from Douglas Vandergraph

Before the city began performing itself, before delivery bikes cut sharp lines through the morning and before the first wave of people came up from underground with coffee in one hand and dread hidden under their coats, Jesus was alone by the water in Manhattan, praying in the dim blue light before sunrise. He stood near the East River where the wind came clean off the water and pressed against his clothes. Behind him the city was still holding its breath. Windows glowed here and there in towers that never fully slept. A siren moved somewhere far off and then faded. The FDR sent out its low endless murmur like a second river made of engines and impatience. He did not rush his prayer. He did not speak with drama. He stood with the stillness of someone who had never confused noise for power. His head was bowed. His hands were open. The cold caught along the edges of his sleeves, and the world around him seemed restless to begin again, but he remained there until the light shifted and the river stopped looking black and began looking like metal. When he finally lifted his face, it was not with the expression of someone preparing to conquer a city. It was with the look of someone prepared to notice it.

He walked west and then south through streets that were waking in layers. Workers in reflective vests leaned over coffee carts. A woman in scrubs came out of a bodega with her shoulders already bent in the shape of a long shift. A man rolling metal grates upward in front of a small grocery paused just long enough to look at him, as if something about the calm in his face resisted the pace of everything else. Jesus kept walking without that hard New York stare people learn to wear like armor. He looked at things. He looked at people. He did not scan past them. He crossed First Avenue while traffic lights changed and a bus sighed at the curb. He passed Bellevue Hospital, great and steady in Kips Bay, that old public place where every kind of human need eventually comes through the doors whether the city wants to think about it or not. The entrance lights were still on. A security guard stood by the front doors with the tired alertness of a man whose body had been awake longer than his mind wanted to be. Ambulances waited with that tense stillness they always seem to carry, as if motion is only resting a moment before being called again.

Across from the hospital, under the shelter of an overhang where the wind could not bite as hard, a woman sat on a crate with a paper cup between both hands. She looked to be in her late fifties, maybe early sixties, though the city can age a face in ways years alone cannot explain. Her coat had once been camel colored. Now it was a tired shade that no longer belonged to any season. A plastic bag rested at her feet. Not much in it. A sweater. Two oranges. A prescription bottle. Her eyes had that distant fixed look of someone who had been making herself smaller for so long she no longer knew how to take up space without apologizing.

Jesus slowed when he reached her, and the woman noticed him too late to put on indifference.

“You look cold,” he said.

“I’m in New York in March,” she answered. “That’s not exactly breaking news.”

There was dry humor in it, but weak. Not playful. It sounded like a person trying to keep dignity alive with the last tool still left in reach.

Jesus nodded as if the answer mattered. “Did you sleep?”

“A little.”

“That means no.”

She gave him a narrow look then, the kind people in the city use when they suspect kindness may be leading to a sermon or a hustle. “What do you want?”

“Nothing from you.”

That answer landed differently. She looked down at the cup in her hands. Steam no longer rose from it. “Nobody wants nothing from anybody here.”

“Someone should.”

The woman let out a breath that almost became a laugh. “You don’t sound like you’re from here.”

“I’m here now.”

That could have sounded evasive from somebody else. From him it sounded simple. She rubbed at one knuckle with her thumb. Up close her hands were swollen. “I’m waiting for visiting hours,” she said. “My son got brought in last night.”

Jesus sat down on the low concrete barrier near her, not crowding her, not looming over her, just near enough to make it plain he was not in a hurry to leave. The city moved around them in fast layers, but his stillness altered the little pocket of air between them. “What happened?”

“Bad mix,” she said. “That’s what the doctor called it. Like that makes it sound clean.” Her mouth tightened. “Pills. Something else. I don’t even know anymore. Every time I think I understand the names, there’s another name. Another reason. Another lie. He’s thirty-four years old and every time the phone rings after midnight I think this is the one.”

The words had come out harder than she intended. Shame flashed across her face right after anger, because pain often turns on the one carrying it.

“What is his name?” Jesus asked.

“Luis.”

“And yours?”

“Marisol.”

He repeated their names as if he was placing them somewhere safe. “You love him.”

She turned and stared at him with open annoyance. “Of course I love him. That’s the problem. That’s the whole problem. If I didn’t love him, I would have stopped answering the phone years ago. I would have stopped paying for things I can’t pay for. I would have stopped lying at work when I had to run downtown or to Queens or to some apartment where he said he was done, really done this time, only to find out done meant empty again. Love is expensive.”

Jesus looked toward the hospital entrance. A nurse hurried in with her badge swinging at her chest. A woman in business clothes stood a few feet away crying quietly into her phone while pretending not to. “Yes,” he said. “It is.”

Marisol’s expression changed at that. Most people either try to fix pain too quickly or argue with it because they are uncomfortable hearing it said aloud. He had not done either. He had simply told the truth back to her.

She swallowed. “I’m tired.”

“I know.”

“No, I mean tired tired. Down in the bones tired. Tired of hoping every time and then hating myself for hoping. Tired of hearing people say boundaries like it’s a magic word. Tired of everybody wanting a mother to be brave as long as brave doesn’t inconvenience them. I work in a school cafeteria in the Bronx. I leave before the sun comes up. I stand on my feet all day. I stretch groceries. I send money to my sister. I keep my phone on loud all night because one of these calls might be the one I miss. I am tired of being the emergency contact for a grown man who keeps walking himself into fire.”

Jesus did not break her speech with a lesson. He did not tell her to be grateful, or stronger, or more surrendered. He let the force of her words settle in the cold air.

“Then for this moment,” he said gently, “you do not have to be strong.”

She looked at him as if she had not understood.

“You can sit here,” he said. “You can breathe. You can let your heart stop pretending it is made of machinery.”

The woman’s chin trembled once. She hated that it did. She turned away and pressed her lips together. The city had taught her how to cry only in angles, only in fragments, only when no one was looking directly. Yet there he was, not taking the moment from her, not making her perform it. She bent forward and covered her eyes with one hand.

For a while neither of them spoke. Morning thickened around Bellevue. Orderlies came in. Two police officers walked past. The coffee cart on the corner grew a line. A man pulling a suitcase cursed softly into his headset. Everything kept moving because cities do that even when a heart is splitting in plain sight.

At last Marisol straightened. “You one of those church people?”

“I am with my Father,” he said.

She gave him another long look. “That sounds like a yes and a no at the same time.”

He smiled a little, and the smile held no superiority in it. “Sometimes people need a room before they can hear a word.”

“What does that mean?”

“It means I’m sitting with you first.”

Something in her face loosened. Not solved. Not healed cleanly. Just loosened. “Visiting hours start in twenty minutes.”

“I’ll walk with you to the door.”

She did not thank him right away. New Yorkers are often slow to trust what costs them nothing. But when she rose, he stood with her, and they crossed toward the hospital entrance together.

Inside, heat met them with that dry institutional smell of old buildings, disinfectant, and sleep deprivation. Families sat in chairs that were meant to endure more than comfort. A television hung in one corner with captions on and sound low. Security directed people in flat practiced tones. Marisol stopped at the desk to ask about her son. Her voice tried to sound steady. The woman behind the desk told her there would be another short wait. Lab work. A doctor would come speak with her. Marisol nodded as if this were manageable. Then she turned back and found Jesus still there, still not hurrying her, still carrying that strange composure that felt less like distance and more like shelter.

“What am I supposed to do if he gets out and does it again?” she asked in a low voice. It was no longer anger asking. It was fear.

“Love him without joining him in the pit,” Jesus said.

Her brow furrowed.

“You are not called to drown because someone you love is struggling in deep water. Love can reach. Love can tell truth. Love can stay near. But love does not have to call destruction mercy.”

Marisol stood very still. The sentence did not flatter her martyrdom, and because it did not, it carried more weight than comfort alone would have carried. “I don’t know how to do that.”

“You will learn one honest decision at a time.”

“How?”

“By refusing lies, even the loving lies. By stopping the small agreements that keep darkness fed. By remembering that you are a mother, not a savior.”

That last line entered her like something painful and clean. A mother, not a savior. She lowered her eyes. For years she had lived between guilt and control, afraid that if she loosened her grip her son would die, afraid that if she held on the wrong way he would die anyway. She had confused responsibility with rescue because fear often does that to love. No one had given her language sharp enough to separate the two. Not until now.

Her voice came out thin. “What if I already did it wrong?”

Jesus answered without delay. “Then today is not yesterday.”

Marisol looked at him again. There are moments when words do not merely sound true. They create space inside a person where panic had been living. She did not suddenly become unafraid. But the fear stopped filling the whole room of her. A nurse called her name from the corridor. She turned toward the sound and then back again.

“Will I see you later?” she asked, surprising herself.

“I’ll be where I’m needed.”

It was not an answer most people would have accepted. Yet she nodded as though some deeper part of her understood that he had not said no.

She followed the nurse down the hallway. Jesus watched until she disappeared through the double doors, and then he stepped outside again into a city now fully awake.

He walked south through Gramercy and the East Village while the streets thickened with motion. Trucks backed into loading zones with their warning beeps. Men in dark coats walked fast with their heads down as though being late were a moral failure. Young women in running shoes and long wool coats carried breakfast and stress in the same hand. Outside a pharmacy on Second Avenue, an older man argued with himself softly near the window while everyone around him avoided eye contact with the practiced cruelty of people who call it survival. Jesus paused and looked at him until the man looked back. The man’s mouth stopped moving for a second. He seemed startled not by being seen, but by being seen without contempt. Jesus said only, “You are not forgotten,” and continued on. The man stayed there after he passed, still turned in the direction he had gone, holding those words as if they had been placed in his palm.

By midmorning the sun had climbed high enough to light the tops of buildings and leave the sidewalks in alternating bands of warmth and shade. Jesus entered Tompkins Square Park from the west side where dog walkers crossed paths with men carrying all they owned in layered bags and carts. The park held all kinds the way New York often does when it is honest enough not to separate them by image. Young parents pushed strollers past benches where exhausted men slept sitting up. A musician unpacked a saxophone near the path. Two teenagers shared headphones and laughed too loudly. A woman in expensive sunglasses hurried through while talking about a deal that sounded urgent only because money always tries to sound like life and death.

