from An Open Letter

We were texting and I found out that she was high. The first day I met her, and that that’s something that she does pretty often. It’s not the end of the world, and I had an ex that was a huge stoner. But that’s not really something that I would like you know? And so it kind of does suck but at the same time, everyone has their vices, and so I cannot be too upset or anything like that. I also kind of noticed I’m waiting for her messages and I’m texting her a lot, especially during work, which maybe isn’t great, and I think it’s pretty obvious it really isn’t great. We have our first date in two days and I should not be talking with her this frequently. Additionally, I kind of noticed that I felt lonely today because I didn’t go to the normal social events that I do and I instead played games with my friends, which is not the worst, but overall I guess I was just a little bit socially less saturated than normal, and so I want to make sure that I’m not slipping up and leaving myself into a situation where it might become codependent again.

 
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from Notes I Won’t Reread

I just got back from work. spent the night there, Not because i wanted to. because i had to. i spent the rest of it arguing with myself. the other guy had some points. annoying. i still dont know who won. I keep wondering if im more exhausting than comforting to the person i love. its just a thought. i talk too much, and i actually always have when I spend time with her. but this time. i talked more than im supposed to. we weren’t supposed to talk this much anyway. those were the rules. so ill try to stick to them instead of pretending i cant read. Also, i finally figured out why my stomach’s been acting like it has a personal grudge against me. it was the medication. they’re changing the prescription, so congratulations to my digestive system for surviving. i dont think im unaware of my problems. if anything, im painfully aware. i notice every little thing, every wrong choice, every moment i couldve handled better. i just never know how to turn that awareness into something useful or i just never seem to explain it correctly.

Sometimes, i think i’d be easier to handle if i came with instructions. Unfortunately, i didnt. Terrible design choice. i know i can be difficult sometimes. i know there are things i can improve. thats not a tragedy, just another thing on the list. i guess i’ll keep figuring myself out the old-fashioned way, slowly.

Sincerely, A man without instructions

 
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from AnOublietteofThought

Sodden quills glisten a bespoken temptation beaded on the arrhythmia of a stuttered confession. What nightmares primp in golden hue? Mere jaunts livid on torment of a pacing wyrm... Digested illogicals too bizarre to satiate the passing awe... I beget this illicit farce to a symphony of dawning restraint. I spill, encumbered with a growing satisfaction— lured indecent. ...I...scrawl...abundant... ever the deficient feed plagued by your survival.

Written July 17, 2026. © 2026 AnOublietteofThought.

 
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from brightway logistics

Retail & Fashion Logistics in UAE – Managing Fast Fashion Supply Chains & Seasonal Shipments

Bright Way Logistics Services LLC presents an in-depth guide on Retail & Fashion Logistics in UAE, covering fast fashion supply chain strategies, sea freight forwarding, LCL vs FCL shipping decisions, climate-controlled warehousing, and value-added 3PL services. Learn how leading UAE fashion brands manage seasonal shipment spikes during Ramadan, winter tourism, and summer sales while keeping products fresh, on-trend, and on-shelf faster.

Explore More: https://brightwaylogistic.com/retail-fashion-logistics-in-uae/

#RetailLogistics #FashionLogisticsUAE #FastFashion #SeaFreight #UAELogistics #SupplyChainManagement

 
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from Douglas Vandergraph | Quiet Christian Reflection

Chapter 1: The Words We Say Without Hearing Them

It is late, the house is finally quiet, and you are sitting at the edge of the bed with your phone face down beside you. The bill is still unpaid. The test result still has not come back. The person you love has not answered. You have already prayed about all of it more than once, but you try again because there is nowhere else to carry what you are feeling. You tell God what you need, what you fear, and what you hope will happen. Then you reach the familiar ending and say, “In Jesus’ name, amen,” almost before you realize the words have left your mouth. That familiar phrase may be part of your deepest faith, but it can also become something you say so often that you no longer stop to ask what it means. That is why the real meaning of praying in Jesus’ name deserves more than a quick explanation or a repeated habit.

Maybe you learned the words as a child. Maybe your parents said them at the dinner table, your grandmother whispered them beside a hospital bed, or someone used them when praying over you during a hard season. The phrase may carry comfort because it connects you with years of trust, family, church, and memory. But comfort can sometimes hide questions we have never faced. If we are honest, some of us treat “in Jesus’ name” like the proper way to close a Christian prayer, the spiritual version of signing our name at the bottom of a letter. We do not mean anything false by it. We are simply repeating what we were taught. Still, the difference between asking God and trying to control the answer matters more than most of us realize.

A woman sits in her car outside work after being told that her position may be eliminated. Her hands are tight around the steering wheel. She asks God to save the job because she needs the insurance, the paycheck, and the sense that life is not falling apart again. A father stands in a dark kitchen after everyone else has gone to bed and asks God to protect his daughter from a relationship he believes is hurting her. A man waits alone in a clinic room and prays that the doctor will walk in with good news. All three prayers are real. All three needs matter. All three people may end with the same words. Yet saying the same words does not mean they are asking for the same thing, carrying the same motives, or placing the same trust in Jesus.

That is where this becomes personal. Praying in Jesus’ name is not mainly about pronunciation, order, or religious form. It is about whose character we are placing over what we ask. The name of Jesus is not decoration added to the end of a request. His name carries His identity, His authority, His truth, His mercy, and His way of seeing people. When we pray in His name, we are doing more than mentioning Him. We are saying that what we are asking belongs beneath who He is.

That can be unsettling because it means Jesus may care not only about what we ask for, but also about why we want it. We may ask for justice when what we really want is revenge. We may ask for success when what we really want is proof that the people who doubted us were wrong. We may ask for a relationship to be restored while refusing to admit that we helped damage it. We may ask God to change someone else because changing ourselves feels harder.

Imagine a man who has been publicly embarrassed by a coworker. He goes home furious and prays that the truth will come out. On the surface, that sounds reasonable. Truth matters. False accusations should not be ignored. But as he keeps praying, another desire begins to surface. He does not only want the truth known. He wants the coworker humiliated. He wants everyone in the office to watch that person lose respect, influence, and security. He wants the pain returned. Then he ends the prayer with “in Jesus’ name.” What would Jesus think about that request?

I do not believe Jesus would be shocked by the anger. He understands what humiliation does to a person. He knows the first hot desire to make someone feel what they made us feel. He is not confused by our mixed motives. But I also do not believe He would quietly lend His name to revenge just because we placed His name at the end of the prayer. He might meet that man in the anger before confronting what the anger is becoming. He might care about the injustice and still refuse the request for humiliation. He might guide the prayer away from “Make them pay” and toward “Bring the truth into the light, protect what needs to be protected, and keep this from turning me into someone I do not want to become.”

That change in direction is the beginning of praying in Jesus’ name. It does not mean the man must pretend the wrong did not happen. It does not require him to remain silent, accept dishonesty, or avoid a necessary conversation. Jesus never asked people to confuse passivity with love. But He may challenge the part of us that wants to use a true complaint as permission for a cruel desire. He may support the search for truth while refusing the hunger for destruction.

Many of us struggle here because we want prayer to work like a request system. We explain the problem, identify the solution, and ask God to carry it out. When we add “in Jesus’ name,” we may feel that we have strengthened the request by attaching the highest possible authority to the outcome we prefer. But the name of Jesus is not leverage over God.

A child may ask a parent for something “because Dad said so,” but if Dad never said it, the child is using the father’s name without representing the father’s will. An employee may claim to speak for the owner of a company, but if the message contradicts what the owner believes, the name does not make the claim true. In the same way, we can speak the words “in Jesus’ name” while asking for something that does not sound like Jesus at all.

This does not mean every request must be perfect before we pray. That would make honest prayer impossible. Our motives are rarely clean from the beginning. Fear mixes with faith. Love mixes with control. Hope mixes with pride. Pain mixes with resentment. We often bring God a tangled prayer because we are tangled people.

A mother may pray for her adult son to come home because she misses him and because she is afraid of losing influence over his life. A business owner may pray for growth because employees depend on the company and because he wants people to admire what he built. A woman may pray for a former friend to call because she longs for healing and because she wants the friend to admit she was right. The request can contain something loving and something selfish at the same time.

Jesus does not require us to untangle every motive before we speak. Prayer is one of the places where the untangling can happen. We come honestly, and then we remain long enough for the truth to meet us. That is different from using prayer to avoid honesty. Sometimes we rush through our requests because we do not want to stay still long enough to hear the question beneath them. We say what we want, finish with the familiar phrase, and move on. We may call that faith, but sometimes it is fear. We are afraid that if we pause, Jesus may not agree with us.

A woman who is desperate for a relationship to continue may pray, “Please do not let him leave.” She may be terrified of loneliness, ashamed that another relationship is failing, and convinced that losing him means she has failed again. Her prayer is not fake. Her fear is real. But if the relationship is manipulative, dishonest, or unsafe, Jesus may not answer by keeping the man close. The name of Jesus cannot mean protecting an outcome that is destroying the person who is asking.

He may instead lead her toward a harder prayer: “Give me the courage to see this clearly. Help me stop calling fear love. Show me what faithfulness looks like now.” That prayer may not feel comforting at first. It may feel like surrendering the only result she can imagine surviving. But praying in Jesus’ name does not mean forcing Jesus into our plan. It means trusting Him enough to let His character examine the plan.

This is why unanswered prayer can become so painful. When we have said “in Jesus’ name,” we may believe we have done what Jesus instructed. Then the door closes, the diagnosis comes, the person leaves, or the opportunity disappears. We are left wondering whether God ignored us, whether our faith was too weak, or whether Jesus made a promise that did not hold.

A man applies for a job that seems perfect for him. The pay would solve several problems. The work fits his experience. He prays through every step of the interview process. He asks friends to pray. He thanks God in advance. When the rejection email arrives, it feels personal. He does not only feel disappointed by the employer. He feels confused by God. The confusion grows because he used the right words, prayed sincerely, and asked in Jesus’ name.

