It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
from Douglas Vandergraph
Before the city had fully opened its eyes, while the sky over Baltimore was still a deep blue with only the thinnest line of pale light beginning to lift at the edge of the water, Jesus stood alone near the harbor in the quiet that comes before traffic takes over the streets. The air held that damp chill that rises from the water before sunrise. A gull cried somewhere out over the dark surface, and the sound carried farther than it would have later in the day. The brick beneath his feet was cool, and the city around him felt suspended, as though everything heavy had not yet remembered its own weight. He bowed his head and prayed in stillness, not in a way that drew attention, not in a way that would have looked dramatic to anyone passing by, but with the deep calm of someone who had nowhere to rush and no need to prove he belonged there. He prayed over the city while its windows remained mostly dark. He prayed over the men and women already awake because work would not wait for them. He prayed over those who had not slept at all. He prayed over children in small bedrooms, over nurses changing shifts, over people staring at unpaid bills, over the ones who had learned how to smile in public and fall apart in private. The breeze moved lightly against his clothes, and when he lifted his face again, the first gray light had begun to spread over the harbor like a promise that did not need to speak loudly to be true.
He started walking as the morning slowly widened. The city was beginning to stir in ordinary ways. Delivery trucks moved through downtown with the groan of brakes and the dull slam of metal doors. A bus exhaled at the curb, then pulled away. A man in a reflective vest crossed Pratt Street with a paper cup in one hand and sleep still visible in the way he carried his shoulders. Jesus moved at the pace of someone who was fully present to every block. He did not walk like a tourist taking in the surface of a place. He walked like someone willing to feel what was under it. The storefronts, the corners, the people waiting in doorways, the puddles left in cracked places along the curb, the sound of a radio playing faintly from inside a security booth, all of it belonged to the morning he had entered. As he made his way east, the city brightened around him in layers. Office towers caught the light first. Then glass doors. Then parked cars. Then the faces of people who had no time to think about how tired they were because the day had already started making demands.
Near a coffee shop not far from the edge of downtown, a woman in her late thirties stood beside a stroller with one hand on the handle and the other digging through a bag with the quick, brittle frustration of someone whose patience had worn thin long before sunrise. Her son, maybe four years old, sat strapped inside in a small winter coat, rubbing one eye and trying not to cry. The woman kept glancing at the door of the shop, then at the phone in her hand, then back inside the bag as though one more look might make the missing thing appear. Her hair was pulled back in a way that had not been done with care but necessity. A hospital badge hung from a lanyard around her neck. Jesus slowed when he saw her because he recognized the kind of strain that does not announce itself with volume. It sits in the body. It shows up in the jaw and the breathing and the way a person speaks to herself when she thinks nobody hears.
“You dropped this,” he said softly.
She looked up. In his hand was the small plastic card she had not realized had slipped near the wheel of the stroller. Relief moved across her face so quickly it almost looked like pain.
“Oh my God,” she said, and then shook her head with tired embarrassment. “Thank you. I can’t lose that. I can’t. I’m already late.”
She took the badge with fingers that trembled more than she wanted them to. Her son looked up at Jesus with that serious, searching expression children sometimes wear when they are too sleepy to hide what they feel.
“You’re having a hard morning,” Jesus said.
The woman gave a dry laugh that nearly broke in the middle. “That obvious?”
“You don’t have to hide it.”
For a second she looked at him in a way people do when they are deciding whether they are safe enough to tell the truth. The city moved around them. A cyclist passed. Someone opened the coffee shop door and a wave of warm roasted air slipped out and was gone again. Her son coughed once into his sleeve.
“I worked overnight,” she said. “My sitter canceled at four-thirty. My mom said she could take him for a few hours, but she’s across town and I still have to make it there and then make it back for another shift because somebody called out sick. I haven’t really slept. He’s got a fever that’s probably nothing, but I still feel bad leaving him anywhere, and my rent went up last month, and honestly I’m so tired that I’m afraid if one more thing goes wrong I’m just going to sit down on the sidewalk and not move.”
Jesus rested one hand on the stroller handle for a moment, steadying it while she adjusted the blanket around her son’s legs. “You are carrying more than one person should have to carry alone.”
The woman swallowed. Those words reached a place in her that advice never reached. “Well,” she said quietly, “alone is what I’ve got.”
He looked at her with deep gentleness. “That may be how it feels. It is not the whole truth.”
Her son leaned his head against the side of the stroller. Jesus crouched slightly so he could meet the child’s eyes. “What’s your name?”
“Micah,” the boy said.
“That’s a strong name.”
Micah nodded, too tired to smile but pleased anyway.
Jesus stood again and said to the woman, “Take the next breath slowly. Then the one after that. Don’t live the whole day at once.”
She let out the kind of breath that comes when someone has been clenching against life without realizing it. “I don’t even know why that helped,” she said.
“Because your soul was not made to be driven like a machine.”
Her eyes filled, and she turned her face for a second because she did not want a stranger to watch that happen. When she looked back, her voice had softened. “Thank you.”
He nodded as though the moment needed nothing larger than that. “Go take care of what is in front of you. Grace will meet you there.”
She pushed the stroller forward, then stopped and turned back once more, as if she wanted to say something bigger than she had words for. Instead she just looked at him, really looked, and then went on. He watched until she disappeared into the stream of morning movement. Something inside her had not been solved. The shifts would still be long. The rent would still be due. Her child might still get sicker before he got better. Yet the edge she had been standing on had moved back a little. Sometimes mercy enters a life that way. Not by changing every fact at once, but by breaking the lie that a person has to survive the whole weight of it in one breath.
By the time the city had fully awakened, Jesus had crossed toward the older streets where brick rowhouses held the light differently and the day felt closer to the ground. In Fell’s Point the morning carried the smell of salt, coffee, damp stone, and food beginning somewhere behind a kitchen door. The old blocks still held traces of the night, but shop owners were lifting grates, wiping windows, setting signs outside, preparing to receive whatever the day would bring. A man hosed down a section of sidewalk. The water ran through the low places and reflected the sky in broken strips. Voices drifted from an open doorway where two workers were arguing gently about a delivery. Jesus moved through the neighborhood with the ease of someone who never treated human places as unclean just because they were tired, rough, crowded, or imperfect.
At the edge of a small convenience store, beside a newspaper box and a trash can bent slightly inward from old damage, a young man sat with both elbows on his knees and his forehead lowered into his hands. He wore jeans, work boots, and a heavy jacket unzipped over a restaurant uniform shirt. He was not asking anyone for money. He was not making a scene. That was part of why most people did not really see him. He looked like any other person taking a minute before work, but the stillness around him was too tight. There are silences that come from rest, and silences that come from somebody trying not to come apart in public. Jesus stopped near him.
“You look like you’ve been trying to hold a wall up by yourself,” he said.
The man lifted his head, startled by the accuracy more than the words. He had the guarded face of someone who had been disappointed often enough to stop expecting understanding from strangers. He was maybe twenty-six, maybe younger in years and older in weariness. “I’m fine,” he said automatically.
Jesus nodded once. “That is what people say when they do not believe anyone wants the real answer.”
The young man looked away toward the street. A truck rumbled by. Somewhere behind them a spoon hit the side of a metal container. “You from around here?” he asked, not because it mattered but because changing the subject felt safer.
“I am here now,” Jesus said.
That answer almost pulled a laugh out of him, though it did not quite get there. “That’s not really what I meant.”
“I know.”
The young man leaned back and dragged both hands over his face. “My name’s Andre.”
Jesus sat on the low stone edge a few feet from him. He did not crowd him. “What happened, Andre?”
