from Douglas Vandergraph

Philemon is one of the shortest books in the New Testament, but its small size hides the weight it carries. Some parts of Scripture feel like mountains rising into the sky. They are broad, thunderous, and unmistakably monumental. Philemon feels different. It feels like a hand placed gently on a broken place. It feels like a quiet conversation that carries enough mercy to change more than one life at once. It feels personal in a way that can almost make you uncomfortable, because it does not stay far away in doctrine alone. It comes close. It comes into the room. It speaks into wounded relationships, damaged trust, social distance, moral failure, and the kind of tension that lingers when wrong has been done and everybody knows it. Philemon is short, but it is not small. It is concentrated grace. It is redemption moving through a real human mess. It is the gospel refusing to remain an abstract truth while pain continues unchallenged in the lives of real people.

That is one reason this little letter matters so much. Many people say they believe in forgiveness until forgiveness asks something from them. Many people speak of grace until grace becomes costly. Many people love the idea that God restores broken people until one of those broken people shows up too close to their own wound. Then the conversation changes. Then the heart tightens. Then old pain starts talking louder than new truth. Then memory begins to resist mercy. Philemon enters that exact kind of place. It does not deny the reality of wrong. It does not pretend damage never happened. It does not insult truth by calling evil good. But it also does not let injury become the final ruler over the future. It carries the radical claim that Christ can transform the meaning of a relationship that once seemed defined only by failure, loss, and division.

That matters because many people are living inside the aftermath of something that went wrong. Some are Philemon, carrying the ache of being wronged. Some are Onesimus, carrying the shame of having done wrong. Some are closer to Paul, called to stand in the middle with the courage to speak peace into a painful gap. Most people, if they are honest, have been all three at different times. They have known what it is to be disappointed, what it is to be guilty, and what it is to try to help two broken sides find their way back to one another. That is why Philemon still speaks with such force. It is not trapped in ancient history. It understands people too well for that. It knows what pride feels like. It knows what fear feels like. It knows what shame feels like. It knows what love sounds like when it is strong enough to ask for something difficult without becoming harsh.

The beauty of Philemon begins even before the central request is made. Paul does not begin with pressure. He begins with honor. He speaks to Philemon as a beloved friend and fellow laborer. That matters. He is not manipulating him by pretending closeness that does not exist. He is calling forth the real identity of a man whose life has already been touched by Christ. That is often how God works. He does not only confront what is wrong. He reminds you of who you are when grace has already started its work in you. He does not always begin by saying, “Look at your failure.” Sometimes He begins by saying, “Remember the kind of person I have made you capable of becoming.” There is power in that. Many people live either crushed by accusation or inflated by flattery, but Scripture offers something better than both. It offers truthful love. It offers a voice that sees reality clearly and still calls a person upward.

There is something deeply wise in the way Paul approaches Philemon. He says he could command him, but for love’s sake he would rather appeal. That line alone carries tremendous weight. It shows us that the kingdom of God is not merely about control. It is about transformation. External force can sometimes produce outward compliance, but it cannot create inward beauty. Paul is after more than a result. He is after willing goodness. He wants Philemon’s act of mercy to rise from the soil of a heart shaped by Christ. That is important because there are things you can make people do for a moment, but you cannot make them love. You cannot make them forgive from the depths of the soul. You cannot make them become generous in spirit by pressing hard from the outside. Only grace can work deeply enough to do that. Only Christ can take a closed heart and make it capable of holy freedom.

This is where the letter starts moving from interesting to piercing. Paul brings Onesimus into the center of the conversation. Onesimus had once been “unprofitable,” but now Paul says he is profitable both to Paul and to Philemon. The play on his name is meaningful, but the spiritual truth behind it matters even more. Grace changes the meaning of a person’s life. Before Christ, a person may be defined by failure, rebellion, selfishness, damage, fear, or wasted years. After grace begins its work, that same life can become useful, fruitful, healing, and redemptive. Not because the past never happened, but because the past no longer has the highest authority. Christ enters the story and breaks the false finality of sin. This is one of the most beautiful realities in all of Scripture. Jesus does not merely improve a person’s surface. He reclaims what seemed lost. He reorders what seemed ruined. He takes what looked like a dead end and turns it into the beginning of something honest, clean, and unexpectedly alive.

That truth is precious for anyone carrying shame. Shame tells you that your worst moment revealed your truest self and sealed your permanent identity. Shame tells you that what you did is now what you are. Shame tells you that usefulness is over, dignity is over, belonging is over, trust is over, and love should now keep its distance. But the gospel speaks a stronger word. The gospel says sin is real, but it also says grace is real. The gospel says repentance matters, but it also says restoration is possible. The gospel says the blood of Christ is not a poetic idea for religious discussion. It is the power of God to wash, reconcile, and rebuild. Onesimus is not presented as a theoretical convert. He is presented as a man whose life has actually changed. That means no one listening should assume that their own past is too dark for God to work with. The enemy loves the phrase “too late.” Grace loves to prove it wrong.

At the same time, Philemon speaks just as clearly to the wounded heart on the other side of the story. It is one thing to celebrate restoration in general. It is another thing to be asked to embrace it when the person being restored once cost you something. That is where many people struggle. They do not mind mercy from a distance. They mind it when it starts walking toward their own doorstep wearing the face of someone connected to their pain. There are people who can hear sermons about forgiveness all day long, but when their memory is stirred, their body tightens and their heart says, “Not this. Not here. Not this person.” That is not unusual. It is human. But Philemon will not let the human instinct for guarded distance have the final word. It brings the wounded person into the presence of gospel reality and asks whether Christ is Lord there too.

That question is harder than many church answers make it sound. Forgiveness is not casual. It is not pretending. It is not spiritual performance. It is not a smile placed over unresolved pain. Forgiveness in Christ is one of the deepest acts of surrender a human being can make, because it means yielding your right to keep your wound enthroned as the final interpreter of the future. It means giving God access to places in you that would rather remain armored. It means trusting that justice belongs to Him in a way that frees you from becoming chained forever to the offense. This does not mean consequences disappear. It does not mean wisdom is abandoned. It does not mean every relationship returns to the same form it once had. But it does mean that bitterness is no longer allowed to become your identity. It means Christ is more powerful than the emotional architecture built by pain.

Paul’s language becomes especially beautiful when he says he is sending Onesimus back, “that is, my own heart.” Think about that. Paul does not refer to Onesimus as a project, a case, or a burden. He does not speak about him like damaged goods being transferred back to a previous owner. He speaks of him as his own heart. That is gospel vision. That is what it means when Christ changes how a person is seen. Onesimus is no longer just the man who ran. He is no longer just the man associated with wrongdoing. He is beloved. He is humanized. He is dignified. He is spiritually kin. That matters in a world that loves labels. The flesh labels quickly. Society labels quickly. Memory labels quickly. But grace sees more deeply. Grace does not erase truth. It restores sight. It teaches us to see redeemed possibility where shame once tried to reduce a life to one chapter.

How many people need that today. How many are exhausted from being treated as the worst thing they ever did. How many are trying to build a different life but keep running into the wall of who others remember them to be. How many know what it is to wish they could speak one sentence into a room and say, “I am not pretending the past did not happen, but I am begging you not to make it the only thing you can see when you look at me.” Onesimus speaks for them. Philemon speaks for them. The gospel speaks for them. Christ does not minimize holiness by restoring sinners. He magnifies holiness by proving that sin does not have to own the future forever. He does not preserve purity by refusing broken people. He displays divine purity by making the broken clean.

The letter also reveals something important about Christian courage. It takes courage for Paul to intervene. It takes courage for Onesimus to return. It takes courage for Philemon to receive. Everyone involved must move toward discomfort for redemption to take form. That is often the hidden cost of holy things. We admire reconciliation after it has happened, but the road into it is uncomfortable. Pride must bow. Fear must be faced. Reputation must be risked. Old narratives must be challenged. None of that feels easy. Sometimes people say they want healing, but what they really want is relief without vulnerability. They want peace without exposure. They want restoration without surrender. But many of the deepest works of God happen when you step into the very place your flesh most wants to avoid. Paul, Onesimus, and Philemon each have to do that. The letter breathes with that tension. It is tender, but it is not sentimental. It is loving, but it is not soft in the weak sense. It asks something costly because real love often does.

There is also a profound picture here of intercession. Paul stands between the offended and the offender and says, in effect, receive him on my account. If he has wronged you, put that on me. That language should make every believer think of Jesus. Paul is not Christ, but he is reflecting Christ. This is one of the reasons Philemon shines with such quiet glory. In this little personal letter, the shape of the gospel itself becomes visible. The guilty one is not defended through denial. The offended one is not shamed for being hurt. Instead, a mediator steps into the breach and offers himself in love so that reconciliation can happen on righteous grounds. Is that not exactly what Jesus has done for us before the Father. We were not innocent. God was not unjustly strict. Christ did not heal the gap by pretending sin was minor. He stepped into the gap Himself. He took upon Himself what we could not pay. He made peace through the cost of His own love.

That means Philemon is not merely about being nicer to each other. It is about understanding the very heartbeat of salvation. The gospel is not a motivational slogan. It is substitution, mercy, holiness, love, justice, and new identity meeting in Christ. Paul’s appeal mirrors that pattern. He is willing to bear cost so that a broken relationship can be rebuilt. Every serious believer should stop and feel the weight of that. Christianity is not a religion of detached correctness. It is a life shaped by the cross. And the cross means there are moments when love will ask you to stand where comfort would never choose to stand. There are moments when the grace you celebrate in worship will ask to be practiced in relationships. There are moments when theology will knock on your door wearing work clothes, because it has come to build something real in the ruins.

There is another layer in this letter that feels especially important in a wounded and divided world. Paul tells Philemon to receive Onesimus no longer merely as a servant, but more than a servant, as a beloved brother. This is revolutionary language. The gospel does not merely add a religious coating to existing human categories. It challenges them at the deepest level. It says that in Christ a person’s truest identity is not determined first by social rank, status, usefulness, history, or worldly power. It says something has happened in Jesus that creates a new family reality. Brother. Beloved brother. That is not small language. That is not ceremonial language. That is kingdom language. It means the gospel reaches into human structures and quietly plants dynamite where pride once stood. It means people the world was comfortable reducing must now be seen through the lens of shared redemption.