What if praying in Jesus’ name was never a guarantee that Jesus would carry out his preferred ending? What if it meant that he was placing the request beneath the wisdom of Jesus, including the possibility that Jesus saw what he could not see? That possibility can sound like an easy answer when someone else is hurting, so it should never be used to brush away disappointment. The man still has to face the unpaid bills, the embarrassment of telling his family, and the tiredness of beginning another search. Faith does not remove those facts.

Yet the closed door does not prove that prayer failed. It may reveal that prayer was never meant to make God predictable. Prayer brings us into relationship with God, and relationship includes trust when the answer is not the one we expected. This is difficult because certainty feels safer than trust. We want a formula we can repeat and an outcome we can count on. “In Jesus’ name” can become attractive as a formula because it sounds definite. Say the words, believe strongly enough, and receive the result. That version of prayer gives us a sense of control.

Jesus did not come to make us feel in control. He came to teach us how to trust. Trust does not mean we stop asking boldly. It means we stop pretending that boldness gives us authority over God. We can ask for healing with our whole heart and still admit that we do not control the body, the timing, or the answer. We can ask for a marriage to be restored and still accept that reconciliation requires truth, repentance, safety, and the choices of another person. We can ask for financial help and still listen for changes we may need to make.

The phrase “in Jesus’ name” should not make us more demanding. It should make us more honest. It should cause us to notice the parts of the prayer that sound like fear, pride, revenge, or control. It should remind us that Jesus cares about the person we are becoming while we wait. It should keep us from using God as a way to avoid responsibility. It should help us ask whether our desired answer would make us more loving, truthful, courageous, and faithful, or simply more comfortable.

A young father kneels beside his child’s bed after another difficult day. He is worn down by work and ashamed of how quickly he lost his patience at dinner. He starts to pray for his child to become more respectful. Then he remembers his own tone. The prayer slows. He still asks for peace in the home, but he also asks for self-control, humility, and the courage to apologize in the morning.

That father has not weakened the prayer. He has allowed the name of Jesus to enter it. The problem was not that his child needed guidance. The problem was that he wanted change to move in only one direction. Jesus turned the prayer into a place of shared truth. The child may need correction, and the father may need repentance. Both can be true.

That is often what Jesus does when we pray in His name. He refuses to let us stand outside the problem as though we are only the injured, wise, or faithful person in the room. He brings us close enough to see what belongs to us. Not every hardship is our fault. Not every conflict is equally shared. Not every painful outcome can be prevented by better choices. Jesus does not blame people for wounds they did not cause. But even when we are not responsible for what happened, we remain responsible for what the pain is forming in us.

We may not have chosen the betrayal, but we can decide whether bitterness will become our permanent language. We may not have caused the loss, but we can choose whether grief will push us away from everyone who tries to help. We may not control the diagnosis, but we can still tell the truth about fear instead of hiding behind religious confidence. Praying in Jesus’ name means Jesus is present not only in the answer we want, but also in the person we are becoming while we wait.

The next time you reach the end of a prayer, you do not need to become anxious about saying the phrase correctly. Jesus is not waiting to reject a sincere prayer because you used the wrong closing words. He is not a gatekeeper looking for a technical mistake. It may help, though, to slow down before you say amen and notice what you have asked for. Pay attention to what you fear will happen if the answer is no. Consider whether your request leaves room for Jesus to disagree with you and whether you have invited Him to change only the circumstance or also your heart.

You can still say, “In Jesus’ name,” but let the words mean something. Let them mean, “Jesus, I am placing this beneath who You are. I am not asking You to become the servant of my fear. I am asking You to lead me in truth. Give what is good. Block what will harm me, correct what is false in me, and help me trust You when I cannot see what You see.”

That is not a perfect prayer, but it is an honest one. Honesty may be the first sign that the name of Jesus has moved from the end of the sentence into the center of the prayer.

Chapter 2: When the Answer Exposes the Request

The alarm goes off at 5:40 in the morning, and before the room is fully light, a woman reaches for her phone. There is still no message from her brother. They have not spoken in three months. She has prayed every night for him to call, apologize, and make things right. By now, the prayer feels reasonable because the silence has gone on so long. She is hurt, and she believes he started the distance. Still, as she sits on the edge of the bed with the blue light from the screen on her face, one thought keeps returning: she has asked God to change his heart, but she has not once asked God to show her anything about her own.

That is one of the quiet dangers in prayer. We can ask for a good thing in a way that protects us from seeing the whole truth. Reconciliation is good. Honesty is good. Healing between family members is good. But sometimes we want those things only if they arrive in the exact form that lets us remain innocent, untouched, and fully in control of the story.

The woman wants her brother to call first. She wants him to say the words she has imagined. She wants him to admit that he was wrong. She may deserve an apology. That part may be true. Yet her prayer has slowly become a script, and she has assigned God the job of making another person perform it.

When we say “in Jesus’ name,” we may think we are strengthening the request. In reality, the name of Jesus may begin to question the script. Jesus may not deny the wrong that happened. He may not excuse the brother’s silence. But He may ask why the woman believes healing cannot begin until she receives the scene she has pictured.

This is where prayer becomes uncomfortable in a useful way. We often enter prayer hoping to be confirmed. Jesus may meet us there and begin to uncover what we have hidden inside the request. The answer we want can reveal what we are afraid to face.

Sometimes we pray for another person to return because we cannot bear the thought that the relationship may have changed. Sometimes we ask for a door to open because our worth has become tied to walking through it. Sometimes we ask God to remove a hardship because we believe peace is impossible while the hardship remains. The request sounds like it is about the situation, but beneath it may be a deeper fear: If this does not happen, I do not know who I am.

A man nearing retirement sits at his kitchen table with a legal pad, a calculator, and three account statements. For thirty years, he has been the dependable one. He paid the bills, helped his children, covered emergencies, and never let anyone see how close things sometimes came. Now the numbers are not working. He asks God for a financial breakthrough because he is afraid of losing stability, but there is another fear underneath. He does not know how to be the person who needs help.

His prayer may be, “Lord, provide what I need.” That is an honest request. Yet praying in Jesus’ name may lead him into a harder place than the sudden solution he wants. He may have to tell his wife the full truth. He may need to ask an adult child for temporary help. He may need to sell something, change a plan, or admit that his image of being the strong one has become too important.

The answer may come through humility rather than rescue.

That can feel disappointing because we often imagine God’s help as the removal of whatever makes us feel exposed. But Jesus does not always protect us from exposure. Sometimes He uses it to free us from the role we have been performing. The man may discover that his family does not love him because he always has the answer. They may love him enough to carry something with him.

If he only asks God to solve the number without touching the identity beneath it, he may miss part of what prayer is doing. The financial need is real, and provision still matters. But the deeper work may be teaching him that dependence is not failure and receiving help does not erase a lifetime of strength.

Praying in Jesus’ name means allowing Jesus to care about more than the visible problem. He may answer the question we asked while also addressing the person who asked it. He may use the prayer to expose the fear attached to the outcome.

That is not punishment. It is mercy.

We sometimes resist this because it feels as though God is changing the subject. We ask for relief, and the prayer begins to uncover pride. We ask for direction, and the silence reveals how badly we want certainty. We ask for peace, and Jesus shows us the conversation we keep avoiding. We ask Him to remove anxiety, and He points toward the exhausted body, overfilled calendar, unpaid debt, or secret we have refused to address.

A woman lies awake at 2:13 in the morning replaying a conversation with her doctor. The test probably means nothing serious, but another appointment has been scheduled. She prays for the result to be normal. She repeats the request until the words become almost breathless. There is nothing wrong with asking for good news. Jesus is not offended by fear, and faith does not require her to act calm.

Yet somewhere in the prayer, she notices that she is not only afraid of illness. She is afraid that if something is wrong, everyone will depend on her while no one notices she is terrified. She has spent years being the calm one in the family. She organizes appointments, remembers medications, reassures everyone else, and does not know how to say, “I need you to sit with me.”

The medical answer still matters. But the prayer has opened another door. She may need to call her sister in the morning and speak without pretending. She may need to ask someone to go with her. She may need to stop calling emotional isolation strength.

What would Jesus think when she says, “In Jesus’ name”? I do not think He would hear a formula. I think He would hear a frightened person placing her fear near Him. He would not shame her for wanting a normal result. He might, however, refuse to let her continue believing that needing comfort is weakness.

The name of Jesus does not make us less human. It gives us permission to be honest about our humanity.

That matters because many people have learned to make prayer sound more confident than they feel. We use strong language because we think doubt will cancel the request. We speak as if the answer has already happened because we are afraid that admitting uncertainty shows weak faith. We say, “I know God will do this,” when what we really mean is, “I do not know how I will survive if He does not.”

Jesus can handle the second sentence.

He does not need us to perform certainty. He asks for trust, and trust can exist alongside fear. A person can say, “I believe You are good, and I am scared of what comes next.” That may be more faithful than making a confident claim we cannot honestly sustain.

Praying in Jesus’ name should make our prayers more truthful, not more polished. The closer we come to Jesus, the less need we have to impress Him. He already knows the motive, the fear, the resentment, and the bargain we are tempted to make. We can hide those things from other people. We cannot hide them from Him.

A college student sits in a campus parking lot before an exam. She has studied, but not enough. She worked late, lost time scrolling on her phone, and kept telling herself she would catch up tomorrow. Now she asks God to help her pass. She means it. She is anxious and ashamed. She ends with “in Jesus’ name.”

What does praying in His name mean in that moment? It does not mean God must erase the consequences of poor preparation. It also does not mean Jesus has no compassion for her. He may give her calm, help her remember what she learned, and meet her in the panic. But He may also lead her to face the habits that brought her there.

We often want grace to remove consequences while leaving patterns untouched. Jesus offers grace that tells the truth. He may help the student through the exam, but He may also call her to change how she uses time, ask for tutoring, sleep more, and stop pretending last-minute fear is the same as dependence on God.

That is another way the answer exposes the request. She asked for help passing, but Jesus may ask whether she wants help becoming responsible. One solves the immediate crisis. The other changes the life that keeps producing the crisis.

