral. Love your enemies. Follow Me. Take up your cross. Forgive. Repent. Lose your life to find it. Come to Me. These are not museum words. They are living words, and living words make people nervous.
I remember how easy it is to hide behind distance. Not everyone does it, but I know what it feels like. You can make a question sound cleaner than it really is. You can say, “I just need more evidence,” when what you mean is, “I do not want this to touch me yet.” You can say, “I am being logical,” when part of you is afraid that if Jesus is real, then the wall you built around your life is not as safe as it feels. That does not make the question fake. It means the question may be carrying more than logic. It may be carrying fear, disappointment, anger, or the memory of being let down by people who spoke in God’s name.
A young man sitting in a college library may not realize that. He has a laptop open, a stack of books beside him, and a quiet need to look intelligent in front of people who seem certain. He reads a skeptical article and feels relief for a moment. Not joy. Relief. Relief because if Jesus can be dismissed, then he does not have to deal with the guilt he has buried. He does not have to call his mother back. He does not have to stop making fun of the faith he once had. He does not have to pray and risk silence. The historical question gives him a place to stand far away from the spiritual question.
But fairness asks him to slow down. Fairness asks all of us to slow down. If we would not dismiss another ancient teacher simply because followers wrote about him, why do it to Jesus? If we would not dismiss another ancient figure because hostile sources mention him briefly rather than fully, why make that complaint only here? If we accept that ancient biographies were written differently from modern biographies, why treat the Gospels as disqualified simply because they do not sound like a twenty-first-century documentary? If we know that ancient communities preserved what formed them, why treat Christian preservation as suspicious in a way we do not apply elsewhere?
That does not mean we should be careless. The Gospels are not less important because believers wrote them. They are more personal, more invested, more direct. They are testimony. Testimony needs to be weighed, not mocked. A witness can be committed and still tell the truth. In fact, some truths are only preserved because someone was committed enough to suffer for them. We understand this in ordinary life. If a mother speaks about the child she lost, we do not say her love makes her automatically unreliable. We listen with respect. We may ask careful questions, but we do not treat devotion itself as proof of dishonesty.
When it comes to Jesus, the early Christians were not preserving an idea that made their lives easier. Their message brought pressure, rejection, imprisonment, and death for many. That does not automatically prove every claim they made. People can suffer for false beliefs too. But it does challenge the lazy idea that the whole thing was created casually for comfort or control. The first followers of Jesus were not gaining worldly power by announcing a crucified Messiah. Crucifixion was shame. Weakness. Public humiliation. It was not the kind of detail you invent if you are trying to make your leader look impressive according to the values of Rome.
That detail alone should make us more careful. Jesus was remembered not as a distant myth floating above history, but as a man tied to names, places, rulers, conflicts, meals, roads, synagogues, gardens, trials, and a Roman cross. His story has dust on it. It has geography. It has political tension. It has religious conflict. It has people misunderstanding Him, abandoning Him, denying Him, and then proclaiming Him. Myth tends to grow upward into fog. The story of Jesus keeps dragging us back down to earth.
Someone might say, “But the Gospels were written by believers.” Yes. And? That fact matters, but it does not settle the question. Most ancient sources come from people who cared about what they were recording. A Roman historian had Roman concerns. A student of a philosopher had philosophical concerns. A royal inscription served royal purposes. A critic had critical motives. A community record reflected community memory. The goal is not to find sources with no perspective. The goal is to read sources responsibly, compare them where possible, recognize their claims, notice what even opponents conceded, and ask what best explains the evidence we actually have.
This is where many online arguments become too small for the subject. They reduce a serious historical question to a quick sentence meant to embarrass believers. “There is no evidence.” But that statement is not careful. It does not explain what kind of evidence would count. It does not compare Jesus with other ancient figures. It does not deal honestly with early Christian writings, non-Christian mentions, the crucifixion under Roman authority, or the rise of the early church. It just closes the door and hopes the listener will feel too intimidated to open it again.
A tired believer does not need to become a professional historian overnight. A doubter does not need to solve every argument before taking one step toward Jesus. But both need permission to notice when a claim is too confident for the truth it carries. Saying “there is no evidence” may sound strong, but strength is not the same as accuracy. Sometimes the loudest sentence in the room is loud because it is trying to avoid complexity.
The real question is not whether we can remove every mystery from the past. We cannot. The real question is whether the existence of Jesus is being judged by ordinary historical standards or by a special standard created to keep Him at a distance. Once you see that difference, something shifts. You may still have questions. You may still need time. You may still feel the old resistance inside you. But the locked door is not locked anymore.
You can look again. You can think again. You can pray again, even if the prayer is awkward and small. You can say, “God, I do not want to be fooled, but I also do not want to hide.” That is an honest prayer. It does not pretend. It does not perform. It stands in the room with the old photograph, the faded ink, the family records, the unanswered questions, and the quiet possibility that the past has been speaking more clearly than you were told.
Chapter 3: When Evidence Starts Asking Something Back
The hospital waiting room is one of those places where arguments become smaller. A man can sit there with a paper cup of coffee cooling in his hands, a vending machine humming against the wall, and a phone full of messages he does not have the strength to answer. In a room like that, the question of Jesus does not feel like a hobby for clever people. It becomes something heavier. Is there anyone who entered our suffering on purpose? Is there anyone who knows what fear feels like from the inside? Is there anyone who can stand near death and not be swallowed by it? The historical question matters because life eventually pushes most of us past theory. At some point, we do not only want to know whether Jesus can win a debate. We want to know whether He is true enough to trust when the floor drops.
That is where the double standard becomes more than frustrating. It becomes personal. If someone dismisses Jesus with a standard they do not use anywhere else, they may not realize what they are taking from the person who is trying to find hope. They are not only challenging a doctrine. They may be placing a false burden on a weary soul. They may be telling a grieving daughter, a tired father, a lonely teenager, or a recovering addict that the door is closed before they have even had the chance to look inside.
I do not believe people should accept Christianity because they are desperate. Desperation can make people vulnerable, and vulnerable people should be treated with honesty. But I also do not believe desperation makes a question less valid. Sometimes pain strips away the games we play. Sometimes the hospital chair, the funeral home, the empty bedroom, or the long drive after bad news makes us brave enough to ask what we were too busy to ask before. If Jesus is historically real, then the hope connected to Him is not floating in the air. It is tied to a person who stepped into a real world with real dust, real roads, real enemies, real friends, and a real cross.
That matters because Christianity is not built on the idea that God sent a feeling. It is built on the claim that God acted in history. The Christian faith does not begin with a private mood, a vague spiritual comfort, or a myth about being nice. It begins with a person. Jesus taught in public. He was known by ordinary people. He was opposed by religious leaders. He was executed under Roman power. His followers did not say they had discovered a helpful philosophy after His death. They said something happened. They said the crucified Jesus was alive.
A person can choose not to believe that. Faith cannot be forced. But we should at least be honest about the claim. The first Christians were not merely saying, “We feel inspired by the memory of our teacher.” They were saying, “We are witnesses.” That is a different kind of claim. It steps into history and invites examination. It also invites resistance, because if witnesses are telling the truth, then Jesus is not just another ancient figure we can file away.