Andre stared ahead for a long moment. Then the words began coming the way water starts after a blockage breaks loose. “My sister called me at two in the morning. My mother got put back in the hospital. She’s got diabetes and a whole bunch of other stuff, and every time we think she’s stable something else happens. My sister says I need to do more. My brother says I already do more than everybody else. My manager says if I miss another shift I’m done. My landlord taped a notice to the door yesterday because I’m short. I sent money to my mother last week, so now I’m behind, and I’m trying not to think about the fact that my car is making that sound again because I don’t have the money for whatever that is either. So, yeah. That happened.”
He laughed once, but it was empty. “And the crazy thing is I’m supposed to go in there in five minutes and ask people if they want extra bacon and hash browns like I’m not thinking about all this.”
Jesus listened the way few people ever had. Not with impatience. Not with the need to interrupt. Not with that distant look people get when another person’s pain feels like too much work. The morning light touched the wet patch of sidewalk in front of them. A woman with shopping bags walked past, speaking softly into a phone. Someone locked a bike to a metal rail. The world kept moving because it always does, even when one person’s life feels one inch from collapsing.
“You have learned how to keep standing while everything around you leans on you,” Jesus said.
Andre looked over at him. “That sounds nice, but it doesn’t change anything.”
“It changes what you believe your suffering means.”
Andre frowned. “What is it supposed to mean?”
“It does not mean you are forgotten.”
Something shifted in Andre’s face at that. Not because the sentence was complicated, but because it landed where the wound lived. “You ever get tired of hearing people say it’ll all work out?” he asked. “Because I do. I’m past that. I don’t need slogans. I need help.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “You need help. And it is not weakness to admit that.”
Andre’s jaw tightened. “Doesn’t matter whether it’s weakness. People still disappear when it gets inconvenient.”
Jesus looked at him with a kind of steady sorrow, as if he knew exactly how many times that had happened. “Some do.”
Andre stared at him, waiting for the polished ending that usually follows. None came. There was no argument, no rush to smooth it over.
After a few seconds Jesus said, “But not all.”
A wind came in from the water and moved the corner of a paper on the ground. Andre looked down at his boots. “I haven’t prayed in a long time.”
“You still know how.”
He shook his head. “No. I know how to talk when I think nobody’s listening.”
“That is closer to prayer than you think.”
Andre sat with that for a while. Then he said, almost ashamed of the need in his own voice, “What do I do right now?”
“Call your sister before you go inside. Tell her one honest thing instead of ten defended things. Tell your manager you can stay through lunch but need the evening. Ask, do not disappear. Then when you finish work, go see your mother.”
Andre let out a breath. “You make it sound simple.”
“Simple is not the same as easy.”
For the first time, a real faint smile touched Andre’s mouth. It vanished quickly, but it had been there. “You always talk like this?”
“Only when needed.”
Andre stood because if he stayed any longer he might miss the courage the moment had given him. He looked down at Jesus, uncertain and moved and still carrying everything, but carrying it differently now. “I don’t know you,” he said.
Jesus rose to his feet. “You were known before you saw me.”
Andre shook his head slowly as if he knew he would be thinking about that sentence all day. Then he stepped away, pulled out his phone, and stood near the corner while it rang. He spoke in a low voice, not with anger this time but with tired honesty. Jesus kept walking. Behind him, Andre remained where he was, no miracle crowd, no spectacle, just a man on a Baltimore corner making a better next move than the one he would have made ten minutes earlier.
By late morning the clouds had thinned and the light over the city had turned whiter, flatter, more exposed. Jesus headed north and west through blocks where the streets widened and narrowed again, where boarded windows stood beside well-kept stoops, where people moved with that mix of endurance and caution common to places that have learned not to trust every promise made to them. A school crossing guard spoke to children by name as they passed. On one block a church sign leaned slightly sideways. On another, a barber swept hair from his doorway into a neat dark pile. The city carried hardship openly in some places and quietly in others, but everywhere it carried people trying to build some kind of life inside it.
When he reached Druid Hill Park, the air changed. Even with the city still close, there was more room to breathe there. Wind moved through bare branches and across open ground. A runner passed with headphones on. Two older men sat on a bench talking without much urgency. Farther off, a woman pushed a stroller along a path while looking down at her phone between glances at the child. The park held that strange peace public places sometimes hold, where everyone brings private trouble into shared space and says nothing about it.
Near one of the paths, under a tree not yet touched by new leaves, sat a man in his sixties feeding small pieces of bread to birds that had learned how to wait near him without fear. He wore a dark coat buttoned wrong by one hole and a knit cap pulled low. Beside him sat a canvas bag and a photograph half visible inside a book. He was not homeless, though someone moving too quickly might have guessed that. He carried himself with the withdrawn care of a man who had once belonged to a fuller life and no longer knew where to put his hands inside the emptied version of it.
Jesus sat on the bench beside him, leaving enough distance for dignity.
The man glanced over. “You got your own bread?”
“I didn’t come for the birds.”
That drew the smallest sound of amusement. “Probably smarter than they are.”
They sat a little while without forcing speech. The park breathed around them. A siren moved faintly somewhere beyond the trees. The old man tossed another piece down and watched the birds gather. “People usually talk too fast,” he said. “I appreciate when they don’t.”
Jesus turned toward him. “You have heard plenty of noise and not enough care.”
The man looked at him longer now. “Maybe.”
“What is her name?”
The question landed so directly that the old man’s face stiffened. He reached into the bag and pulled out the photograph. A woman smiled out from it with the settled warmth of someone who had loved well for a long time. “Loretta,” he said. “Forty-one years married.”
He stared at the picture. “Been fourteen months.”
“Since she died?”
He nodded. “Pancreatic cancer. Quick, then not quick. You know what I mean?”
“Yes.”
“She used to walk with me here. Not every day, but enough that the place got mixed up with her in my head. Bench over there. Path near the water. She liked the geese more than the geese liked her.” His mouth trembled around what almost became a smile. “I come here now because if I stay in the apartment too long, the silence gets mean.”
Jesus listened.
The man went on. “Everybody checked in at first. Then life moved on because that’s what life does. My daughter calls. My grandson comes by. People are decent. It’s not that. It’s just…” He struggled for it. “When you lose the person who witnessed your whole life, you start feeling unreal. Like maybe you’re fading while everybody else keeps going.”
The birds pecked at the last crumbs. A bus could be heard braking on a nearby street. Wind touched the edges of the photograph in the man’s hands.
“What is your name?” Jesus asked.
“Walter.”
“Walter, love that deep leaves a sound behind. Silence does not erase it.”
Walter swallowed hard. “Some days I’m afraid if I stop coming out and sitting where we used to sit, I’ll lose her twice.”
“You are not keeping her alive by suffering harder.”
Walter turned, tears now standing in his eyes with nothing left to keep them back. “Then why does letting the pain ease feel like betrayal?”
“Because grief often confuses holding on with hurting.”
Walter bowed his head. He pressed his thumb against the edge of the photograph as though it were a hand. “I talk to her sometimes.”
Jesus said gently, “Love does not become foolish because it continues.”
Walter let out a shaking breath. “I don’t even know what I’m waiting for anymore. I wake up. I make coffee for one person. I sit near the window. I come here. I go home. I do it again.”
Jesus looked out over the park with him. “There is still life to be given and received in your days.”
Walter gave a tired, doubtful shake of the head. “At my age?”
“At your age.”
A child’s laughter rang out from somewhere farther down the path. Walter listened to it without turning. “You talk like a man who knows things.”
“I know what can die inside a person before the body does.”
Walter looked at him fully now, and something in him seemed to recognize a depth he could not explain. “Then tell me this,” he said quietly. “How do I live when the best part of my life is behind me?”
Jesus answered without haste. “You stop calling what was beautiful the end of beauty. You let what was loved teach you how to love what remains.”