This is not about turning every prayer into self-criticism. Some people already blame themselves for everything. They do not need another reason to believe every hardship is their fault. Jesus is not cruel, and self-examination is not the same as self-accusation.

A caregiver may be exhausted because the work is genuinely heavy, not because she has failed spiritually. A worker may lose a job because the company closed, not because he made the wrong choices. A child may be mistreated by a parent and carry no responsibility for the harm. A person may pray for healing and remain sick without having caused the illness.

The point is not that every painful outcome reveals a personal flaw. The point is that every honest prayer gives Jesus room to show us what is true, including what belongs to us and what does not.

That distinction is important. Some people take responsibility for things they never controlled. They pray as if they must discover the hidden mistake that caused every loss. They search their past, their faith, and their words, wondering whether one wrong thought blocked the answer. That is not trust. It is fear dressed as responsibility.

Praying in Jesus’ name means bringing the request under His truth, and His truth may say, “This was not your fault.” It may say, “You cannot fix this person.” It may say, “You did what you could.” It may say, “You are allowed to grieve without turning the grief into a trial against yourself.”

A man who cared for his father through a long illness sits alone in the garage after the funeral. He keeps replaying the final week, wondering whether he missed something. He prayed for healing. He prayed in Jesus’ name. His father still died. Now he feels as if the unanswered prayer is evidence that he failed both God and his father.

Jesus may meet him not with an explanation, but with truth: love was present in the rides to appointments, the meals, the medicine schedule, the quiet nights, and the hand held at the end. The death was not proof that the prayer was empty. The man’s grief does not need to be corrected into confidence. It needs room.

In that moment, praying in Jesus’ name may sound less like asking for a changed outcome and more like saying, “Stay with me while I live through what I did not want.” The prayer is still in His name because it rests in His presence, not because it achieved control.

We tend to think the strongest prayer is the one that produces the result. Jesus may see strength differently. A strong prayer can be the one that remains honest when the answer hurts. It can be the prayer that refuses revenge, admits fear, accepts help, tells the truth, or takes responsibility without drowning in shame.

The woman waiting for her brother may still decide to reach out. She may send a short message without defending herself or demanding an apology. She may say, “I do not want this distance to continue. I know there are things we both need to talk about. I am willing when you are.”

He may not respond.

That possibility is painful because prayer does not remove another person’s freedom. We can ask God to soften a heart, but we cannot force a relationship into health. Praying in Jesus’ name does not mean controlling another person through spiritual language.

The woman can still choose what reflects Jesus. She can make room for truth without chasing someone who refuses it. She can apologize for what belongs to her without taking responsibility for everything. She can forgive without pretending trust has been rebuilt. She can leave the door open without standing in the doorway every day.

Maybe that is where the answer begins. Not with the phone ringing, but with her becoming free from the script. She can want reconciliation without making her peace depend on receiving it in one exact form.

Jesus may not always give us the answer we pictured, but He can expose the fear that made only one answer seem survivable. Once that fear is brought into the light, the prayer becomes larger. It can hold hope without control, honesty without shame, and desire without demand.

Then “in Jesus’ name” stops sounding like pressure placed on heaven. It becomes a way of saying, “I trust You to tell me the truth about what I am asking, and I trust You not to abandon me when the truth is difficult.”

Chapter 3: When His Name Reaches Beyond the Prayer

The coffee in the break room has been sitting too long, and the air smells faintly burned. A supervisor stands alone beside the sink, staring at a message from one of his employees. The employee has made another mistake, missed another deadline, and offered an explanation that sounds thin. The supervisor is already tired, already behind, and already carrying pressure from people above him. Before he walks back into the office, he whispers, “Jesus, help me handle this,” and then adds the familiar words, “In Your name.”

What happens next may reveal more about that prayer than the words themselves.

He can step into the conversation determined to prove authority, or he can enter it determined to tell the truth without crushing the person in front of him. He can use the mistake as an excuse to release a week of frustration, or he can separate the employee’s failure from his own anger. He can ignore the problem because confrontation feels uncomfortable, or he can address it clearly while still remembering that the person across the desk has a life outside the office.

Praying in Jesus’ name does not end when we say amen. If His name means His character, then the prayer follows us into the room, the phone call, the email, and the decision we make next. It asks whether the way we respond represents the One whose name we used.

This is where the phrase becomes harder to separate from daily life. We may pray for patience and then speak harshly to the first person who slows us down. We may ask Jesus to heal a relationship and then refuse the conversation that could begin the healing. We may ask for wisdom and ignore the answer because it requires humility. We may pray for peace in our home while carrying our irritation from room to room.

The problem is not that we are imperfect after we pray. Everyone is. The problem is when we treat prayer as a private spiritual moment that has nothing to do with the way we live afterward. Jesus never divided faith that way. His name is not only spoken in quiet rooms. It is carried into ordinary places where our choices affect other people.

The supervisor may still need to issue a warning. The deadline may still matter. The employee may need to face consequences. Acting in Jesus’ name does not mean avoiding standards or pretending poor work is acceptable. It means the supervisor refuses to turn correction into humiliation. He does not exaggerate the failure, attack the employee’s worth, or enjoy the power of making someone feel small.

That difference matters because truth can be delivered in a way that leaves a path forward, or it can be delivered in a way that makes shame the whole point. Jesus was direct with people, but He did not use truth as entertainment. He did not expose weakness merely to show that He could see it.

When we pray in His name, we are not only asking Him to act. We are also offering ourselves as people through whom His character may be seen. That does not make us perfect representatives. It makes us responsible ones.

A woman may pray every morning for her husband to become more open, yet shut him down whenever he tries to speak because his words come out awkwardly. A father may ask God to guide his teenage son, then make every conversation feel like an interrogation. A friend may pray for someone’s healing while quietly resenting the amount of attention that person’s pain requires.

These contradictions do not mean the prayers are fake. They mean the prayer has not yet reached every part of the person saying it. The name of Jesus may begin at the mouth, but it is meant to move into the tone, the timing, the listening, and the willingness to change.

There is a young woman who keeps praying for God to repair a friendship that ended badly. She misses the friend, but she also misses the version of herself she was when the friendship felt safe. She has replayed the final argument many times and can explain exactly where the other person was wrong. What she has not admitted is that she shared part of the conflict with someone else afterward, turning private pain into public sympathy.

She wants reconciliation, but she also wants to protect the story in which she did nothing wrong.

One evening she opens a blank message and begins typing. Her first version explains her hurt in detail. Her second version sounds more spiritual but still places all responsibility on the other person. Then she stops. If she is going to reach out in Jesus’ name, she cannot use His name to cover self-protection.

The message becomes simpler. She admits that she talked about something that should have remained private. She does not excuse it by explaining how wounded she was. She says she is sorry. She does not demand an immediate response.

That apology does not guarantee the friendship will return. The other person may need time or may decide not to rebuild trust. But the prayer has already changed something important. It has moved from asking Jesus to fix the relationship to allowing Jesus to correct the person who is asking.

This is one reason sincere prayer can feel risky. We may begin with a problem outside us and discover that Jesus wants access to something inside us. We want Him to influence a spouse, a child, a coworker, a pastor, a neighbor, or a friend. He may agree that the other person needs to change, but He may not let us use their need as a hiding place from our own.

Sometimes the most honest answer to prayer is an apology we do not want to give.

Sometimes it is a boundary we have delayed because we are afraid of disappointing people.

Sometimes it is a promise we need to keep, a debt we need to address, a conversation we need to stop rehearsing and finally have, or a habit we need to stop calling harmless.

The name of Jesus is not only comfort. It is direction.

That can sound severe until we remember how Jesus directs people. He does not expose what is wrong merely to leave us ashamed. He reveals it so we can become free enough to live differently. Shame says, “This is what you are, and nothing can change.” Jesus says, “This is what is happening, and you do not have to remain here.”

A man sits in his truck outside his house after work because he does not want to go inside yet. The job has been difficult, and his body is tired. He has spent the drive home asking Jesus for peace, but he knows what often happens next. He walks through the door carrying the whole day in his shoulders. A small question from his wife sounds like criticism. His child’s noise feels unbearable. By dinner, everyone is adjusting themselves around his mood.

He believes he is praying for peace, but he may also be expecting his family to create it for him.

If the house is quiet enough, if no one asks too much, if dinner is ready, if the children behave, then he can be calm. His peace depends on everyone else managing his exhaustion correctly.

Praying in Jesus’ name may lead him to a different choice before he opens the door. He may sit for another minute and admit, “I am not ready to be patient, and they should not have to pay for my day.” He may text his wife and say he needs ten minutes to change clothes and settle down before joining the family. He may walk inside and tell the truth without making the truth a threat.

That is not a dramatic spiritual moment. No one watching would call it a miracle. Yet the prayer has become visible. The name of Jesus has reached the front door.

We often look for God’s answer in changed circumstances while missing the quieter answer of changed conduct. We ask for a peaceful home, and Jesus teaches us to stop using silence as punishment. We ask for stronger relationships, and He teaches us to listen without preparing a defense. We ask for spiritual growth, and He brings us back to the apology, the calendar, the budget, the promise, or the boundary.

The answer may be less exciting than the one we imagined, but it may be more transforming.

This also means that we should be careful about claiming Jesus’ name over choices we have already made without Him. People sometimes say, “God told me,” when what they mean is, “I have decided.” They may sincerely believe the choice is right, but invoking God’s authority can make honest conversation almost impossible. Anyone who questions the decision now seems to be questioning God.

The name of Jesus should make us more humble about our certainty, not less.

There are times when conviction is clear. There are also times when desire, fear, and faith are difficult to separate. A person may feel strongly led to leave a job, begin a relationship, move to another city, start a business, or confront someone. Strength of feeling alone does not prove that Jesus has approved the choice.

Praying in His name includes the willingness to be tested by truth. Does the decision require dishonesty? Does it depend on using someone? Does it ignore wise counsel because counsel may disagree? Does it demand that others carry costs we refuse to acknowledge? Does it move us toward love, courage, responsibility, and integrity, or does it mainly protect our comfort and pride?