This is why some people try to keep the conversation stuck at the level of existence. They never want to get to the harder question. They want to argue forever about whether Jesus was even there, because as long as the conversation stays there, they do not have to face what His life means. It is like standing on the front porch for years arguing about whether the house has a door. At some point, if the door is there, the question becomes whether we are willing to knock.
That does not mean the existence question is unimportant. It is important. But for most serious historians, the existence of Jesus is not the wild part. The wild part is what Christians believe about Him. There is a big difference between saying, “Jesus never existed,” and saying, “Jesus existed, but I do not believe He rose from the dead.” The second statement is still a major disagreement with Christianity, but at least it is closer to the real conversation. The first statement often functions like a shortcut. It skips the stronger historical ground and tries to make the whole subject disappear.
I understand the appeal of that shortcut. If Jesus never existed, nobody has to deal with His mercy toward sinners. Nobody has to deal with His warnings to the proud. Nobody has to deal with His tenderness toward the broken. Nobody has to deal with His command to forgive, His call to repent, His claim to be the way, the truth, and the life. A non-existent Jesus can be ignored. A merely symbolic Jesus can be reshaped. But a real Jesus is harder to manage.
That is the pressure under the pressure. Historical evidence asks us to think, but Jesus asks us to surrender. That word can scare people because surrender sounds like losing yourself. In the hands of controlling people, surrender has been misused. But surrender to Christ is not the destruction of your soul. It is the rescue of it. It is finally admitting that the small throne you built inside yourself cannot hold the weight of your life. It is letting the One who knows you better than you know yourself speak truth into the places you have guarded.
A mother sitting in a school parking lot may not think of it that way. She may be waiting for her son to come out after a hard meeting with teachers. She may be replaying every mistake she made that morning, every sharp word, every impatient sigh, every moment she felt like she was failing him. She hears people say faith is unreasonable, and part of her believes them because she already feels foolish in so many other areas of life. But then she remembers Jesus welcoming children, correcting adults, showing patience to slow learners, and restoring people who had made a mess of things. If Jesus was real, then His compassion was not an abstract value. It had hands. It had eyes. It had a voice. It moved toward people in actual rooms, actual streets, actual shame.
That is one reason the historical reality of Jesus carries such spiritual weight. It means God’s love is not merely an idea we are supposed to admire from a distance. In Christ, love walked. Love ate with people. Love noticed the ignored. Love touched the untouchable. Love rebuked hypocrisy. Love wept near a tomb. Love stood silent before accusers. Love forgave from a cross. When we ask whether Jesus existed, we are not asking whether a random name belongs in an old book. We are asking whether love entered history in a way that can still reach us.
The world is full of spiritual talk that never has to touch the ground. People say “the universe” has a plan, or that everything happens for a reason, or that we need positive energy, or that we should manifest better outcomes. Some of those phrases may come from sincere people trying to survive hard days. I do not mock the longing behind them. But Christianity makes a more concrete claim. It says hope has a name. It says mercy came near. It says God did not remain distant from human suffering. It says Jesus of Nazareth lived, died, and rose, and that everything changes if that is true.
Maybe this is why the standard gets so severe. The more concrete the claim, the harder it is to keep it vague. A vague spirituality can be adjusted to fit whatever we already want. Jesus does not adjust so easily. He comforts and confronts. He welcomes and commands. He heals and exposes. He lifts burdens and tells us to drop sins we have grown used to carrying. People often like a comforting Jesus until He becomes a commanding Jesus. They like a historical Jesus until He becomes a living Lord.
This is not a problem only for skeptics. Christians can do it too. We can defend the existence of Jesus while avoiding obedience to Jesus. We can argue online about historical evidence and still refuse to forgive someone at home. We can talk about first-century sources while ignoring the Holy Spirit’s conviction in our own kitchen. We can know enough to win a point and still not love our neighbor. That should humble us. The goal is not to use history as a weapon so we can feel superior. The goal is to remove false barriers so we can meet Christ more honestly.
A fair look at Jesus should make believers more gentle, not more arrogant. If the evidence for His existence is strong, we do not need to panic. If His life is grounded in history, we do not need to shout. If truth is on solid ground, we can speak with steadiness. The person across from us may not be rejecting evidence as much as protecting an old wound. They may have known a church that was cold, a father who was harsh, a preacher who manipulated, or a season of suffering that made prayer feel dangerous. They may be using historical doubt as armor because faith once felt unsafe.
That is why love matters in this conversation. Not soft love that avoids truth, but patient love that knows people are more than their arguments. We can say, “Yes, Jesus existed,” and still say it with tears in our voice for the person who is afraid to believe. We can talk about sources and standards without forgetting the soul in front of us. We can be clear without being cruel. Jesus Himself was full of truth and grace. If our defense of Him loses either one, we are not representing Him well.
The man in the hospital waiting room may not need a lecture. He may need someone to sit beside him and say, “You do not have to solve everything tonight. But do not let a careless claim steal the possibility of Jesus from you.” The mother in the school parking lot may not need a stack of books thrown at her. She may need to know that taking Jesus seriously is not intellectual surrender to nonsense. It may be the beginning of coming home to the deepest truth there is.
Evidence does not save us. Jesus saves us. But evidence can clear brush from the path. It can help us see that faith is not a leap into darkness but a step toward a light that has already entered the world. It can show us that the Christian claim is not built on mist, but on memory, witness, suffering, proclamation, and the strange, stubborn survival of a message that should have died with a crucified man and did not.
There is a kind of honesty that begins when we stop pretending Jesus can be judged like everyone else while secretly demanding more from Him than we demand from anyone else. We can bring Him our questions. We can bring Him our resistance. We can bring Him our doubts, our anger, our grief, our fear of being fooled, and our fear that He might actually be Lord. He is not threatened by honest searching. The real question is whether we are willing to be honest about why we search the way we do.
Chapter 4: The Standard We Use When We Do Not Want to Be Changed
A man hears the comment during lunch at work, not in a classroom. He is standing near the microwave, waiting for his leftovers to heat, when a coworker laughs about Christians believing in “some guy nobody can prove existed.” The room gets quiet in that strange way rooms do when people know something personal has been touched. The man does not want to start an argument. He does not want to be the office religious guy. He just takes his food, walks back to his desk, and feels smaller than he did ten minutes earlier. What stays with him is not only the comment. It is the confidence behind it. It sounded like everyone reasonable already knew the answer, and only sentimental people were still holding on.
That moment matters because many believers are not shaken by careful historical study. They are shaken by social pressure wearing the clothes of certainty. They hear a claim made with a smirk, a meme, a short video, or a sentence dropped into a conversation, and they assume there must be a mountain of knowledge behind it. Sometimes there is. Many skeptics have studied seriously, and Christians should respect honest work even when we disagree. But sometimes there is no mountain. Sometimes there is only a repeated slogan that sounds powerful because nobody in the room knows how to answer it.
The believer at the desk may not know names of historians, dates of documents, or the details of ancient source criticism. He may only know that something feels unfair. He knows enough about life to sense when rules change in the middle of the game. He has heard people accept the existence of ancient people on evidence they would reject if the subject were Jesus. He has watched people trust sources for one topic and ridicule similar kinds of sources for another. He cannot explain every piece of it, but he can feel the unevenness.