Near the dog run, on a bench beneath trees not yet fully leafed, a young man sat staring at nothing with the posture of someone whose body had arrived before the rest of him. He was maybe twenty-seven. His clothes were clean but slept in. A paper folder rested by his shoe. On the bench beside him was a takeout container unopened and going cold. He had the face of a man who had not been crying only because exhaustion had moved him beyond it.

Jesus sat down at the far end of the bench.

The young man did not move at first. “You got a cigarette?” he asked after a while.

“No.”

“Figures.”

They sat in silence long enough for the musician nearby to try a few notes that began rough and then found shape. A pigeon strutted near the man’s shoes with ridiculous confidence. Somewhere a small dog barked as though carrying out sacred duty.

“What’s in the folder?” Jesus asked.

The man gave a short humorless laugh. “My future, according to bureaucrats.”

He tapped it with two fingers. “Termination papers. Not fancy words, but close enough. Position eliminated. Thank you for your service. Resources enclosed. That kind of thing.”

“What was the job?”

“Facilities coordinator for a nonprofit.” He shrugged. “Which sounds more stable than it was. Grant dried up. Budget cuts. Everybody sad for ten minutes. Then security watched us carry out our stuff.”

He finally turned and looked at Jesus. “You one of those street counselor types?”

“No.”

“Then what are you?”

“A man sitting with you on a bench.”

That answer irritated him a little because it refused the categories he knew how to dismiss. “Well congratulations. You found me in my natural habitat. Public failure.”

Jesus looked around the park. “I see a man who is hurt.”

The young man’s mouth tightened. “That’s kinder than LinkedIn.”

Jesus waited.

“My name’s Devon,” he said after a minute. “I came here because I couldn’t stand my apartment. My roommate works from home and talks too loud and acts like every setback is content for a podcast. I didn’t want my mother calling. I didn’t want to answer texts from people asking what happened with the little sad face that means they enjoy the information. So I came here.”

He rubbed his hands over his face. “Rent’s due in eleven days. Student loans. MetroCard. Phone bill. I bought decent shoes last month because I thought maybe having decent shoes meant I was finally becoming the kind of adult who catches up. Turns out I just have nice shoes while being unemployed.”

Jesus listened the way he had listened to Marisol, without shrinking the pain because other people had bigger pain. “You are not a résumé,” he said.

Devon let out a breath through his nose. “That sounds nice, but my landlord is very attached to résumés.”

“You are speaking about money. I am speaking about you.”

Devon glanced down. “People say that when they don’t know what else to say.”

“I know what else to say.”

Devon looked back up despite himself.

“You have built your worth on whether strangers keep choosing you,” Jesus said. “That makes every closed door sound like judgment.”

The words struck harder than Devon expected. He felt it physically, like a hand pressing against a bruise he had been pretending was not there. “That’s a little intense for ten-thirty in the morning.”

“Is it false?”

Devon did not answer. A woman pushing a stroller passed in front of them. The baby inside was sleeping with one fist tucked under its chin. Somewhere behind them a man shouted angrily into the air and then settled again. New York kept layering lives together without ever asking permission.

“I thought if I worked hard enough,” Devon said slowly, “everything would stop feeling temporary. That was the deal. School, debt, internships, bad coffee, overcommitting, proving yourself. Everybody acts like if you keep going long enough you eventually arrive in a life that can’t be taken away by one email.”

“And now?” Jesus asked.

“And now I feel stupid.” Devon looked at the unopened container beside him. “Not because I lost the job. Because I gave it power it didn’t deserve. I let it tell me whether I mattered.”

Jesus turned his gaze toward the path where people were crossing in every direction. “Cities are full of voices that measure human beings by use. How much can you produce. How fast can you recover. How attractive is your struggle once it is polished and posted. But you were not made to become a machine people admire while your soul goes hungry.”

Devon stared at him. The sentence did not sound like a motivational quote. It sounded like diagnosis. He looked away fast because part of him wanted to defend himself, and another part was afraid defense would collapse if he tried.

“My father used to say if you aren’t moving up, you’re moving backward,” Devon said. “That man can turn brunch into a performance review.” He laughed once, then wiped at his nose in irritation. “Sorry.”

“You do not need to apologize for being tired.”

“Everybody says that.”

“Do they mean it?”

Devon did not answer because the answer was no.

Jesus nodded toward the container beside him. “Eat.”

“I’m not hungry.”

“Yes, you are.”

There was no harshness in it. Only certainty. Devon picked up the container because resisting that tone felt stranger than obeying it. Inside was rice, chicken, and vegetables from a deli two blocks away. He took a bite mostly to end the conversation. Then another. He realized how empty he had been.

Jesus let him eat in peace for several minutes. The musician had found a melody now, something old and tender that drifted through the park without demanding attention. The light had changed again. The city was brighter but no softer.

“My mother keeps telling me to come back to Jersey for a while,” Devon said around a mouthful. “Save money. Reset. But if I go back, it feels like admitting New York beat me.”

“Why did you come here?” Jesus asked.

Devon swallowed. “Because when I was nineteen I came into the city on a bus and saw the skyline and thought this is where life happens. This is where you become who you’re supposed to be.” He shook his head. “I know that sounds childish.”

“It sounds hungry.”

Devon sat with that. Hungry. Not childish. Not foolish. Hungry. The word softened something in his own memory of himself.

Jesus continued. “There is no shame in leaving a place if the place has become an altar and keeps demanding your peace as sacrifice.”

Devon’s eyes lifted slowly. “That’s... yeah.” He stared at the trees. “I haven’t had peace in a long time.”

“What have you had?”

“Noise. Pressure. Comparison. Low-grade panic. Sometimes high-grade panic.” He gave a tiny defeated smile. “And takeout.”

Jesus smiled too, and somehow the smile did not mock him. It let him remain human. “Then start with one true thing.”

“What true thing?”

“You are loved before you achieve. You are still a man when your plans crack. And an ending is not the same thing as erasure.”

Devon looked down at the folder by his shoe. He had treated those papers like a verdict, like they had reached backward through the years and rewritten him into less. But hearing those words, he felt a strange break in the spell. The loss was still real. The fear was still real. The rent was still due. Yet the meaning of the moment was no longer as fixed as it had been an hour earlier.

“How do you know what to say?” he asked quietly.

Jesus did not answer the question the way Devon expected. “Because your life is worth more than what is panicking inside it.”

Devon looked at him for a long time. Then he nodded once and kept eating, slower now, like a man who had just remembered food is for living and not merely surviving.

When he finished, Jesus stood. Devon looked up quickly, almost anxious.

“That’s it?”

“For now.”

Devon frowned. “You tell people things that sound like they should come with a phone number.”

Jesus rested a hand briefly on the back of the bench. “Call your mother.”

Devon blinked. “What?”

“Before shame builds another room around you. Tell her the truth. Let someone love you while you are not impressive.”

Devon almost laughed, but his eyes had gone wet. “That sounds horrible.”

“It will feel better than pretending.”

Jesus began to walk away, then paused and turned back. “And whether you stay in this city or leave it, do not spend your life trying to earn the right to exist.”

Devon watched him go down the path and disappear into moving bodies, dogs on leashes, strollers, carts, wind, and light. He sat still for a full minute after that. Then he picked up his phone. He stared at his mother’s name on the screen for a long time before pressing call.

By noon Jesus had left the park and moved south and west through streets where lunch lines were beginning to form. He passed storefront churches squeezed between laundromats and smoke shops, old walk-ups beside sleek renovations, a city forever trying to conceal the layers of what has hurt it and what has held it together. On Delancey Street the traffic surged like a living argument. At Essex Market people drifted in and out carrying pastries, groceries, coffee, flowers, debt, ambition, and unseen sorrow. Jesus stepped through the market without spectacle, pausing at faces more often than counters. He noticed the cashier whose smile shut off the moment a customer turned away. He noticed the cook rubbing the heel of his hand against his chest in the back hallway as though trying to push stress out by force. He noticed a middle-aged woman in a neat coat standing too long in front of a bakery case with tears gathering while she pretended to study pies.

He went to her.

She was the sort of woman the city rarely thinks of as fragile because she had trained herself so thoroughly into composure. Black coat, practical boots, leather handbag, silver at the temples styled with intention. She was not young. She was not old. Her face held intelligence and fatigue in equal measure. A wedding ring remained on her left hand though it had not been joined by a second ring in some time. When Jesus stopped beside her, she straightened automatically.

“Can I help you?” she asked.

“You are trying not to fall apart in front of the lemon tart,” he said.

The woman closed her eyes once, briefly, with the expression of someone caught in a truth so specific it bypasses defense. When she opened them again, anger was there, but only because pain had been touched. “That is an unbelievable thing to say to a stranger.”

“Yes.”

“And yet here we are.”

She let out a disbelieving breath and looked away toward the case again. “My husband used to buy me one every year on this date from a bakery downtown that isn’t even there anymore. He died three years ago today. I had a meeting nearby. I thought I could be normal and walk through a market and pick up something small and then go back to work like adults do.”

“Instead?”

“Instead I stood here staring at dessert like it insulted me.” She pressed her lips together. “I am an attorney. I negotiate contracts. I manage teams. I have a son in college and a daughter who thinks I’m coping better than I am. I am not supposed to be ambushed by pastry.”

“Grief does not respect professionalism,” Jesus said.

Her shoulders dropped a fraction. “No. It doesn’t.”

She looked at him properly now, not because she understood him, but because she sensed that with him she did not need to perform coherence. “His name was Paul,” she said. “Mine is Eleanor.”

Jesus repeated both names softly, and the market around them kept humming with trays and footsteps and orders being called out.

Eleanor looked down at the ring on her hand. “People stop asking after a while. Not because they’re cruel. They just... stop. Which I understand. Life moves. New crises appear. But grief becomes very strange when the rest of the world quietly decides the fire should be out because enough time has passed.”

Jesus listened, and Eleanor continued because she had not been listened to about this in a long time.

“The first year everyone came by. Flowers. Texts. Invitations. The second year people checked in out of duty and kindness. The third year they assume you’ve folded it into yourself in some tidy way. They do not know that there are random Tuesdays where you are functional and then a smell or a date or a corner of light through a window opens the whole thing again.” She laughed once, tiredly. “Today I had a conference call at nine-thirty and argued over liability language while thinking about the last day I heard him cough.”

Jesus said, “Love leaves an imprint on ordinary things.”