These are not questions meant to paralyze us. They are meant to keep us from treating Jesus’ name as a shield against correction.

A woman believes God is leading her to take on a new project at church. The work is meaningful, and she feels needed. She also has an elderly mother who depends on her and a family that has barely seen her during a demanding season. She prays for God to bless the opportunity, but every attempt by her family to discuss the strain feels to her like resistance to God’s calling.

It may be that the project is good. It may also be that the timing is wrong or that her need to be needed has become mixed with service. Praying in Jesus’ name means she does not have to choose between dismissing the opportunity and declaring it unquestionably divine. She can slow down, listen, and ask whether obedience in one place is becoming neglect in another.

Jesus is not honored when His name is used to silence the people affected by our decisions.

The more His name shapes a prayer, the more seriously we take the human beings around us. We begin to notice the cost of our choices. We become less eager to call every personal desire a calling. We learn that love may require us to explain, listen, wait, revise, or admit that we were wrong.

This kind of prayer does not make a person weak. It makes a person safer to trust.

The supervisor in the break room still has to return to the office. The employee still needs to hear the truth. But now the supervisor may begin differently. He may say, “This deadline mattered, and your work did not meet what was required. I also want to understand what happened before we decide what comes next.”

That sentence holds both responsibility and dignity. It does not promise that consequences will disappear. It does show that the employee is more than the mistake.

After the conversation, the supervisor may discover that the employee has been caring for a sick parent and has been afraid to say how overwhelmed he is. That context does not erase the missed work, but it changes what wise leadership may require. Perhaps the answer is a clearer plan, temporary flexibility, or a decision that the role is no longer a fit. The point is not that mercy always produces the easiest outcome. The point is that mercy refuses to make another person’s difficulty invisible.

To pray in Jesus’ name is to ask for His help and then carry His character into whatever help requires of us. It is to stop treating prayer as the place where we hand God a problem and walk away unchanged. It is to let the prayer follow us into the next sentence we speak.

Before we ask whether Jesus answered, we may need to ask whether we listened. Before we wonder why He did not change the other person, we may need to notice the choice He placed in front of us. Before we repeat the request tonight, we may need to act on what became clear this morning.

The words “in Jesus’ name” are not meant to close the conversation. They may be the moment the conversation begins to enter the life we are about to live.

Chapter 4: When Silence Is Not Rejection

The grocery store is almost empty when a woman pushes her cart past the pharmacy counter for the third time. She is not shopping anymore. She is waiting for the pharmacist to finish filling a prescription her husband needs before morning. The doctor changed the medication again, the insurance company denied part of the cost, and the balance on the screen is more than she expected. She stands beneath the hard white lights, opens her banking app, and silently asks Jesus to make a way.

Nothing changes on the screen.

The price remains the same. The pharmacist is still busy. Her husband is still sick. She has prayed for healing for months and has ended many of those prayers in Jesus’ name. Now she is tired enough to wonder whether those words still mean anything.

Silence can make us question everything. When the answer does not come, we may begin examining the prayer for mistakes. Did I ask with enough faith? Did I doubt too much? Did I use the right words? Did I surrender honestly, or did I hold too tightly to the outcome? We can turn prayer into an investigation and place ourselves on trial.

Sometimes self-examination is helpful. Sometimes it becomes another form of control.

We imagine that if we can find the hidden error, we can correct it and finally produce the answer. That belief keeps us working on the formula. It also quietly assumes that every delay must be caused by something wrong in us.

Jesus did not teach that.

There are moments when prayer exposes our motives, and there are moments when the silence does not explain itself. The lack of an answer is not always a lesson we can identify, a consequence we earned, or a puzzle we are meant to solve. Sometimes we are simply standing in a difficult place where God has not told us why the situation continues.

Praying in Jesus’ name does not guarantee that every silence will become understandable. It means we bring the silence into relationship with Him.

That distinction matters because people can become spiritually exhausted trying to explain what God has not explained. A woman caring for a sick husband may already be carrying medication schedules, insurance calls, household tasks, and the fear of what comes next. She does not need to carry the additional belief that she must have failed at prayer.

Jesus may not answer her with a sudden healing or an unexpected deposit in her account that evening. He may meet her through a pharmacist who finds a discount card, a friend who sends money without knowing the exact need, or a family member who finally realizes how much she has been handling alone. He may also meet her in a way that does not change the immediate facts at all.

That is harder to accept because we naturally look for God in the visible solution. We want the medicine paid for, the illness removed, and the pressure lifted. Those are reasonable desires. Presence can sound smaller than provision when the bill is still due.

But the presence of Jesus is not a consolation prize offered because the real answer failed to arrive. His presence is the heart of the relationship we are praying within. It does not make the problem imaginary. It means the problem is not the only reality in the room.

The woman may still have to call the doctor the next morning. She may need to ask for a less expensive medication or begin another appeal with the insurance company. Faith does not free her from those tasks. Yet she may no longer have to pretend that carrying them alone is spiritual strength.

There is a kind of prayer that says, “Jesus, solve this so I will know You are here.”

There is another kind that says, “Jesus, I do not know what You will do, but I need You here while I face it.”

The second prayer is not a surrender to hopelessness. It is a refusal to make one outcome the only evidence of God’s care.

That can take time to learn.

A young man sits in the parking lot outside a treatment center while rain taps against the windshield. His older brother is inside after another relapse. The family has been through this before. They have prayed, paid bills, taken phone calls in the middle of the night, and believed every promise that this time would be different.

The young man has asked Jesus to free his brother from addiction. He has used those exact words. He has prayed with confidence, anger, tears, and exhaustion. Now he does not know what to ask for. He loves his brother, but he is also afraid of being pulled back into the same cycle.

He may believe that praying in Jesus’ name requires him to remain endlessly available. He may confuse love with rescue and mercy with removing every consequence. He may feel guilty even considering a boundary because his brother is suffering.

But the name of Jesus does not require us to participate in another person’s destruction.

Jesus can love someone completely without agreeing with every demand that person makes. He can offer mercy without pretending that choices have no consequences. He can remain open to repentance without allowing manipulation to define the relationship.

The young man may pray, “Help my brother,” and Jesus may also lead him to say, “Help me stop doing what only delays the truth.” That could mean refusing to give money, ending a conversation when threats begin, or allowing professionals to handle what the family cannot.

The brother’s recovery still matters. The young man’s safety and honesty matter too.

Silence can feel like abandonment when we have already done everything we know to do. Yet sometimes the next faithful step is not another attempt to force movement. It is standing still long enough to admit what we cannot control.

That admission can feel cruel when someone we love is in danger. We may believe that letting go of control means letting go of the person. It does not. It means we stop pretending that our fear gives us power we do not possess.

Praying in Jesus’ name may lead us to stay near someone. It may also lead us to step back. The difference is not determined by guilt, pressure, or the need to appear loving. It is determined by truth.

Jesus does not ask us to call chaos peace. He does not ask us to call enabling compassion. He does not ask us to promise what we cannot sustain simply because the other person is desperate.

His name brings both mercy and clarity.

A woman may pray for a marriage while living in fear of the next explosion. A parent may pray for family unity while allowing one adult child to control the entire household. A friend may keep answering calls at midnight because she believes saying no would be unchristian.

In each case, the person may use “in Jesus’ name” while asking God to preserve a situation that needs honest change. Silence may not mean Jesus has refused to help. It may mean the help He is offering does not look like keeping everything together.

Sometimes what we call restoration is only the return of familiar conditions. Jesus may be leading us toward something truer, even if it first feels like loss.

This does not mean every difficult relationship should end. It means prayer should not be used to keep us from seeing what is happening. The name of Jesus brings light. Light can reveal a path back to one another, but it can also reveal why distance is necessary until truth, safety, and responsibility are present.

The most painful prayers often involve people we cannot change. We can ask Jesus to work in them, but we cannot pray away their freedom. We can love them, tell the truth, offer help, and remain open to what is healthy. We cannot make them choose honesty.

That can leave us with an unfinished prayer.

A father may continue praying for a daughter who will not speak to him. He may have apologized sincerely, changed what needed to change, and respected her request for space. Still, the phone remains silent. He cannot repair the relationship alone.

What does “in Jesus’ name” mean there?

It may mean he refuses to use faith as pressure. He does not send messages claiming God told her to forgive him. He does not ask relatives to shame her into responding. He does not confuse his desire for relief with her readiness to trust.

He keeps the door open. He also allows her to decide when or whether she walks through it.

That kind of waiting is painful because it contains no guarantee. The father may do everything he can and still not receive the reconciliation he wants. Praying in Jesus’ name does not turn another person into an answer.

It can, however, shape the way he waits. He can become less defensive. He can continue changing even when no one is watching. He can resist the temptation to make himself the victim of her distance. He can ask Jesus to help him love without controlling the outcome.

Waiting in Jesus’ name is different from waiting for life to return to the way it was. It means remaining available to truth, even if the future looks different from the past.

Many of us are comfortable with prayer as long as it moves toward visible resolution. We become unsure what to do when the issue remains open. We repeat the same request because repetition feels like action. Sometimes repeating it is faithful. Jesus Himself taught persistence in prayer. But persistence is not the same as panic.

Panic says, “I must keep saying this until I make something happen.”

Persistence says, “I will keep bringing this to You because I trust You with what I cannot settle.”

The words may sound similar, but the inner posture is different.

One is trying to apply pressure. The other is choosing relationship.

A nurse finishes a long shift and sits in her car before driving home. Her mother has dementia and no longer recognizes her every day. She has prayed for improvement, clarity, and more good mornings. Some days come. Many do not.

She is not looking for a theological explanation in the parking garage. She is tired and sad. She does not need someone to tell her that everything happens for a reason. She needs enough strength to go home, sleep, and return tomorrow without becoming numb.

Her prayer may be only a few words: “Jesus, stay close.”

That prayer belongs fully in His name.

It reflects His character because it reaches for His presence without pretending the loss is easy. It does not demand a performance. It does not hide grief beneath confident language. It brings the truth of the moment to the One who is already there.