That feeling should not be dismissed. Sometimes ordinary people notice what specialists later describe with more polished language. A mother may not know the legal terms for favoritism, but she knows when one child is being treated differently. A worker may not know every policy in the handbook, but he knows when rules are enforced only against certain employees. A friend may not have a degree in counseling, but he knows when someone is moving the target because they do not want to admit they were wrong. The human heart recognizes unfair weights.
The double standard with Jesus often works like that. If an ancient source was written decades after an event, people may still use it carefully to understand another figure. But when early Christian writings are brought forward, the timing is treated as fatal before the discussion even begins. If followers preserved the memory of a teacher in another tradition, we may call that tradition valuable. But when followers of Jesus preserve His words and deeds, their devotion is treated as automatic disqualification. If a hostile writer briefly mentions someone else, the mention may count as useful confirmation. But when hostile or non-Christian references to Jesus are discussed, they are waved away as too brief, too late, or not enough.
The problem is not that people ask hard questions of Christian sources. They should. The problem is when those questions become demands no other ancient figure is required to meet. If every source must be neutral, then we lose most of the ancient world, because neutrality was not the normal posture of ancient writing. If every text preserved by committed communities must be rejected, then we lose not only Christian memory but large amounts of religious, philosophical, and political history. If every copied manuscript is worthless because it is copied, then ancient literature itself collapses. Nobody lives that way consistently. The standard becomes impossible only when Jesus is standing in front of it.
That does not mean every Christian argument is strong. Some are careless. Some overstate things. Some make faith sound like it depends on one impressive fact instead of the full weight of witness, history, Scripture, and the work of God in a person’s life. We should be honest enough to admit that. A weak defense of Jesus can make a doubter feel even more justified in walking away. When believers speak as if every question has a simple answer, people who carry real intellectual pressure may feel unseen. The truth does not need exaggeration to survive.
Still, weakness in some Christian arguments does not erase the strength of the central historical claim. Jesus lived. Jesus was known. Jesus was crucified. His followers proclaimed Him after His death in the same world where He had been publicly executed. The movement began early, in real places, among people who had names, conflicts, fears, failures, and reasons to remain silent if nothing had happened. The existence of Jesus is not a late decoration added to make faith respectable. It is part of the ground from the beginning.
The harder question is why some people resist even that ground. I think of a woman sitting in her car outside a church she has not entered in years. Her hands are on the steering wheel. She arrived early, then lost courage. She remembers the youth group where she felt judged. She remembers the adult who used Scripture like a hammer. She remembers praying when her father was sick and feeling like heaven had no answer. For her, the claim that Jesus may not have existed does not arrive as an academic position only. It arrives as protection. If Jesus can be kept unreal, then she does not have to risk being disappointed by Him again.
That is tender territory. It should change the way we speak. People are not machines that process evidence without pain. A person’s mind may be tangled with memories, wounds, loyalties, fears, and pride. So may mine. So may yours. Sometimes a person holds Jesus at a harsher standard because Christians hurt them. Sometimes because they do not want to give up control. Sometimes because they are afraid of looking foolish. Sometimes because they have never heard the evidence explained without contempt. Sometimes because saying “I do not know” feels too vulnerable.
This is why the conversation cannot be only about proving a point. It has to be about becoming honest people. If I ask someone else to judge Jesus fairly, I have to let Jesus judge me fairly too. I cannot demand intellectual integrity from a skeptic while avoiding spiritual integrity in my own life. I cannot complain about double standards while making excuses for my bitterness, my laziness, my secret pride, or my lack of love. The question of standards comes home. It asks whether I only want fairness when it helps my argument, or whether I want truth even when it exposes me.
That is where Jesus becomes impossible to use as a mere debate topic. He turns the light around. He does not let the believer stand proudly over the doubter. He does not let the doubter hide forever behind a standard nobody can meet. He calls both toward truth. He calls the believer to gentleness, patience, courage, and clean speech. He calls the skeptic to fairness, humility, and a willingness to follow evidence where it leads. He calls the wounded person to risk bringing pain into the open. He calls the proud person to admit that unbelief can be as emotionally loaded as belief.
One of the most honest prayers a person can pray is, “Lord, show me where I am not being fair.” That prayer can be frightening because it does not only apply to one side of the argument. It may show the Christian where fear has replaced love. It may show the skeptic where intellectual confidence has become a shield. It may show the wounded former believer that the people who hurt them were not the same as Jesus. It may show the casual critic that they have rejected a version of Christianity they never truly examined. It may show the lifelong churchgoer that defending Jesus is easier than obeying Him.
A father helping his daughter with homework at the dining room table understands this better than he realizes. She gets frustrated and says the math problem is impossible. He looks at the page and sees she skipped a step. She insists the answer cannot be found, but the issue is not the problem. It is the way she is approaching it. He does not shame her. He pulls the chair closer, lowers his voice, and says, “Let’s look at it again.” Sometimes that is what God does with us. We declare Jesus impossible, unreasonable, disproven, unreachable, or too complicated, and the Father gently draws us back to the page and asks us to look again.
Looking again does not mean pretending doubt is easy. It does not mean ignoring hard questions about manuscripts, miracles, resurrection, suffering, hypocrisy, or the history of the church. It means refusing to use one standard for everything else and another for Jesus because Jesus makes us uncomfortable. It means having enough respect for truth to stop hiding behind slogans. It means letting the question become personal in the best sense, not personal as in defensive, but personal as in honest.
When we look again, we may notice that the historical existence of Jesus has never been the embarrassing weakness some people claim it is. The embarrassment may be something else. It may be our fear of being changed. It may be our anger at people who represented Him badly. It may be our love for sin we do not want to name. It may be our exhaustion from hoping and being disappointed. It may be the strange comfort of staying distant from a Savior who would heal us and then call us to follow.
The man at work may not answer his coworker that day. He may simply sit at his desk and breathe. But later, on the drive home, he can choose not to let shame make the decision for him. He can learn. He can ask. He can read with a calmer heart. He can talk to God in plain language and say, “Jesus, I do not know how to answer everything, but I do not want to be intimidated away from You.” That is not weakness. That is a beginning.
Fairness with Jesus is not the end of faith, but it may be where faith starts breathing again. It clears enough space for a person to see that the question was never as simple as the smirk near the microwave made it seem. It lets a tired soul stand up a little straighter. It reminds us that truth is not threatened by examination, and Jesus is not fragile in the presence of honest questions.
Chapter 5: The Witnesses We Allow Until They Point Toward Jesus
A woman sits in a courthouse hallway with a paper badge clipped to her sweater, waiting to be called for jury duty. She watches strangers walk past with folders, tired faces, and quiet nerves. Nobody in that hallway saw the event being discussed in the courtroom. Nobody can rewind the day and watch it happen again. So the court does what human beings have always done when the past matters. It listens to witnesses. It examines records. It compares details. It notices whether the story fits the world around it. It asks whether the people speaking had reason to lie, reason to remember, reason to risk something, reason to stay silent, or reason to tell the truth.