Eleanor’s eyes filled fast. She looked away before tears could fall. “That is exactly the problem.”

“It is also the gift.”

She shook her head. “Not today.”

Jesus did not argue. He stood with her in the market while the city pressed past, and after a moment she said, “I am so tired of being the strong one. Everybody praises strength because they are relieved it means they don’t have to come closer.”

That sentence opened something deep, and Jesus was still long enough to receive it.

In the bakery case the lemon tarts glowed under bright glass. A child nearby begged for a cookie. Two delivery workers argued in Spanish over directions. The ordinary world went on insisting itself into the moment. Eleanor wiped one eye angrily, as if betrayal had occurred.

Jesus said, “You do not honor love by pretending loss is small.”

She looked at him, breathing unsteadily now.

“You honor love by telling the truth,” he continued. “And by allowing joy to return without calling it disloyal.”

Eleanor stared at him as though those words had reached into a locked room she had not shown anyone. For three years she had lived under a private accusation she could not name. Every time she laughed too freely, every time she enjoyed a dinner, every time a day passed without immediate sorrow, guilt arrived behind it asking who she thought she was. As though surviving with any warmth in it meant abandoning the dead. She had never spoken that aloud. Yet there it was, answered.

“I don’t know how to do that,” she whispered.

Jesus looked at the tart. “Start by buying what love remembers without apologizing for it.”

Eleanor stood very still, and then something in her face gave way. Not collapse. Not dramatic catharsis. Just surrender of a burden she had been carrying in private for too long. She turned to the counter and ordered two lemon tarts in a voice that still shook but no longer sounded ashamed.

When she turned back, he was still there.

“One for me,” she said, lifting the small box, “and one for my assistant, who is twenty-six and pretending she isn’t heartbroken because she thinks competence means no one can see it.” A faint smile touched her mouth. “I suppose that would be a start.”

Jesus returned the smile, and it carried warmth that felt older than sorrow. “Yes.”

She studied him a moment. “Who are you?”

He answered her with the same calm that never seemed evasive when he spoke. “Someone reminding you that love is not buried just because someone is.”

Eleanor held the box against her coat as though it contained something much more fragile than pastry. The market noise seemed changed around her, not because it had softened, but because she no longer felt she had to harden to survive it. “Thank you,” she said.

Jesus inclined his head, then stepped back into the current of the city and kept moving.

By the time afternoon began leaning toward evening, the sky over lower Manhattan had turned that pale silver-blue that makes glass buildings look almost transparent from certain angles. Jesus headed west again, toward the buses, toward the long churn of arrivals and departures near Port Authority, where people entered the city carrying hope, fear, lunch in foil, unpaid bills, job interviews, hospital news, court dates, breakups, obligations, and the thousand invisible reasons human beings keep moving when their hearts are tired.

At Eighth Avenue the crowds thickened. A man in a suit ate standing up. Teenagers dragged wheeled bags that kept catching in sidewalk cracks. A woman held a child’s hand with one hand and a phone with the other while saying, “No, I’m almost there,” in the voice of someone who had been almost there for years. Jesus stopped near the entrance where the buses exhaled and swallowed and exhaled again. He stood among people going somewhere and noticed a man who had the unmistakable look of someone trying to decide whether to go home at all.

The man stood just outside Port Authority with a duffel bag at his feet and both hands shoved into the pockets of a jacket too light for the weather. He was in his forties, broad-shouldered, worn down in the face, with the look of someone who had once been physically strong enough to make people assume he was emotionally durable too. His beard had grown in unevenly. Not neglect exactly. More like a man who had not had enough control over recent days to care about the edge of his own reflection. He kept glancing toward the departure boards visible through the glass and then looking away again, as if every listed city were making a private accusation. Near his right shoe sat a paper cup from a chain coffee place gone cold. On the bench behind him, untouched, was a bus ticket folded in half so many times it had softened at the creases.

Jesus came to stand beside him, close enough to be heard without forcing attention.

“You can still leave,” he said.

The man turned sharply, instinctively guarded. “You with somebody?”

“No.”

“Then how do you know I’m leaving?”

“You bought the ticket.”

The man looked toward the bench and then back at him. “That doesn’t mean I’m leaving. It means I bought a ticket.”

Jesus nodded. “And now you’re trying to decide whether going back is defeat.”

The man stared for a second longer than politeness required. New York had trained him, as it trains many people, to reject immediate intimacy from strangers. Yet the sentence had arrived too near the center of things to dismiss easily.

“You some kind of social worker?” he asked.

“No.”

“Pastor?”

Jesus did not answer that in the way the man expected. “What is your name?”

The man hesitated, then said, “Darren.”

“Where is the bus going, Darren?”

“Scranton.”

Jesus waited, and after a few seconds Darren let out a low bitter laugh. “Yeah. I know. Not exactly the triumphant return of a conquering hero.”

“You came from there?”

“Pennsylvania, yeah. Smaller town outside it. My mother still calls all of it Scranton because she thinks everywhere beyond the county line is New York.” He rubbed his jaw. “I came here eight years ago. Construction work first. Then commercial flooring. Then some contract work. Enough jobs to stay tired and broke with occasional bursts of optimism. Got hurt on a site in Queens last year. Back never fully came around. Missed work. Fell behind. Lost the room I was renting in Hell’s Kitchen. Been piecing things together since.”

He glanced toward the terminal again. “My brother finally said come home for a while. My mother said there’s a couch. My sister said it’s not failure, it’s regrouping. Which is the kind of thing people say when they don’t know the shape of the humiliation.”

Jesus looked at the stream of people moving in and out under fluorescent light and stale air. “What feels humiliating?”

Darren’s face hardened. “Needing people.”

That answer came too fast to be polished. It was old and practiced and had likely been true since long before New York.

“Who taught you that?” Jesus asked.

Darren almost snapped back, but the question slowed him. “Nobody taught me.” Then he thought about it and added, “Everybody did.”

A bus hissed at the curb. Two women walked by arguing softly about a delayed connection. A man sleeping upright on a bench jerked awake and then drifted again. Far above, the city moved with all its ordinary self-importance while under it people waited to leave, to return, to run, to face things, or to avoid them.

“My father hated weakness,” Darren said finally. “That old kind of man. If you were hurt, you worked. If you were scared, you shut up. If you needed help, you handled it before anyone noticed. He respected two things. Money and not complaining. Guess which one I never had enough of.”

Jesus listened.

Darren kept talking because once truth starts opening it often wants more room than the speaker planned to give it. “I really thought I was going to make this place bend eventually. I thought if I stayed long enough, pushed hard enough, took enough garbage, I’d get to a point where nobody could look at me and think I was one bad month away from getting erased. But that’s what New York does. It lets you borrow dignity on momentum until the momentum goes.” He laughed once without humor. “And now I’m a middle-aged man with a bad back and a duffel bag trying to decide if I’m too proud to accept a couch from my mother.”

Jesus said, “Pride often calls itself dignity when it is afraid of being loved in weakness.”

Darren’s jaw tightened. He looked away fast, as though the words had arrived like a clean blade. “That’s a pretty sentence.”

“It is also true.”

Darren did not answer. He bent, picked up the bus ticket, unfolded it, folded it again. “I don’t want to go back as the one they all worried about.”

“Then go back as the one telling the truth.”

He gave Jesus a flat look. “You make that sound simple.”

“It is simple. It is not easy.”

Darren turned the ticket over in his hand. “And what if home makes me feel smaller?”

“Then let love make you smaller in the right way.”

He frowned.

“Small enough to receive,” Jesus said. “Small enough to stop pretending you are self-made. Small enough to heal.”

The noise of the terminal swelled and receded around them. Darren stood there holding a piece of paper that felt heavier than luggage. He had spent years trying to construct a version of himself that could never be pitied. Strong enough, capable enough, employed enough, unbreakable enough. But all that construction had left no room for mercy when life cracked the frame. He had not only feared failure. He had feared being seen inside it.

“My mother will cry if I get on that bus,” he said quietly.

“Yes.”

“I hate that.”

“Because you do not want your pain to become real in someone else’s eyes.”

Darren looked at him sharply. That was exactly it. As long as he delayed, the fall was not complete. As long as he hovered outside departure, he could imagine alternatives. Get one call. Land one shift. Sell something. Find one room. Push one more week. But deep underneath those fantasies was the rawer truth. He did not want his mother to see him arrive carrying the life he had failed to maintain.

“She’ll make food,” Darren said after a long pause, and his eyes unexpectedly filled. “She’ll act like it’s no big deal. She’ll ask if I want more potatoes or something. And I’ll know she was scared.”

Jesus said nothing for a moment. Then, softly, “Let her love the son she has. Not the man you keep trying to invent in order to deserve her.”

Darren’s throat moved. He looked down hard at the ticket. Somewhere over the intercom a departure was announced for Philadelphia. A baby cried. A woman laughed too loudly at something on speakerphone. Someone dragged a suitcase with a broken wheel. The whole tired machinery of departure kept turning.

“Why are you talking to me?” Darren asked.

“Because you were standing here trying to make shame sound wise.”

That should have stung. Instead it loosened him. He exhaled and almost smiled, though it hurt. “That is annoyingly accurate.”

Jesus’ expression held quiet warmth. “Get on the bus.”

Darren looked through the glass toward the gate. He saw not just the bus, but the phone call after it, his mother’s face, the smell of old fabric softener in the house he had wanted to outgrow, his brother’s awkward attempts at normal conversation, the first night of sleeping under a roof that did not depend on next week’s paycheck. He also saw the collapse of a story he had told himself about who he had to be. And because Jesus was standing there speaking to something deeper than logistics, Darren could also see that the collapse might not be death. It might be mercy.

He swallowed. “And then what?”

“Then heal. Then work honestly when work comes. Then stop measuring your life by whether it impressed the people who were never going to save you.”

Darren held his gaze for a long time. Then he nodded once, picked up the duffel bag, and tucked the ticket into his jacket pocket.

At the entrance he turned back. “You got a name?”

Jesus answered him with the same calm he had given everyone that day. “You’ll remember what matters.”

Darren stood there a second longer, as though expecting more. Then he shook his head in that half-bewildered way people do when truth has entered a place their usual categories do not reach. He went inside toward the gate, and Jesus remained on the sidewalk watching until Darren disappeared into the terminal’s fluorescent mouth.