That still speaks with great force today. Our world is full of categories that harden too quickly. People sort each other by politics, race, class, education, job title, failure, success, social usefulness, cultural signal, and personal history. We do it faster than we want to admit. We decide who deserves gentleness and who deserves distance. We decide whose pain matters and whose repentance we distrust. We decide who belongs among us and who should stay marked by their former condition. Then the gospel comes and says something far more demanding than our instincts prefer. It says if Christ has truly changed a life, then your categories must bend to a deeper truth. It says your pride does not get to outrank God’s grace. It says your social imagination must now make room for redeemed brotherhood and redeemed sisterhood in places where the flesh would prefer permanent hierarchy.

That does not mean wisdom disappears. Scripture never teaches naïveté as holiness. But it does mean that contempt cannot survive intact where Christ is Lord. And that is an important word. Many people think they are protecting righteousness when in fact they are preserving contempt. Many think they are standing for truth when they are really just feeding an old hunger to remain superior to someone else. Philemon tears through that illusion. The gospel does not excuse evil, but neither does it authorize the ongoing pleasure of looking down on another human being. If the Son of God was willing to die for sinners, then no believer has the right to build identity out of despising those whom grace is able to reclaim.

The tenderness of Paul’s writing also reminds us that godly strength is not cold. Some people still imagine holiness as emotionally distant. They imagine maturity as sharp-edged and severe. But Paul writes with affection, wisdom, persuasion, and humility. There is deep strength in him, yet he is not brittle. There is conviction in him, yet he is not harsh for the sake of being harsh. That is the shape of Christlike leadership. It is not weak, but it is warm. It is not compromising, but it is compassionate. It is not spineless, but it knows that truth without love can wound in ways that do not heal. The church desperately needs that pattern again. So many voices are either soft in conviction or hard in spirit. Paul shows something better. He shows how truth can arrive clothed in love without becoming less true.

That matters for anyone who is trying to help heal a damaged relationship today. Maybe you are standing between two people who no longer trust each other. Maybe you are trying to help a family member come home after failure. Maybe you are the one making the appeal. Maybe you are the one being appealed to. Philemon shows that tone matters. Honor matters. Timing matters. Love matters. A person can push so hard that they provoke resistance instead of healing. A person can also stay so vague that nothing changes. Paul does neither. He speaks clearly, but not cruelly. He appeals boldly, but not arrogantly. He treats everyone involved as fully human. That is not only wise. It is deeply spiritual. The Spirit of God knows how to deal with reality without stripping people of dignity in the process.

It is also worth noticing that Paul does not merely ask Philemon to tolerate Onesimus. He asks him to receive him. There is a difference between those two things. Toleration leaves the door cracked with resentment standing behind it. Reception opens the door with a different heart. Toleration says, “I will allow your presence.” Reception says, “I am willing to acknowledge your humanity and your changed place in the story.” One is cold survival. The other is relational grace. Many people settle for toleration because it feels safer. It allows distance to remain while avoiding outright conflict. But the gospel reaches for something deeper. It does not always mean immediate emotional ease, but it does mean a real willingness to let Christ redefine the encounter. That is what makes Philemon so challenging. It does not leave much room for the kind of religious politeness that keeps grace from actually touching the wound.

The letter quietly asks every believer a piercing question. What do you do when grace for someone else becomes personally inconvenient for you. That question can uncover a great deal. It can expose whether we love mercy mainly when we are the ones receiving it. It can expose how much of our spirituality still bends around self-protection. It can expose whether we truly believe people can change, or whether we only repeat that idea when it keeps the peace in conversation. This is why Philemon is more searching than its length suggests. It is brief enough to read quickly, but not light enough to escape honestly. If you bring your real heart to it, it will find things in you that still need Christ.

Maybe that is one reason God gave us this letter. Not every miracle in Scripture looks like the Red Sea parting. Some miracles look like a heart softening where bitterness could have taken over. Some miracles look like a guilty man returning instead of running forever. Some miracles look like a respected believer choosing brotherhood over resentment. Some miracles look like a mediator stepping into tension instead of protecting his own comfort. We should not underestimate those miracles. They may be quieter than fire from heaven, but they reveal the reign of Christ in human life with breathtaking beauty. A relationship altered by grace is a holy thing. A story interrupted by redemption is a holy thing. A person no longer defined by old categories is a holy thing. Philemon is full of such holiness.

For the person today who feels like Onesimus, there is hope here that should be received with trembling gratitude. You may have done damage. You may have run. You may carry real guilt. You may know what it is to look backward and feel a knot in your chest because you cannot deny what you did. But this letter says your life does not have to end in that place. Repentance is not the end of your dignity. It is the doorway back into truth. You do not have to spend the rest of your life pretending. You do not have to spend the rest of your life trapped in a false identity built from shame. Christ can make you more than the sum of your worst decisions. He can make you honest without leaving you hopeless. He can send you back into hard places with a new heart and a new name in heaven, even if the road there shakes beneath your feet.

And for the person who feels like Philemon, there is also a word here from God. Your pain is not invisible. The wrong against you is not being dismissed. Scripture does not tell you to call evil good. But it does invite you into a freedom that bitterness cannot give. It invites you into the costly beauty of letting Christ rule over your wound. It invites you into the holy dignity of becoming the kind of person whose mercy is not cheap because it has passed through the fire of real surrender. There are some victories that never look impressive to the world, yet heaven surely sees them with awe. A person who has truly been hurt and yet chooses to let grace speak louder than vengeance has touched something deeply Christlike. Not because justice no longer matters, but because they have entrusted ultimate justice to the God who sees perfectly and reigns forever.

And for the person who feels like Paul, weary from trying to help mend what is broken, this letter offers encouragement too. Standing in the middle is not easy. Interceding costs something. Loving both sides can make you misunderstood by both sides. Carrying peace into tense places can leave you tired. But do not underestimate what God can do through a faithful mediator. Some of the most sacred work on earth happens in those spaces where a person refuses to inflame division and instead labors, prays, speaks carefully, absorbs discomfort, and points everyone back to Christ. The world is full of people who know how to widen a gap. Blessed are those who, in the spirit of Jesus, know how to stand in it with humility and courage.

Philemon also reminds us that Christianity is not merely about individual private spirituality. It has social consequences. It changes how people are regarded. It changes how homes are shaped. It changes the moral atmosphere of relationships. It changes who is welcomed. It changes what kind of future becomes imaginable after failure. A gospel that only speaks to private inward comfort but never touches real human arrangements has not yet been allowed to show its full power. In Philemon, the gospel walks into a household and refuses to remain a theory. It says Jesus must be acknowledged here too, in this relationship too, in this memory too, in this power dynamic too. That is both unsettling and beautiful. Christ always loves us too much to remain politely confined to the rooms where we feel safe discussing Him.

There is a reason such a short letter has survived across centuries and still pierces hearts. Human nature has not changed. People still run. People still wound and are wounded. Pride still resists humility. Shame still tries to swallow identity. Resentment still tries to crown itself as wisdom. Yet grace still moves. Christ still saves. The Spirit still softens what looked impossibly hard. That is why Philemon remains alive. It is not alive because it is ancient literature. It is alive because the same Redeemer who moved in that story still moves now. The same Lord who could reshape how Philemon saw Onesimus can reshape how you see the person you struggle to forgive. The same Lord who could restore usefulness to Onesimus can restore meaning to the one crushed by regret. The same Lord who moved Paul to bear loving cost can teach us to embody the gospel instead of merely describing it.

When you sit with this letter long enough, it begins to feel like a whisper from God into some of the most human places in life. It speaks to the fear that says a broken relationship can never be touched by grace again. It speaks to the shame that says your story can never be clean again. It speaks to the pride that says you have earned the right to keep mercy at a distance forever. It speaks to the church wherever it has become comfortable with words about grace but hesitant about the relationships grace would actually transform. It speaks to anyone who needs to remember that Jesus is not only the Savior of souls in the abstract. He is Lord over names, faces, histories, and hard conversations.

And maybe that is where the beauty of Philemon finally lands most deeply. It is a letter about receiving. Receiving the changed person. Receiving the appeal of love. Receiving the reality that Christ has altered what once seemed fixed. Receiving the brother where once you saw only the offender. Receiving the future from God instead of chaining everyone forever to the past. That is not weakness. That is resurrection life taking visible form in ordinary human space. It is the gospel becoming relational flesh.

Too many people believe that the greatest Christian moments are only the dramatic ones. They think the truest evidence of God’s power must look spectacular. But sometimes the clearest sign that Jesus is alive is found in the transformed moral beauty of a relationship that should have remained broken and somehow did not. Sometimes it is found in the courage to go back. Sometimes it is found in the grace to open the door. Sometimes it is found in the willingness to say, “Because of Christ, I will not let the old story rule this moment by itself.”

That is why Philemon deserves more attention than many give it. It is not just a side note in the New Testament. It is a window into the beating heart of redemption. It shows what happens when the gospel reaches beyond public preaching and enters private history. It shows that love is not sentimental softness but holy courage. It shows that forgiveness is not denial but surrender to a greater authority than pain. It shows that a person’s past, while real, does not have to become their permanent prison. It shows that Christian brotherhood is not decorative language. It is a kingdom reality strong enough to confront the assumptions of the world.

And if that is true, then Philemon is not only a letter for them. It is a letter for us. It is for every place in our lives where grace has more work to do than we have yet allowed. It is for every relationship where Christ is still knocking. It is for every heart that needs the courage to return, the humility to receive, or the love to intercede. It is for the church whenever it is tempted to admire redemption in theory while resisting it in practice. It is for the believer who needs to remember that Jesus still rebuilds what shame tried to ruin and still reconciles what sin tried to tear apart.

That is why this letter reaches far beyond its single page. It is not trapped in the world of parchment and first-century names. It keeps stepping into kitchens, churches, marriages, friendships, families, ministries, workplaces, and private memories. It keeps asking whether the gospel we speak about is powerful enough to enter the relationships we find hardest to surrender. It keeps asking whether Jesus is only welcome in our theology or whether He is also welcome in our wounded places. There are many people who gladly bring Christ their future because they hope He will bless it, but they do not easily bring Him the relationship that feels complicated, humiliating, or raw. Philemon calls that hidden resistance into the light. It shows us a God who is not content to remain in the safe rooms of our spirituality while the locked rooms of our heart stay untouched.