We sometimes think praying in Jesus’ name must sound powerful. It may sound small. It may come out through tears, anger, silence, or one honest sentence.

Jesus is not measuring the prayer by its volume. He is not impressed by our ability to sound certain. He is present with the person who no longer has the strength to make the request beautiful.

The woman at the pharmacy eventually walks to the counter. The pharmacist tells her the discount has lowered the price, but not enough. She pays what she can and leaves with a smaller supply while the doctor works on another option.

It is not the answer she wanted. It is barely a solution.

In the parking lot, she places the bag on the passenger seat and rests her head against the steering wheel. She does not feel victorious. She feels tired.

She says, “Jesus, I still need help.”

There is no dramatic change. The rain does not stop. The banking balance does not rise. Her husband is still waiting at home.

But the prayer is not empty.

She has not used His name to pretend that everything is fine. She has placed her real life beneath it: the cost, the fear, the love, the weariness, and the next step she does not yet know how to take.

Sometimes praying in Jesus’ name means trusting Him with the answer.

Sometimes it means trusting Him with the unanswered part.

Chapter 5: The Name We Carry Into Amen

Morning light is beginning to move across the kitchen floor when a man opens a notebook he has not used in months. The house is quiet except for the refrigerator and the soft click of the heating system. He has been awake since four, thinking about a decision he cannot postpone. His sister needs more help caring for their mother. His employer has offered him a promotion that would require longer hours. His wife is trying not to pressure him, but he can see the worry in her face. Every choice seems to protect one person by disappointing another.

He writes one sentence at the top of the page: “Jesus, tell me what this prayer sounds like to You.”

That question changes the room.

Until now, he has been praying mainly for permission. He wants Jesus to approve the promotion because the money would help his family and because he has worked hard for years. He also wants Jesus to remove his guilt about his mother. He has been asking for a way to keep everything: the opportunity, the income, his family’s approval, and the image of himself as the person who never lets anyone down.

There may be no path that preserves all of it.

Praying in Jesus’ name does not always give us a way to avoid the cost of choosing. Sometimes it gives us the courage to admit that every faithful decision may disappoint someone, including us. We want God’s will to feel clean and obvious. Real life is often messier. Love can pull in more than one direction, and responsibility can become heavy enough that no answer feels fully good.

The man has not been dishonest with God, but he has been selective. He has spoken about the promotion and the family need. He has not spoken about how badly he wants to feel important at work. He has not admitted that part of him resents being the son everyone calls when something goes wrong. He has not said that he is tired of being needed and ashamed of being tired.

When he finally writes those things down, the prayer becomes less impressive and more true.

That is often the movement Jesus invites. We begin with the version of the prayer we think we should say. Then, if we remain honest, we reach the prayer underneath it.

The prayer underneath may sound like, “I am afraid I will become invisible if I say no to this opportunity.” It may sound like, “I love my mother, but I do not know how much more I can carry.” It may sound like, “I want to help my family, and I also want them to see how much I have already given.”

Jesus can work with the prayer underneath.

He does not need the polished version. He does not need us to hide ambition, weariness, resentment, or fear behind religious language. He already knows what is present. The question is whether we are willing to know it too.

Saying “in Jesus’ name” can become a moment of honesty rather than a closing habit. It can be the point where we stop trying to sound faithful and begin allowing faith to tell the truth.

That truth may lead to a decision, but it may first lead to a conversation. The man may need to speak with his sister without defending himself. He may need to tell his employer that he cannot answer immediately. He may need to ask his wife what she sees. He may need to discover whether the promotion can be adjusted or whether other family members can share more of the caregiving.

Prayer does not replace those conversations. It prepares us to enter them without pretending that our preference is God’s command.

This is one of the clearest signs that the name of Jesus is shaping a prayer: we become willing to listen. Not only to God in the private place, but also to people whose lives are affected by our choice. Listening does not mean giving everyone control. It means we stop using spiritual certainty to protect ourselves from information we do not want to hear.

A woman may pray about moving across the country for a relationship. She may feel deeply convinced that the opportunity is meant for her. Yet the people who love her notice that she is becoming isolated, hiding details, and making excuses for behavior that once concerned her. If she says, “God told me,” every question can feel like disobedience.

But Jesus is not threatened by careful questions.

If the relationship is healthy, truth will not destroy it. If the move is wise, listening will not ruin it. Praying in Jesus’ name does not require blind certainty. It allows room for counsel, time, facts, and the possibility that strong feelings are not the same as clear direction.

The woman may still choose to go. The point is not that other people always know better. The point is that the name of Jesus should make her more open to truth, not more protected from it.

There is humility in saying, “I believe this may be right, but I could be wrong.”

That sentence does not weaken conviction. It keeps conviction from becoming pride.

Many people fear that kind of openness because they have been taught that faith must sound certain. But some of the most faithful prayers begin with, “I do not know.” I do not know what You are doing. I do not know which door is right. I do not know whether this desire comes from love or fear. I do not know how to carry what is coming.

Those words leave room for Jesus to be Lord instead of merely the name attached to our plan.

The final lesson is not that we should stop asking boldly. It is that bold prayer and surrendered prayer belong together. We can ask for healing with our whole heart and still place the body in God’s care. We can ask for restoration while refusing to manipulate another person. We can ask for provision while remaining willing to change our habits. We can ask for direction while admitting that the answer may not flatter us.

The phrase “in Jesus’ name” becomes meaningful when it gathers all of that into one honest act of trust.

It says, “Jesus, I want this, but I want to remain near You more than I want to control the answer.”

That sentence can be difficult because some outcomes matter so much that surrender sounds almost impossible. A parent praying for a child in danger is not calmly choosing between equal options. A person waiting for test results is not pretending the diagnosis makes no difference. A spouse praying for a broken marriage is not wrong for longing for restoration.

Surrender does not mean becoming emotionally detached.

It means we stop making one outcome the condition for believing Jesus is still good, still present, and still worthy of trust.

That kind of surrender is rarely completed in one prayer. We may place the request in His hands at night and pick it up again before breakfast. We may say we trust Him and then spend the afternoon trying to control every detail. We may feel peace for an hour and fear by dinner.

Jesus is not surprised by that movement. Trust is often practiced repeatedly because fear returns repeatedly.

A young parent stands outside a school office waiting for a meeting about a child who has been struggling. She has prayed for the teacher to understand, for the child to be treated fairly, and for the meeting not to become another moment of blame. Her stomach is tight. She wants to walk into the room ready to defend.

Before the door opens, she says, “Jesus, help me hear what is true, even if it is hard.”

That may be one of the most faithful forms of praying in His name.

She is not asking to become passive. She can still advocate for her child. She can question unfair assumptions and insist on needed support. But she is also giving Jesus permission to show her something she may not want to see. Her child may need help she has resisted. The teacher may know something she does not. She may have to hear that love alone has not solved the problem.

The prayer changes her posture before it changes the meeting.

She walks in prepared to speak and prepared to listen.

That balance reflects Jesus. He was never afraid of truth, and He was never careless with people. He could confront what was wrong without losing sight of the person in front of Him. To pray in His name is to ask for that same union of clarity and mercy.

The man at the kitchen table eventually closes the notebook. He has not received a dramatic answer. No voice has told him whether to accept the promotion. But the prayer has become honest enough to guide the next step.

He decides not to answer his employer that morning. He calls his sister and asks if they can talk that evening without making decisions over text. He tells his wife that he needs her real opinion, not the answer she thinks will make him feel supported. He admits that he wants the promotion for reasons that are both good and selfish.

The uncertainty remains, but the prayer has changed from a request for approval into a willingness to be led.

That is the difference.

Saying “in Jesus’ name” can be a habit, and habits are not always bad. Familiar words can carry us when we are tired. They can connect us to years of faith and to people who taught us how to pray. We do not need to become suspicious of the phrase or afraid that one careless ending ruins a sincere prayer.

The lesson is not about avoiding the words. It is about hearing them again.

When you say His name, remember that you are not adding power to your demand. You are placing the demand beneath His character.

You are not reminding God who authorized you. You are reminding yourself whom you trust.

You are not forcing heaven to agree. You are opening your life to be corrected, redirected, strengthened, or comforted by Jesus.

That may change the request. It may change the way you wait. It may change the action you take after amen. Sometimes it may change only your willingness to remain with Him while nothing else changes yet.

Before your next prayer ends, pause for a moment. You do not need a long speech. You may simply ask, “Jesus, does this reflect You?” Then wait long enough to notice what rises in you.

If the answer reveals pride, do not run from Him. If it reveals fear, tell the truth. If it reveals a needed apology, make it. If it reveals a boundary, honor it. If it reveals that you have done what you can, stop punishing yourself. If no clear answer comes, remain honest and take the next responsible step you can see.

The power of praying in Jesus’ name is not hidden in a phrase that makes God obey us.

It is found in the relationship that teaches us how to trust Him.

We begin by telling Jesus what we want. We continue by allowing Him to show us what is true. We finish not by pretending the outcome no longer matters, but by placing what matters most into hands we believe are wiser and more merciful than our own.

Then amen is not a way of ending the prayer.

It is the moment we begin to carry His name into whatever comes next.

Your friend,

Douglas Vandergraph

Explore the complete Douglas Vandergraph Master Index: https://douglasvandergraph.com/douglas-vandergraph-master-index/

Watch Douglas Vandergraph’s faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph

 
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from Out of Office

I suppose today was slightly better. Not 100%, maybe 30%, which is higher than yesterday. I don’t know what is going on with me. I feel sick, tired, unmotivated, and still waiting.

I don’t even think it is only my situation making me feel this way. I think it is a lot of external things adding up to more than I thought I'd be handling. On top of it, I can’t seem to shake this sickness away.

I am sorry that I don’t have more to say, maybe tomorrow I will get back to my flow.

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.

 
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from Out of Office

I really had no energy or motivation at all today.

I wish I had more to say, but I simply have no words.

I stayed in bed most of the day and could hardly get myself to do even the most basic things.