Walter held still after that, as if one sentence had opened a door inside him that had been stuck for months. He stared ahead, but he was no longer seeing only the park. He was remembering something. Perhaps the face of his daughter when she spoke too brightly on the phone because she worried about him. Perhaps the grandson whose stories he only half listened to because grief made every conversation feel far away. Perhaps the unopened letter on his kitchen counter. Something in him was turning, not away from Loretta, but away from the false loyalty of living half gone.
He wiped his face once with the back of his hand, embarrassed but beyond pretending. “I used to make pancakes for my grandson on Saturdays,” he said. “Stopped doing it after she died. He kept asking, then he stopped asking.”
“Call him,” Jesus said.
Walter nodded slowly, still looking straight ahead. “Yeah. I should.”
“You should.”
Walter put the photograph back in the bag with more care than before, not because the grief had lifted, but because it had changed shape. He sat up a little straighter on the bench. The birds had moved on. The path remained. The air remained. The ache remained. Yet something else now remained with it, and that changed the bench, the morning, and the old man sitting there inside them.
Jesus rose and continued on through the park, leaving Walter still seated but no longer hollowed out in quite the same way. By then the day had moved past its gentler hours. The city’s sharper edges had returned. Traffic thickened. The phones in people’s pockets carried bad news, pressure, schedules, and disappointments from one block to the next. Somewhere across Baltimore a nurse was walking into another shift. A restaurant worker was trying to hold his family together one decision at a time. An old widower was reaching for the phone he had been avoiding. And Jesus kept walking toward the next burden, the next face, the next place where quiet mercy would have to meet a life in the middle of what was real.
By early afternoon the light over Baltimore had changed again. The softer haze of morning had burned off, leaving a harder brightness on the pavement and the sides of buildings. Jesus moved east and then north through streets where the city felt dense with motion and private strain. A siren flared and then faded. Horns sounded in bursts that carried irritation more than danger. The smell of fried food drifted from one corner while disinfectant and exhaust met it from another. A row of people waited at a bus stop with the resigned posture of those who had done too much waiting in too many parts of life. Jesus walked through it all without ever seeming hurried by what hurried everyone else. It was not that he ignored the pace around him. It was that he was not owned by it. The city had its own rhythm of pressure, but he moved inside a steadier one.
He made his way toward Johns Hopkins Hospital, where the human weight of Baltimore gathered in concentrated form. Here fear traveled in elevators and sat in waiting rooms and hid behind practical questions. Here families tried to sound calm on the phone while their hands shook. Here nurses carried more than charts and doctors sometimes delivered words that split a life into before and after. Outside one of the main buildings, a woman stood near a concrete planter with both arms folded tightly across herself. She looked to be in her early fifties. Her coat was buttoned wrong, and she had not noticed. A brown paper bag sat at her feet, unopened. She kept staring at the hospital entrance as though she might force it to give her a different answer than the one it had already given.
Jesus slowed when he saw her because sorrow has a way of changing the air around a person. It had done that to her. People passed within feet of her, but her pain had already isolated her from the movement around her. He stood near enough for her to notice without startling her.
“You have been standing here for a long time,” he said.
She looked up with red-rimmed eyes and the defensive weariness of someone who had already repeated herself too many times to too many people. “Do you work here?”
“No.”
“Then I’m okay.”
Her voice had the edge of a person trying not to break in front of one more stranger. Jesus did not step away. “No, you are not.”
The words were gentle, but they left her with no place to hide. She looked at him, annoyed for a moment that he had seen through her so quickly, and then too tired to maintain the annoyance. “My son is upstairs,” she said. “Twenty-three. Infection in his blood. They’re saying a lot of things in words I don’t fully understand, and every time a doctor starts talking I feel like the room tilts.”
She pressed her lips together and glanced at the entrance again. “He was supposed to be getting his life together. That was the plan. He had trouble with pills for a while. Then he got clean. Then he started doing better. He got work with his cousin. He was trying. He really was. And now I’m standing out here because they needed to do something and I couldn’t just keep sitting in that chair pretending I’m strong.”
Jesus looked at the unopened paper bag at her feet. “You have not eaten.”
She gave a bitter little half laugh. “I bought a sandwich because some woman at the desk said I needed to eat. It felt rude not to buy it after she said it twice.”
“What is your son’s name?”
“Malik.”
He nodded. “And your name?”
“Denise.”
The entrance doors opened and shut behind them in waves. A man in scrubs came out rubbing the bridge of his nose. An elderly couple went in arm in arm, moving carefully. Somewhere a helicopter sounded faintly overhead. Denise stared at the ground, then at Jesus. “I keep thinking about all the times I was mad at him,” she said. “Not just disappointed. Mad. The nights he wouldn’t answer. The money that disappeared. The lies. The things he said when he was high. I keep thinking, what if the last strong thing he remembers from me is anger?”
Jesus answered without rushing to soften what was true. “Love sometimes speaks in anger when fear is underneath it.”
“That doesn’t make me feel better.”
“It is not meant to excuse anything. It is meant to tell the truth.”
Denise’s face tightened. “I’m tired of truth that hurts.”
“Yes,” he said, “but false comfort will not hold you.”
For a moment they just stood there while the city and the hospital continued around them. Then Denise bent to pick up the paper bag and held it awkwardly, as though she had forgotten why she bought it. “Everybody keeps saying pray,” she said. “I know that word. I grew up in church. I know the sound of it. But right now when I try, all I have is panic and half sentences.”
Jesus said, “Bring God the half sentences.”
Her eyes filled again. “That counts?”
“It counts because you are bringing what is real.”
She looked away toward the upper floors of the building as if her son might somehow be visible through concrete and glass. “I don’t know how to carry this.”
“You carry this minute. Then the next one.”
She let that settle. “A man told me something like that years ago at my mother’s funeral,” she said quietly. “I forgot it.”
“Some truths return because we need them more than once.”
Denise looked at him with the beginning of wonder now, not because he had dazzled her, but because he had spoken in a way that felt old and steady and clean in a place where everything felt unstable. “Do you think he’s going to live?”
Jesus did not answer the question she wanted most, because love does not always comfort by pretending certainty where there is none. “He is in God’s sight,” he said. “And so are you.”
She wanted more, but the honesty of the answer kept her from resenting it. She nodded once, as if some harder part of her respected him for not trying to perform reassurance. “I’m afraid,” she said.
“I know.”
“No, I mean I’m really afraid.” Her voice lowered until it was almost a whisper. “Afraid of the phone call. Afraid of the doctor coming down that hall. Afraid that if he lives, I’m back in the same fear six months from now. Afraid that if he dies, I will never be the same again.”
Jesus looked at her with the kind of compassion that does not retreat from the full shape of another person’s fear. “You will not become someone untouched by this. But you do not have to become someone abandoned inside it.”
Something in Denise gave way then, and she wept without elegance. Not loudly. Not theatrically. Just the deep, exhausted tears of a mother who had run out of ways to hold herself together. Jesus stood with her while she cried. He did not hurry her out of it. He did not hand her a lesson. He let her sorrow have room. After a while, when the worst of the shaking had passed, she wiped her face and shook her head as if embarrassed by how much had come out in public.
“I need to go back inside,” she said.
“Yes.”
She took one breath, then another. “Will you tell me one thing before I go?”
He waited.
“What do I say when I get back to his room?”
Jesus said, “Tell him the truth without punishment in it.”
Denise held still after that. She knew exactly what he meant. No guarded speech. No old anger disguised as wisdom. No punishment wrapped in concern. Just the truth. “All right,” she said.
She started toward the entrance, then turned back. “Who are you?”
He answered her the same way he had answered another question earlier in the day. “I am here now.”