That ordinary scene can help us think about Jesus without pretending the subject is simple. Evidence is not always a photograph. It is not always a signature on a government form. It is not always a stone inscription with every detail carved into it. Sometimes evidence is a cluster of things that, together, carry weight. A letter by itself may not tell the whole story. A hostile comment may be short. A community memory may be shaped by love. A public consequence may need interpretation. But when several lines begin pointing in the same direction, a fair person does not wave them away just because each one is not the kind of proof they personally prefer.
When people say there is no evidence for Jesus, they often mean there is no evidence they are willing to count. That is a different statement. The New Testament writings count as evidence. Early Christian testimony counts as evidence. The existence of communities centered on a crucified and risen Jesus counts as evidence that something powerful happened at the beginning. Non-Christian references to Jesus and the early Christians count as evidence. The willingness of followers to proclaim Him under pressure counts as evidence of what they believed they had encountered. None of these pieces force a person to become a Christian against their will. Evidence does not work that way. But it is not honest to call it nothing.
This is where the conversation gets strange. A person may say the Gospels do not count because they are religious. But why would religious sources automatically fail when they are discussing religious events and religious figures? If we are studying an ancient philosopher, philosophical sources matter. If we are studying a military commander, military and political sources matter. If we are studying a religious teacher who changed the lives of His followers, the writings of those followers matter. They do not get a free pass. They must be read carefully. But careful reading is not the same as dismissal.
The Gospels are not detached newspaper articles written by strangers who had no stake in the matter. They are witness-shaped writings from within the early Jesus movement. That makes them passionate, but passion is not the same as fraud. A person who has been rescued from a burning house will not describe the firefighter with cold neutrality. Their gratitude may come through every sentence. That does not mean the fire was imaginary. Love can color testimony, but it does not automatically cancel testimony.
Think of a son standing in a funeral home, telling people about his father. His voice breaks. He leaves out some details because grief is heavy. He remembers certain moments more clearly than others. He speaks with love, loyalty, and pain. Nobody standing nearby says, “We cannot trust anything he says because he cares too much.” We understand that his closeness matters. We may not treat every sentence as a full biography, but we listen because he knew the man. Distance is not the only path to truth. Sometimes nearness is what preserves truth.
That is important when we look at the earliest followers of Jesus. They did not speak of Him as a vague lesson. They remembered His words, His actions, His death, His meals, His touch, His mercy, His warnings, His silence before accusers, and His resurrection. Their testimony came from a community that believed history had been interrupted by God. We can debate what that means. We can examine their claims. But we should not pretend devotion makes them worthless. If devotion made every source worthless, much of human history would become unreadable.
The same unevenness appears with hostile or non-Christian sources. People sometimes demand that outside sources say more about Jesus than outside sources were ever likely to say. Jesus was not a Roman emperor. He did not command legions. He did not mint coins with His face on them. He did not build marble monuments to His own greatness. He was a Jewish teacher from a small place under Roman occupation, publicly executed in a way Rome used to shame people. The surprise is not that Roman writers did not give Him pages of attention during His earthly life. The surprise is that His name became impossible to ignore at all.
That is part of the evidence too. Something began with such force that a crucified man from Galilee became the center of a movement that spread beyond its birthplace, crossed languages and cultures, and outlived the empire that killed Him. Again, that does not answer every theological question by itself. Movements can grow for many reasons. But growth still asks for an explanation. The rise of Christianity is not proof in the lazy sense of a slogan. It is a historical reality that must be accounted for, and the earliest Christian explanation was not, “We invented a helpful story.” It was, “God raised Jesus from the dead.”
A man reading late at night may not know how to weigh all of that. He may have a browser full of tabs, each one arguing with the next. One person says the evidence is overwhelming. Another says it is all legend. Another says Jesus existed but the resurrection is impossible. Another says the whole subject is too complicated to trust. After a while, the mind gets tired. It is easy to close the laptop and decide that nobody knows anything. But that kind of exhaustion is not the same as truth. Sometimes confusion is what happens when we have been handed too many conclusions and not enough patience.
Patience matters. We do not have to settle every question in one sitting. A person can begin by asking something more modest and more honest. Is it reasonable to believe Jesus existed? Yes. Is it reasonable to believe His first followers truly believed He had risen? Yes. Is it reasonable to notice that the crucifixion is historically difficult to explain away? Yes. Is it reasonable to ask why a movement built around a shamed, executed Messiah took root so early and so stubbornly? Yes. Those questions do not manipulate anyone into faith. They simply clear the fog created by the claim that Christians are believing in a person with no historical ground beneath Him.
The deeper question comes after that. Once we admit Jesus belongs in history, we have to decide whether we will let Him speak from there. Not every ancient person speaks with the same weight. Some names remain names. Some kings remain dates. Some philosophers remain quotations. But Jesus keeps stepping forward. Even when people try to reduce Him to a moral teacher, His words do not stay small. He forgives sins. He claims authority. He announces the kingdom of God. He welcomes sinners and confronts the religiously proud. He says the Father sent Him. He speaks as one who has the right to call human beings to Himself.
That is why the evidence question cannot be separated from the heart forever. A person may start by asking, “Did Jesus exist?” But eventually the question becomes, “Who is He?” That movement can feel frightening. It is easier to debate whether the road exists than to walk down it. It is easier to inspect the doorframe than to enter the room. It is easier to read about mercy than to confess that we need it. History can bring us to the edge, but Jesus calls us across.
This does not mean faith is less thoughtful than doubt. In many cases, faith requires more honesty than doubt because faith has to face both the evidence and the self. Doubt can sometimes remain safely critical. Faith has to kneel. Faith has to forgive. Faith has to repent. Faith has to trust when the emotions do not cooperate. Faith has to stop using pain as a permanent excuse to stay far from God. That is not anti-intellectual. That is whole-person truth. Jesus does not ask only for agreement from the mind. He asks for the person.
A woman caring for her aging mother may understand this without knowing how to explain it. She keeps track of medicine bottles on the counter, doctor appointments on a calendar, and quiet fears she does not say out loud. She is too tired for clever arguments. But one afternoon, while folding towels, she remembers Jesus saying that those who are weary can come to Him. If Jesus is only an idea, those words may comfort her for a minute and fade. If Jesus is a real person who entered history, suffered, loved, died, and lives, then those words are not decoration. They are an invitation from Someone who knows where she is.
That is what is at stake when people casually dismiss the evidence. They may think they are clearing away superstition, but they may be cutting the thread of hope for someone who needs more than a slogan. They may be telling the caregiver, the addict, the ashamed husband, the lonely widow, the exhausted teenager, and the former believer that the door to Jesus is locked by history when it is not. Honest skepticism has a place. Careless dismissal does damage.
The fairer path is not to lower the standard for Jesus. It is to stop raising it dishonestly. Test the sources. Ask hard questions. Study the world of the first century. Notice what the earliest Christians actually claimed. Notice what even opponents and outsiders did not deny. Notice how strange the crucified Messiah message was. Notice how quickly Jesus became the center, not merely the memory of a teacher. Notice the difference between evidence that does not answer every question and evidence that deserves to be taken seriously.