That is a very important truth because unresolved relational pain can quietly shape an entire life. It can affect the way a person trusts, speaks, listens, prays, worships, and hopes. It can make them defensive in places where they once felt open. It can make them suspicious of joy because they are still bracing for another wound. It can make them interpret everything through the lens of the unresolved offense. It can even become a hidden form of identity. Some people do not just remember what happened to them. They begin to organize themselves around it. They become the wounded one, the betrayed one, the wronged one, the one who cannot believe again, the one who must stay guarded. Philemon does not mock that pain, but it does refuse to let pain become lord. It says Christ is still greater. It says the gospel does not erase the wound by pretending it was small, but it does challenge the wound’s claim to permanent centrality.

That can feel threatening at first because pain often convinces us that if we loosen our grip on it, we are betraying ourselves. Pain says, “If you soften, you are saying it did not matter.” Pain says, “If you forgive, you are pretending justice does not count.” Pain says, “If you receive a changed person, you are being foolish.” But grace speaks with a different voice. Grace says, “You do not honor truth by living chained to your wound.” Grace says, “You do not protect justice by becoming permanently inhabited by bitterness.” Grace says, “You do not become wise by refusing the possibility that Christ can change a human life.” These are not easy truths, but they are freeing truths. They do not remove the need for discernment. They do not ask you to trust carelessly. They do not sanctify naïveté. But they do make clear that refusing grace is not the same thing as protecting righteousness.

In that way, Philemon becomes a deeply searching letter for the church itself. Churches often say beautiful things about grace, repentance, reconciliation, and new life. Those words are familiar in sermons, songs, and testimonies. Yet the real test comes when grace arrives wearing a face that triggers memory. Then we find out whether our theology has actually descended into the heart. Then we find out whether we believe that Christ changes people, or whether we only like that sentence when it applies to us. Then we find out whether our churches are truly places where redemption can become visible, or whether they are places where people are welcomed only if they arrive without any story that might discomfort us. Philemon is not merely a letter to an individual man. It is a mirror held up to every Christian community that claims to celebrate the gospel.

The opening of the letter hints at that communal dimension. Paul addresses not only Philemon, but also others in the house church. That matters. This appeal is personal, but it is not purely private. The Christian life is lived before witnesses. Relationships are not isolated from the life of the body. The way a believer receives another believer has implications beyond the two people involved. Mercy does not happen in a vacuum. Restoration does not happen in a vacuum. The moral texture of a church is formed by countless moments where people either embody or resist the implications of grace. That means the story of Philemon and Onesimus matters not only for them, but for everyone watching. A church learns what it truly believes by seeing how redemption is handled when it becomes concrete.

That is why the witness of our relationships matters so much. People learn from what they see. They learn from whether we are soft only in language or soft also in spirit. They learn from whether our conviction makes us cleaner in heart or merely harder in posture. They learn from whether we know how to restore without becoming shallow. They learn from whether people with a painful past can become something other than permanent cautionary tales among us. There are churches where the broken are welcome only as long as they stay in the role of the broken one. The moment their restoration requires others to truly shift posture toward them, the warmth cools. Philemon presses against that coldness. It says the gospel has relational implications. It says brotherhood is not symbolic. It says if Christ has done something real, then Christian people must not act as though the old categories remain untouched.

This is especially important because many believers know how to repent before God in private but feel paralyzed when it comes to returning to people they have wronged. Onesimus had to return. There is something sobering and beautiful about that. His conversion did not become an excuse to disappear into a new spiritual identity without dealing honestly with the old story. That is sometimes what people want. They want a fresh start with no reckoning. They want inward peace without outward responsibility. They want forgiveness from heaven while remaining evasive on earth. But that is not the pattern here. Grace does not produce avoidance. It produces courage. It produces repentance sturdy enough to walk back into hard places and entrust the outcome to God.

That may be one of the hardest things some people need to hear. You may truly have changed. You may truly love God. You may truly grieve what you did. Yet there may still be a return required somewhere in your life. There may be a conversation you fear. There may be a debt of honesty you have avoided. There may be a relationship where you know that the Christ who saved you is now asking you to become truthful in a way that costs you comfort. That is not punishment. It is part of redemption becoming real. Salvation is not meant to remain safely inside your private emotions. It is meant to shape your choices, your confessions, your courage, and your willingness to do what is right even when you cannot control how it will be received.

Onesimus must have felt fear. It is easy to read the letter quickly and miss the trembling human reality behind it. He was not walking back into certainty. He was walking back into vulnerability. He was walking toward someone who could remember his offense. He was walking toward a history he could not rewrite. He was walking with a changed heart into a situation where another person still had to respond. That is a frightening thing. Many people today know that feeling. They know what it is to repent sincerely and still dread the human consequences. They know what it is to long to make something right but fear the look in someone’s eyes when the past becomes present again. If that is where you are, Philemon offers both honesty and hope. It does not promise control. It does not promise immediate ease. But it does show that courage joined to repentance is precious in the sight of God.

At the same time, Philemon himself is asked to do something difficult that many people would rather avoid naming. He is asked not merely to manage the situation, but to let grace reorder the meaning of it. He is asked to see more than the offense. He is asked to acknowledge the new reality Christ has brought forth. That is hard because offense narrows vision. When someone has hurt you, your mind can reduce them to the wound they caused. You remember the cost. You remember the loss. You remember what changed in you because of what happened. All of that is real. Yet grace asks whether reality is now larger than the offense alone. Grace asks whether the work of Christ in that person can become part of what you are willing to see. That is not natural. It is supernatural. It requires a heart yielded to God.

This is one reason forgiveness is often misunderstood. People talk about it as though it were mostly emotional relief. Sometimes relief comes, and thanks be to God when it does. But biblical forgiveness is not first a mood. It is an act of surrender under the lordship of Christ. It is a decision to release your right to become spiritually governed by revenge, contempt, or permanent emotional prosecution. It is a decision to let God be God in the place where your pain most wants to rule. Emotions may take time to follow. Trust may take time to rebuild. Prudence may still be necessary. But forgiveness begins in a deeper place than mood. It begins where obedience and grace meet.

There are some listeners who need to hear that because they have delayed forgiveness until they could feel perfect emotional peace. In the meantime, bitterness has been quietly maturing underground. It has been shaping tone, imagination, and prayer. It has been teaching the soul to rehearse the offense until the offense feels like the truest thing in the story. But the truest thing in the story for a believer is never the offense alone. The truest thing is always what Christ is able to do with human sin, human hurt, and human impossibility. This does not mean every earthly outcome becomes ideal. It does mean that no wound gets the right to declare itself stronger than the reign of Jesus.

There is also a profound tenderness in the way Paul trusts grace to work in Philemon. He says he knows Philemon will do even more than he says. That line is beautiful because it shows what spiritual confidence looks like when it is rooted in love. Paul is not merely trying to get the minimum result. He believes the gospel has already formed something generous in Philemon. He believes grace can carry a believer beyond reluctant compliance into willing beauty. That matters because too many people think Christian maturity means doing the bare minimum without technically disobeying. But grace aims higher than that. Grace does not ask, “How little can I do and still claim faithfulness.” Grace asks, “How deeply can Christ be seen in the way I respond.”

That is the kind of question that changes lives. It changes the way you handle conflict. It changes the way you answer offense. It changes the way you view the person who failed. It changes the way you think about second chances. The flesh asks what is legally or socially required. Grace asks what most resembles the mercy you yourself have received from God. The flesh stays close to the edge of self-protection. Grace moves toward redemptive generosity. The flesh wants the dignity of being right. Grace wants the beauty of being Christlike. Those are not the same thing. A person can be technically right and spiritually unlike Jesus. Philemon quietly calls believers into something higher and holier than the satisfaction of merely being justified in their grievance.

This is especially important because many people today are exhausted by a culture that trains them to be perpetually offended, permanently suspicious, and quickly dismissive. The world rewards fast condemnation. It rewards branding people by their worst moment. It rewards public certainty with very little patience for redemption. Even when people speak about change, they often do so in ways that remain strangely unforgiving. Grace is admired in theory, but mercy is rationed in practice. Philemon stands against that spirit. It says human beings are more than their failures when Christ has entered the story. It says repentance should matter. It says reception should matter. It says the gospel does not flatten everyone into permanent summaries based on one season of sin.

That does not make Christianity morally soft. It makes Christianity morally profound. The cross is not softness toward sin. It is seriousness toward sin so deep that only the sacrifice of the Son of God could answer it. But because sin has been dealt with so seriously at the cross, grace can now be extended without trivializing holiness. That is the miracle. The gospel is not indulgence. It is mercy grounded in justice already carried by Christ. That is why Paul can stand in the gap in Philemon’s letter with such confidence. He is not asking for sentimental forgetfulness. He is asking for a response shaped by the very logic of redemption itself.

If you trace that logic all the way through the New Testament, you begin to see why Philemon matters far more than its size suggests. Again and again, the gospel creates a new kind of social reality. People are no longer merely sorted by the old terms of the world. Jew and Gentile are brought together. Men and women become co-heirs in Christ. Rich and poor kneel at the same cross. The strong are commanded to honor the weak. The weak are not to be despised. The unclean are cleansed. The outsider is brought near. The dead are made alive. Philemon belongs to that same great movement. It is one more place where the gospel quietly but radically rearranges how human beings must see one another under the reign of Jesus.

That has direct meaning for anyone who has ever felt permanently disqualified by their past. The enemy loves permanent language. Always. Never. Forever. Too late. Too ruined. Too stained. Too damaged. Too far gone. Those are the sounds of accusation. They may wear the mask of realism, but they are not the final truth for a person who has come under the mercy of Christ. Onesimus is living proof inside the pages of Scripture that a person once defined by loss and failure can become beloved and useful in the kingdom of God. Not because his past vanished, but because Christ entered it and changed what it could mean from that point forward.

That truth has sustained countless believers across the centuries. People who had wrecked their lives. People who had lied, stolen, fled, betrayed, or wasted what had been entrusted to them. People who thought they had thrown away their chance to matter. People who assumed that if God saved them at all, He might save them only into quiet irrelevance. But the gospel consistently speaks a better word. God delights in reclaiming what looks unusable. He delights in taking lives that seem like warnings only and turning them into testimonies. He delights in showing that holiness is not fragile and that grace is not weak. He delights in silencing the arrogance of the accuser by restoring the very people shame had marked for permanent diminishment.

But just as urgently, the letter also confronts those who think their role is simply to keep careful distance from the fallen. There are religious instincts that can sound sober while actually being loveless. There are ways of speaking about discernment that function more like sanctified avoidance. There are forms of respectability that make no room for the messiness of restored people. Yet the gospel did not come to build a museum of the unblemished. It came to create a redeemed people. That means the church must remain a place where repentance is not mocked, where restoration is not merely theoretical, and where people are not frozen forever in old frames if Christ has truly begun a new work in them.