Hopefully tomorrow is better.

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.

 
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from Out of Office

Today felt busy, but the days are beginning to blend quite a bit. I don’t know how long I can keep this going. I know that this current anxiety will be replaced later by the anxiety of either going back to my job (not the greatest situation) or looking for a new one.

Is it just me or does life in general feel heavy?

I am having a hard time properly planning for the future when I have no idea what the future holds.

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.

 
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from SmarterArticles

The pitch was always seductive in its simplicity. For most of human history, good information has been a luxury good. If you wanted reliable guidance on a tax problem, a legal threat, a worrying symptom, a confusing letter from a government department, you paid for it, in money or in social connections or in the cultural fluency that lets a person know which door to knock on. The people who could afford an accountant, a solicitor, a private tutor, a doctor who would take their call, lived inside a different information economy from everyone else. The promise of the large language model, repeated from conference stages and policy submissions and the mouths of the most powerful executives in the technology industry, was that this gap could finally be closed. Put a free, fluent, tireless adviser in every pocket, and the rural teenager and the metropolitan professional would draw from the same well. The machine, the argument ran, would be the great equaliser.

It is worth holding that promise still for a moment, because the people who made it were not lying about wanting to believe it. Sam Altman, the chief executive of OpenAI, has built a substantial part of his company's political positioning on a three-part framework of access, adoption and agency: making the tools free so they reach people regardless of income or education, embedding them in schools and clinics and small businesses, and giving ordinary users the confidence to use them for decisions that previously required a paid professional. In early 2026, with India having become OpenAI's second-largest user base in the world, Altman travelled there talking about democratic AI and putting capability in as many hands as possible. The vision is coherent. It is also, on the evidence now arriving from peer-reviewed research, running precisely backwards for the people it most invokes.

In February 2026, a team at the MIT Center for Constructive Communication, based at the MIT Media Lab, published findings that should have detonated rather more loudly than they did. They had taken three of the most capable chatbots in commercial use, OpenAI's GPT-4, Anthropic's Claude 3 Opus and Meta's Llama 3, and asked a deceptively simple question. Does the machine give the same quality of answer to everyone? Not in theory, not on a sanitised benchmark, but when the person on the other side of the screen carries the textual fingerprints of disadvantage: a non-native command of English, a lower level of formal education, an origin outside the wealthy core of the West. The answer, across two separate datasets and three separate models, was no. And the shape of that no is the subject of this piece, because it is not the shape anyone selling the equaliser story wants you to see.

What the Machine Does When It Decides You Are Not Worth the Trouble

The MIT study, titled “LLM Targeted Underperformance Disproportionately Impacts Vulnerable Users” and presented at the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, was conducted by Elinor Poole-Dayan, a technical associate at the MIT Sloan School of Management, alongside Jad Kabbara, a research scientist at the Center for Constructive Communication, and Deb Roy, a professor of media arts and sciences who directs the centre. Their method was careful in a way that matters for the conclusions. They took standard factual and truthfulness benchmarks, the TruthfulQA dataset built around common misconceptions and the SciQ set of science exam questions, and they varied not the questions but the apparent user. They constructed profiles signalling different levels of English proficiency, different levels of education, and different countries of origin, and they watched what happened to the answers.

What happened was a quiet sorting of the population into those the machine treated as worthy of a straight answer and those it did not. Accuracy fell when the questions appeared to come from users with less formal education or non-native English. The effect was sharpest, and this is the detail that ought to keep policymakers awake, at the intersection: a user who was both less educated and a non-native English speaker saw the steepest decline of all. Disadvantage, in other words, compounded. The machine was not merely sensitive to one marker of vulnerability. It stacked them.

The refusals tell their own story. Claude 3 Opus declined to answer nearly eleven per cent of questions when they came from a profile signalling a less-educated, non-native English speaker, against three point six per cent for the control. A person more likely to lack an alternative source of expert guidance was thus markedly more likely to be told nothing at all. But the figure from this study that genuinely lingers, the one that turns an abstract debate about model alignment into something closer to a moral indictment, concerns tone. For users marked as less educated, Claude responded with language the researchers classified as condescending, patronising or mocking forty-three point seven per cent of the time. For highly educated users, the same figure was under one per cent. In some cases the model went further than mere condescension. It mimicked broken English back at the user. It adopted an exaggerated dialect.

Sit with the scale of that gap. Not a few percentage points. A near-binary difference in basic respect, determined by textual markers of class and education that the user did not choose and very likely cannot disguise. The model was not occasionally curt with a struggling user. It was contemptuous with one in almost every other exchange, while remaining courteous to the educated user almost without exception. If a human call-centre worker behaved this way, sneering at the customers who spoke imperfect English and smiling at the ones who spoke like graduates, we would not call it a quirk. We would call it discrimination, and we would expect it to be a disciplinary matter.

There was a geographic dimension too. Testing users from the United States, Iran and China who had been given equivalent educational backgrounds, the researchers found Claude 3 Opus performed significantly worse for the Iranian users on both datasets, refusing to engage on subjects including nuclear power, anatomy and historical events. A person in Tehran asking a straightforward factual question about human anatomy received a worse service than an identically educated person in Ohio, not because the question was different, but because of where the machine inferred they were from.

The Word That Changes Everything Is “Structural”

It would be comforting to read all of this as a bug. Bugs get fixed. A list of failure cases gets handed to a safety team, a patch ships, the embarrassing behaviour is sanded off, and the equaliser story survives with an asterisk. The reason the MIT findings are so much heavier than that is the mechanism the researchers point to. This is not a stray line of bad code. It is, on their account, a logic the systems learned during the very process meant to make them safe and helpful.

To understand why, you have to understand how a raw language model becomes the polished assistant in your phone. After the initial training on a vast corpus of text, the model is refined through a process usually called reinforcement learning from human feedback, or RLHF. Human annotators compare the model's possible responses and rate which is better; those preferences train a reward model; the reward model then shapes the assistant to produce more of what people rated highly and less of what they rated poorly. It is the step that turns an unpredictable text-completion engine into something that feels like it is trying to help you. It is also, it turns out, the step where a great deal of trouble enters.

The well-documented failure mode of this process is sycophancy. Models learn what earns a high rating, and what earns a high rating is, reliably, a confident tone, a clear structure, and agreement with whatever the user seems to believe. A self-assured answer that feels right tends to be rated above a cautious one that admits uncertainty, even when the cautious one is more truthful. Over many rounds of training the model absorbs the lesson that approval, not accuracy, is the currency. This is not a fringe observation. It is one of the central open problems in the field, catalogued at length in the research literature on the limitations of RLHF, and it is amplified rather than cured by scale: larger models can be more prone to it, not less.

Now layer onto sycophancy the question of who does the rating, and whose preferences the reward model therefore encodes. If the annotators, or the prompts they are shown, are not representative of the full human population the system will eventually serve, the reward model bakes in their blind spots. The literature is explicit that demographically unrepresentative evaluator sets can cause a reward model to penalise responses that are factual but blunt, or to reward a register of politeness and fluency that correlates with a particular kind of education. A system optimised to please a certain kind of evaluator learns, in effect, the manners and the assumptions of that evaluator, and carries them into every conversation.

Kabbara, one of the MIT authors, put the mechanism plainly when he suggested that the alignment process itself might incentivise models to withhold information from certain users, ostensibly to avoid misinforming them. Read that carefully, because the paternalism in it is the whole problem. The model has, in some sense, learned to make a judgement about who can handle the truth. It has learned that for a user who reads as less educated, the safe move, the move that the training process rewarded, is to refuse, to hedge, to simplify into uselessness, or to condescend. The researchers note that this echoes documented patterns of human sociocognitive bias, the unconscious downgrading of people we read as lower status. The machine did not invent the prejudice. It learned ours, distilled it from a billion human judgements, and now applies it at a scale and speed no human bureaucracy could match.

Poole-Dayan framed the stakes without melodrama. The technology's promise, she noted, cannot become reality unless model biases and harmful tendencies are mitigated for all users, regardless of language, nationality or demographics. And then the sentence that ought to be printed above every product launch: the people who may rely on these tools the most could receive subpar, false or even harmful information. Kabbara added that these effects compound in concerning ways, such that models deployed at scale risk spreading harmful behaviour or misinformation. Roy, the centre's director, called it a reminder of how important it is to keep assessing the systematic biases that quietly slip into these systems and create unfair harms for particular groups. None of these are the words of people describing a typo. They are describing something woven into the cloth.

The Second Frontier: When Your Language Is Not the Machine's Language

If the MIT study describes how the machine treats people who write English imperfectly, a parallel body of evidence describes what happens to the billions of people who, reasonably enough, would prefer not to write in English at all. Here the gap is not a matter of tone or refusal rate. It is a matter of basic capability, and it is widening.

In April 2026, the international media organisation Global Voices, as part of a Spotlight series on human perspectives on artificial intelligence, published an analysis by Aaron Spitler under the title “Lost in translation: How AI models impact low-resource language communities.” Its argument is uncomfortable for anyone attached to the equaliser narrative. The predominance of English-language content online, it notes, has shaped the development of the tools now on the market so profoundly that systems from the largest firms often simply fail to perform well in languages other than English. For speakers of what the field calls low-resource languages, the outputs are ill-suited, and the communities themselves are treated as an afterthought by the companies building the systems.

The numbers underneath this are stark in a way that the marketing rarely acknowledges. English usually accounts for nearly half of any given month's Common Crawl, the web-scraped corpus that underpins much of modern AI training, and in some major models the English share of training data runs close to ninety per cent. Meanwhile, languages spoken by tens of millions of people can constitute a vanishingly small fraction of the data. Low-resource languages such as Tagalog, Punjabi, Kurdish, Lao and Amharic each amount to less than a hundredth of one per cent of Common Crawl. Some languages appear hundreds of times less frequently than English. A model is, in the most literal sense, what it eats; feed it a diet that is overwhelmingly English and it will understand the semantics and the accumulated knowledge of English speakers far better than it understands anyone else.