The woman in the courthouse hallway eventually hears her name called. She stands, smooths her sweater, and steps through the door. She is not being asked to pretend certainty where certainty has not been earned. She is being asked to listen fairly. That may be all some readers can do right now with Jesus. Listen fairly. Stop letting slogans testify in place of evidence. Stop letting old wounds serve as historians. Stop letting pride decide what the mind is allowed to see. Bring the question into the room honestly and let the witnesses speak.
And somewhere in that honest listening, a person may discover that Jesus was never the fragile figure critics made Him out to be. He does not disappear when examined. He does not collapse when questioned. He stands in history with more weight than many people were told, and He stands before the heart with more mercy than many people expected.
Chapter 6: The Door History Opens in the Heart
A man walks into his house after a long day and sees his Bible on the small table near the couch. It has been sitting there for months, maybe years, more like furniture than a book. His keys are still in his hand. His shoulders hurt. There is a grocery bag on the floor that needs to be put away, a message from a family member he has been avoiding, and a heaviness in him that he cannot explain without sounding dramatic. He remembers the lunchroom comment, the online argument, the confident claim that Jesus is no different from myth, and for once he does not feel angry. He feels tired of letting other people decide what he is allowed to seek.
That may be where this article has been trying to lead. Not to pressure. Not to panic. Not to a shallow answer that pretends history removes every mystery. It has been leading to a quieter place where a person can admit that Jesus has often been judged differently, not because He is less grounded than other ancient figures, but because He matters more. He matters in the hidden places. He matters when the house is quiet and the mind is not. He matters when pride has worn us out. He matters when our past is too heavy to keep carrying alone. He matters because if He lived, then His words were spoken into the real air of this world, and if His words were spoken here, they still deserve to be heard here.
There is a big difference between saying, “I still have questions,” and saying, “I will not look.” The first can be honest. The second can become a prison. Many people think doubt is freedom, but doubt can harden into a locked room when it refuses to examine itself. Faith can be abused too, of course. Faith can be made shallow, fearful, and anti-thinking when people treat questions like enemies. But real faith is not afraid of light. Real faith can sit at the table with evidence, pain, memory, Scripture, and prayer, and say, “Lord, I want what is true, even if it changes me.”
That last phrase is where many of us hesitate. We do not mind truth that gives us information. We struggle with truth that asks for transformation. Historical facts can be comfortable when they remain outside us. Jesus does not remain outside us. Once we begin to see that His existence is historically serious, the conversation naturally moves toward His identity. Then His identity moves toward our response. That is the part no one can do for us. A historian can help clear the fog. A friend can sit beside us. A teacher can explain sources. A pastor can guide us. But each person eventually stands before Jesus with their own heart exposed.
A young woman may feel that exposure while sitting on the edge of her bed with a journal open on her knees. She has written the same sentence three times and crossed it out twice: “God, are You there?” She is not trying to win a debate. She is trying to survive the distance she feels inside. She has heard enough arguments to be confused and enough shallow religious talk to be cautious. But she also cannot escape the pull of Jesus. Not religion as noise. Not church as performance. Jesus Himself. The One who looked at broken people without disgust. The One who told the truth without cruelty. The One who seemed to know the secret ruin in people and still called them forward.
For someone like her, the historical question is not a cold doorway. It is a mercy. It says Jesus is not merely a feeling created by tired people. He is not just a moral symbol we invented to comfort ourselves. He belongs to history. He walked among people who misunderstood Him, needed Him, resisted Him, loved Him, hated Him, touched Him, followed Him, abandoned Him, and then proclaimed Him. That does not make faith automatic, but it makes dismissal too easy. It asks us to slow down before we throw away the One who may be calling our name.
The fairness we give to Jesus should begin with the same basic fairness we give to the rest of history, but it should not end there. Once fairness opens the door, humility has to walk through it. Humility says, “Maybe I have been repeating things I never examined.” Humility says, “Maybe I have confused bad representatives of Jesus with Jesus Himself.” Humility says, “Maybe I have treated my pain as proof when it was actually a wound still asking to be healed.” Humility says, “Maybe the standard I used against Christ was not as honest as I told myself it was.”
That kind of humility is not humiliation. God is not trying to shame a person into belief. Jesus never needed to crush people in order to reach them. He could correct with authority and still restore with tenderness. He could expose sin and still invite sinners to the table. He could confront hypocrisy and still weep over the city that rejected Him. If you are reading this with questions, God is not asking you to pretend. He is asking you to come into the light with the whole truth of where you are.
Maybe you do not know what you believe yet. Maybe you believe, but you feel embarrassed because you cannot answer every objection. Maybe you walked away and now wonder whether you left Jesus because He failed you or because people failed you while using His name. Maybe you have been treating faith as childish because that made it easier not to revisit old pain. Maybe you are a Christian who needs to stop reacting defensively and start speaking with steadier love. Wherever you are, the answer is not to manipulate the evidence until it protects your comfort. The answer is to become honest before God.
A man paying bills at the end of the month understands the temptation to avoid honest numbers. He may leave an envelope unopened because he does not want to see what it says. He may delay checking the account because anxiety feels easier than clarity. But the number does not become kinder because he refuses to look. It simply remains there, waiting. Truth is like that. Avoiding Jesus does not make Him less real. Mocking believers does not make the historical question disappear. Pretending there is no evidence does not erase the witnesses. And defending Jesus loudly without obeying Him does not make our hearts clean.
The good news is that Jesus is not only true; He is merciful. That is the part I do not want us to lose in all this talk about evidence and standards. The goal is not merely to convince someone that an ancient man existed. The goal is to help someone see that the real Jesus is worth seeking, trusting, following, and loving. He is not fragile. He is not threatened by honest questions. He is not surprised by your doubt. He is not shocked by your anger. He is not confused by the fact that you have been hurt. He knows the road you took to get here.
So what should a person do with all of this? Start honestly. Not dramatically. Not performatively. Honestly. Ask whether you have judged Jesus by a standard you do not use for anyone else. Ask whether your doubts have been careful or convenient. Ask whether your resistance is intellectual, emotional, spiritual, or some mixture of all three. Ask whether you have confused the failures of Christians with the absence of Christ. Ask whether you have been willing to examine the evidence for Jesus with the same fairness you would give to any other person in ancient history.
Then take one faithful step. Open one Gospel and read it slowly, not as a weapon to use on someone else, but as a window. Read as a person willing to meet Jesus, not merely analyze Him. Pray a simple prayer before you read: “Lord, show me what is true.” That prayer is small enough for a beginner and deep enough for a saint. You do not have to sound impressive. You do not have to fix your whole life first. You do not have to understand everything before you come near. You only have to stop pretending distance is the same as honesty.
If you are already a believer, let this strengthen you without making you proud. The evidence for Jesus should not turn us into people who enjoy humiliating doubters. It should make us patient. It should make us calm. It should help us stop acting like every question is a threat. The Lord we follow entered history in humility. He did not build His kingdom by panic. He did not need the approval of the powerful to be true. He walked with sinners, answered traps, endured mockery, carried the cross, and rose with scars still visible. We can speak of Him with courage and kindness because truth does not need cruelty to stand.