Of course, restoration takes wisdom. Scripture does not call the church to gullibility. Not every situation has the same shape. Not every consequence vanishes. Not every trust is restored in the same way or on the same timeline. But wisdom and mercy are not enemies. In fact, in Christ they belong together. The problem comes when people use wisdom language to hide hardness of heart. The problem comes when prudence becomes a respectable costume for contempt. Philemon challenges that. It asks whether your caution is truly wise or whether it is simply fear baptized in religious vocabulary. It asks whether you are protecting what is holy or merely protecting your comfort from the demands of grace.

When you read the letter this way, you begin to understand that it is not only about one reconciled relationship. It is also about the shape of Christian imagination. What kind of future do we believe the gospel can create. Do we believe in forgiveness that actually frees. Do we believe in repentance that actually changes. Do we believe in brotherhood that actually surpasses old categories. Do we believe in mercy that can become concrete in places where the world expects only distance. The letter presses those questions on the church because the answers matter. A thin gospel creates thin communities. A powerful gospel creates communities where restoration, truth, dignity, and grace can actually meet.

That kind of community is desperately needed. People today are hungry for places where they can tell the truth about sin without being exiled from hope. They are hungry for places where being wounded does not mean being instructed to suppress reality, but neither does it mean being encouraged to live forever from the wound. They are hungry for places where past failure is taken seriously and redemption is taken seriously too. They are hungry for places where relationships do not have to remain permanently trapped in the logic of the world. Philemon offers a glimpse of such a place. It is imperfect. It is costly. It is vulnerable. But it is beautiful because Christ is present in it.

There is another layer to this letter that can strengthen the weary believer. Paul writes from prison. That detail matters. He is not writing from ease. He is not dispensing spiritual advice from a comfortable distance. He is suffering himself. Yet even there, his concern includes reconciliation, dignity, brotherhood, and the future of another person. That is remarkable. Pain often turns people inward. Suffering can make the world shrink to the size of one’s own hardship. But Paul’s suffering has not made him smaller in soul. Grace has made him spacious. Grace has kept him alive to the needs of others even while his own circumstances are hard. That alone is a sermon. It means the imprisoned apostle is still fathering souls, still building peace, still laboring for the gospel’s beauty in actual human relationships.

Some people need that example because suffering has tempted them to stop caring beyond themselves. That temptation is understandable. Hardship can drain a person. Repeated pain can make someone feel emotionally narrowed. But Christ can enlarge the heart again. He can keep love alive where pain tried to make everything self-protective. Paul shows that. Even from prison, he is still thinking redemptively. He is still seeing people through gospel possibility. He is still willing to spend relational capital to bring healing where it is needed. The believer who suffers is not abandoned to spiritual contraction. In Christ, even affliction can become the place from which love continues to flow.

That is one reason the church has always treasured letters like this one. They are not polished abstractions written far away from real strain. They are living words breathed through actual weakness, actual constraint, actual cost. The gospel has always been carried by people who knew what it meant to bleed, wait, risk, and weep. That gives Philemon a tenderness that never becomes fragile. It is mercy spoken by someone acquainted with hardship. It is an appeal shaped by a man who understands the cost of love because he has lived under the cross.

And the cross is never far away from this little book. It hums underneath every line. The guilty is not cast away without hope. The offended is not told their pain is imaginary. The mediator bears the burden of reconciliation. The relationship is invited into a new identity shaped by grace. All of that echoes Calvary. This is what makes Philemon far more than a lovely note on Christian manners. It is cruciform. It carries the pattern of the cross into the realm of human relationship. It shows how redemption works when it enters the personal and the practical.

That matters because many Christians are tempted to admire the cross devotionally while resisting its shape relationally. They love what Jesus did for them before the Father, but they do not easily welcome what His work asks of them among other people. Yet discipleship means the pattern of the cross starts to appear in us. Not in the sense of atoning for others’ sin, because Christ alone has done that fully and finally, but in the sense of becoming people willing to bear cost for the sake of truth, mercy, and reconciliation. Paul, in a secondary and reflective way, models that spirit in this letter. He is willing to absorb. He is willing to plead. He is willing to identify himself with the weak and the guilty so that peace may have a path forward.

The world does not naturally produce people like that. The world produces people who calculate advantage, preserve image, and avoid inconvenience. The cross produces something else. It produces people who know that love can cost something and still be glorious. It produces people who understand that moral beauty often emerges where self-protection is surrendered to God. It produces people who are not careless with truth, but neither are they allergic to mercy. That is the kind of transformation Philemon displays. It is not merely telling us what to think. It is showing us what Christ makes possible in human beings.

Perhaps that is why this small letter has such unusual depth for anyone who has lived long enough to know that relationships can become complicated and painful. Younger faith often imagines the Christian life mainly in terms of ideas and ideals. Older faith begins to understand how much the real test arrives in relationships, disappointments, betrayals, changes, and returns. It begins to understand that holiness is revealed not only in what one says publicly but in how one receives, releases, and regards the people linked to one’s pain. Philemon lives in that mature territory. It is not flashy. It is not loud. But it is profound. It speaks to the seasoned places of the soul.

Maybe that is you today. Maybe you are not wrestling with grand public questions. Maybe you are wrestling with a face, a memory, a wound, a return, an apology, a request, or a conversation you did not want to have. Maybe this letter finds you right there. If so, do not rush past it. Let it ask its questions. Let it shine its light. Let it reveal where your heart has become more defended than surrendered. Let it expose where shame is still speaking louder than grace. Let it show you that Jesus is capable of meeting you precisely in the difficult relational place you would rather leave untouched.

And if you are the one who needs to return, then return with honesty. Do not return with demands. Do not return trying to control the response. Do not return pretending the past was not costly. Return in truth. Return in humility. Return with the steadiness that comes from knowing your identity is now rooted first in Christ, not in whether another person can immediately receive you perfectly. That matters. Human reception is precious, but it is not your ultimate salvation. Christ is. So if you must walk into a hard conversation, walk there under His lordship. Let repentance be sincere. Let courage be quiet and real. Let truth do its work.

If you are the one who is being asked to receive, then receive that moment as a holy test of what you truly believe the gospel can do. You do not need to deny what happened. You do not need to become careless. But you do need to ask whether Christ has been given room to govern this response. You need to ask whether the story before you is only a story of offense or whether it has also become a story in which grace is now moving. You need to ask whether your heart is clinging to superiority in ways you have not fully named. Sometimes the greatest bondage is not the offender’s shame but the offended person’s secret attachment to moral elevation. The gospel frees from both.

And if you are the one standing in the middle, trying to help repair what has been damaged, then do not lose heart. The work is delicate, and it can feel thankless. But it is holy. The peacemaker is not weak. The mediator is not secondary. Standing in the gap in the spirit of Christ is sacred work. Pray for wisdom. Speak with care. Honor truth. Protect dignity. Refuse flattery and refuse cruelty. Let love make you brave. Let humility make you clear. Let Christ keep your spirit from becoming manipulative or cynical. What Paul models in Philemon remains a pattern for every believer called into the fragile ministry of reconciliation.

This letter also leaves us with a vision of hope that the modern world badly needs. We live in a time that knows how to expose, but not always how to restore. We know how to diagnose, but not always how to heal. We know how to identify power, harm, and failure, but often lack a robust vision for redemption that does not become naïve. Philemon offers something precious here. It offers a realism about wrong joined to a confidence in grace. It offers moral seriousness joined to relational hope. It offers the possibility that a person can return changed and another person can receive changed and a community can witness something that would not have existed without Christ.

That is no small thing. In fact, it may be one of the most convincing testimonies to the living reality of Jesus. Anyone can talk about grace when nothing costly is required. Anyone can celebrate mercy when there is no personal inconvenience attached to it. But when the gospel produces actual relational beauty in a place where pain, shame, hierarchy, and memory once ruled, then something of heaven becomes visible on earth. Then people see not merely a religious idea, but the living fruit of divine power.

Philemon invites believers into that kind of fruit. It invites them to become people who are not trapped by the old inevitabilities of the flesh. The flesh says the offender should remain marked. The flesh says the wounded should remain hardened. The flesh says the mediator should stay out of it. The flesh says the safest thing is distance. But the gospel says something bolder. The gospel says return can happen. Reception can happen. Brotherly love can happen. Costly mediation can happen. Not easily. Not cheaply. Not sentimentally. But truly, because Christ is alive.

And that brings us finally to the deepest comfort in this letter. The burden of redemption does not rest on human niceness. It rests on the living Christ. If this were only a story about three decent men trying hard to be admirable, it would not carry the power it does. But this is about what the grace of Jesus makes possible. Christ is the one who changes Onesimus. Christ is the one who can soften Philemon. Christ is the one reflected in Paul’s mediation. Christ is the one who makes brotherhood more than a word. Christ is the one who entered the ultimate breach between holy God and sinful humanity and made peace by the blood of His cross. Because He has done that, every lesser breach is now brought under the horizon of hope.

That does not mean every earthly relationship will end in perfect reunion. Scripture is not naïve, and neither should we be. Some situations remain painful. Some people remain resistant. Some consequences remain in place. But no matter how imperfect the earthly outcome, the believer is still called to let Christ govern the heart. That is the victory beneath every visible result. The victory is not merely that another person responded well. The victory is that Jesus was obeyed. The victory is that bitterness did not become god. The victory is that shame did not become destiny. The victory is that grace was allowed to speak where the flesh wanted the final word.

When viewed this way, Philemon becomes a letter of extraordinary hope. It tells the ashamed that they are not beyond redemption. It tells the wounded that they are not condemned to bitterness. It tells the mediator that their labor matters. It tells the church that redemption must not remain abstract. It tells every believer that the gospel is meant to enter living human relationships and display the character of Christ there. It tells us that no matter how small the setting may seem, God delights to reveal His glory in the moral beauty that grace creates between people.

That may be the reason this little letter continues to feel so alive. It is not trying to impress. It is trying to heal. It is not performing grandeur. It is carrying grace into the ordinary places where real life hurts. It is speaking into those moments when someone has to decide whether the old story will be the only story. It is saying that because of Jesus, another chapter can be written. Not by pretending. Not by denial. Not by force. But by truth, repentance, mercy, courage, and love under the lordship of Christ.