Denise frowned, not out of irritation this time, but because the words did not behave like ordinary words. Then she gave a small nod and went inside with the paper bag still in her hand. When the doors closed behind her, Jesus remained where he was for a moment, looking at the building, at the rooms stacked above rooms where lives were hanging in the balance for reasons old and new. Then he turned and walked back into the city.
As afternoon leaned toward evening, he moved through neighborhoods where rowhouses sat shoulder to shoulder and whole family histories had unfolded behind narrow doors. Laundry stirred on a line in one small yard. Children bounced a ball against a wall where paint had long ago given up trying to cover all it had seen. A man repaired a bicycle on a stoop while a radio played low enough that only the rhythm carried. On one block a woman called her daughter in through the screen door with a tone that carried both authority and tenderness. On another, a vacant lot held broken glass and weeds pushing stubbornly through old neglect. Jesus walked on, not romanticizing any of it, not reducing any of it to hardship either. The city contained fatigue, humor, addiction, prayer, resilience, violence, rent notices, funerals, kindness, unpaid electric bills, old songs, missed buses, and neighbors who still checked on one another when it mattered. To walk through Baltimore honestly was to feel all of that at once.
Near a laundromat off a busier road, a young woman sat on the low cinderblock edge beside the parking lot with a laundry basket at her feet and a phone in her hand that she kept unlocking and locking again. Her age was hard to place because exhaustion had blurred the lines. She might have been twenty-nine. She might have been thirty-five. Her face was beautiful in the unguarded way a face can be when life has stripped it of vanity for the day. A bruise, yellowing at the edges, marked one side of her wrist. She had the faraway look of someone standing at a line she had not yet decided whether to cross. Inside the laundromat, machines turned with dull steady force. A child laughed at something near the folding tables. Somebody dropped coins into a machine. The ordinary sound of people doing ordinary tasks made the stillness around her look even lonelier.
Jesus came to stand nearby. “You are deciding whether to go back,” he said.
She looked up sharply, instantly guarded. “Go back where?”
“You know.”
Her jaw set. “You don’t know me.”
“No,” he said gently, “but I know this moment.”
She stared at him, then away again. “I’m waiting on my clothes.”
“Yes. And something else.”
She looked down at the phone in her hand. “People need to mind their business.”
“Sometimes mercy does.”
That irritated her enough to pull her fully into the conversation. “Mercy?” she said. “You don’t even know what you’re talking about.”
“Then tell me.”
She almost refused. He could see the battle in her face. Shame told her to shut down. Pain wanted to be heard. Anger wanted to strike first. In the end pain won. “My name’s Tasha,” she said. “And I left my boyfriend’s apartment this morning. Again.”
Jesus waited.
“Not because of some big dramatic thing today. That’s the stupid part. It wasn’t some huge event. It was a look. A tone. A way he said my name. That feeling started up in my stomach again, and I knew where the day could go because I know him and I know me and I know how quick bad things can come back after three good days.” She laughed once without humor. “So I left before anything happened. Took my clothes from the dryer and my daughter’s backpack and left.”
“Where is your daughter now?”
“With my aunt.”
“That was wise.”
She shrugged. “Maybe. Or maybe I’m just doing the same stupid cycle again where I run, then I calm down, then he calls, then he cries, then he says I make everything bigger than it is, then I go back because I’m tired and broke and don’t want my kid sleeping on people’s couches.”
The laundromat door swung open and a woman came out carrying warm folded sheets against her chest. Heat and detergent smell drifted past, then the door closed again.
Tasha rubbed her thumb against the edge of her phone. “He keeps texting. He says if I don’t come back, I’m proving I never loved him.”
Jesus said, “Control often borrows the language of love.”
She looked at him quickly. That sentence found the exact wound. “Yeah,” she said after a moment, very quietly. “Yeah.”
“He has taught you to question what you know when fear enters the room.”
Her eyes filled, though she fought it. “I’m not stupid.”
“No.”
“But I feel stupid.”
“You feel worn down.”
That was closer, and because it was closer, it hurt more. “He wasn’t always like this.”
Jesus looked at her with compassion that did not require her to simplify the story. “That is often why people stay too long. They keep waiting for the beginning to return.”
She lowered her head. “I keep thinking if I say the right thing at the right time, maybe the good version of him comes back for real.”
“You cannot heal another person by giving them more of yourself to bruise.”
Tasha’s breathing changed. She leaned back against the block wall behind her as if she had suddenly become too tired to keep sitting upright. “I don’t have enough money to do this right,” she said. “That’s the truth. Everybody talks about leaving like it’s one clean decision. It isn’t. It’s rides. It’s diapers. It’s who has a spare room. It’s whether your job lets you miss a shift. It’s whether your kid asks when you’re going home and you know home is the very place that hurts.”
Jesus nodded. “Yes. The truth matters.”
She looked at him, surprised that he had not rushed to turn her situation into something neat. “So then what?”
“You do the next safe thing.”
Tasha let those words sit between them. “The next safe thing,” she repeated.
“Yes.”
She looked at her phone again, then locked it and slipped it face down into the laundry basket. “My aunt said I could stay three nights. Maybe more if I help with groceries. I told her I’d think about it.”
“Do not return tonight.”
She drew in a slow breath. “That sounds simple when you say it.”
“Simple is not the same as easy.”
A strange look crossed her face then, because the sentence reached her with the force of something she would remember years later. “I think I needed somebody to just say it plain.”
“Then hear it plain. Do not return tonight.”
For the first time all day, her body seemed to loosen one degree. Not because the problems were solved, but because truth had cut through confusion. “Okay,” she said.
Inside the laundromat a buzzer sounded. Tasha stood and wiped at her eyes impatiently. “I have to get my clothes.”
“Yes.”
She lifted the basket, then looked back at him. “I don’t know why I listened to you.”
Jesus gave the faintest hint of a smile. “Because something in you is tired of calling danger home.”
The words followed her all the way to the laundromat door. She stopped with one hand on the handle, absorbed them, then went inside. Through the glass, Jesus saw her stand still for a moment between the turning machines and the plastic chairs, basket at her feet, face changed not by joy but by decision. That mattered. In some lives the holiest moment is not loud. It is the moment somebody decides not to walk back into what has been breaking them.
The day moved on, taking its light with it in slow degrees. Jesus crossed toward the waterfront again as the sky softened and the city’s edges began to glow instead of glare. Evening in Baltimore carried a different sound from morning. The urgency did not vanish, but it shifted. Commuters moved with the drained focus of people heading home or toward whatever would count as home tonight. Harbor water caught the late light in broken copper shapes. Wind carried cold from the open stretch near the docks. Restaurant windows glowed. Somewhere a saxophone was being played badly but earnestly. Somewhere else a man laughed too loudly outside a bar because the drink had reached the point where sorrow begins dressing itself as confidence.
Near the water in Fell’s Point, Jesus saw Andre again. This time he was standing outside the restaurant where he worked, apron folded in one hand, staring across the harbor as though the day had aged him and steadied him at once. When he turned and noticed Jesus, surprise crossed his face, followed by something like relief.
“You’re real,” Andre said before he could stop himself.
Jesus came to stand beside him. “How was your day?”
Andre let out a breath that carried fatigue and a little wonder. “Hard. Better than I thought. My manager was mad, but not as mad as I expected. My sister cried when I called. My mother’s awake. I went to see her on break. She yelled at me for looking skinny.” He smiled fully now, brief but genuine. “That’s probably a good sign.”
“It is.”
Andre looked down at the apron in his hand. “I kept hearing what you said. About being forgotten. I didn’t realize how much I’d started believing that.”
Jesus said nothing. He let him continue.
Andre shrugged. “I don’t know. Today was still messy. Money still short. Problems still there. But it didn’t feel pointless the way it did this morning.”