If you are not sure what you believe, do not let someone else’s confidence become your cage. A person can sound certain and still be wrong. A crowd can laugh and still miss what matters. An online argument can feel intelligent and still be shallow. You are allowed to look again. You are allowed to question the question. You are allowed to ask why Jesus is treated differently. You are allowed to admit that maybe the name of Jesus unsettles people because He is not merely an ancient figure. Maybe He unsettles us because He is near.
The man standing in his living room still has his keys in his hand. The groceries still need to be put away. The message still needs an answer. Nothing about the room has changed, and yet something in him has shifted. He walks over to the table and picks up the Bible. He does not know everything. He does not know how to answer every person. He does not know whether the heaviness in him will lift tonight. But he is done letting shallow dismissal keep him from the deepest question of his life.
He opens the Gospel and begins to read, not as someone who has mastered the past, but as someone willing to be found by the One who stepped into it. The page is thin under his fingers. The house is quiet. The old arguments are still out there, but they do not own the room anymore. Jesus is not less real because people resist Him. He is not less worthy because people question Him. He is not less present because history has to be studied with care. He stands where He has always stood, in truth and mercy, calling weary people out of hiding and into the light.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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Fitzz & Pieces
This article is a supplemental piece to my main investigation into Marco Robinson. As I drafted that work, the section (14) dealing with Robert Fitzpatrick — and the network of entities surrounding him — began expanding far beyond what belonged in a Marco‑focused narrative. The Marco article needs to stay centred on Marco.
This piece exists to provide the additional background that sits behind him: the partner he promotes, the structures he attaches himself to, and the institutional theatre that frames his claims. What follows is the deeper context — the Fitzpatrick ecosystem.
Two of the businessmen named in the Dellis Cay article are Simon Tolan and Raymond Jackson. These are not incidental figures: Tolan is publicly presented as a co‑founder of Naked Diablo Tequila, while Companies House records identify Raymond Jackson as an active director and shareholder of Naked Diablo Ltd. The third named businessman, Paul Clarke, appears to have dropped out of Fitzpatrick’s corporate orbit after the Dellis Cay collapse, but both Tolan and Jackson remain closely connected to Fitzpatrick’s ongoing ventures.
Their presence in the Dellis Cay bid further undermines any claim of institutional backing; it shows that the “Inn Vogue Hotel Group” was effectively being fronted by the same promotional circle that later repackaged itself as a self‑described luxury‑spirits brand.
The corporate structure behind Naked Diablo Ltd reflects a clear division of roles. Tolan is publicly presented as a co‑founder and strategic partner across press releases, trade media, and their own television content, yet he does not appear as a director in the company’s legal filings. By contrast, Companies House records list Raymond Jackson as an active director and shareholder, carrying statutory responsibility for the company. This creates a split between the public‑facing promotional figures and the individuals who anchor the formal corporate entity — a pattern consistent with their wider ventures.
Outside the tequila brand, Fitzpatrick and Tolan also operate together in New World Developments, where Fitzpatrick is listed as President & Co‑Chairman and Tolan as Development Director.
Under that banner, they pitched another billion‑dollar concept: a Baker’s Bay‑style resort on 10,000 acres in San Salvador, Bahamas. In March 2023, The Tribune reported Tolan announcing a $500m–$1bn master plan, with a $100m first phase supposedly beginning later that year. As with Dellis Cay, they did not own the land; they had aligned themselves with a local landholder to create the appearance of control while they searched for financing. No institutional funding was ever identified, the promised construction date passed without activity, and there is no public evidence of hotels, infrastructure, or development filings since. On the available record, the San Salvador project ended the same way as Dellis Cay: a highly publicised “billion‑dollar” vision that generated headlines but ultimately fell through.
Fitzpatrick and Tolan also promoted a Lake Como venture — another glossy, high‑end redevelopment pitch that followed the same pattern. They claimed they were transforming the historic Cotonificio Cantoni mill in Bellano into a cultural centre with a luxury hotel, residential apartments, and an art gallery. In 2024, Tolan used social media to announce that the project was “due to open in 2026” and that they were “taking deposits now,” even marketing the scheme with lines like “Who fancies George Clooney as their neighbour?” But there is no public evidence of permits, construction, institutional financing, or any progress toward the promised opening. The project never broke ground and quietly disappeared, while legitimate Lake Como developments — such as the Corinthia Lake Como, backed by regulated European asset managers — moved ahead without them. The Bellano venture was another paper‑and‑social‑media project designed to project scale and solicit early interest without the institutional backing required to deliver it, and it also ultimately fell through without leaving any trace of development.
Across its entire portfolio, New World Developments has not delivered a single project; every venture they announced — Dellis Cay, San Salvador, Bellano, Salt Cay — collapsed without progressing beyond glossy mockups, social‑media hype, or early‑stage marketing. The company presents itself as a global luxury developer, but its track record is a catalogue of unexecuted schemes, none of which ever secured institutional financing, permits, or construction.
In practice, New World Developments functions as a digital showroom of failed ideas, a brand designed to look substantial while never laying so much as a brick.
The modern real‑estate ventures promoted by Robert Fitzpatrick and Simon Tolan operate in a legal grey zone rather than in the territory of formally adjudicated fraud. Their projects — Dellis Cay, San Salvador, Lake Como, and Salt Cay — were all announced with large‑scale ambitions but never progressed beyond promotional materials, early‑stage marketing, or social‑media pre‑sales. In several cases, deposits or reservation fees were solicited before any evidence of permits, financing, or land control existed, leaving buyers exposed when the projects failed to advance. Because these arrangements are framed as private civil contracts rather than regulated investments, they fall outside the remit of financial regulators and offer little practical recourse when the developments fail to materialise. Taken together, the pattern mirrors the hallmarks of “ghost development”: high‑visibility concepts presented as major projects, none of which resulted in a verifiable, on‑the‑ground build.
Another venture with Fitzpatrick and Tolan as Co‑Founders and Managing Partners, Legends Advocates, follows the same pattern.
Legends Advocates markets itself as a sports‑focused advisory consortium aimed at professional athletes and family offices, presenting the organisation as a multi‑entity partnership with global reach. The branding leans heavily on high‑end associations and institutional‑sounding affiliates, yet there is no public record of Legends Advocates completing major transactions, managing regulated investment funds, or delivering institutional‑grade projects. Its public presence consists largely of promotional claims, aspirational deal language, and undeveloped ventures.
Legends Advocates presents a partners page designed to imply a network of heavyweight institutions. The most prominent name, the Adi Dassler International Family Office (ADIFO), is used to suggest heritage‑level backing, yet ADIFO’s own compliance wording makes clear that its advisory arm is separate from the family’s investment decisions and does not endorse or refer clients to Legends Advocates. The only link is historical: Julian “Brad” Bradham once held senior roles at ADIFO before joining Legends Advocates. That biographical detail is inflated into present‑tense partnership, despite ADIFO’s explicit position that it does not underwrite or back external consortiums.