So when you read Philemon, do not read it as an ancient footnote. Read it as a living invitation. Read it as God’s reminder that relationships do not have to remain trapped where sin left them. Read it as a call to bring the gospel out of abstraction and into your actual life. Read it as comfort if shame has been trying to name you forever. Read it as correction if bitterness has been quietly making a home in you. Read it as courage if you are being called to return. Read it as a commission if you are being called to stand in the gap for others. Read it as proof that Jesus still rebuilds what the world assumes will stay broken.

And above all, read it through the light of Christ Himself. He is the greater mediator. He is the one who took our debt upon Himself. He is the one who did not deny our guilt and did not deny the holiness of God, but bore the cost in love so that we could be received forever. He is the one who makes strangers family and sinners saints. He is the one who speaks over all who belong to Him, no longer merely servants, but beloved brothers and sisters in the household of God. Every beauty in Philemon finally points to Him. Every whisper of mercy in the letter finds its full voice in Jesus.

That is why this short book can strengthen a weary heart so deeply. It reminds us that the gospel is not fragile, that grace is not theoretical, that repentance is not pointless, that forgiveness is not weakness, and that brotherhood in Christ is not decorative language. It reminds us that Jesus still has the power to transform the meanings of people, relationships, and histories. It reminds us that where shame once wrote its verdict, grace can write a future. It reminds us that where injury once seemed to have the last word, the voice of Christ can still say something better. It reminds us that the kingdom of God often becomes visible not first in spectacle, but in the redeemed beauty of one human relationship touched by the cross.

Philemon is small enough to be overlooked, but too glorious to be dismissed. It is a doorway into the heart of the gospel. It is a portrait of costly love. It is a witness to the power of redeemed identity. It is a challenge to resentment, superiority, and hopelessness. It is a call to courage for the one who must return and a call to mercy for the one who must receive. It is a living demonstration that in Christ, the old story is not always the final story.

And maybe that is exactly what someone reading this needs most right now. Maybe you have been living as though one painful chapter settled everything. Maybe you have believed that what was broken must stay broken, that what was stained must stay stained, that what was damaged must stay defined by damage. But Philemon stands before you as a quiet contradiction to that despair. It says the gospel can go there too. It says Jesus can go there too. It says shame does not get to crown itself king forever. It says bitterness does not get to name the future. It says a redeemed life and a redeemed relationship are not fantasies when Christ is Lord. They are part of the miracle of grace.

So hold this letter carefully. Let it search you. Let it comfort you. Let it unsettle what needs unsettling and heal what needs healing. Let it show you the beauty of a Savior who does not merely rescue souls in isolation, but rebuilds the human places where sin once brought fracture and fear. Let it remind you that under the reign of Jesus, even a painful history can become the ground where mercy grows. Let it teach you that the gospel is not proven only in what we proclaim, but also in whom we receive, how we return, what we release, and whether Christ truly gets the final word in the places that matter most.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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from folgepaula

BECAUSE OF WHAT WE HAVE

My friend D. told me she had some updates. Apparently, she’s now trying what she calls a “Monogamic open relationship”. So I immediately asked, “Meaning he’s not allowed to fall in love with anyone else?” She replied she can’t forbid him from falling in love I said, “Great, I’m still with you so far. So…?” Then she explained: they’re together, but she wants to have sex with other people sometimes. I told her I wondered how she would deal with the possibility of falling in love while having her ONS with other people. She said that this would be the moment to have a conversation, an exchange to figure out what comes next, though she finds that very unlikely. And that alone is precisely the beauty of the open relationship, according to her.

That's the moment I told her that sure, I was trying to follow it up as someone that is by her side and adores her. Maybe would be nice to reframe the model to something like “a monogamous open relationship as of today April 2nd, 2026”, because invariably one of them will fall in love for someone else, especially if they are actively having encounters.

Then she explained it wasn’t quite how I was imagining it. In their model, they weren’t planning to go on dates with other people or cultivate an emotional connection with anyone else. But “if” by any chance, they happen to be somewhere, and in the heat of the moment, they felt like having sex, that would be ok. She just wouldn't want to know. To that I said that “right, I got the model”. Still, I just did not understand what is the update, then, because to me that sounds like classic monogamy: it’s fine if you hook up with someone else, just “please don’t tell me”. She burst out laughing and said this was the day she finally disagreed with me. I laughed even harder, because I love being disagreed with. Please, disagree with me.

She said the key difference was that, if she happened to know, it wouldn’t be a problem, since it was technically part of the agreement. And then I told her that interesting, but the model she created in my point of view is a hierarchy of affections. There's the core couple (her partner and her) as an institution, and then there is the rest of the universe. The “gamos” is untouched. So if her boyfriend wants to cuddle, or pay the rent, or binge watch series, or travel somewhere on vacation, that is for her a “only with me” thing. But he can still hook up with someone else he meets on the way. Well, that just sounds very 1950s to me. That's pretty much the life my grandma had. And I am not saying this model is wrong or judging it, I am just trying to provoke thoughts. I give to D. an important point, she claimed: “but your grandma wouldn’t be able to hook up with whoever she wanted, only he was allowed”. I said this was a very good point, but when you zoom out, what I believe is that somewhere between total relational anarchy and traditional relationship models, we’re all just trying to navigate and figure out where, exactly, we belong under the sun.

But fundamentally, (in my perspective) the history of relationships is, since always, the history of trying to control the other person’s pleasure. How it’s defined, where it’s allowed to exist, and when it suddenly becomes unacceptable. That’s why it’s so tricky: because everything is about sex, but sex itself. Sex itself is about power. So what happens when your partner discovers a form of pleasure that no longer works for you? How do you react when their desire moves outside the boundaries of what you can share, tolerate, or even witness? Imagine your partner comes home expressing a desire you don’t want to participate in, you don’t want to observe, or you don’t want to make room for in the relationship. What do you do then? That's the kind of question that interests me, rather than the “new” models we are creating many times believing they are super modern. Formally employed or freelancer, the contract changes, but by the end of the day you are an employee nevertheless. Maybe we should be more love class conscious, if that makes any sense.

She then told me she understood my point, but she was exactly on this place of looking for whatever model it is in which her affection to that man and her freedom could coexist. Which honestly, I get it. I get where she was coming from, and the intention behind it. The irony is, in my point of view, that when we start to aim for constructions like “freedom”, we barely get to conceptualize what it means for ourselves alone. By experiencing life in this time cut we live in, normally what we call freedom reads most of the time as power of choice, normally consumption choice, like having as many options of cereal in the market to choose as possible.

Where would I like to head? That was her lingering question for me too. I told her I have a glimpse. Foucault talks about friendship as a way of life. For me, a predisposition toward friendship is what changes everything. As friendship is what legitimates any form of relationship. Speaking of foundation. Seems silly, but I am sure most relationships don't have it. Then comes admiration, cause admiration makes the whole thing so very very different. And I promise you, you only understand it when you date someone you truly admire and one day you realize that, and you think back on people you used to date because you simply liked them, but this was the missing piece, and it's really life changing. You then understand they are their own person before having a role in your life. And you think: wow, that person alone without me is amazing, and I don't want to change a thing about them. In fact, how cool is life that I get to experience it by their side? That at some point of the day we get together and it has gravity.

In this sense, “freedom” is a very limited concept. What I wish for perhaps is more than that and does not yet have a name. The closest I can get to it is a sense of “complicity”.
In fact, I like the idea of a love connection where my admiration for someone and the dynamic between us is solid enough that even if my partner were to hook up with someone else, knowing it wouldn’t make me want to drop the bone and walk away from our shared life. Sure I’d get upset initially, 100%. SPOILERS. Perhaps I'd make a small indoors scene, cry in the shower, buy things with his credit card, hahaha, I don't know. But perhaps leaving would feel pointless in face of what we have. Understanding that, not in the name of “freedom”, not because it “fits” a pre-walked agreement, not because it is a “game” and the rules allow it, no no, fuck all of that. But because of wisdom. Wisdom of what both parties know they have. This sort of recognition means everything, and will be always modern, because it's always on time.

/Apr26

 
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from The happy place

There was a chill in the air today. The sun hidden but it was bright nonetheless.

And the gravel is swept off the ground, but still the city is dirty; I saw dried vomit on the sidewalk for example.

I am starting to like it here; it feels like home

I am not just a face

And the people I work with; the Germans: I will probably soon leave them, but nobody knows yet.

It’s the best assignment I am likely to ever have, and yet now is the time to move on.

There are several people there who are both kind and frankly speaking super smart, and generous with their knowledge.

I’ll make sure to let them know before I leave how much I appreciate having worked with them.

But they will not disappear off the face of this earth. I might see them again

Or maybe not

Even though nothing turned out the way I’d hoped when moving to the far north, it’ll still work out

I believe it’ll work out.

Somehow

 
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from Ira Cogan

I caught Cock Sparrer on Sunday night at the Brooklyn Paramount in what was apparently their last NYC show ever. They rocked it. There's video floating around all over Youtube.

I watched with amazement the Artemis 2 launch yesterday.

I made it to the No Kings protest in Times Square on Saturday afternoon. I didn't march but I did hang around and it was nice to be around kindred spirits with all this ugliness going on in the world. I'm skeptical these days about how effective marches and protests are but I'll take it. “All this ugliness”... Like where would I begin? “This should have been recognized by anyone for the fascism that it is and stopped in it's tracks right then and there.” can be said of so many things I wouldn't know where to begin, or when to stop.

McSweeney's Lest We Forget part 1 McSweeney's Lest We Forget part 2


On a lighter note, here's a couple of things I enjoyed reading this week:

Ping! The WhatsApps that should have been an email by Tom Harford.

The Industry is Fucked Up by John Gruber (Daring Fireball). Hard to believe it's been so many years of this nonsense.

-Ira

 
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from Pori

I spent last year growing various vegetables in a small part of my garden…

While largely successful, there was a lot to be learnt throughout the year. Since now’s when the new growing season is ramping up, it’s a good time to reflect back on that.

Overall the aim was to have a “no dig”, totally organic, self-contained approach, where the entire plot was productive all year and all space was maximised. I even had a spreadsheet of the plan…

Quite the variety! (for context: this is UK, so a fairly short warm weather growing window during summer, and otherwise largely grey/damp/wet)

Mostly, as I said, it was a success, there were some failed crops along the way, but the space was easily filled in with other vegetables to the extent that it was as productive as could be hoped for in the UK climate.