“Pain and pointlessness are not the same thing.”
Andre nodded slowly. “Yeah.”
He glanced over. “Can I ask you something?”
“Yes.”
“Why would God care about somebody like me?”
Jesus looked out over the harbor. A ferry moved in the distance. Light trembled across the water. “Why would a father ignore a son because the son was tired, afraid, or buried under trouble?”
Andre swallowed. “A lot of fathers do.”
“Yes,” Jesus said softly. “But that is not because neglect is love.”
The honesty of that struck deep. Andre looked away quickly, jaw tightening, and Jesus knew there was a history there that did not need to be named yet to be felt. “I always think if I can just get all the way stable first, then maybe I can pray again,” Andre said. “Like maybe I should wait until I’m not a mess.”
“You do not clean your wounds before bringing them to the physician.”
Andre laughed under his breath, shaking his head. “Man.”
A gull swept low and then lifted again with the wind. People walked behind them in twos and threes. The city was beautiful in the tired way a city can be when daylight is leaving and all its effort is visible at once. Andre looked at Jesus with open curiosity now. “I still don’t know who you are.”
Jesus turned toward him. “You do not need all the answers to begin walking in the right direction.”
Andre absorbed that. “Fair enough.”
“Go home tonight,” Jesus said. “Sleep. Call your mother in the morning. And when fear starts speaking again, do not let it pretend to be wisdom.”
Andre nodded. “All right.”
He looked at Jesus one more time as if he wanted to ask the larger question again, the one beneath all the others, but something told him the answer would come in time. He slipped the apron into his jacket pocket and headed toward the bus stop with a different posture than he had carried that morning. Jesus watched him go, then continued along the waterfront as evening settled.
Farther on, near a row of lights coming alive one by one, he saw Walter walking with his grandson. The boy, maybe eight years old, was talking fast and pointing at everything. Walter carried himself differently now. Not young, not suddenly healed of grief, but more present, more returned to himself. He held a paper bag in one hand. Pancake mix. When he noticed Jesus, he slowed, and understanding passed over his face with quiet force.
“Hey,” Walter said, almost under his breath.
The grandson looked up. “You know him?”
Walter’s eyes stayed on Jesus. “I met him earlier.”
The boy studied Jesus with childlike seriousness. “Grandpa says we’re making pancakes tomorrow.”
“That sounds like a good plan,” Jesus said.
Walter smiled, and this time the smile stayed. “It is.”
There was nothing more that needed saying in that moment. Walter gave the smallest nod, the kind one man gives another when something holy has happened without spectacle. Then he and the boy kept walking, their voices blending into the evening air.
The city darkened slowly around him. Windows became brighter. Streetlights laid thin gold across wet patches and old brick. Night workers emerged as day workers disappeared. Somewhere Denise was sitting beside Malik’s hospital bed saying the truth without punishment in it. Somewhere Tasha was laying her daughter down in her aunt’s spare room, hearing the ache of uncertainty and choosing safety anyway. Somewhere a nurse who had nearly collapsed under the weight of morning was finding, maybe for just a few minutes, that she could breathe without carrying the whole week at once. And Jesus walked through Baltimore as if every unseen burden in it mattered, because every unseen burden did.
He returned at last toward the harbor where the day had begun. Night had fully come now. The water was dark except where city light reached it and broke across the surface. The air was colder. Footsteps sounded differently in the dark, sharper and more separate. A couple passed laughing softly. A man in a hooded sweatshirt sat alone on a bench eating from a takeout container, staring at nothing. Far off, music drifted from somewhere it did not quite belong. The city was no less itself at night. If anything, its loneliness and longing were easier to feel then.
Jesus found a quiet place near the edge of the water where the movement of the harbor could be heard beneath the smaller sounds of the city. He stood in stillness for a moment, taking in the long line of lights, the old buildings, the working streets, the neighborhoods beyond sight, the hospital rooms, the apartments, the shelters, the buses, the kitchens, the empty beds, the family tables, the men trying not to drink tonight, the women trying not to go back, the widowers sitting with photographs, the mothers waiting on good news, the children sleeping while grown troubles pressed at the walls around them. Then he bowed his head and prayed.
He prayed with the same quiet authority with which he had begun the day, but now the prayers carried the names and faces of the hours behind him. He prayed for Micah’s fever and his mother’s strength. He prayed for Andre’s family, for his mother’s healing, for his own heart not to collapse under pressure he had carried too long. He prayed for Walter’s grief to become a door to renewed love rather than a room he never left. He prayed for Denise and Malik, for mercy in the hospital room and for truth to do its deep work without destroying hope. He prayed for Tasha and her daughter, for courage to hold through the night and for the next safe thing to become the next whole season. He prayed for the forgotten, though in his prayer no one was forgotten. He prayed for Baltimore in all the places where suffering hid behind routine and in all the places where it stood openly in the street.
The wind rose and moved against the water, and he remained there, steady and still. There was nothing theatrical in the moment. No crowd gathered. No light split the sky. There was only the city and the night and the Son praying in the dark for people who did not know how near mercy had come to them that day. Yet that quiet was not empty. It held all the depth of heaven’s attention. It held the truth that streets and hospitals and laundromats and bus stops are never beyond the reach of God. It held the truth that a human life can begin changing before anything outward is fixed. It held the truth that Christ does not wait for people to become polished before entering their city, their fear, their grief, or their confusion. He comes into places as they are. He meets people where they are. He speaks to what is real. And even when the city does not yet know what to call his presence, lives begin turning toward light.
At length he lifted his head. The harbor still moved in darkness before him. The city still carried all its need. But prayer had laid that need before the Father, and nothing laid before the Father remains unseen. Jesus looked once more across Baltimore, not with distance, not with judgment, but with deep and tender knowing. Then in the cold night air, while the water touched stone and the city breathed around him, he stood a moment longer in silence before turning to go.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

My game of choice this afternoon comes from the (very woke, yuk) NBA and features my San Antonio Spurs playing the Denver Nuggets. Scheduled start is at 2:00 PM CDT, less than half an hour away. I've already got the radio set to 1200 WOAI, the proud flagship station of the San Antonio Spurs, and I'm listening to the Pregame Show ahead of the call of the game. Go Spurs Go!
And the adventure continues.
from Steve's Real Blog
In July 2025, I started working on autowt to make git worktree management simpler. It was partly a response to seeing people over-building “agentic multitasking” tools, heavyweight opinionated GUIs or multiple-git-clone-agent-queue managers or Claude Code menu bars. When I heard git worktrees were a thing, I thought, why don’t we just automate that a little bit and then we can add agent stuff on top of it as needed?
(If you just want to know what autowt can do for you, read the docs. This post is more about the process than the result!)
Fundamentally, git worktrees are git clones of one repo, but sharing one .git/ directory. You only pay the cost of checkout and avoid the cost of cloning over a network. They’ve been a feature of git for years, but not a popular one, until the rise of coding agents raised the perceived value of multitasking. It was exotic to need a second clone before you found yourself waiting for Claude Code to do something.
The UX of git worktrees is minimalistic:
git worktree add ~/worktrees/new-feature -b new-feature
# (Open a new terminal tab)
cd ~/worktrees/new-feature
uv sync # install dependencies
cp <repo_dir>/.env . # copy secrets
But I wanted it to look more like this:
awt go new-feature
# there is no step 2; you're already on the new-feature branch
# in a fresh worktree
If you make creating and switching to worktrees seamless, you don’t need “agent integration” on top of it. Just start claude if you want claude. Every project has slightly different needs. Straightforward customization can be more important than magic. (Integration can help, which is why autowt can auto-start coding agents and integrate with issue trackers.)