The remaining “partners” reveal a closed loop rather than external institutional weight. Athlon Family Office is genuinely connected because it shares ownership through co‑founder De Anna Guerreiro. New World Developments as previously discussed, is connected to Fitzpatrick and Tolan. And “Lakehouse Capital” turns out not to be the well‑known institutional fund manager but a boutique dot‑io venture co‑founded by Legends team member Gary Nealon — a name that creates intentional ambiguity by echoing a major investment house. Taken together, the partners page is not a map of external institutions but a circle of insiders listing their own side‑ventures to create the appearance of scale and credibility.
Legends Advocates claims to have “40+ clients” and to have facilitated “£500m of investments,” yet the site provides no verifiable examples, no named clients, no case studies, and no attributable endorsements. One testimonial is credited only to “NFL Star,” offering no name, no team, and no identifiable source.
There is almost no evidence of Legends Advocates delivering substantive, standalone business activity. The group’s public output consists largely of press releases and promotional syndication rather than executed deals. Its most high‑profile moment came in late 2023, when it announced itself as the US sports fund backing LKY Sunz’s bid to join the Formula One grid. Press materials claimed a $1 billion funding package, including a self‑declared willingness to pay a $600 million anti‑dilution fee — triple the official requirement at the time. While this inflated figure served as a strategic demonstration of intent to project financial strength, the bid never progressed: LKY Sunz did not advance beyond the application stage and ultimately disappeared after the FIA window closed. No transaction, investment, or operational project followed.
The FIA does not allow teams to simply claim they have $600 million or $1 billion; applicants must prove it through audited business plans, bank‑guaranteed funds, and a fully costed three‑year operating model. Because Legends Advocates operates as a boutique consortium syndicator rather than an independent, institutionally regulated mega-fund, the capital backing the LKY Sunz bid relied on conditional, back-to-back equity commitment letters that would only activate if a grid slot was granted. Once the FIA examined the details, its review process exposed a framework lacking immediate liquid operational infrastructure, relying on a chain of “if‑this‑then‑that” pledges. The bid was ultimately rejected by the governing body because this highly conditional, contingent financial model could not satisfy the strict regulatory requirements for immediate, non-contingent funding. Legends’ inability to demonstrate real, immediate funding was a key part of that outcome.
Legends Advocates devote a page to what they bill as their latest investment with World Champion Fantasy and its PlayerX platform. These services are the perfect case study in how Legends Advocates constructs the illusion of institutional investment. The pitch deck promised a fantasy‑esports empire built on “exclusive worldwide rights” from Riot, Blizzard and Valve, a strategic Verizon partnership reaching “100 million gamers,” a $27 million valuation, a $15 million raise for 29.5% equity, and a projected $74 million post‑investment valuation. But every pillar collapses under basic scrutiny. The “exclusive rights” were just a standard non‑exclusive data feed purchased from GRID Esports. The Verizon “partnership” was a routine 5G accelerator trial inflated into a corporate alliance. And the financials contradict themselves outright: if $15 million buys 29.5%, the post‑money valuation is $50.8 million, not $74 million; if the company is worth $27 million, adding $15 million yields $42 million, not $74 million. The promised 90% IRR over four years is fantasy‑marketing — it implies a near‑$200 million payout on a $15 million investment. These aren’t projections; they’re incompatible numbers pasted together to impress unvetted investors.
The reality is microscopic compared to the hype. WCF raised roughly $1.5 million, not $15 million. PlayerX launched as a modest nine‑employee operation running a basic esports stats dashboard at playerx.gg, powered entirely by GRID’s commercial feeds. The Web3 marketplace, NFT ecosystem, proprietary tech networks and “global exclusivity” evaporated because the capital never arrived to build them. And despite claims of reaching “350 million monthly active users,” the platform has virtually no public footprint: negligible social engagement, no industry presence, no traction in esports communities, and no visibility among fantasy‑gaming competitors. To compensate for the absence of institutional capital, the founders reverted to their core playbook — celebrity validation — bringing in JuJu Smith‑Schuster and later Drew Brees to provide the illusion of scale.
So what became of this “$74 million, industry‑shaking” opportunity? A ghost town. PlayerX is technically still online, but it exists as a minor stats dashboard with almost no active community, no meaningful adoption, and none of the promised infrastructure. It stands as the perfect monument to the Legends Advocates model: a project built on borrowed logos, contradictory valuations and athlete endorsements, designed to look like an institutional investment ecosystem while delivering a completely ordinary, unnoticed application. It is the clearest proof that the group’s real product is not technology or investment — it is concept inflation packaged as opportunity.
Beyond the WCF/PlayerX example, the wider Legends Advocates record shows the same pattern: brief visibility, no execution. Their highest‑profile moment — a short‑lived appearance in Formula One — produced no deals, no investments, and no follow‑on activity. The only other verifiable instance of the Legends Advocates name appearing on a project is in press releases for Smith Arenas, a venture driven entirely by co‑founder De Anna Guerreiro through her separate firm, Athlon Family Office. Legends Advocates did not originate, fund, or execute that deal; it was simply appended to Athlon’s announcement. Personnel turnover reinforces the absence of momentum: senior figures, such as Managing Director Gavin Ford, have quietly departed after short tenures. There is no evidence of Legends Advocates completing a standalone corporate acquisition, managing a regulated investment fund, or executing any substantive transaction. The available record shows Legends Advocates functioning as a promotional vehicle rather than an operating private‑equity consortium — a brand deployed for syndication and visibility, and silent when projects fail to materialise.
In light of that record, Legends Advocates appears to serve primarily as a visibility and positioning tool for Fitzpatrick and Tolan, used to present speculative real‑estate or sports‑investment concepts to high‑earning individuals. As with their other ventures, the public evidence points to image rather than execution.
Fitzpatrick’s credentials collapse the moment they’re checked against any regulated standard. He has no FCA or SEC registration, no Series‑licensing, no fiduciary qualifications, and no audited track record. His “Family Office” is a Nevis shell paired with a UK mail‑drop, and his claimed $400 million portfolio, 100 “millionaires created,” and even his “own Cryptocurrency” leave no public footprint. Nothing about his background qualifies him to manage capital or advise clients.
So how does a former upholsterer from Lancashire who wouldn’t qualify as a junior analyst end up positioned as a Managing Partner in Legends Advocates beside genuine banking and military professionals? Because he wasn’t hired into an existing institution — he co-founded the company. Legends Advocates is a co‑creation of Fitzpatrick, Simon Tolan, and De Anna Guerreiro, designed to merge their networks under a single banner. In alternative‑capital ventures, teams are assembled like film casts: high‑credibility professionals supply the trust assets, while promoters supply the hype. Fitzpatrick’s title reflects that dynamic. The US isn’t Nevis, and because he has no SEC registration, no Series‑licensing, and no legal authority to trade securities or provide regulated investment advice, his role inside Legends Advocates can only operate in the narrow space available to someone without credentials: that of an introducer. He generates buzz, works rooms, and funnels prospects toward the licensed figures who can actually transact. His presence beside legitimate professionals doesn’t validate him; it shows how self‑constructed platforms allow promoters to occupy institutional roles without institutional qualifications.