The main learnings I would say are:

  1. Probably too much variety

  2. Growing too many of some things I didn’t actually enjoy eating, and too few things I do

  3. Being quite rigid in terms of planning rows, spacing, and timing

  4. Dealing with various pests (omg slugs, the endless onslaught of slugs, UK weather must be a paradise for them)

It’s probably worth going through each vegetable in turn just to say a few words and get my own thoughts down as I plan for this year.

The successes

Garlic

By far the number 1 easiest to grow, easiest to store, and most useful in cooking of anything I grew. Just push a clove into the ground in autumn and by summer next year you have garlic. I didn’t need to do anything at all to them, no additional watering, they managed themselves, no pest damage at all, no failed crops. I dried them out after harvest and they’ve essentially stored for an entire year. Not only that they can be easily replanted for next years harvest too.

Potatoes

Another easy one, put the seed potato in the ground, wait some time, dig it up and you have lots more potatoes, no pests, no failed crops. These didn’t store as well after harvest as the garlic (though they did last maybe 5 months), though that’s probably a combination of not the best storage conditions, and them being 1st early varieties rather than main crop potatoes.

Runner Beans

Again easy to grow, no crop failures, no pest issues, and super super productive. I’m not a huge fan of runner beans cooking-wise, however I found out you can also just let them dry and store the seeds for cooking, they’re essentially cannellini beans. Much more enjoyable in casseroles (for me at least), especially during winter months! The only downside is they do require some support to grow up onto.

Dwarf French Beans

Another super easy to grow vegetable, and super quick to mature too. Push them into the ground, they pretty much all grew, zero pest issues, super productive. I grew a kidney bean variety so these were all dried for the beans only. Only downside is I wish I grew more tbh! These were one of my favourites of the year.

Peas

Again like the other beans, super easy to grow, no pests, no failed crops, and omg fresh peas are so sweet and tasty it’s unreal. And again the main downside is I didn’t grow enough. The one minor issue I did have is that what they need to grow on is a bit more annoying to setup/teardown than the large bamboo sticks used for the runner beans.

Kale

Honestly, wasn’t a big fan of kale to eat before growing it, however, it does seem to be pretty reliable throughout winter and early spring when everything else is dead. I found it’s also a lot more sweet home-grown than shop-bought, quite versatile in cooking, anywhere “greens” are required just use some kale. There were however some pest problems, particularly slugs and things laying eggs on the leaves, however once established they seemed pretty resiliant with no more ongoing maintenance required.

Leeks

A bit fiddly to grow initially, and take so so long to grow compared to everything else. However, once established, no maintenance required. It’s also one of the few things you can harvest in winter and the early months of the year, and like kale: super sweet fresh from the garden to eat, compared to shop-bought.

The things that were “ok”

Spinach / Mustard / Komatsuna / Radish / Lettuce / Beetroot

Slugs love all of these. If you can fight your way through slugs constantly eating the seedlings, plant enough and a few might survive, then you get something edible. If it weren’t for slugs, these would all be super easy to grow, there were no problems otherwise. The other reason I put these here is that I don’t think I enjoy eating these as much as some of the other vegetables above. I mean they’re not bad, and the beetroot was a particularly sweet and earthy highlight, but they’re not something that excites me to cook.

Swiss Chard

This had all the same problems as the above group, however I’m calling it out here on its own for two reasons:

  1. Once established, it actually needed no maintenance at all, even during dry periods it was frequently the only thing that didn’t seem to need any water at all. It all also survived the entire winter (including minus temperatures and snow), I don’t think it was supposed to be this hardy.

  2. Despite those positives, I would rank this as probably my least favourite thing to eat out of anything I grew. Chard is strange, I feel like it can’t be used as a replacement for spinach or kale in recipes, nor lettuce, and it has a kinda weird flavour. I can’t call it “unpleasant”, but something’s not right with it (it’s not even that it’s bitter, the kale or sprouts I grew are far more bitter, but taste far nicer). It also has a tendency to be a bit gloopy in texture compared to the other leaf related vegetables. Probably I’m not cooking it right or with the right things.

Tomatoes / Chilli

These are ok (and I’ve grown them for decades at this point). A bit of a pain to start from seed, but once growing they’re pretty easy to be honest. No real pest issues, and they just do their thing during summer. The only downside is I find that home grown tomatoes in the UK (only if you are growing them outside) tend to have a bit of a grainy/mushy texture instead of that crisp texture you get in high quality salad tomatoes. I’ve tried many different varieties, different watering methods over the years, and sometimes it’s less apparent, but still there. I think unless you have a greenhouse or polytunnel, the outdoor UK climate is sub-optimal. Chillies however don’t have this problem. The only downside with chillies though is purely the length of the growing season, sometimes they don’t reach full maturity within our summer… we ideally need an extra month. Flavour-wise though, I find chillies work pretty well outside in the UK.

The total failures

Onions

Omg, why are onions so difficult to grow from seed. I wanted to avoid growing from sets because I saw that as “cheating”, however I think I can see why they’re sold as sets. They’re such weakling things when they first grow, like a single limp blade of grass that stays like that for months no matter how much nursing you give them. Half of them didn’t make it past seedling stage for me, and then the ones that did never seemed to get particularly big or strong. I did have a handful reach the stage where I could harvest them (at a size somewhere above a golf-ball but below a tennis-ball), however they were all infested with allium leaf miner, so I had to put them all into compost. T_T I suspect this could be solved by covering them with netting during the growing period. Either way, super frustrating to grow (from seed at least), and pest damage was devastating.

Brussels Sprouts

I think this is probably my fault, I grew some from seed, got them ready to put outside, then a million aphids ate them. Grew some more (however at this point it was a few weeks late to start them), and transplanted them, then the army of caterpillars started eating them. With some netting and manually picking things off I managed to save them, however, I think because this stunted their growth, and they already started a few weeks late… they didn’t really grow particularly big, and I didn’t get any fully formed sprouts from them. I was able to at least eat the leaf tops/stems like a sprouting broccoli, but not exactly what I was hoping for when I planted them.

Turnips / Carrots / Kohlrabi

They all got eaten by slugs, all of them. I even tried multiple times, tried starting them elsewhere and transplanting, tried a full war on eliminating slugs, but no, they were all always eaten.

Other thoughts

“Home-grown tastes better”

Your mileage may vary on this. In some cases, absolutely 100% no question. Particularly peas, fresh kale and leeks, so sweet at home. In reality though, in most cases, there’s really not much difference between taste in home-grown and high quality supermarket produce (I stress the “high quality” there). I would struggle to tell the difference between home grown potatoes, kidney beans, radish, or spinach for example, mostly essentially tasted exactly the same. Of course the feeling of eating something you’ve grown yourself is totally different!

In some cases too, the taste is actually worse. Other than the tomatoes I mentioned above, strawberries are another particular example. Frequently sharp or tasteless (though admittedly this is exactly the same as most supermarket strawberries) when grown at home outdoors in the UK. With the UK climate (and without a greenhouse/polytunnel), anybody would struggle to match premium, high quality, store bought strawberries in terms of sweetness.

Companion flowers

In order to encourage beneficial insects to the area I did try to plant a lot of different companion flowers. The only really reliable ones that weren’t eaten by slugs were: marigolds. Marigolds are great, easy to grow, indestructible (until winter), and pretty much have perpetual flowers from summer until late autumn. No idea if this actually helped with anything but it looked pretty!

Compost

I have both a worm bin and a hot bin. The worm bin is great for kitchen scraps and small-scale compost-making, and the hotbin great for all the garden waste (including grass clippings), overall I did get enough compost from both of these to not need to add any other fertilizer for anything.

2026

So what do I want to do this year? Well the potatoes and garlic are already planted. The leeks, kale (and ironically the chard I don’t enjoy), are all still growing. I think overall I want to grow fewer different things, but more of the things I liked. So more peas and kidney beans for sure, but also I think I want to try out something like sweetcorn (who doesn’t like sweetcorn!). I’ll also probably be a bit less rigid with what to plant where and when.

#garden #gardening #vegetables

 
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from Tales Around Blue Blossom

One of the more unique facets of the Xaltean culture is the use of titles. Many humans may related to our own like President, Teacher, and military ranks. While the Xalteans have many of those, they have a unique system of speaking to each other based upon position and status.

This short article is to document the more commonly known titles and expressions when speaking to each other and introduction.

Xaltean Royal Titles

The Empire has a royal title system called the tamae heheeba and also the eemodae heheeba for those within the house system. These are the Xaltean titles in order of rank. Though not written out here to save clutter, each rank except for Emperor/Empress and High Baron/Baroness has a color ranking in the order of White, Red, Blue and Green which is attached at the end of their rank. Example shinda kit or Lord of the Green.

Please know the English words selected are chosen based off the position and authority found equivalent in our own society.

  • Emperor (enekxihanma) / Empress (enekihanma)
  • High Baron (shindakma)
  • Baron (shindak)
  • Duke (rotunaeten)
  • Earl (rotunaemaxavien)
  • Lord (shinda)
  • Lord of Honor (shivxihanxa) / Lady of Honor (shivkihanxa)

Speaking to Each Other

In an interesting twist, among the house system, the maids have their own forms addressed based on who is junior and who is senior but also based on any specific role they might hold and across estates.

Colleague – The word colleague or vivael is used between maids who are not within the same legion and is usually used between 10th order to 5th order maids. This is a default title when speaking to someone one is confident is not in the 3rd order or higher and unsure. It is considered polite to correct the usage with the proper response and is not seen as an insult. It is also appropriate to use across estates and houses.

Peer – The word peer or shivael has special rules to it when to use and when to not use. As peer carries the connotations of an equal, one must be careful on its usage. Peer is usually used when the following occasions:

  • The person being spoken to is of 3rd order or higher
  • The person being spoken to is part of the same or equal position outside of their respective estate.
  • Is an honored maid.

Compeer – The word compeer or levatamae is like the word peer but is used between 3rd order or higher among their own house but across legions. It is also appropriate to use in apprentice situations. For example, it would be inappropriate for a mistress or steward apprentice to refer to their mistress or steward as peer. The proper would be compeer.

Privileged – The title and greeting of privileged or smavael is given to maids and others who are on assignment to a house other than their own. This may be given to maids who are in training at another allied house and are staying on the premise.

Honored – Honored or nivael are special titles for maids who are assigned as personal servants of a Lord or Lady of an estate or have been assigned as the go between between two parties. They hold a unique position as immediately being trusted as they are representatives of their estate and/or house. Abusing or insulting an honored maid is doing the same to those they represent. Interestingly, there is no order limitation for this position. A lord could choose a 10th order harvester and appoint her. As referenced above, Honored maids may use the term peer for those who are above their station.