With this vision in mind, I started coding. I leaned heavily on agents at first, which meant the results were just OK. As I got my head around the edge cases and the shape of a good API, I refactored and rewrote, until I was finally comfortable sharing it out as a usable project. As the months went by, I picked up a few dozen users, some of whom filed tickets or sent PRs to help me sand off the rough edges.
Earlier I said that customization is more important than magic. Well, a little magic is good too. One thing autowt does that I don’t see anywhere else is terminal automation. I multitask by flipping between tabs in iTerm2. “Go to a worktree” to me means ”go to the iTerm2 tab associated with a worktree.” So autowt uses AppleScript—or dbus on Linux!—to automate your terminal program, opening or switching to tabs. I broke this part of autowt out into its own library, automate-terminal, with support for 8 terminal emulators across macOS and Linux, including tmux.
Today, autowt is rolled out internally at Descript, and there are real people daily-driving it out in the wild. It’s very fulfilling to have written a tool I invoke many times per day. Most of my side projects are of the “wouldn’t it be cool if…” variety, but autowt has changed my actual day-to-day process.
from Douglas Vandergraph
There are seasons in life when a person can carry pain so quietly that almost nobody around them understands how much they are truly holding. They still answer when spoken to. They still go where they need to go. They still do what the day requires. They still manage to smile at the right times and say the right things in the right places, but inside, something heavy keeps pressing down on the soul. It is the weight of disappointment that did not pass quickly. It is the ache of betrayal that did not heal neatly. It is the lingering sting of being treated carelessly by people who were trusted with something sacred. For many people, the deepest part of that experience is not even the event itself. It is the question that gets left behind after the moment is over. It is the question that rises in the silence when the house is still, when the memories begin moving again, and when the heart starts wondering whether its pain means something more permanent than it wants to believe. That question is simple enough to say, but it carries a lifetime of emotion inside it. When will I be loved?
There is something painfully human about that question because it comes from a place deeper than ordinary frustration. It comes from the wound of having been cheated, mistreated, neglected, rejected, overlooked, or used. It comes from having opened the door of the heart with sincerity and finding that the person on the other side did not know how to honor what they were being given. Some wounds in life heal quickly because they remain near the surface. Other wounds move downward. They enter a person’s confidence. They enter the way they interpret life. They enter the private places where trust, hope, and dignity are supposed to live. Those are the wounds that do not just hurt for a day. Those are the wounds that follow a person into new rooms, new conversations, new relationships, and even into moments that should have felt peaceful. Once pain reaches those depths, it no longer feels like a bad experience that happened. It starts feeling like a lens through which the whole future might be seen.
That is why the cry for love after betrayal is so powerful. It is not only about romance, though it may include that. It is not only about being chosen, though that too can matter deeply. It is about something more basic and more urgent. It is about whether the heart will ever again be handled with care. It is about whether goodness is real enough to find its way into a life that has already known so much disappointment. It is about whether the soul can stop bracing itself for the next letdown. It is about whether tenderness is still possible without danger traveling alongside it. For some people, the pain is tied to a relationship that ended in dishonesty. For others, it is connected to a friendship that fell apart through selfishness or disloyalty. For others still, it reaches back into family wounds, old neglect, deep abandonment, or years of feeling as though they were standing beside people who could see them without truly valuing them. In each case, the details may differ, but the ache becomes strangely similar. The human heart begins to ask whether it will ever find a place where it is not merely tolerated, not merely used for what it can provide, and not merely admired from a distance, but actually loved in truth.
The danger of such pain is not only that it hurts. The danger is that it begins teaching false lessons while the wound is still open. A person who has been mistreated enough times can begin to mistake repetition for destiny. They can start thinking that because something has happened more than once, it must always happen. They can begin to treat disappointment like prophecy. They can start reading their past as if it were the final script of their future. This is one of the cruelest tricks pain ever plays on a soul. It takes what was real and painful and then tries to enlarge it until it becomes an identity. Instead of saying, “I was betrayed,” the heart begins to whisper, “I am the one who gets betrayed.” Instead of saying, “I was not treated well,” it begins to say, “Maybe this is all I am worth.” Instead of saying, “Someone lied to me,” it begins to say, “Maybe honesty is never coming.” At that point, the wound is doing more than hurting. It is trying to rename the person carrying it.
That is why the first truth that must be spoken over a wounded heart is a truth that may sound simple, but it carries enormous power when it is truly received. What happened to you is real, but it is not who you are. The betrayal was real. The dishonesty was real. The rejection was real. The neglect was real. The humiliation may have been painfully real. The tears were real. The nights of confusion were real. The overthinking was real. The loss of peace was real. Yet none of those things have the authority to define your identity. They describe what you have been through. They do not declare what you are worth. That difference matters more than many people realize because once a person begins confusing injury with identity, they start making decisions from a place of distorted value. They settle where they should walk away. They cling where they should release. They explain away what should have ended. They lower standards that should have been protected. They tolerate treatment that should have been rejected. All of that flows from the same root. Somewhere along the way, pain managed to convince the heart that this was the best it could expect.
But the God of Scripture never measures a person by the way others have mishandled them. He never looks at a wound and concludes that the person carrying it must be less precious because of the damage. In fact, one of the great revelations of the Gospel is that God moves toward brokenness with compassion instead of disgust. He does not recoil from the wounded. He does not avoid the ashamed. He does not stand at a distance from the rejected. Again and again, the life of Jesus reveals a Savior who sees people most clearly at the points where the world has treated them least fairly. He walks toward the wounded woman. He stops for the overlooked man. He speaks to the rejected outcast. He touches the untouchable. He gives dignity back to people the world had already decided to dismiss. That matters because it tells the wounded heart something it desperately needs to know. Pain does not make a person invisible to God. If anything, it becomes one of the very places where His nearness is most clearly revealed.
Yet even when a person loves God, they can still struggle deeply with the question of being loved by others. Faith does not automatically erase the human need for tenderness, safety, honesty, and companionship. It does not make betrayal painless. It does not cause rejection to bounce harmlessly off the heart. People of faith still feel loneliness. They still feel disappointment. They still feel the strange sadness of watching others seem to receive with ease what they have prayed for through many hard nights. There are moments when a believer can stand between two truths and feel the tension of both. On one side, they know that God loves them. On the other side, they still ache for that love to be reflected in human relationships that feel trustworthy, steady, and real. It is important to say that clearly because some wounded people start feeling ashamed of their longing. They begin to think that because they know God loves them, they should no longer feel the pain of wanting earthly love that is honest and secure. But longing for that is not weakness. It is part of being human. The question is not whether the longing exists. The question is what that longing will drive a person to believe and how it will shape the decisions they make.
This is where the wisdom of God becomes so necessary. Human longing, when mixed with untreated pain, can become dangerous. A heart that has gone too long without feeling safe can begin reaching for anything that looks like relief. Attention starts looking like love. Intensity starts looking like devotion. Familiar chaos starts feeling strangely comfortable because it resembles what the person already knows. A wounded heart can get pulled toward people who know how to awaken emotion without ever offering peace. It can start mistaking the thrill of being noticed for the reality of being cherished. This is why some people repeat the same kind of relational pain over and over again while swearing each time that the next person is different. The faces change. The names change. The settings change. But the underlying pattern remains. The heart, still hungry and still hurting, keeps reaching with more hope than discernment. Then when the same kind of disappointment comes, the pain deepens because it now carries shame with it. The person no longer feels only hurt by what happened. They feel betrayed by their own inability to see it coming.
Yet the mercy of God reaches even there. It reaches into the place where a person is not only sad about what others did, but discouraged about their own repeated wounds. There is no shame-free life on this side of heaven, but there is healing available for every place where shame has tried to settle. God does not only forgive sin. He also restores the human soul where it has been bent and bruised by things that were done to it, by lies it has believed, and by choices it regrets. He does not tell the wounded heart to simply be stronger next time. He invites it into truth. He invites it into healing. He invites it into a deeper understanding of His love, because apart from that love, people tend to spend their lives trying to fill eternal needs with temporary substitutes.