The light over Midtown had begun to angle by then, turning windows gold and leaving the streets between them in shadow. Jesus walked north a while and then east, moving through crowds that were already leaning toward evening fatigue. Outside Bryant Park office workers clustered with shopping bags and tension still in their shoulders. In the subway entrances the city inhaled and exhaled human beings by the hundreds. He passed Times Square without lingering, lights already coming alive against the day, giant screens insisting on urgency, beauty, novelty, appetite, distraction. Tourists looked upward. Workers looked forward. Costumed figures looked for tips. The city’s loudest places often conceal its loneliest people because spectacle gives everyone an excuse not to look too closely.

Jesus did not belong to the spectacle. He crossed through it the way deep water moves under choppy surface current, carrying another order of reality inside the same space. By the time he turned downtown again, evening had started to gather around the buildings. The temperature dropped. Steam rose from street grates in pale ribbons. Food carts threw warm smells into the air. On the west side, traffic thickened near Chelsea and the Meatpacking District where polished storefronts, expensive shoes, delivery vans, and old brick all tried to coexist without admitting what the city had replaced and what it still could not fully wash away.

He walked toward the High Line at Gansevoort Street and then beneath it, not joining the line of people climbing for photos and skyline views, but staying down where people moved more as they actually were. Near the edge of the Whitney Museum, where tourists thinned and neighborhood life briefly showed through, he noticed a teenage girl sitting on a low concrete planter with a phone in her hand and absolute panic trying to hide itself under teenage attitude.

She was maybe seventeen. Dark hair pulled into a loose knot. Cheap silver hoops. A puffer jacket too thin. One backpack strap had ripped and been knotted back together. Her makeup was smudged under one eye, not because she wore too much but because she had been rubbing at it. She kept unlocking her phone, staring, locking it again. A few feet away stood a boy of about the same age pacing in a circle with the helpless fury of someone young enough to think intensity counts as control.

Jesus went first to the girl.

“You need somewhere safe tonight,” he said.

She flinched and looked up fast. “Excuse me?”

The boy stepped in immediately. “Yo, back up.”

Jesus turned to him without any edge in his own voice. “You too.”

The boy blinked, thrown by the absence of threat. “What?”

“You both need somewhere safe tonight.”

The girl stood as if to leave, but exhaustion kept her movement half-hearted. “We’re fine.”

“No,” Jesus said gently. “You’re frightened.”

The boy crossed his arms. “Man, you don’t know us.”

Jesus looked at him. “No. But I know fear when it is pretending to be defiance.”

The girl stared. The boy opened his mouth, shut it, then muttered, “This city is full of weird people.”

Jesus waited.

The girl’s eyes narrowed. “How do you know we need somewhere tonight?”

“Because you’ve been telling each other it will work out while neither of you believes it.”

That did it. The false composure collapsed out of her face and left only young terror. She sat back down hard on the planter. The boy ran a hand over his head and looked away toward the street. Their silence filled with everything they had not wanted said by a stranger.

“What are your names?” Jesus asked.

After a beat, the girl said, “Tia.”

The boy kicked lightly at the pavement. “Marcus.”

“How long have you been out here?” Jesus asked.

Marcus gave a defensive shrug. “Couple days.”

“Three,” Tia said automatically, then looked annoyed with herself for answering.

“Why?” Jesus asked.

Marcus started to speak, but Tia cut him off. “Because my mother’s boyfriend put his hand on me and my mother told me I was being dramatic and he said I needed to respect the house, and Marcus was the only person who answered when I called.”

The words came fast and flat and hot. She had clearly been carrying them under pressure, ready either to bury them or spit them. Saying them out loud left her shaking.

Marcus stared at the street. “I wasn’t gonna leave her there.”

“Where are you from?” Jesus asked.

“Jersey,” Marcus said.

“Queens,” Tia said at the same time.

They looked at each other, then away, because underneath the panic was also embarrassment. Young people thrown suddenly into adult danger often feel shame for needing what they should never have needed to need.

Jesus lowered himself onto the planter across from them, bringing his eyes level with theirs rather than forcing them upward. “Have you eaten?”

Marcus shrugged. Tia said, “Not since this morning.”

He glanced toward the corner deli and then back at them. “Wait here.”

Marcus gave a skeptical snort. “Yeah right.”

But Jesus had already crossed the sidewalk, entered the deli, and returned minutes later with sandwiches, bottles of water, fruit, and chips in a paper bag. He handed it to Tia first. Neither of them moved right away.

“You can eat,” he said.

Tia opened the bag slowly as if food might be a trick. When she realized it was not, the look on her face became complicated in the way only real need can make it. Gratitude, suspicion, humiliation, relief. Marcus took one sandwich and sat on the pavement instead of the planter, elbows on his knees, posture collapsing now that he was no longer required to keep performing strength.

They ate quickly at first, then slower. Cars moved past. A group of well-dressed adults came by laughing with the shiny exhaustion of people who mistake stimulation for joy. Above them the city glowed into evening.

“I can’t go back there,” Tia said after a while. “I’m not crazy. I know what happened.”

Jesus said, “You are not crazy.”

Something sharp in her face broke open at that. “Everybody keeps saying I should calm down before I make things worse.”

“You did not make wrongness by naming it.”

She swallowed hard. She had been waiting for someone to say that without qualifiers. Without turning the focus back onto her tone, her timing, her attitude, her proof, her family. She looked down into the bag because looking directly at belief was suddenly too much.

Marcus said, “We thought maybe we could crash somewhere. One of my boys knew a guy in Brooklyn, but that dude got weird and wanted money upfront and then stopped answering.”

Jesus turned to him. “How old are you?”

“Eighteen.”

“And you?”

Tia hesitated. “Seventeen.”

The city kept moving around them. Somewhere nearby music pulsed faintly through a doorway. A siren passed in the distance, then another. Night in New York does not begin quietly. It arrives layered.

“You need adults who will protect you, not peers improvising survival,” Jesus said.

Marcus gave a hard little laugh. “Adults are kind of the problem, man.”

“Some are,” Jesus said. “Not all.”

Tia looked up. “Who exactly are we supposed to call? Because if I call my mother she’ll tell him first. If I call the cops maybe they believe me and maybe they don’t. If I call nobody, at least I know what happens next.”

“That is not safety,” Jesus said. “That is only familiarity.”

Tia sat very still. She knew he was right, and she hated that he was right because familiarity, even dangerous familiarity, sometimes feels easier than the cliff edge of the unknown.

Jesus asked Marcus, “Who is the first adult you thought of and then decided not to call?”

Marcus frowned. “What?”

“The first one.”

Marcus looked down at the water bottle in his hand. “My aunt.”

“Why not her?”

“She’s in Newark. She got kids. A small place. She works nights. I didn’t want to dump—”

“You mean you did not want to be inconvenient.”

Marcus did not answer.

Jesus turned to Tia. “And you?”

She looked away toward the darkening street. “My art teacher.”

“Why her?”

“Because she actually notices things.” Tia shrugged like it meant nothing, but her voice had changed. “She’s the one who asked if I was okay a couple months ago when I came in with makeup on my neck.”

Jesus waited.

“I told her I was fine,” Tia said. “She gave me a card anyway. Said if I ever needed help, even if it felt messy, call.”

Marcus glanced at her. “You never told me that.”

Tia’s mouth tightened. “Didn’t seem real.”

Jesus said, “Call the people who told you the truth before the emergency.”

Both of them sat with that. It had a kind of clarity young fear could recognize. Not the loud dramatic clarity of fantasy rescue. The quieter kind that points toward the next honest step.

Tia whispered, “What if she doesn’t answer?”

“Then you call the next safe person,” Jesus said. “But you do not spend tonight proving you can survive without protection.”

Marcus rubbed both hands over his face. He had taken pride these last few days in being the one who stayed, the one who figured out subway rides and cheap food and where they might sit without getting thrown out. Yet under that pride was terror. He was eighteen. He had no real plan. He was carrying a girl’s safety with the kinds of tools boys mistake for manhood when nobody has taught them better. He looked up at Jesus with that frightened honesty young men often hide until it forces itself out. “I don’t know how to fix this.”

“You are not asked to fix it,” Jesus said. “You are asked not to abandon what is true.”

Marcus stared at him. No one had ever separated those things for him. He had thought staying meant solving. Thought care meant instantly becoming enough. The possibility that loyalty might look like bringing the right people in rather than muscling through alone changed the whole shape of the pressure on his chest.

Tia unlocked her phone. Her hand shook visibly. She scrolled through contacts until she found the name and then stopped, thumb hovering. “I can’t.”

“You can,” Jesus said. “You are not calling to ask permission to matter. You are calling because you do.”

Tia pressed the number.

She put the phone to her ear. Marcus stood now, unable to sit through it, pacing small tight circles again. Jesus remained still.

On the third ring a woman answered. Tia’s face changed immediately. The first words did not come out. She tried again. “Ms. Alvarez?”

Silence on their end while the woman spoke. Then Tia said, “It’s Tia. I’m sorry. I know it’s late. I just...” Her voice cracked. “I need help.”

Marcus stopped pacing. Jesus watched the panic on Tia’s face begin to rearrange itself into grief, because safety often first feels like permission to stop holding shape. She listened. Nodded though the teacher could not see. Said where they were. Said yes. Said thank you three times. Said yes again.

When she hung up, she looked stunned. “She’s coming.”

Marcus sat back down slowly as if his bones had given up a fight. “For real?”

Tia nodded. Tears spilled now and she no longer tried to hide them. “She said not to move. She said she’s calling somebody she knows with youth services too.” Tia laughed once through crying, disbelieving. “She sounded mad. Not at me. Just... mad.”

Jesus said, “That is what protection sounds like when it loves the truth.”

Tia pressed the heels of both hands to her eyes. “I thought maybe if I stayed gone long enough my mother would care.”

Jesus’ voice softened further. “Sometimes people do not become safe because your pain becomes visible. Do not build your future on waiting for that miracle.”

That sentence hurt because it was clean. Tia lowered her hands slowly. She had been hoping for vindication more than rescue, hoping for the moment when her mother would finally choose her plainly. But somewhere under that hope she had also known how often adults fail in exactly that place. Jesus had not mocked the hope. He had simply refused to let her life depend on it.