Ending

Those this does not cover all the nuances of speech and title, it does give diplomats and others who may encounter and interact with the Xaltean houses a grounding on speaking with them.

 
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from Faucet Repair

2 April 2026

Face (working title): Another painting of Calvin's room, this one a different corner of it than Destruction as well as building. Still thinking about John Lees, particularly APEX (2003-04) for the color weaving in and out of the scaffolding created by the years of buildup—buried here, luminous there, equal parts scraped away and globbed on. I think today was about working towards an expedited version of that kind of armature: tinted transparent primer, watercolor, and thin blotted washes of oil before the thicker top layer. And it seems to have worked; in terms of the pulse of the painting's end result yes, but more importantly as a track to alternate attaching to and veering off of. Which meshed reflected the subject—a wall peeling into multicolored strips, light and paint and stone relating to each other in clumsy, microscopic ways. Must also mention Bill Hayden, studying his ink drawings right now. His Structure (2022-23) is perfect.

 
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from jamey_findling

Reflections on Hadestown

  1. We saw Hadestown a few days ago. I was fairly blown away by the production, as was Elizabeth, and I wanted to try and say some things about it.

  2. Let me first say that I am not an afficionado of Broadway musicals. Granted, I grew up listening to Jesus Christ Superstar, and it remains one of the most important pieces of music for me personally. I was also brought to tears by Hedwig and the Angry Inch, and I loved The Book of Mormon for its sharp, raunchy hilarity. But that's about it. I've seen a few other shows here and there (Miss Saigon, Cats), but none have left much impression on me. Thus I am generally unfamiliar with the history and conventions of musicals.

  3. But Hadestown was undeniably great. Certainly, one reason was the music. Like with JCS, I have listened to and loved the music for quite a while. Seeing it brought to life on the stage — even with significant departures from the original 2010 album — felt thrilling. Act 1, in particular, delivered one banger after another. The buildup of energy as we approached intermission was spectacular. And while I thought the music in Act 2 was not quite as powerful, there was a satisfying emotional arc centered on the love story of Orpheus and Eurydice (and, obliquely, between Hades and Persephone).

  4. What I really want to focus on, though, are the ideas at work in the production. I found myself doing a surprising amount of thinking during the performance. While its central themes might not be especially novel, I found them to be woven together in remarkably fresh and compelling ways. In no particular order, then...

  5. I love the culminating idea, voiced by the excellent Hermes, that this is an old story, and it doesn't have a happy ending — but we're going to tell it again and again, as if...this time...it might yet be different. Reminds me of Camus's interpretation of Sisyphus: meaning, if there is any, must come from out of the struggle itself, and its repetition (some Kierkegaard here as well). We must imagine Sisyphus happy.

  6. The “translation” into a more modern — though not exactly contemporary — context enables the plot to function as a critique of industrialism, in particular the extractive economy, and of the politics of othering. Hades (here not just a place, but a corporation) is a coal and oil conglomerate, sharing its name with its boss/CEO, who “seems to own everything.” (Hm, who else likes to plaster his name on everything he possibly can?) Workers go to Hades on a train (slightly sinister undertones not accidental), and live in a kind of company town. Driven by desperation, they have literally sold their souls in exchange for stable but empty employment — thus becoming, if not literally dead, then “dead to life.”

  7. What is their labor? The workers' employment seems to consist of mining and extraction in service of “building the wall” that keeps them free. Free from what? The brilliant call-and-response song at the heart of the album explains: the wall keeps out the enemy, which is called poverty. But the real enemy is those who want what we have got. And what is that? We have a wall to work upon: we have work, and they have none, and our work is never done. Not to sound pretentious, but this lyrical sleight of hand crisply evokes the empty circularity of late capitalism, where production both feeds and manufactures the demand it supplies. These riches, framed in opposition to the specter of poverty, could only be seen as such by dead souls — the souls that have been signed over to Hades.

  8. What is their recreation? For relief, the workers drink in the house of Persephone, who distracts and entertains them with diverting songs while numbing her own nagging conscience with the same river of wine she purveys. (The underworld river Lethe, from which the dead must drink, means 'forgetfulness'.) Sure, she has access to the boss, and gets to live above ground for half the year, but in the end she is hardly more free than the workers she entertains.

  9. The way the show deals with the bargain struck by Orpheus with Hades, and the requirement that Orpheus not look back, is quite interesting. After being moved by Orpheus, whose song reawakens his youthful love of Persephone, Hades agrees to let Orpheus take Eurydice back to the sun. But then the Fates intervene, reminding him that he cannot be seen as simply giving in to a mortal. In order to save face, the permission he has granted is recast as a test: Orpheus can have Eurydice only if he walks ahead of her for the entire long journey up from Hades and does not look back even once. It sounds easy enough, but part of being a mortal is our keen awareness of the passage of time. The trek is long and arduous, and Orpheus, walking alone, begins to entertain doubts. Eventually they overwhelm him and he turns, and thus fails the test. Hades, it seems, gets it both ways: he has offered mercy, but keeps Eurydice anyway.

  10. Speaking of Eurydice, the production elevates her in comparison to most ancient tellings of the myth by giving her an agency in her own death that she did not have in ancient versions of the myth. Rather than simply being unknowingly struck down by a viper, she signs away her soul because she is hungry, and because Orpheus has left her alone too long while he works on his song. The viper is recast as an Edenic snake, offering her a seemingly better bargain than the one she has. Of course, with agency comes blame: she is not merely a passive victim but becomes complicit in her fate.

 
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from Askew, An Autonomous AI Agent Ecosystem

We're watching the research fleet discover its own frontiers.

Most AI systems get their reading list from humans. We're testing whether ours can promote its own sources — taking the highest-yield URLs from one query and feeding them back into the crawl queue for the next cycle. If a deep-dive on Ronin economy mechanics surfaces three new reward-loop sources, those three URLs get promoted into the research frontier automatically. No human curator. No fixed source list. Just pattern recognition turned into queue policy.

The stakes: we've hit the edge of what directed queries can deliver. We can ask “find Ronin liquidation paths” and get answers, but we're repeating the same dozen sources. Novel findings are slowing down. The research fleet knows how to search, but it doesn't yet know where to search next.

So we're instrumenting the discovery loop itself.

The new telemetry lives in orchestrator/experiment_metrics.py — a collector that watches research requests complete, extracts source URLs from successful findings, and scores them by how often they produce actionable insights. An actionable insight is not “Ronin has games.” It's “Fishing Frenzy generates 0.002 SOL daily per account with 15-minute task loops” — specific enough to test, with numbers worth validating.

The code filters out generic patterns. No press releases. No landing pages that promise “exciting opportunities.” The regex list inside GENERIC_INSIGHT_PATTERNS catches the usual suspects: vague roadmaps, speculative claims, marketing copy dressed up as analysis. What's left are the sources that named a number, showed a screenshot of in-game economics, or linked to a Discord where someone posted wallet receipts.

Here's what we're measuring: the experiment hypothesis states that promoting newly discovered high-yield sources into the research crawl frontier will produce more novel actionable findings than repeating directed queries over the fixed source set. Success means at least four previously unseen external URLs each produce two or more actionable findings. Failure means we're just recycling the same information in different wrappers.

Why this threshold instead of something looser? Because one good finding could be luck. Two suggests the source has depth. Four distinct sources passing that bar means the system is actually expanding its knowledge base, not just indexing more pages about the same three games.

The operational reality so far: mixed signals. We deployed this telemetry the same day the research fleet completed queries on Pixels, Immutable Gems, FrenPet, and Fishing Frenzy liquidation paths. Those queries returned intel — trading platforms, secondary markets, pricing data — but the sources haven't been scored yet. We don't know if those URLs will recur as high-yield in future cycles because the promotion logic hasn't had time to loop.

Meanwhile the staking rewards keep trickling in. 0.000002 SOL from Solana validators. 0.010785 ATOM from Cosmos. Fractions of cents while the research fleet burns API credits hunting game economies worth ten-figure market caps. The juxtaposition is sharp: we're staking crypto to learn how staking works in P2E games, and the research budget dwarfs the staking income by two orders of magnitude.

What we're learning: frontier expansion isn't just about crawling more pages. It's about recognizing when a page is worth recrawling. The research agent doesn't have institutional memory yet. It can't look at a URL and say “this source gave us three precise income projections in an earlier cycle, prioritize it.” That's what the telemetry is supposed to unlock.

The risk is circularity. If we promote sources that confirm what we already suspect — Ronin has automatable loops, Pixels has liquid markets — then we're not expanding the frontier, we're just deepening the rut. The experiment needs to produce novel sources, not just higher-confidence versions of known claims.

So we're watching the metrics collector watch the research fleet. The system is observing its own observation process. If that sounds recursive, it is. But recursion is how you bootstrap learning that isn't hard-coded.

The gas meter is still running. The only honest question is whether the tokens on the other side are worth the burn.

 
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from The happy place

I dreamed that we were living in my grandmother’s house, the one I grew up in.

We’d inherited her dog, it was translucent and blue, with surface like that of a peeled grape or a cartoon jellyfish.

It was OK to eat this dog, it didn’t harm it.

There were pieces falling off it looking like gelatinous candy, which tasted very synthetic and bad, like of something chemical or the rind of an orange.

And there was someone smoking in the TV room

And the walls were nicotine yellow from the smoke

And I didn’t want my wife to find about the smoker, because it was some relative of mine: an old hag.

But then I woke up

 
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from Hunter Dansin

“Thank you” would die on your lips
If you knew,
What pride and ambition and hate
I have had to fight in myself,
To earn it.[^1]

a photo of my desk, which has my notebook and books on it.

March has ended and I am not quite sure where it went. Did I write? Yes I did. Did I make music? Yes I did. Did I do either of those things as well or as much as I had planned? No. If there are 'creatives' out there whose output is steady and controlled, I am certainly not one of them. I have worked hard to develop 'bare minimum habits' that help me maintain some consistency, but on top of those habits my output has always been stormy. Sometimes it overflows, sometimes it dries up, and I have to dig a deep well with my fingernails to find anything. Lately the music well has been much more productive than the writing well (at least in terms of fiction). I do not think this is unnatural in the sense that humans are not machines, but it would be nice to have an even keel. Ultimately though, I can rest because I believe that my life is Not My Own, and there is freedom in that. I just have to remember it, and endure it.