The deepest answer to the question “When will I be loved?” begins long before another human being ever enters the picture. It begins with the reality that a person is already loved by God before anyone else ever gets the chance to treat them rightly or wrongly. This matters because many people unconsciously let human treatment determine whether they feel valuable. If they are desired, they feel worthy. If they are ignored, they feel diminished. If they are pursued, they feel affirmed. If they are left behind, they feel defective. That way of living places the deepest meaning of life into the hands of unstable people. It gives too much authority to those who are themselves wounded, confused, selfish, inconsistent, and often spiritually blind. As long as worth is measured by human response, peace will always be fragile. The soul will rise and fall with every disappointment. But when worth is rooted in the love of God, something stronger begins to form. A person may still grieve. They may still cry. They may still feel the ache of rejection, but rejection no longer has the power to define them. It may wound their emotions, but it cannot rewrite their identity.
Scripture speaks with incredible tenderness and power into this very place. It does not merely say that God tolerates people or puts up with them out of obligation. It speaks of love that is intentional, personal, and costly. It speaks of a God who knew His people before they were formed. It speaks of steadfast love that does not fail. It speaks of mercy that is new every morning. It speaks of Christ laying down His life not for the flawless, but for sinners, for the weak, for the undeserving, for those who had nothing to offer in return. At the cross, God forever destroyed the lie that human weakness or failure makes a person unlovable. The cross stands as the greatest answer heaven ever gave to a world full of broken hearts. It declares that love is not a vague sentiment floating in the air. It is action. It is sacrifice. It is pursuit. It is God moving toward a wounded humanity and saying, through Christ, that no amount of darkness, shame, failure, or pain can outdistance the reach of His redeeming love.
When that truth starts sinking deeply into the heart, it does not remove human longing, but it changes the place from which longing is experienced. The person is no longer begging the world to prove they matter. They begin living from a deeper foundation. They still desire companionship, honesty, tenderness, and faithfulness, but they no longer treat those things as the source of identity itself. That shift is quiet, but it is revolutionary. It is the difference between looking for love from emptiness and looking for love from fullness. One person reaches for affection because they are desperate to know whether they are enough. Another reaches from a place of already knowing that God has spoken over their life. The first person is more vulnerable to counterfeit love because they need too much from it. The second person is more able to discern because they are not asking a human relationship to carry the weight of proving their worth. In that sense, one of the greatest protections God ever gives is not immediate relief from loneliness, but a deeper revelation of His love that changes the structure of the soul.
Still, revelation alone does not always immediately heal emotional pain. There is often a process involved. God’s healing is real, but it frequently unfolds in layers. A person may know with their mind that they are loved by God while still feeling bruised in their emotions. They may believe Scripture while also fighting memories that rise unexpectedly. They may pray sincerely and still feel sadness when certain names, places, or moments return to mind. This does not mean faith has failed. It means the heart is healing like a real wound heals. There are stages. There are setbacks. There are days of progress and days when pain suddenly feels close again. The human soul is not a machine that can be reset by one sentence, even when the sentence is true. God often heals by steadily bringing truth into places where lies have lived for a long time. He heals by repetition. He heals by presence. He heals by patience. He heals by leading a person through small acts of obedience that gradually rebuild inner strength. He heals by teaching people not only what is true, but how to live as though that truth is now real in the deepest places of their life.
This is one reason honest prayer matters so much. Many people try to approach God with polished language while their real pain stays hidden underneath. They say what they think should be said rather than what is actually happening inside. They tell God that they trust Him while secretly feeling angry, confused, wounded, and exhausted. But the Psalms reveal a different kind of relationship with God. They reveal a place where grief can speak honestly. They reveal that tears do not offend heaven. They reveal that confusion can be brought into prayer. They reveal that a person does not have to sanitize the heart before laying it before God. In fact, real healing usually begins where honesty begins. When a person finally says to God, “This hurt more than I know how to explain,” something important shifts. When they say, “I do not want to keep carrying this,” the soul starts opening at a deeper level. When they confess, “Part of me is afraid love will always disappoint me,” then the place needing healing has at last been brought into the light.
There is also a practical holiness involved in healing from betrayal. It is not enough to simply feel pain and wait for time to do something meaningful with it. Time alone does not heal all things. Time often only buries what remains unaddressed. A person can move on with life while carrying entire chambers of unresolved sorrow beneath the surface. Those hidden places eventually shape reactions, choices, and expectations whether the person intends it or not. This is why healing often requires courage. It requires the courage to stop calling numbness peace. It requires the courage to notice where bitterness has taken root. It requires the courage to admit when cynicism feels easier than hope. It requires the courage to stop returning emotionally to places God is asking the soul to leave behind. A wounded heart often drifts toward self-protection and calls it wisdom, but there is a difference between wisdom and emotional withdrawal. Wisdom sets healthy boundaries. Wisdom learns from pain. Wisdom grows in discernment. Emotional withdrawal shuts every door and then wonders why love cannot enter.
Many people who have been mistreated develop a hidden relationship with fear. They may not name it that way, but fear starts shaping the inner world all the same. It appears in the form of expecting the worst. It appears in hesitation when kindness is shown. It appears in the constant scanning for signs that something will go wrong. It appears in the inability to rest inside good moments because part of the heart is waiting for disappointment to arrive. Fear, once rooted deeply enough, can turn tenderness itself into a threat. The person does not consciously decide that love is dangerous, but the nervous system begins reacting as though it is. This is why the healing God brings is not merely theological. It reaches into the body, the memory, and the deep patterns of expectation. He does not only declare that His children are loved. He patiently retrains the heart to believe that love does not always have to wound. He teaches the soul that peace is not a trick. He teaches it that stillness is not a setup for betrayal. He teaches it that holiness is safer than chaos, even if chaos has been more familiar.
This is also why some seasons of life feel like waiting when they are actually seasons of rebuilding. A person may look around and see others entering relationships, building homes, raising families, or receiving visible answers to prayers that seem similar to the ones they have prayed for over many years. In such moments, it is easy for sorrow to become comparison. The heart starts asking why others seem to find what it keeps losing or why the life it imagined has taken so long to arrive. That pain can become especially sharp for those who have tried to do what is right and still find themselves carrying heartbreak. Yet not every delay is abandonment. Not every unanswered longing is divine neglect. Sometimes the waiting itself is full of unseen mercy. Sometimes God is doing a quieter work that is deeper than what the person would have chosen for themselves. Sometimes He is teaching the soul not to collapse under the weight of desire. Sometimes He is exposing patterns that would have ruined what the person was asking for if it had arrived too soon. Sometimes He is strengthening identity so that the next chapter is entered with wisdom instead of desperation.
That kind of waiting does not always feel comforting while it is happening. There are nights when it feels lonely. There are days when it feels unfair. There are moments when the person would gladly trade all the lessons for one simple answer that feels warm, steady, and human. It is important not to pretend otherwise. Yet the pain of waiting can coexist with the goodness of God. A person can ache and still be loved. They can feel delayed and still be held. They can cry and still be under the careful hand of a faithful Father. One of the mature realities of faith is learning that God’s presence is not canceled by sorrow. In fact, some of the deepest forms of divine companionship are discovered only in the seasons where the heart is too weak to rely on anything else.