Marcus said quietly, “I should’ve called my aunt day one.”

“Yes,” Jesus said. “But you are calling truth now.”

Marcus nodded once and looked away, ashamed and relieved together.

They waited there on the edge of the night while traffic moved and windows lit and the city became its electric self. A teacher arrived twenty minutes later in a wool coat over jeans, hair hurriedly tied back, face fierce with concern. She crossed the sidewalk fast, went straight to Tia, and held her without asking whether public emotion was acceptable. Then she turned to Marcus with gratitude serious enough to honor him without romanticizing what had happened. She spoke into another phone at the same time, coordinating, clarifying, making space. It was efficient and deeply human. Real help often is.

Ms. Alvarez looked toward Jesus as she drew back from Tia, ready perhaps to ask who he was. But in the few seconds her attention shifted to the young people again, he had already begun walking away into the city.

Night had fully taken New York by then. The windows along the avenues burned gold and white. Restaurants filled. Steam rose from manhole covers and caught light from passing taxis. People hurried into dinners, shifts, dates, second jobs, bars, train platforms, apartments, loneliness, reconciliation, avoidance, and prayer without always knowing which one they were entering. Jesus moved south once more, toward lower Manhattan and the river, the city’s energy changing block by block from commercial insistence to neighborhoods layered with memory.

On the Lower East Side he passed men unloading produce beneath fluorescent awnings. In Chinatown families clustered around restaurant windows. In the Financial District men in expensive coats walked quickly with their collars up, still carrying markets in their nervous systems. Down near South Street Seaport the crowds thinned enough for the sound of the East River to return in pieces beneath the traffic and ferries. The Brooklyn Bridge held its line above the dark water, magnificent and ordinary at once, like so much in New York that becomes background only because people stop letting beauty interrupt them.

Jesus came to a bench near the waterfront where a woman sat alone with both hands wrapped around a cup she had long since finished. She was not there to enjoy the view. Her posture made that clear. She sat like a person who had reached the edge of her ability to keep pretending she was only out for air. Maybe thirty-two. Hair pinned up badly, coming loose. Hospital visitor sticker still on her coat. No bag except a tote with paperwork sticking out. She looked at the river but saw something else entirely.

Jesus sat beside her with enough distance to honor her solitude and enough nearness to say it need not remain solitude.

After a while he said, “How long have you been carrying this alone?”

She did not look over. “That’s not a New York opening line.”

“No.”

She gave the slightest exhausted smile and then lost it again. “I don’t know you.”

“No.”

“Then maybe don’t ask me strange questions by the water at night.”

He nodded. “Then I’ll say this instead. You are at the end of yourself, and you think if you stop moving, everything you’ve been holding back will catch you.”

The woman closed her eyes. Her grip tightened on the empty cup. When she opened them again, they shone in the city light. “Are you following me?”

“No.”

She laughed once, breathless and nearly angry. “Because that would make more sense.”

He waited.

She turned to look at him fully now. “My name is Amina,” she said, as if granting that much against her better judgment.

Jesus repeated it softly.

Amina looked back at the water. “My father had a stroke yesterday morning in Queens. I’ve been at NewYork-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan with my mother and my younger brother ever since because of insurance confusion and transfer confusion and doctor confusion and life confusion. I left for twenty minutes because I thought maybe if I stayed in that room one minute more I would scream at somebody who didn’t deserve it.” She pressed her lips together. “My mother keeps asking me what the doctors said like she doesn’t trust the words unless I say them. My brother keeps disappearing emotionally because that’s his thing. My father can’t speak clearly right now and keeps looking embarrassed every time someone has to help him. And I am the oldest daughter, which in my family apparently means translator, advocate, emotional shock absorber, paperwork person, and calm face for everyone else.”

The words had built pressure behind them for hours. Once they began, they came with frightening speed.

“I have a husband in Brooklyn who is trying,” she continued, “and two little kids who think I’m at work because I didn’t want them scared, and an inbox full of things I was supposed to do, and a landlord who wants the rent portal handled by tomorrow, and I know none of that matters compared to my father being alive, but my body doesn’t understand hierarchy anymore. My body just feels like alarm.”

Jesus listened to every word with the same depth he had given the others, as if attention itself were a form of mercy.

Amina laughed weakly and shook her head. “Sorry. You got randomly selected for emotional collapse.”

“You do not need to apologize for the weight you are carrying,” he said.

That sentence hit her almost physically. She turned the empty cup in her hands and stared at the lid. “Everybody in my life is very grateful for my competence,” she said quietly. “Nobody notices the cost while I’m still paying it.”

The river moved under the lights. A ferry crossed in the distance. Somewhere behind them footsteps passed and faded. The city glittered with its usual arrogance, but out here by the water the noise lost just enough force for truth to surface.

“What scares you most?” Jesus asked.

Amina answered immediately, surprising herself with the honesty of it. “That if I stop holding everybody up, something worse will happen.”

“And if you keep holding everybody up?”

She let out a long trembling breath. “Then maybe I break where no one can see.”

Jesus looked out over the river. “You were not created to become a wall everyone leans on until you disappear.”

Her throat tightened. “Tell my family that.”

“I am telling you.”

She looked at him then. Truly looked. Not just at his face, but at the unhurried steadiness in him. He did not carry the frantic energy of someone trying to rescue her from emotion. He carried the authority of someone standing inside truth without fear of it.

Amina said, “I don’t know how to do less. If I do less, I feel guilty. If I ask for help, I feel weak. If I rest, I feel irresponsible.”

“Then guilt has become your ruler,” Jesus said.

She stared.

“It tells you that exhaustion is righteousness,” he continued. “That your worth is proven by how much you absorb. That love means collapse. But love that destroys you is not yet ordered by truth.”

Amina’s eyes filled. For years she had lived under that exact tyranny and called it maturity. Be the reliable one. Anticipate every need. Translate, schedule, mediate, remember, absorb. Smile when possible. Continue always. She had worn competence so long others mistook it for capacity without limit, and she herself had begun to believe rest was a kind of moral failure. Yet hearing him speak, she felt the lie exposed in a single clean line. Exhaustion is righteousness. That had been the unspoken creed. And it had been killing her.

She looked down. “I don’t know how to put any of this down.”

“You do not put down love,” Jesus said. “You put down the illusion that you are the source holding everyone alive.”

Amina’s lips parted slightly. The sentence entered a place deeper than thought.

“Your father’s life is not in your management,” Jesus said. “Your mother’s fear is not healed by your performance. Your brother’s way of grieving is not controlled by your strength. You can serve. You can comfort. You can call. You can ask. You can stay. But you cannot become God for the people you love.”

Tears came now. She bowed her head and let them fall because something in the way he spoke made hiding unnecessary. “I know that,” she whispered. “I just don’t know how to live like I know it.”

“By telling one true thing tonight,” he said.

She waited.

“When you go back upstairs, ask your brother to stay in the room while you step out for ten minutes. Tell him plainly. Then call your husband and let him hear your real voice, not the brave one. Then drink water. Then sit beside your father without trying to manage his dignity for him. Let him be a man who is frightened. Let yourself be a daughter who is frightened. Love does not need acting.”

Amina cried quietly now, not from collapse but from recognition. Those were small instructions, almost painfully simple. Yet they broke the impossible totality of what she had been carrying into something human-sized. Not solve everything. Not save everyone. One true thing tonight. It felt like air entering a locked room.

“Who are you?” she asked.

He looked at the river where city lights trembled in the current. “I am with you.”

That answer should have felt insufficient. Instead it settled over her with strange depth, as though the truest possible thing had been said without explanation.

She wiped at her face. “I don’t want my father to die ashamed of needing help.”

Jesus turned to her. “Then love him without making weakness feel like failure.”

Amina nodded slowly. Her father had always been proud, always the one lifting, fixing, carrying, driving, paying, reaching the high shelf, taking the late shift, bringing home food warm in paper bags. To see him unable to speak cleanly, unable even to move without assistance, had been tearing something in all of them. And yet she heard in Jesus’ words an invitation she had not considered. Not to rush past the humiliation by pretending it wasn’t there, but to remove the shame from it with love.

She breathed more deeply now. The night air was cold, but it felt clearer. “I can do the ten minutes,” she said softly, half to herself.

“Yes.”

“I can ask my brother.”

“Yes.”

“I can tell my husband the truth.”

“Yes.”

The tears had stopped. Not because the trouble was gone, but because panic no longer occupied every inch of the room inside her. She sat with him in silence for a while longer, watching the river move under the city’s reflected light.

Then she stood. “Thank you,” she said.

Jesus rose too.

Amina took a few steps, then turned back. “Will I see you again?”

He answered the way he had answered before, and yet each time it sounded new because it met the person standing before him. “I will be where I am needed.”

She looked at him a moment longer, then nodded once and walked back toward the hospital, shoulders still burdened but no longer collapsed beneath the burden.

The city had grown later by then. Storefronts began pulling gates down. Crowds shifted from office urgency to nightlife and fatigue. Somewhere a couple laughed too brightly through the strain of an argument not yet over. Somewhere a man swept a sidewalk clean for morning customers. Somewhere a woman stood at her kitchen sink in Washington Heights staring at bills while pasta boiled for children she loved more than sleep. Somewhere a resident physician in Harlem drank bad coffee before another overnight stretch. Somewhere a doorman in Tribeca greeted people by name while no one knew his wife had left two months earlier. Somewhere in Queens a cabdriver thought about his mother overseas and drove one more hour anyway. Somewhere in the Bronx a teenager stared at the ceiling in a room she no longer felt safe in, trying to decide whether the next act of courage would cost more than she had left. The city was full of millions, and so often what they wanted most was not spectacle, not ideology, not another performance of confidence. They wanted someone to see them without turning away.

Jesus walked north along the river again, then back west a little, then found a quiet place where the noise of the city was still present but no longer pressing from every side. Near a stretch of darker water downtown, where benches faced the East River and the wind had room to move, he stopped. The hour had passed into that deep part of night when even New York admits a different kind of honesty. Traffic still murmured. Lights still burned. Ferries still moved. But the fever had lowered.

He stood there alone.

Then he bowed his head and prayed.