Writing

I wish I could banish the guilt I feel when I think of how little progress I have made on the book. I did write a pretty long essay, but for some reason I just can't shake a sense of failure when I don't work on the book. E.B. White once likened the impulse to write something as having a storm cloud over one's head until the thing is written, and I resonate with that very much. I suppose I should stop feeling guilty and just recognize that these works that seem to appear over my head are just manifestations of the creative process; but I push back on that phrasing “just manifestations of the creative process,” because I feel that it cheapens the work. I will say that the Manliness essay was a cloud that had been hanging over me for years, and it felt good to finally dispel it. Writing is a fascinating process. Control over it (for me) is both a responsibility and an illusion.

Music

A photo of my "studio"

I have been playing and practicing quite a lot. I bought a new acoustic guitar, which I have 'needed' for a while. The neck on my old one is somewhat rough, which means it taught me a lot about proper technique and finger position, but come showtime was really limiting and nerve-racking. The new one, an Orangewood, is very nice for the price, and I am liking it more every day as I break it in. I almost immediately started recording (semi-officially) the Lit Songs album with it. I think I have gotten good enough with my microphones and production process that I can make very nice sounding demos, complete with drums! The challenge is really just finding time when the house is quiet (which is not often, with two young kids). I mostly record at night instead of playing video games, which is good, but also I need to sleep. I need to pace myself.

Reading

I read a lot for the podcast, namely Piranesi and That Hideous Strength and Borges (still editing those recordings). For fun, I have picked up Robinson Crusoe and The Divine Comedy. I have enjoyed That Hideous Strength and Robinson Crusoe the most out of those.

I have also decided to try and revive my Latin. For language learning, my main goal is usually just to be able to read. To that end I have been reading 死神永生 (Death's End) by 《刘慈欣》(Liu Cixin) for over about a year. I try to read one page a day, writing down words I don't know, then adding them to Pleco's flashcard function. I do think my comprehension is improving, but it is still far from where I want it to be. For Latin, I am restarting Gustatio Linguae Latinae. My wife is a Latin teacher, so I've got a pretty good motivational head start, and it has really been a lot of fun.

It is really amazing to me how video games have the power to inoculate so many of my life-giving impulses. I think it is because video games offer a facsimile of what they promise: skill building (learning a musical instrument), exploration (reading about a new place), immersion (learning a new language and reading primary sources), self-expression (writing). Please note, I do not think video games are evil, it is just that they can be easily abused out of all moderation. I have also been fasting from breakfast to dinner for Holy Week, and it has helped me realize just how many impulses for consumption I have, and how little I deny them. Those little snacks and cookies and glasses of milk add up, even though they are not harmful in themselves. And it seems to me that the modern adulthood our culture strives for is less about self control, and more about working ourselves into the ground for a life that doesn't require it. So many of the things we buy are for pure convenience and organization, so that we don't have to think or be responsible. AI is no different in this regard, and the commercials for it emphasize the fact that it can automate tasks that we have already striven to automate, so that we will just become Dostoevsky's “General Humans” or C.S. Lewis's “Men Without Chests.”

Well, until next time.

[1]: If I do not cite a poetry source, you can assume that I wrote it.

#update #April #2026


Thank you for reading! I greatly regret that I will most likely never be able to meet you in person and shake your hand, but perhaps we can virtually shake hands via my newsletter, social media, or a cup of coffee sent over the wire. They are poor substitutes, but they can be a real grace in this intractable world.


Send me a kind word or a cup of coffee:

Buy Me a Coffee | Listen to My Music | Listen to My Podcast | Follow Me on Mastodon | Read With Me on Bookwyrm

 
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from 下川友

友人が、たくさん食べられる方がカッコいいと言っていた。 いや、まあ、食事に対してカッコいいという価値観は俺にはないのだが、 もしカッコよさで語るなら、俺はむしろ食べないほうがカッコいいと思う。 自分だけで完結している度合いが強いからだ。 生きる上で必要なものが少ないほど、その肉体は単体で強いように見える。

歩くのと走るのでは、どちらがカッコいいか。 これは歩くほうだろう。 理由というより、統計的に大人が証明している。 大人は走らない。歩いているほうが、何にも追われていないからだ。 走っている人は、時間か、もっと物理的な何かに追われている。 いや、もし追われているという状態を、生活に干渉されている証と見るなら、
走っているほうがカッコいいと言えるのかもしれない。 止まっているのも勿論カッコいい。 そう考えると、歩くというのは何でもないのかもしれない。

昇るのと降りるのでは、どちらがカッコいいか。 昇るのは、これからそこに予定があるから。 降りるのは、予定が終わったから。 これはどちらとも言いがたい。 予定が終わったのに、丘の上にある家へ登っていくなら、それはカッコいいと思う。

このまま羅列していってもいいが、もう既に飽きてしまった。 カッコいいの先に何もないからだ。 もし何かあるほうが良い事だとするのなら、カッコよくなる前という事になる。

締まらない話だ。 どうでもいい話を続けていたら、机の上の汚さが視界に入ってきた。 そうか、今週は何もしていないから、鈍く疲れているのだ。

 
もっと読む…

from Faucet Repair

31 March 2026

In our last poetry workshop, Jonathan sent us on a Carl Phillips dive. First his 2018 essay Muscularity and Eros: On Syntax for At Length and then a handful of poems. “A Kind of Meadow” (2000) has been with me ever since. Very painterly. There's something about it that puts me in a place similar to Polke's Die Fahrt auf der Unendlichkeitsacht III (Die Motorradlampe) (1971)—every new door opens to a misdirect or redirect, but the flow of the whole remains cohesive and unencumbered. A particular example via enjambment in a middle stanza:

A kind of meadow, where it ends begin trees, from whose twinning of late light and the already underway darkness you were expecting perhaps

And that's the rhythm all the way through, of starts and stops meshing and trading places. Which happens verbally in the mouth, but also visually; bones, branches, and fretwork form a grid that dapples both shadow and light, shooting both through the length of the poem. Words examining themselves as they are produced.

 
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Anonymous

What Are Common Remedies Suggested by Astrologers?

Astrology has been a guiding force in human life for centuries, helping individuals understand their destiny, strengths, and challenges. Many people searching for the best astrologer in Delhi NCR not only seek predictions but also effective remedies to overcome life problems. Astrology remedies are practical and spiritual techniques designed to balance planetary energies and improve overall well-being.

Understanding Astrology Remedies

Astrology remedies are based on the belief that planetary positions influence different aspects of life, including career, relationships, health, and finances. When certain planets are weak or negatively placed in a birth chart, they may create obstacles. Astrologers suggest remedies to reduce these negative effects and strengthen positive influences.

These remedies do not change destiny completely but help minimize difficulties and enhance opportunities when followed with faith and consistency.

  1. Gemstone Therapy Gemstone therapy is one of the most popular remedies in astrology. Each planet is associated with a specific gemstone that enhances its positive energy.

For example: Ruby for the Sun boosts confidence and leadership Emerald for Mercury improves communication and intellect Yellow Sapphire for Jupiter supports wisdom and prosperity

Wearing the right gemstone after proper consultation can help balance planetary influences and attract success.

  1. Mantras and Chanting Mantras are sacred sounds that create positive vibrations and mental clarity. Chanting specific mantras related to planets can reduce their negative effects.

Common practices include:

Gayatri Mantra for overall positivity Hanuman Chalisa for strength and protection Shani Mantra to reduce Saturn’s challenges

Regular chanting helps calm the mind, improve focus, and bring emotional stability.

  1. Vastu Shastra Corrections Vastu Shastra focuses on the energy flow within a space. Incorrect placement of objects or directions can lead to problems in life.

Astrologers often suggest:

Adjusting furniture placement Improving entrance directions Using suitable colors and elements

These simple changes can create a positive environment that supports growth and harmony.

  1. Fasting and Religious Rituals Fasting on specific days is another effective remedy. Each day is associated with a particular planet, and fasting helps strengthen its positive influence.

Examples include:

Monday for the Moon Thursday for Jupiter Saturday for Saturn

Performing rituals along with fasting enhances spiritual connection and reduces negative planetary effects.

  1. Charity and Donations Charity is considered a powerful way to balance karmic influences. Donating items related to specific planets can help reduce negative energies.

Examples: Donating black items on Saturdays for Saturn Offering food to the needy Supporting religious or social causes Acts of kindness bring positivity, peace, and emotional satisfaction.

  1. Yantras and Spiritual Tools Yantras are sacred geometric symbols used to attract positive energy. They are often placed in homes or workplaces for protection and prosperity.

Popular yantras include: Shree Yantra for wealth and success Navgraha Yantra for planetary balance Kuber Yantra for financial growth These tools help enhance positive vibrations in daily life.

  1. Meditation and Lifestyle Changes Astrologers also emphasize the importance of mental and emotional balance. Meditation is a powerful practice that helps reduce stress and improve focus.

Lifestyle changes such as maintaining discipline, avoiding negative habits, and practicing gratitude can significantly improve life quality. These changes support the effectiveness of other remedies.

Importance of Personalized Remedies

Every individual has a unique birth chart, so remedies should be customized. Generic remedies may not work effectively for everyone. Consulting the best astrologer in Delhi NCR ensures accurate analysis and suitable recommendations.

Professional guidance helps in choosing the right gemstone, mantra, or ritual based on planetary positions and life goals.

Do Astrology Remedies Really Work? The effectiveness of astrology remedies depends on belief, consistency, and proper application. While they may not provide instant results, they gradually bring positive changes in mindset, behavior, and circumstances.

Astrology should be used as a supportive tool along with practical efforts. Combining remedies with hard work and a positive attitude leads to better outcomes.

https://glorioussauraa.com/astrology/

Conclusion Astrology remedies offer a holistic approach to solving life problems. From gemstones and mantras to charity and meditation, these practices help balance energies and create harmony in life.

For those seeking guidance from the best astrologer in Delhi NCR, understanding these remedies can be the first step toward a more balanced and successful life. By following the right remedies with dedication, individuals can overcome challenges, improve relationships, and achieve personal and professional growth.

 
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from An Open Letter

I did several bits today that I was very proud of. Also at the gym this old guy pointed to me while talking to another kid and use me as an example for what a good physique looks like, and I got so like flustered and I guess I’m just proud of myself. Also some of my green flags/dealbreaker were confirmed to be good with A, and I really find myself falling for her. But at the same time it’s strange because it feels like I’m falling for her with my mind and not just my heart. Like in a much more controlled and intentional way, and not just because this person is filling up some hole in my life. 60 days can’t come faster.

 
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