But perhaps most valuable to Fitzpatrick, by presenting himself as a co‑founder of a global “investment consortium,” he gains the appearance of a legitimate institutional investor — a role his lack of US‑recognised investment credentials prevents him from performing within his own company.
And again, across Fitzpatrick’s ventures, the “official” websites are the same cheap, template‑built pages that undermine the billion‑dollar projects they’re supposed to front. The Legends Advocates site is perhaps the worst example: poorly designed, poorly worded, inconsistently structured, and so difficult to navigate that key executive profiles exist only on unlinked pages — a website so amateurly produced as to be an immediate red flag to any potential client or investor.
For the most damning, if not shocking, episodes of Fitzpatrick’s career, see main article section 14.1 The Swindle: The Judgment Fitzpatrick Doesn’t Mention.
The distance between the man Fitzpatrick once was and the financial mogul he now claims to be is no distance at all. The same patterns that defined his early ventures in Accrington — the schemes, the bans, the reinventions — simply reappear in new packaging, scaled up and exported across jurisdictions. This isn’t character assassination; it’s the documented record. Every part of this article is drawn from publicly available sources: court judgments, Companies House filings, archived reporting, and Fitzpatrick’s own promotional materials.
Robert Fitzpatrick’s public persona — the “self‑made Multi‑Millionaire,” the global mogul with 22 countries’ worth of business interests and a $400 million portfolio — collapses the moment it is compared to the record. His websites present a world of billion‑dollar funds, private‑banking pipelines, offshore trusts, and vast real‑estate holdings, yet none of it survives basic verification. The supposed family office is a Nevis maildrop paired with a rural accountant’s address in Lancashire. The “global headquarters” is a subdivided farm outbuilding shared with a tack shop and an ATV garage. The investment vehicles he cites have no audited accounts, no regulatory filings, no identifiable assets, and many have no functioning websites. Even his cryptocurrency claim dissolves instantly: there is no token, no contract, no ledger entry — nothing.
Behind the promotional façade lies a documented history that Fitzpatrick never mentions. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, he fronted Freedom International and Igennex, both shut down as illegal money‑circulation schemes. A High Court judge described his operation as “a swindle on the public” and banned him from acting as a director for 11 years — one of the longest disqualification orders of its time. A 2001 county court case revealed how he and his wife left a 71‑year‑old relative carrying more than £59,000 in debt taken out in her name; the judge concluded bluntly that Fitzpatrick had been “basically ripping his auntie off.” When those ventures collapsed, he simply moved offshore and launched Perfect4u, a Gibraltar‑registered pyramid scheme that falsely claimed banking partnerships, collapsed internationally, and resurfaced under new names in South Africa, New Zealand, and Botswana. Investigators across multiple jurisdictions linked him to a cross‑border network of pyramid operations and money‑laundering probes. This is not ancient history — it is the foundation of his business career.
The modern ventures follow the same pattern. Fitzpatrick and his partners announced billion‑dollar resort schemes in Dellis Cay, San Salvador, Lake Como and Salt Cay, none of which ever progressed beyond glossy mockups, social‑media hype, or early‑stage marketing. They pitched themselves as global developers without owning the land, without permits, without financing, and without construction. Every project collapsed. Legends Advocates — the sports‑finance consortium he co‑founded — presents itself as a multi‑entity advisory platform with institutional reach, yet it has no track record, no executed deals, and no evidence of managing regulated capital. Its highest‑profile moment, a $1 billion Formula One bid, evaporated the moment the FIA demanded proof of funds. The esports investment they promoted as a $74 million opportunity turned out to be a nine‑employee stats dashboard with contradictory valuations and no meaningful adoption. Across every venture, the pattern is identical: borrowed prestige, inflated claims, and no execution.
Even the credentials he uses to anchor his image are manufactured. His “family office” website appeared years before the company behind it existed. His personal site has barely changed since 2013. For several years his contact email was a Hotmail address. The numbers he cites — $2 billion AUM, 40,000 acres of real estate, billions in coal reserves — have no supporting evidence anywhere in the public record. The promotional materials read like amateur marketing copy, not the infrastructure of a global investment house.
Taken together, the picture is unmistakable. Fitzpatrick’s corporate footprint is not that of a global financial player but of a long‑running promotional ecosystem built to look like one. The public record shows a man repeatedly tied to pyramid schemes, disqualification orders, offshore scams, unbuilt developments, and self‑authored digital branding. The institutional world he describes does not exist outside his own websites.
This is the figure behind Naked Diablo Airlines — a venture with no evidence of commercial activity. A venture he fronts alongside a convicted fraudster: Marco Robinson, an absconded UAE convict, paired with Fitzpatrick, a man once condemned by a High Court judge as running “a swindle on the public.” Together, they now solicit investment funds from the public while Fitzpatrick positions himself on SiriusXM beside Billy McFarland, the architect of the Fyre Festival and the fake “Magnises Air” jet service — a promotional ecosystem built on the same pattern of borrowed credibility and non‑existent aviation.
The record is clear. The empire Fitzpatrick promotes is a façade. The history he omits is the truth. And the pattern — from Freedom International to Perfect4u to Legends Advocates — is the same: grand claims, borrowed credibility, and ventures that dissolve the moment they meet real‑world scrutiny.
For more on Marco Robinson & Robert Fitzpatrick see Marco Robinson — The Man, The Myth, The ‘Legacy of Lies’
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from Out of Office
My brother left today, my dad and I dropped him off at the airport early this morning. Then I came back to sleep a little more and just woke up not long ago.
I feel a little more motivation, but still feel physically sick. I think I am going to continue taking it easy this week. I am four weeks out since I had to stop working and sadly it has just been one thing after another – I have not had time to do any of the projects I wanted to do. Maybe I can spend some time today to map out my projects for the next few weeks. Hopefully the illness goes away and stays away.
I am also trying to map out a weight loss plan. I should be able to eat healthier while I am at home and maybe do some workouts from home. A lot of it may be from stress so I will look into finding some solutions for that also.
Thank you for your message. I am currently out of office with no set return date. I will get back to you when the time is right.
from Out of Office
Today was a special day even though I have yet to hear any update. I was able to be a part of a special moment in my family and I am incredibly grateful to have been there.
I also had a moment of frustration because I am trying to make something super special for my dog in pottery and I don’t know if it is because I am seeking perfection, or nervous to mess it up, but it is not turning out right. I am on my fourth attempt and just grateful she is still here so I can keep trying to get it right.
I tried reconnecting by catching up on text messages that I have been neglecting. It is so hard to keep up. I have been feeling particularly down lately, it is amazing that I have even done anything at all. I think I have tried to do things to keep up appearances with my family, but I have zero motivation to do even my favorite things (this may also be why my pottery project is not turning out). I know keeping a positive attitude is important, but it gets exponentially harder the longer I have to keep going on like this.
Thank you for your message. I am currently out of office with no set return date. I will get back to you when the time is right.
A zine chronicling the Conquering the Barbarian Altanis D&D campaign.
This issue details sessions 114, 115, and 116.
Adventurers head into the deep jungle. Unprepared.
You can download the issue here.
Overlord's Annals zine is available as part of the Ever & Anon APA, issue 13:

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