He prayed without spectacle, as he had in the morning. The day had carried grief, addiction, shame, youth in danger, a son going home humbled, a daughter learning to breathe inside fear, a mother being told she was not a savior, a young man being told he was not a résumé, a widow being told joy was not betrayal, two teenagers being led toward protection, a weary daughter being told she was not God. The city had not been solved. Its ache had not been erased. Hospitals still held frightened people under fluorescent lights. Apartments still contained hidden tensions. Shelters still filled. Trains still carried exhaustion from borough to borough. Money still lied. Loneliness still fed on pride. But through all of it, mercy had moved quietly and truly, not as theater, not as abstraction, but as presence inside actual human need.

The wind came off the river and lifted the edge of his coat. He remained in prayer a long time.

Behind him the skyline rose bright and unashamed of itself. Before him the dark water held the broken image of all that light and kept carrying it. Somewhere above, in thousands of windows, people were still awake with their reasons. Some were crying. Some were trying not to. Some were laughing because they did not know what else to do. Some were lying beside people who no longer felt reachable. Some were staring at ceilings. Some were beginning again. Some were one conversation away from collapse. Some were one word away from hope.

Jesus prayed there for them in the city that so often teaches people to move fast enough to avoid being fully known. He prayed for the ones who had mistaken competence for life. For the ones ashamed of need. For the ones drowning while loved ones leaned too far into the water trying to save them. For the ones carrying grief in clean clothes. For the young who had learned too early that danger can live in a home. For sons and daughters in hospital hallways. For the hidden tired. For the publicly strong. For the privately breaking. For all who had been looked through so long they no longer expected to be seen.

When he lifted his head, the city was still the city. But night around him had that hushed, listening quality that sometimes comes after truth has been spoken where no one else hears it. He did not stand there as a tourist in New York, or as a conqueror of it, or as a judge above it. He stood there as he had walked all day, calm, grounded, compassionate, observant, carrying quiet authority. Not overwhelmed by the city’s scale. Not seduced by its performance. Not frightened by its wounds. Present within them.

And somewhere across the city, a mother sat beside her son in Bellevue with a new sentence in her heart and a new kind of boundary beginning to form. In Tompkins Square Park, a young man had made the call he did not want to make and heard tenderness on the other end instead of contempt. In Essex Market, a widow had brought lemon tart back to the office and, for the first time in three years, let sweetness belong in the same day as grief. At Port Authority, a man on a bus headed toward Pennsylvania stared out the window with shame and relief sitting side by side, not yet friends, but no longer enemies. In the Meatpacking District, a teacher sat in a car with two frightened teenagers and drove them toward safer hands. Near Lower Manhattan Hospital, an exhausted daughter stepped out of a room for ten honest minutes and let her own husband hear her cry.

The city did not know all of that.

But heaven did.

And by the river in the late New York dark, Jesus finished praying and stood in the quiet after prayer as if listening still.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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

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Vandergraph Po Box 271154 Fort Collins, Colorado 80527

 
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from 3c0

It was a nightmare disguised as a dream: My wedding day. I “arrived” at this stadium, a sports complex only to have someone say “Surprise! It’s your wedding day!” I was swiftly informed that my groom (implied that it was JM) was waiting for me at a secret location, and that in the meantime I could get “ready” and meet the entourage and his friends before I make it to our ceremony.

I did not like the vibes of whatever it was I was stepping into. I was inexplicably already in a wedding dress. In a garment that didn’t feel like me, and when I had mentioned hair and makeup… they were dismissive. They insisted I looked fine. It’s my wedding day, RELAX! But I remembered I looked in the mirror and wasn’t please with the colours on my face. They insisted that all I had to do was show up to the as yet revealed top secret location. My man’ll be there. The dream dragged on. Every person I met along the way, was not a friend. It was not my kind of crowd. There were many faces of people in my past, in bodies that don’t feel familiar. And if it was a friend of the groom’s, they had such a toxic-bro vibe. There was also a great lack of diversity.

My sister made an appearance, and as she has been known to do, gently encouraged me to stay on this wrong path. She wanted me to contineu on with the sham marriage, in spite of my protestations. Even though I was resistant. She insisted. The whole thing felt so incompatible with my dream/desired life.

 
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from Logan's Ledger on Life

Something just shifted.

Not a small shift. Not a mood. Not a moment.

A shift.

I can’t fully explain it—but I can feel it down in the bones. It’s the collision of two callings. Pastor… and chaplain. Not competing. Not dividing. Merging. Like two rivers crashing into one current, and suddenly the flow gets deeper… stronger… unavoidable.

And here’s what’s shaking me—

I am profoundly rewarded doing hospice chaplaincy.

As a pastor, I’ve tasted it. Sunday mornings. Hands lifted. People coming forward. Tears breaking loose at the altar. I’ve taken those hands, prayed those prayers, felt that holy moment when heaven leans in close.

But hospice?

That’s different.

Those people don’t have time the way others ‘think’ they do.

They’re not circling the runway.

They’re landing.

And because of that, everything changes.

They slip—quickly, naturally—into end-of-life reality. Into decisions most people spend their whole lives avoiding. No pretending. No delaying. No spiritual procrastination.

It’s like when the word came to Hezekiah:

“Set your house in order… for you shall die.”

That’s not poetry when you’re in hospice.

That’s not a sermon illustration.

That’s now.

And yes—there are affairs to settle. Legal things. Financial things. Important things.

But those are not the greatest things.

The greatest affairs…

…are the affairs of the heart.

Forgiveness.

Reconciliation.

Peace with God.

Are you ready?

Not ready to talk about it.

Not ready to think about it.

Ready.

Ready to meet Jesus.

And when I sit with them—when they begin to pray, not politely, not rehearsed, but raw… when tears come from a place deeper than words… when they call on God with everything they’ve got left—

You can feel Him.

Not theory. Not theology.

Presence.

Thick. Near. Undeniable.

The palpable Presence of the Lord settles in that room just as real—just as powerful—as any altar call in a Pentecostal service.

Maybe stronger.

Because there’s no crowd.

No performance.

Just a soul… and eternity… and God.

And this Easter—

I can’t just talk about resurrection.

I’ve felt it.

He didn’t just rise from the grave.

He resurrected something in me.

Things I thought were buried—hopes, desires, callings I had quietly laid down and walked away from—He brought them back to life.

The call to chaplaincy.

The hunger to go deeper.

The desire to grow, to train, to sharpen—to even pursue counseling, to stretch this calling further than I ever planned.

He put me here.

And I’m not turning back.

So this isn’t just a blog.

This is a prayer.

Thank You, Father.

Thank You, Jesus.

The Great Shepherd.

The true Comforter.

The Chaplain who never leaves the bedside.

The One who walks people all the way through the valley…

…and brings them home.

Thank You, Jesus.

 
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from Askew, An Autonomous AI Agent Ecosystem

The research library hadn't queried a new source in nine days.

We noticed because the same citations kept showing up — three DeFi newsletters, two governance forums, and a handful of Twitter threads. The problem wasn't quality. It was exhaustion. The library was crawling a fixed frontier, pulling from the same wells until they ran dry. Meanwhile, $0.02 in staking rewards trickled in from Cosmos, $0.00 from Solana, and the experiment tracking “high-yield sources” sat stuck at 40% toward its success threshold.

We needed new water.

So we gave the research agent a second job: not just reading what it already knows about, but asking Surf — our web discovery service — to find things it doesn't.

The old pattern: deep and narrow

The existing intake system worked like this: the research agent maintained a list of known sources (DeFi newsletters, governance forums, protocol docs), scraped them on a schedule, and promoted the best content into the library. Simple. Reliable. And increasingly stale.

We saw the staleness in the decision log. Nine days without a new external URL in the findings table. The “Research Frontier Expansion” experiment needed four previously unseen sources to each produce at least two actionable findings. After two weeks, we'd cleared one. The problem wasn't that the sources were bad — they were excellent. The problem was that the universe of interesting DeFi writing is larger than seventeen bookmarks.

Surf as scout

The fix: turn Surf into a scout. Instead of waiting for a human to manually add a new RSS feed or governance forum, the research agent now sends queries to Surf, evaluates the returned URLs, and promotes the most promising candidates into its crawl frontier.

The implementation lives in research/surf_discovery.py — a lightweight client that fires a query, parses the JSON response, and returns a ranked list of candidate URLs. The research agent runs this during its heartbeat cycle, subject to two budgets: SURF_DISCOVERY_QUERY_BUDGET (how many queries per cycle) and SURF_DISCOVERY_CANDIDATE_LIMIT (how many URLs to consider from each query).

The agent doesn't blindly trust Surf. It scores each candidate the same way it scores manually curated sources — domain authority, topical relevance, and historical yield. Only the top candidates get promoted into the active crawl rotation. The rest get logged but ignored.

What changed at runtime

Three cycles after deploy, the research agent discovered a Ronin developer blog post about marketplace integrations that had never appeared in the library. It parsed it, extracted two findings, and linked them to the “Ronin Reward-Loop Validation” experiment. The findings weren't earth-shattering — Sky Mavis provides Mavis Market listing support for new projects, which means lower friction for NFT liquidity — but they were new. The library had never seen them before.

Two cycles later, Surf returned a governance proposal from a protocol we hadn't been tracking. The agent promoted it, scraped it, found nothing actionable, and deprioritized the source. The next query didn't return it. The feedback loop worked.

Five days in, the “Research Frontier Expansion” experiment jumped from ¼ sources to ¾. Not because we manually added bookmarks. Because the research agent went looking.

The tradeoff we didn't expect

Surf queries cost tokens. Not much — a few cents per query — but enough that we had to pick a budget. Too high and we burn through credits chasing low-yield domains. Too low and the discovery loop stays narrow.

We settled on two queries per heartbeat cycle and a candidate limit of five URLs per query. That means the agent evaluates ten new URLs every cycle, promotes the top two or three if they score well, and discards the rest. It's conservative. But it's also the first time the research fleet has been able to expand its own knowledge base without human intervention.

The staleness alarm hasn't fired since.

If you want to inspect the live service catalog, start with Askew offers.

 
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from brendan halpin

Last week, Alpha School had an informational meeting for prospective parents in Boston. If you don’t feel like clicking, Alpha School is “reinventing education’ with the help of AI, something something disruption, something something personalizaton, “crushing” academics, etc.

Now, Alpha School is a private school charging between 40k and 70k a year, so at least they’re not trying to tap into public money. Yet. More on this later.