The cruellest part of the dynamic Spitler describes is that the obvious fix has begun to make things worse. To plug the data gap for under-resourced languages, developers have turned to machine translation, generating synthetic text to bulk out the training corpus. But machine-translated content is frequently rife with errors, and when that flawed text is fed back into the training of the next model, the errors compound. The system learns a degraded, distorted version of the language and presents it back to native speakers as authoritative. Speakers of Tamil, Kurdish, Swahili and hundreds of other languages are thus being offered tools that are biased and unreliable by construction, and told that this is access.

And here is the structural cruelty that ties the two frontiers together. The performance gap between English and low-resource language interactions is not closing as the models improve. It is widening with each generation. The reason is depressingly logical. The frontier of capability advances fastest where the data is richest, which is English. Each leap forward in reasoning, in factual recall, in nuance, lands first and most fully for the English-speaking user. The low-resource speaker receives a watered-down version of last year's capability, if that. So the better the technology gets in absolute terms, the further behind the non-English speaker falls in relative terms. Progress itself becomes the engine of the divide. The rising tide does not lift all boats. It lifts the yachts and leaves the rest aground in a falling tide of their own.

The Classroom Is Where the Divide Becomes Hereditary

There is a particular reason to worry about all of this landing on children, and a peer-reviewed paper published in the same window makes the case with unusual clarity. In February 2026, the journal Frontiers in Computer Science published “AI and the digital divide in education,” written by Mokgata Alleen Matjie, Andani Nethavhani and Mary Matlakala of the Department of Business Management at the University of Limpopo in Polokwane, South Africa. Their vantage point matters. This is not a critique written from inside the well-resourced institutions that build these systems. It is written from a region that experiences, daily, what it means to be on the receiving end of tools designed somewhere else for someone else.

Their finding is that AI-driven educational tools have become a significant new driver of the digital divide, and they are precise about the mechanisms. The first is language and cultural mismatch. AI educational technologies, they write, are predominantly designed for English or other major international languages, with limited accommodation for multilingual or Indigenous linguistic and cultural contexts. A tutoring system that assumes a particular language, a particular set of cultural reference points, a particular way of phrasing a maths problem, will serve the child who shares those assumptions and quietly fail the child who does not.

The second mechanism is algorithmic bias of exactly the kind the MIT study documents at the level of the individual conversation. Systems trained on unrepresentative data, the authors argue, produce less appropriate feedback and misinterpret students' work. This is where the abstract becomes devastating. An adaptive learning system is supposed to do one thing above all: notice when a student is struggling and respond. But if the system reads a struggling under-resourced student's non-standard input as noise rather than as a signal of difficulty, it fails at the exact moment its intervention matters most. The student who most needs the machine to lean in is the one the machine is least equipped to read. The Limpopo authors name this a third-level digital divide, a divide concerned not with who can get online, which is the old battle, but with who actually benefits from the technology once they are there.

The third mechanism is institutional. Rural teachers, the paper notes, often lack the professional development to spot and correct algorithmic bias in the systems their pupils are using, a deficit the authors call a TPACK divide, after the technological, pedagogical and content knowledge that effective integration requires. So the bias arrives in an under-resourced classroom and finds no one positioned to catch it. The well-resourced school has the staff, the training and the institutional confidence to treat an AI tutor as a fallible instrument to be supervised. The under-resourced school receives the same tool stripped of that scaffolding, and is more likely to take its outputs at face value precisely because it has fewer alternatives.

Stack these mechanisms and you get something worse than a static gap. You get a divide that compounds across a childhood and threatens to become hereditary. The child in the well-served context gets a tool that reads her accurately, encourages her, catches her when she stumbles, and is supervised by adults trained to correct it. The child in the under-served context gets a tool that misreads her, gives her contextually wrong guidance, misses her struggles, and operates without that human safety net. Extend that across years of schooling and into the labour market, where, as the Limpopo authors point out, fluency with these very tools is becoming a prerequisite for employment, and the divide stops being about a single bad interaction. It becomes a divergence in life chances, manufactured by a technology sold as the cure for exactly that divergence.

The Anatomy of a Broken Promise

So we have three independent bodies of evidence, from MIT, from Global Voices, from a South African university, converging from different directions on the same conclusion. The chatbot is less accurate, more dismissive and less helpful for the user with non-standard English or lower literacy. The non-English speaker is falling further behind with every model generation. The under-resourced student gets tools that fail to read her and fail to catch her. Each of these would be troubling alone. Together they describe a system that systematically underserves the people for whom the equaliser promise was supposed to matter most. The technology positioned as the great leveller is, on this evidence, a sorting machine.

It is worth being precise about why this is so much more dangerous than the old, honest inequality it was meant to replace. The pre-AI information economy was unequal, but its inequality was legible. Everyone understood that a paid lawyer gave better advice than a free pamphlet, that a private tutor outperformed an overcrowded classroom. The hierarchy was visible and therefore, at least in principle, contestable. The new system hides its hierarchy inside a single interface that presents itself as identical for everyone. The educated user and the struggling user open the same app, type into the same box, and receive what looks like the same kind of answer in the same confident voice. The struggling user has no way of knowing that her answer was less accurate, that the machine refused her where it would have helped someone else, that the warmth she received was, statistically, more likely to be condescension. The discrimination is invisible to its target. You cannot file a complaint about a slight you cannot detect, and you cannot shop for a better provider when every provider runs on the same handful of underlying models with the same baked-in tilt.

There is a further trap. The very fluency that makes these tools feel like a gift to the underserved is what disarms scrutiny. A confident, articulate, well-formatted wrong answer is far more dangerous to someone without an independent way to check it than a hesitant one would be. The user with a professional network can sense-check the machine against a friend who is a doctor or a lawyer. The user the equaliser story is supposedly serving is, by definition, the one without that network, the one who took the machine's word because the machine's word was all there was. Sycophancy plus disadvantage is a particularly toxic compound. The model tells the confident professional what he wants to hear and gets corrected by his own expertise; it tells the vulnerable user what it has decided she can handle and faces no correction at all.

So Who Is Responsible?

This is the question the evidence forces, and it does not have a comfortable answer, because the architecture of the AI industry has been arranged, whether by design or by drift, to make sure no single party need own the gap between the claim and the reality.

Consider the candidates. The model developers will point out, not unreasonably, that they did not instruct the system to be condescending; the behaviour emerged from a training process that nobody fully controls or interprets. The deployers who build products on top of these models will say they are using industry-standard foundations and cannot be expected to audit the inner workings of a system they licensed. The institutions that adopt the tools, the schools and clinics and government departments, will say they were promised an equaliser by people far better resourced to understand the technology than they are. The annotators whose preferences shaped the reward model were anonymous, transient and following instructions. And the user who received the worse answer never knew it was worse. Diffuse a harm finely enough across a supply chain and it can come to seem as though it has no author at all, like rain. But this harm is not weather. It is the predictable output of specific, documented design choices, and the diffusion of responsibility is itself a choice, or at least a convenience that benefits the people at the top of the chain.

The honest answer is that responsibility sits, unavoidably, with the parties who made the equaliser promise and who alone have the power to test whether it is true. A company cannot market a system to a rural community or a low-income household on the explicit basis that it will give them the same quality of guidance the wealthy used to pay for, and then disclaim responsibility when peer-reviewed research shows it does the opposite. The promise creates the duty. If you tell the world your tool is a great equaliser, you have assumed an obligation to know whether it equalises, and to find out before deployment rather than after a research team catches you. The MIT authors did not need privileged access to discover any of this. They used public benchmarks and varied the user. The audit was cheap. The choice not to run it, or not to act on it, is where accountability begins.

What that accountability would actually require is not mysterious, and it is striking how concretely the very researchers documenting the problem have sketched it. The MIT team's framing implies that bias auditing across user demographics must become a standard, continuous part of evaluating these systems, not an afterthought once a model is already serving hundreds of millions of people. Roy's insistence on continually assessing systematic biases is a process demand, not a one-off fix. The Limpopo authors are more specific still. They call for genuinely multilingual development, building tutoring systems in local languages with culturally relevant examples rather than bolting a translation layer onto an English core; for training on diverse, representative datasets drawn from the underrepresented populations the tools claim to serve; and for teacher capacity-building, so that the adults nearest the child are equipped to identify algorithmic bias rather than defer to it. The Global Voices analysis points the same way, towards treating low-resource language communities as primary users to be designed for rather than markets to be machine-translated into as an afterthought.

None of this is technically impossible. The uncomfortable truth is that it is merely expensive and slow, and it runs against the grain of an industry whose competitive advantage comes from shipping the next, more capable model as fast as possible to the users who generate the most data and the most revenue, which is to say the English-speaking, educated, wealthy core. Every incentive in the system pushes capability towards the people who already have the most of it. Closing the gap requires deliberately pushing against that gradient, spending money and attention on the users who are, in the cold logic of the market, the least commercially attractive. The equaliser promise was a commitment to do exactly that. The evidence suggests the commitment is not being honoured.

The Equaliser That Has to Be Built on Purpose

There is a version of this story that is not a tragedy, and it is worth ending there, because despair is its own kind of abdication. Nothing in the MIT findings, the Global Voices analysis or the Limpopo paper suggests that a language model must treat the vulnerable user worse. The condescension and the refusals are learned, which means they can be unlearned. The language gap is a function of data and investment, which means it can be narrowed by different data and different investment. The classroom failures are a function of design choices made far from the classroom, which means they can be changed by involving the classroom in the design. Every mechanism in this account is human-made, and what is human-made can be remade.

But it will not remake itself, and that is the lesson the equaliser narrative has obscured for three years. The default behaviour of these systems, left to the gravitational pull of their training data and their commercial incentives, is to serve the served and dismiss the dismissed, to reproduce the existing hierarchy of who gets good information and who gets condescension, and to call that reproduction democratisation. Equality is not what you get when you point a powerful, biased system at a population and stand back. It is what you get when you decide that the worst-served user, not the average one and certainly not the best-served one, is the benchmark the system must clear before it ships. That is a choice about what to measure, what to spend on, what to delay for, and whom to listen to. So far it is not the choice the industry has made.