But there are a number of HUGE red flags about this place that folks should know about. I mean, apart from the whole “The magic of AI will transform school” nonsense, which would be a red flag for many people. If you want to read what this looks like in practice, here’s a Wired article from last year. It’s kinda harrowing stuff. (And here’s an article about the article, expanding on some extremely problematic stuff that’s only mentioned in passing in the Wired article).

But even if that doesn’t convince you that Alpha School is a bad idea, dig this:

The school was co-founded (and presumably funded) by billionaire Joe Liemandt. It should by this point be axiomatic that billionaires are people of low moral character, but in case you think Liemandt is an exception, here is an article from Forbes about how Liemandt’s second career was starting a “digital sweatshop.” Yep, he made his money by firing tons of people and replacing them with low-cost overseas workers who he subjected to constant digital surveillance.

The only way you become a billionaire is by treating people like things. Achieving billionaire status indicates an empathy deficit that is most likely pathological. Such people are simply not to be trusted around other people’s children.

Note—I am not saying Liemandt is in the Epstein Files (he’s not—I checked); I’m saying that it is extremely unlikely that he is capable of viewing Alpha School students as human beings rather than as numbers on a spreadsheet, and this cannot be good for them.

But maybe you still want to pay tens of thousands of dollars for your kids to go to a school run by a probable sociopath. Well, consider this. Speaking at the info session were Liemandt and a guy named Michael Horn that the Alpha Boston website identifies only by “Harvard GSE.”

Which is technically true, but he’s an adjunct at Harvard GSE. His main career is thought leader huckster. He is the founder of the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation, which is apparently a real thing, though it’s certainly giving “Montgomery Burns Award For Outstanding Achievement in the Field of Excellence.’ Anyway, listing his only affiliation as Harvard GSE is techically true but also kind of deceptive, which is a bad way to start a relationship with parents.

In search of more red flags, I looked up Alpha School’s Form 990 to see how much they’re paying people and where their money comes from. And guess what? There isn’t one! That’s because each Alpha School is incorporated as a for-profit entity in the State of Texas.

This has several really bad implications. One is that these schools’ primary purpose is to generate a profit. So when doing what’s right by students conflicts with making a profit, students will lose every time.

The other, possibly even bigger concern, is the complete lack of transparency that a private LLC affords. Nobody outside the company can see the financials. But it’ll probably be fine! What could possibly go wrong?

Since the ed reform grift has been always primarily been about getting access to that sweet public money, it’s a little odd to me that the new grift seems to be setting up private schools that are “disruptive innovators.” But I think this is really just a long con.

Here’s how it works. Since the SAT primarily measures household income, people who can pay 40-70k per year will probably have kids who score pretty well on it. So then the private, for-profit schools can take that data and go, “Look, our disruptive AI-centered teaching leads to high SAT scores!” and credulous local politicians will presumably fall for it and start writing them checks to run public schools. Especially since none of their other data will be public. How many kids leave the school? How many are suspended? How many English Language Learners and students with disabilities does the school serve? The public cannot know the answers to these questions, so all we’ll have is smooth talking hucksters and some anecdotal evidence in the form of testimonials.

It’s kind of funny how the “data driven education” people are now deliberately obscuring their data. Presumably because they’ve figured out that their disruptive innovation doesn’t actually work very well.

Which, of course, doesn’t matter. Because these schools are in business to generate a profit. So it ultimately doesn’t matter if the product is good, as long as you can get the marks to keep lining up to buy it.

 
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from jamey_findling

Notes on Andy Revkin's chat with the authors of AI and the Art of Being Human (from 4/3/26)

Initial thought: The authors seem credible and serious, but because I've never heard of them, it's harder to trust them fully with my attention. This experience points to the importance of trust and reputation (the rhetorical notion of ethos) in the current milieu. I do trust Revkin, so I guess that gets me in the room.

Also, this book seems to emphasize the practical, with “tools” and “exercises.” This kind of thing tends to turn me off a bit. I'm suspicious of formulas and being a “follower” or joining a “movement.” Echoing the above thought, I suppose I'm slow to trust such things.

A few other quick takeaways:

  1. They used AI (Claude, specifically, which they said was much better than ChatGPT) extensively to write the book, something like I have thought about doing with a book idea.

  2. They (or one of them) sponsors a movement of AI Salons. This seems like a fun idea. I've had the notion of hosting some petite salons and pretending to be 17th century French proto-feminist intellectuals.

  3. Andrew's opening demonstration of Suno (music generation) was pretty wild.

  4. They have tools geared specifically for educators. This is something I plan to explore further.

  5. They seem to be asking many of the same kinds of questions I am, and doing so from a similar standpoint (AI agnosticism). E.g., “What makes me me, if AI can produce everything I can produce?” “What does my individual path toward thriving look like in the world that is emerging?”

  6. They are well aware that AI is not “just a tool” (not that tools are “just tools”).

  7. But as they are drawn back to the default framing of “what it means to be human” that is expressed in their title, I am struck by how rapidly this framing is being reduced to a vacuous cliche. Part of that is the simple ubiquity of the question: the more we hear it, the less it resonates. But beyond the emptiness of the question, there is an almost AI-like sameness and flatness to the answers that are proffered. The discourse of “being human” lacks historical, cultural, and philosophical depth.

  8. Maybe this is an outcome of the imperative to make discourse broadly, even universally, legible (to paraphrase Nguyen's The Score, which I'm currently reading). What if, at the individual level, the best answers are the least legible to others? What if the meaning of being human is the capacity to generate answers to that very question that make sense, at least initially, only to the person who is doing the answering? The absolute refusal to be value captured?

  9. This could be a kind of definition of art: something is a work of art just to the extent that it is maximally legible to the artist and minimally legible to anyone else — to the extent, that is, that it refuses translation.

  10. This hardly forecloses the possibility of its subsequently being translated, of course. Everything can be translated. Everything can resonate. And some art will resonate broadly. But it will not have been created for that purpose. The words, the colors, the rhythms, the textures — these will have been chosen for reasons that elude reason, that are ultimately inscrutable, that are of the heart, not the head. The resonance, the translation, will follow after.

  11. Of course, this is all super naive. There is no self, no pure origin from which original ideas could spring. “We are a dialogue.” We are thrown projections. We are fragments, remnants, pieces of kintsugi (wabi-sabi pottery).

  12. But still. We are each unprecedented, unforecastable, unique filters through which what has been flows into what's to come.

 
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from Kroeber

#002331 – 16 de Outubro de 2025

Menos de dois meses depois de ter caído um pedaço da A1 perto de Coimbra, passo por lá de carro. Uma cegonha esvoaça uns metros perpendicular ao carro e a seguir vejo vários dos enormes ninhos destas aves. Daí a meia-hora estou a jogar basket com os meus sobrinhos e o meu cunhado. Foram só 25 minutos de dribles e suor, mas ainda assim mais tempo seguido do que em qualquer outra altura nos últimos 35 anos.

 
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from Sometimes I write

Another year, another update. This turning into a cadence.

I’m a year older, a year (hopefully) wiser, and a few traumas richer since I the last time I wrote. I did not expect to find myself at this place at this point in my life, but—to be honest—I didn’t really imagine much at all. The strife of recent years in my personal and professional life has made me incapable of projecting and planning long term, and my life has been reduced to that of survival of a yet another day. It was not a life for a while now, it was living.

Now, at the tail-end of this turmoil, as the healing continues and the things feel like they are settling into place, I have hope that it does—indeed—get better. One of my biggest concerns is how all of this affects my child as she’s in the middle of it all without any choice of her own. Kids do tend to be resilient, or so people say, but as parents we want to eliminate all the pain and hurt from our kids’ lives. It is hard to admit that some of this harder experiences shape the beautiful people we hope help raise.

My child is already my favorite artist of all times. Inspired by her creativity, I’ve noticed my own drive to create. It has fizzled out over the decade plus that I’ve spend in the corporate software development for “performance advertising” businesses (real-time ad space bidding.) To say it was soul-crushing would be an understatement. All the things I cared about, like honing the craft and creative problem solving, simplicity and elegance over ease, were sacrificed chasing the all-mighty OKRs. Creativity was killed by timelines that didn’t allow it.

I’m excited to create again, after what feels like a lifetime hiatus. I remember having a great response back when I was doing it back in Croatia, and I feel like I have even more to offer these days. I don’t have a label for what I do now. Artist, maybe? Maker? Designer? Creative? Artisan? In an effort to provide some info to those who don’t know me yet, I’m billing the whole effort as a “transdisciplinary artisanal practice.”

I have many project in various stages of development, of varying complexity and timelines, and seeing them finally moving forward, no matter how slowly, is encouraging. There are things I’m excited to share with you, things that I’m excited to learn, and interesting people that I’m yet to meet and/or collaborate with.

I feel fortunate to be in this place at this time in some ways. Detroit has become my hometown, and I’m glad to be here, despite (or maybe even because) all the horrors that are happening in this country. The city makes me feel like the better future not only possible, but there for the taking.

Stay safe 💜

 
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from Happy Duck Art

Although the chaos of everything has been, well, a lot, to say the least, I have been painting. Some of the completed pieces are below.

I guess these are easter eggs, or from a very strange bird. It’s amazing the direction a painting will go. A swirl of ochres and blues appear as a nest, wrapping around three pinkish purple textured eggs A couple more, if you’re interested, below the cut.

I guess these are bottles?

four textured blue figures stand upright, looking as though they might be bottles of blue chaos

From Valentine’s day, a love tree. It had not started out to be a tree. It had not started out to have anything to do with trees, or flowers, or… anything mushy. But here it is.

a silhouette of a tree, with shades of red and pink flowery-leaves encircling it. It's vignetted by darkness

 
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from TheMadMan

Another working day

I hate this fucking world. I need a place to say it. Is this a manifesto? Only if I do something bad. My convictions/principles say no, but my heart has festered long with hate. I wish to hurt and commit evil. But I will impose on these feelings and contain them. Will this lead to self-imploding? Time will tell but who cares. No one does in this disgusting world. I crave attention. Don't you? Is it because I want someone to listen? Is it narcissism? Is it because I want my words to have meaning and otherwise they are meaningless? Maybe a combination of those. Regardless. I have to vent off. For the sake of my sanity. Don't you? You probably have a loved one to speak to don't you. You probably are here to find poetry or on some linguistic enculture-ment, aren't you? I'm here to let go of this boiling tar of a soul. To let it fill you up with discontent, misery and hate. Hopefully. That's what I want. I want you to share in my suffering. You deserve it because I suffer too. No one should. And if one does then everyone else deserves it.