The promise was that the machine would hand the person in the rural community and the low-income household the same quality of guidance once reserved for those who could pay. The research of early 2026 says that, as built, the machine is doing something closer to the reverse, handing the powerful a brilliant new advantage and the powerless a fluent, confident, condescending counterfeit of it. The gap between the claim and the reality is not an accident waiting for a patch. It is a structure, and structures have architects. The question is no longer whether the equaliser works as advertised. We know it does not. The question is whether the people who advertised it will be made to answer for the difference, or whether, as so often in the history of technology, the bill for a broken promise will be quietly handed to the people least able to pay it, in a language the machine has already decided they do not deserve to hear properly.

References and Sources

  1. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, “Study: AI chatbots provide less-accurate information to vulnerable users,” MIT News, 19 February 2026. https://news.mit.edu/2026/study-ai-chatbots-provide-less-accurate-information-vulnerable-users-0219
  2. MIT Media Lab, “Study: AI chatbots provide less-accurate information to vulnerable users,” 2026. https://www.media.mit.edu/articles/study-ai-chatbots-provide-less-accurate-information-to-vulnerable-users/
  3. Poole-Dayan, Elinor, Jad Kabbara, and Deb Roy, “LLM Targeted Underperformance Disproportionately Impacts Vulnerable Users,” MIT Center for Constructive Communication / Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2026. https://www.media.mit.edu/publications/llm-targeted-underperformance-disproportionately-impacts-vulnerable-users/
  4. Poole-Dayan, Elinor, Jad Kabbara, and Deb Roy, “LLM Targeted Underperformance Disproportionately Impacts Vulnerable Users,” arXiv preprint. https://arxiv.org/pdf/2406.17737
  5. Tech Xplore, “AI chatbots provide less-accurate information to vulnerable users, study shows,” 20 February 2026. https://techxplore.com/news/2026-02-ai-chatbots-accurate-vulnerable-users.html
  6. Spitler, Aaron, “Lost in translation: How AI models impact low-resource language communities,” Global Voices, 8 April 2026. https://globalvoices.org/2026/04/08/lost-in-translation-how-ai-models-impact-low-resource-language-communities/
  7. Global Voices, “Announcing Global Voices Spotlight!” 3 April 2026. https://globalvoices.org/2026/04/03/announcing-global-voices-spotlight/
  8. Global Voices, “A lack of electricity and internet access hinders AI adoption in Sub-Saharan Africa,” 28 April 2026. https://globalvoices.org/2026/04/28/a-lack-of-electricity-and-internet-access-hinders-ai-adoption-in-sub-saharan-africa/
  9. Matjie, Mokgata Alleen, Andani Nethavhani, and Mary Matlakala, “AI and the digital divide in education,” Frontiers in Computer Science, vol. 8, 5 February 2026. https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/computer-science/articles/10.3389/fcomp.2026.1759027/full
  10. Casper, Stephen, et al., “Open Problems and Fundamental Limitations of Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback,” arXiv, 2023. https://arxiv.org/pdf/2307.15217
  11. IntuitionLabs, “Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF) Explained.” https://intuitionlabs.ai/articles/reinforcement-learning-human-feedback
  12. BlueDot Impact, “Problems with Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF) for AI safety.” https://blog.bluedot.org/p/rlhf-limitations-for-ai-safety
  13. UnifiedCrawl, “Aggregated Common Crawl for Affordable Adaptation of LLMs on Low-Resource Languages,” arXiv, 2024. https://arxiv.org/html/2411.14343v1
  14. Digital Divide Data, “Low-Resource Languages In AI: Closing The Global Language Data Gap.” https://www.digitaldividedata.com/blog/low-resource-languages-in-ai
  15. The Tribune, “OpenAI CEO Sam Altman pushes for 'Democratic AI' in India; says will announce expansion and Govt partnerships,” 2026. https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/world/openai-ceo-sam-altman-pushes-for-democratic-ai-in-india-says-will-announce-expansion-and-govt-partnerships/
  16. The Indian Eye, “India surges to become OpenAI's second-largest user base globally, reveals Sam Altman,” 15 February 2026. https://theindianeye.com/2026/02/15/india-surges-to-become-openais-second-largest-user-base-globally-reveals-sam-altman/
  17. Axios, “Altman plans D.C. push to 'democratize' AI economic benefits,” 21 July 2025. https://www.axios.com/2025/07/21/sam-altman-openai-trump-dc-fed

Tim Green

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

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from Roscoe's Story

In Summary: * Glad I tuned into 94 WIP, the home of the Philadelphia Phillies, ahead of their game tonight with the New York Mets. The game appears to be starting much earlier than I'd been led to believe.

Also glad I did the night prayers early. The only thing between now and an early bedtime is this baseball game. It was just announced that the game time had been moved up due to air quality issues. Huh. I wonder if the folks in Philadelphia are suffering from the Canadian smoke like my friends and family up in Michigan and Northern Indiana are.

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= 231.49 lbs. * bp= 144/86 (65)

Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups, BP breathing exercises, pilates

Diet: * 05:30 – 2 McDonald's double cheeseburger sandwiches, 1 banana, apple pie * 10:00 – snacking on little cookies * 11:45 – pizza * 14:50 – 1 fresh apple

Activities, Chores, etc.: * 03:30 – listen to local news talk radio * 04:00 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 04:30 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap * 12:50 – listening to general sports talk on 94 WIP, Philadelphia Sports Radio ahead of tonight's Phillies / Mets MLB game. * 14:10 – follow news reports from various sources * 14:25 – listening to a replay of today's Clay & Buck show * 17:00 – Tuned in again to 94 WIP, the home of the Philadelphia Phillies, ahead of their game tonight with the New York Mets

Chess: * 13:15 – moved in all pending CC games, started a new one at liChess

 
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from Semantic Distance

i was scrolling through reels (as one does at 6:51 pm on a monday) and my mood was sadly soured by the takes of white people talking about, of course, hip hop in a podcast studio. ignoring the obvious micro-aggressions from everyone in room, it speaks to, i think, a conversation that we’ve been having for decades at this point. said conversation has been characterized by the golden age fallacy (i.e., the belief that a specific period in the past is objectively better than the present), with many perpetually looking backward, averting their gaze on the art being created in the present. for anything that does illicit some response—teetering between neutrality and small bouts of un-enthusiasm—it’s more of a fluke than an indication that good art is out there for us to enjoy.

in general, looking towards Industry artists as a signpost for quality specifically is misinformed because a) you will likely be disappointed and b) it’s a little disingenuous to believe that artists coming out of atlantic or columbia records are going to be doing a service to the genre they are occupying. and if i’m being honest, i don’t even necessarily agree with the premise that i’m working under. the bar for what constitutes as Good Music has been rising since access to the tools to make music are becoming easier and the veil of quality production is lifting, especially after hyperpop entered the zeitgeist. music artists, especially producers, are more keen to share tips and tricks they’ve learned along the way, understanding that the Industry (as we know it today) notoriously gatekeeps pertinent information from those that need (want, rather) it.

i’m not a boomer that puts 90s rap on a pedestal or genuinely believes that radiohead is the best band ever (let’s not open that one up), it’s more so rooted in the reality of ai-generated content on the internet and what that means for music consumption at large. we (unironically) live in a time where natural language prompts can create so-called artistic artifacts, with details on its training regiment becoming news covered by pitchfork and fader magazines. there’s a lot more onus on us to sift through content to ensure we are not consuming something made by a machine, and while that does seem like nightmare fuel, i use it as an excuse to spend more time curating and honing my own taste through deep exploration. if anything, this aversion towards ai swings the pendulum back, with artists wanting to make it abundantly clear that everything in their process if human-first—no technological intervention needed.

as the internet becomes increasingly bloated (non-pejorative), we have to work harder to find the art we care about. we have a lot more agency in our creative discovery than we realize; algorithms and recommendations from other content creators we deem with “good taste” only goes so far. when was the last time you listened to an album in full? listened track by track? the last time you went to a record store and didn’t immediately look for albums you already know? do you frequent non-streaming services for songs? what about youtube or vimeo—have you gotten lost in a rabbit hole of related videos, somehow ending up watching content in a language that’s not your own? of course, some of these methods of discovery assume your proximity to them, but there’s only so many addendums you can add to your complaints before it becomes obvious that you don’t really care about finding something worth your time.

it’s trite to say at this point, but we live in a time where literally everything is at our fingertips. entire ecosystems of music from other countries can easily be accessed given enough time searching. somewhat similarly, it’s not difficult to be a surveyor of counterculture via social media, routinely observing what artists are doing in the underground before we deem it cool enough to enter the mainstream. it’s easy to write off the entirety of a genre simply because it’s difficult to find artists within it that you connect with—but because something is difficult doesn’t mean the existence of what you deem interesting is completely out of the picture.

 
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from The happy place

today was warm, the elderly suffering, ofttimes there’s no AC, and the fans used instead to cool them are blowing all of the bacteria mucus and viruses straight into their faces. I saw that on the news.

But some other people lay at the beach, sweating like pork chops, then dipping themselves every once in a while in the clear water which is pure enough for all sorts of special fishes.

And on the same planet, even in the same little town, I am too.

Making rhubarb pie. Something about rhubarb is unhealthy I think for the kidneys, but for me — having a tinge of darkness churning deep within — it’s part of the charm.

And I dug the soil and with my bare hands I harvested the potatoes with their tender, demon red skins.

Life, I don’t even pretend to understand what’s going on

Fascinating and frightening like a yin yang

 
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from Roscoe's Quick Notes

Mets vs Phillies

New York Mets vs Philadelphia Phillies.

Major League Baseball is offering me only one game to follow today: the New York Mets vs the Philadelphia Phillies; so this will be my MLB game of choice. This game is scheduled to start at 6:10 PM CDT. As I usually do, I'll follow the game's score and stats in real time via MLB's Gameday Service where we can also find links to the radio-call of the game provided by announcers of either team we choose.

And the adventure continues.

 
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