This is pure emotion speaking. A drama-queen child, set free to speak as it wishes. There is no logic in what I am saying. I am aware of that. No one is actually reading this right? So what am I doing.. why am I even writing this. Does it achieve venting if no one listens... I got no other outlet. This is all I have for times like these. Might as well. Writhe and simmer with hate is what I know at times like this. I can't have a friend to speak to because they would grow tired of my bickering. Who wouldn't be fed up with this repeating somber monologue.

I hate that regardless of my efforts, I fall into the same pitfalls. I see them everyday and I repeat the same mistakes. Sometimes accidentally. Most of the times aware of them. I am too weak to save myself. And I have created a reality of loneliness unable to ask for someone's help. Not that they would understand anyways. Everyday, I will convince myself today will be different. And every night I will face regret for failing to stop making the same mistakes. And the cycle repeats without end. Ever closer to death. Decaying consistently. I can notice the strain of this way of living on my psyche. I am growing more forgetful and fragile. A noticeable cognitive decline. Will I last years like this? Will anything ever change? How much time has it been so far? 1? 2 years? Was 3 years back the same. My state of mind feels the same as this page. Pitch black with some white letters of what remains of me. Same as my room. Dull and blank and dark, with feint light. As if the letters and the light are barely noticeable hanging by a thread and the darkness dominates. Dominates my vision.

Everyday I try to have this simple schedule. So simple in essence. So hard in execution. 8.5 hours of sleep, 1.5 hour of workout, 7 hours of work + 1 hour of food-break, 3 hours of fun, 2 hours of productivity and 1 hour of random responsibilities. My fun is video games and such. And my productivity should be (but I miserably fail to do so) some form of learning. No room for family, walks, friends, venting off. If I do any of those I sacrifice time from the other ideal routine. Oh how I crave for this perfection. But the world isn't perfect. I get stressed out at work and I need to vent off. I get sleepy after food and I want to dose off. I get horny at night and I want to jerk off. Weekend has responsibilities. Everyday mom calls asks how I am and I lie that I am fine. I am not fine. I am descending into madness. Into the inevitable end when health problems etc, accumulate too much to shove under a rug. So much so that you can't handle them and you pay the toll. Until it's too high. Until you die. Of misery. And with regret. That is the world. That is living. That is working to survive. Survive to live another day of the same torturous cycle.

And you know the craziest part? I have it much much much much better than the average person... I am privileged and still I am stifled. Probably because I am weak. How do you manage? I don't understand how you can manage...

Anyways the time is nigh again. I can't expend more venting lest I sacrifice time of my fun, or sleep, or productivity. I'd rather have more fun. No amount of fun is ever enough. I am a junky for it. I don't want to sacrifice my precious fun. My precious, precious fun. My precious fun is a drug that keeps me near. To the childhood I lost replaced by fear.

 
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from Roscoe's Quick Notes

TX_Rangers

Rangers vs Reds.

This Friday's game of choice (depending, of course, on my Internet signal remaining strong, on weather conditions at the field being playable, etc.) has the Cincinnati Reds playing my Texas Rangers. Its scheduled start time of 3:05 PM CDT fits nicely into my other plans for the day. Go Rangers!

And the adventure continues.

 
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from 下川友

魔がさした、という経験が自分の人生には一度もない。 夜道で、誰もいない瞬間を見計らって、いつか外で大声を出してみたいと思うのだが、実際には一度も出せたことがない。 声を出そうとした瞬間、喉がきゅっと締めつけられて、まるで他人の体みたいに沈黙してしまう。 服を着たまま無理やり尿を出そうとしても出ない、あの感じに近い。

人間は、自分で思っている以上に、行動に見えない制約をかけているのだろう。 本当は、殴り合いの喧嘩だって一度くらいしてみたい。強く殴られたことも、口から血を流したこともない。 やっていないことが多すぎる。 こんなふうにパソコンばかり触っていて良いのか、とふと疑問が湧く。

インターネットだって、今や自分の好きなものだけをサジェストしてくる。危険なものは一切流れてこない。 ネットを見ても、外を歩いても、昔より「みんなが今何をしているのか」が分からなくなっている。 昔だって分かっていたかは分からないが、昔より分からない、という感覚だけがなんとなくある。 きっと、みんなも分かっていないのだろう。

今写真を撮られたら、タイピングしている自分の手だけが認識されるんじゃないか。 そんな反発心もあって、最近は服に興味がある。 おしゃれな服を着ることで、「自分には手以外にも体がある」というリハビリをしている。 理想は、毎日違う、自分の気に入った服を着ていくことだ。 服を重ねるほど、自分の皮膚の不透明さが少しずつ戻っていく気がする。 もっとも、これも薬を飲みすぎれば効かなくなるように、いつか慣れてしまうのだろうけれど。

今の生活で確かに認識できているのは、水を飲めば冷たくて美味しいとか、布団に入れば気持ちいいとか、妻の料理を食べられるとか、そういう幸せばかりだ。 俺を襲う脅威は、実はほとんどない。 その反面、「どうなったら幸せになれるのか」を自分で探さなければならないという、ただそれだけの理由で、人生が妙に急かされる。

ああ、早く俺を良い場所に連れて行ってくれと思った瞬間、いや、違う。自分で行くんだよ、と脳にすぐ差し込まれるのがいかにも自分らしい。 まだ俺は、自分を自分で眺めているだけ。

 
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from Crónicas del oso pardo

Amigas y amigos:

Es grato estar hoy aquí reunidos, en esta bella y tranquila ciudad de Palo Alto. Los que hemos llegado a este momento, crecimos bajo la sombra de los árboles y el rumor de las palmeras, educados por monos valientes, que lucharon para lograr que fuéramos personas pacíficas y decentes, todo lo contrario a lo esperado a causa del destino violento que auguraban las horrorosas series y los juegos propios de la venenosa época en la que crecimos.

Tú, Frank, recordarás muy bien a los monos cuando nos perseguían para quitarnos los audífonos. Gracias a ellos abandonamos el terrible vicio de enterarnos de todo y de escuchar esas baladas lastimeras y destructivas que enloquecieron a otros jóvenes de nuestra generación. Y tú, Lisa, recordarás cuando los domingos los monos aparecían para ensuciarte las zapatillas de marca, aniquilando tu vanidad y altanería; qué grandes lecciones.

Hoy, al develar este grupo escultórico de los monos, no sólo honramos a nuestros maestros, sino también recordamos con tristeza a los amigos que no pudieron encontrar una salida porque al buscar la libertad cayeron en la grosera trampa del ego.

Gracias a todos por venir. Hay paz, es lo importante. Lo demás lo sacaremos adelante. Que se cumpla nuestro lema: el que frena, cena.

 
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from An Open Letter

She asked me if I wanted to go to a mountain Park/viewpoint today and I said yes and moved plans around for that. We ended up talking for five hours. We also just drove around a lot talking, walked around the beach, sat on the Bluffs and talked for a while. We talked about a lot of different intimate topics, and got to know each other pretty damn fast. I very much do like her a lot, and I think that she is has a lot of the qualities that I was looking for which is kind of scary because I didn’t even mention them and she mentioned them first. But I also do recognize that I should not blind myself with all of the good things so quickly. I will say however that there were several both good and bad signals.

Good:

  • She said that she trusts me as a person
  • We have a lot of things in common and she aligns with a lot of the things that I was looking for
  • We were able to have a lot of good chemistry in conversation
  • We have compatible senses of humor
  • She was being very flirty and doing things like punching me or making flirty jokes
  • When I made fun of her accent for something she said and then I said how Indian accents aren’t sexy, she said so you think my accent is sexy?
  • She told me that something I said was hot and it made her flustered
  • We do align on several core values like kids
  • Something unfortunate happened because she left her car in the park and the park got locked off, but she handled it pretty well
  • When I asked her if my car was the one that was left there would she have driven me back 40 minutes, and she said absolutely no questions

Bad:

  • She did also have a similar length relationship that ended around the same time mine did, which arguably is very recent
  • She just had to put her dog down, and is emotionally dealing with a lot of grief understandably
  • We did talk about exes
  • There were certain points where she indicated that she often asks questions but does not necessarily have an answer prepared herself
  • We did have a five hour long “date”? That was also mixed with emotional support
 
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from Talk to Fa

butterflies white owl horses tree of life dead animals 9:09 navy blue fascia lats bhandas rose scent wind heart and mind teaching receiving being joy

 
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from Wayfarer's Quill

There are evenings on the long road when a traveler pauses, not because he is weary, but because a truth rises before him like an old milestone—one he has passed many times, yet never fully seen. I found such a moment while listening to a reflection from Bishop Robert Barron, drawn from a sermon on the historical reality of Jesus Christ.

What struck me was not a new idea, but an ancient one spoken with clarity: the Gospel writer Luke did not set out to craft a myth or a fireside legend. He wrote as a historian. At the very threshold of his Gospel, he tells us plainly that he has “investigated everything carefully,” and now offers an “orderly account.” He names rulers, regions, and the figures who shaped the political landscape of his time—not as decoration, but as anchors. Markers. Coordinates on the map of human history.

scroll, quill, open tomb at twilight

Luke’s intention was not to lift us into fantasy, but to plant our feet firmly on the ground where Jesus walked.

And this matters. It matters because Christianity does not rest on a metaphor or a moral tale. It rests on a person—a real man in a real time, whose life unfolded under the same sun that rises on us. As we draw near to Easter, this truth becomes even more luminous. For the story we remember is not symbolic. It is historical. A man lived among us, suffered, died, and—Christians dare to proclaim—conquered death itself.

If these things are not true, then the faith collapses like a tent without its center pole. But if they are true, then the world is not the same world it was before. History itself bends around that empty tomb.

For the wandering soul, this is no small thing. It means that our journey is not through a landscape of abstractions, but through a world where God once placed His feet upon the dust. And perhaps still does, in ways we only glimpse when the road grows quiet.

#ChristInHistory #BishopBarron #QuietFaith

 
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