What often emerges from these seasons, if a person stays open to God, is a more refined understanding of love itself. Many people begin life by imagining love mainly as desire, affection, closeness, and emotional warmth. Those things matter, but they are not the full picture. Real love includes truth. It includes faithfulness. It includes moral clarity. It includes peace. It includes the ability to protect what is sacred. It includes consistency. It includes the willingness to choose another person’s good instead of using them for self-centered needs. When God heals a wounded heart, He often expands its definition of love. He teaches it not to be impressed merely by emotion or intensity. He teaches it to value what is clean, what is honest, what is steady, and what is capable of honoring what heaven calls precious. This kind of growth may not feel dramatic from day to day, but over time it changes everything. A person who once would have been flattered by attention becomes more discerning. A person who once would have excused confusion as passion begins recognizing that peace matters. A person who once would have tolerated inconsistency because they feared losing the connection begins understanding that anything requiring the abandonment of self-respect is too expensive to keep.
That transformation is part of God’s answer to the cry for love. Sometimes people expect His answer to appear first as another person, but often it appears first as inner restoration. It appears as clearer boundaries. It appears as deeper self-respect rooted in divine love. It appears as the ability to walk away from what once would have kept them trapped. It appears as a heart that no longer interprets loneliness as permission to compromise. It appears as the slow return of peace. It appears as the surprising realization that being alone with God is better than being emotionally entangled with what keeps harming the soul. At first, such changes may not feel like an answer because they do not resemble the future the person had imagined. Yet they are often among the most merciful forms of love God can give. Before He entrusts a person with more, He often heals the places that would have mistaken less for enough.
This is why it is so important never to despise the quiet seasons of rebuilding. The world celebrates visible outcomes, but heaven often values unseen formation. The world notices rings, weddings, public affection, and visible signs that a person has been chosen. Heaven notices whether the soul is becoming whole. The world may congratulate someone for attracting attention, but God may be far more concerned with whether they are learning to discern between attention and honor. The world may ask whether a person has found someone yet. God may ask whether the heart is being taught to rest in His love, to recognize truth, and to refuse anything that requires spiritual compromise. These are not lesser questions. They are deeper ones. They are the kinds of questions that shape lives for decades instead of merely moments.
At the core of all this stands a truth that must be repeated until it reaches the deepest chambers of the heart. Love has not forgotten you. Delayed is not the same as denied. Wounded is not the same as worthless. Alone is not the same as abandoned. Human betrayal may have spoken loudly, but it does not have the final word. God’s love is still the truest thing about your life. If the soul can begin there again and again, even while healing is still underway, then hope begins to rise in a different form. It is no longer the frantic hope of trying to force a human answer before the heart is ready. It becomes the steadier hope of knowing that God is faithful and that nothing real is ever truly lost in His hands.
There are people who will read these words while carrying old heartbreak that has quietly shaped years of their life. Some will remember the specific moment they realized they had been lied to. Some will think about the relationship they gave everything to only to watch it dissolve under selfishness or dishonesty. Some will remember childhood wounds that taught them early to expect inconsistency. Some will think of the people who seemed to love them only as long as it was easy. Others will carry no single dramatic memory at all, only the cumulative sadness of having spent years feeling unseen. To every one of them, the invitation of God remains the same. Bring the whole heart to Me. Bring the confusion. Bring the sorrow. Bring the fear. Bring the longing. Bring the exhaustion. Bring the parts that still do not understand what I am doing. Bring the parts that are ashamed of still hurting. Bring the parts that secretly believe they may be too damaged to ever be handled gently again. Bring all of it, because grace does not begin at the edge of the wound. It enters the wound itself.
And once a person begins living there, in that kind of surrendered honesty before God, something beautiful starts to happen. The heart becomes less interested in trying to force outcomes that only God can give. It becomes less willing to make an idol out of being chosen by people. It becomes less likely to hand over sacred ground to those who have not demonstrated the character to honor it. It becomes more peaceful. More discerning. More rooted. More free. This does not mean the longing for human love disappears. It means the longing is no longer ruling the soul. It is no longer being allowed to drag the heart into compromise. It is no longer being interpreted as proof that something essential is missing. Instead, longing becomes something laid before God, trusted to His timing, and held within the larger reality of His faithful care.
When that happens, even the question “When will I be loved?” begins to change shape. It is no longer the desperate cry of a heart questioning its worth. It becomes the tender prayer of a heart that knows it is already loved by God and is now asking Him to complete what He, in His wisdom, sees fit to complete in His time. That is a very different place to live from. One place is ruled by fear. The other is carried by trust. One place grasps. The other waits with dignity. One place settles. The other remains open without becoming reckless. One place interprets every silence as abandonment. The other learns to believe that God can still be preparing mercy in unseen ways.
This does not make the journey easy, but it makes it meaningful. It allows sorrow to be held within hope instead of replacing hope entirely. It allows the wounded person to remain human without becoming hopeless. It allows them to keep praying without pretending. It allows them to heal without hardening. It allows them to become wiser without becoming colder. These are holy changes, and they are worth more than many people understand while they are still unfolding.
What often surprises people in such a season is how deeply God is able to work through what they would never have chosen. Human instinct usually asks for immediate relief. It asks for the pain to stop, for the loneliness to end, for the confusion to clear, and for the right person or right circumstance to arrive quickly enough to quiet the ache. Yet God, in His wisdom, often does something more lasting than immediate relief. He works at the roots. He reaches into the hidden conclusions the heart formed when it was wounded. He reaches into the fears that grew quietly while no one was looking. He reaches into the places where worth became entangled with human approval. He reaches into the old hunger that made even unhealthy attention feel better than silence. Then, with patience that can feel both frustrating and merciful, He begins teaching the soul how to live free. That freedom is not the same as numbness. It is not a person deciding that they no longer care. It is a person learning that their peace is too precious to keep handing it to what repeatedly harms them. It is a person discovering that God’s love is not a substitute for human love because human love failed. It is the first and deepest reality from which all other forms of love must be understood.
That is why spiritual healing after mistreatment does not usually begin with another person arriving to erase the pain. It usually begins when the wounded person stops asking human affection to do what only God can do. No human being can go backward into your life and undo every wound. No relationship can rescue a soul that has not yet learned to stand inside the love of God. A new person may offer kindness. They may offer honesty. They may offer companionship. Those things matter deeply, and they can be beautiful gifts from heaven, but they cannot replace inner restoration. They cannot carry the full burden of proving to your heart that you matter, that your life is secure, that your identity is whole, or that your future is safe. Those things must be rooted deeper than any human hand can reach. If they are not, then even good love gets forced to carry a weight it was never meant to carry. It becomes strained by the fear of loss. It becomes distorted by the pressure of expectation. It becomes a place where old wounds keep making demands that no relationship, however sincere, was designed to fulfill.
This is one of the reasons God often deals first with the soul itself. He loves too wisely to simply hand answers to a heart that would misuse them because it is still bleeding in hidden ways. That may sound severe to some, but it is actually one of the gentlest things He does. He knows the difference between what you want now and what will preserve you later. He knows when the thing you are praying for would become an idol in your hands because too much of your peace is still attached to it. He knows when your longing has become so intense that you would likely excuse warning signs simply because you are tired of waiting. He knows when a person is vulnerable not because they are weak in character, but because pain has worn them down to the point where almost any relief would look like mercy. In those moments, the restraint of God is not cruelty. It is protection dressed in a form that the hurting heart does not immediately understand.
There are times when a person looks back and realizes that what they once called loss was actually deliverance. At the time, it felt like heartbreak. It felt like rejection. It felt like being left behind while others moved forward into lives that appeared fuller and safer. Yet with distance and healing, they begin to see what they could not have seen when emotion was still ruling the interpretation. They begin to recognize the manipulation they once tried to excuse. They begin to recognize the confusion that never should have been named love. They begin to recognize how often their dignity was negotiated away because they feared being alone. They begin to recognize how much of their peace had been sacrificed trying to hold together something God never asked them to keep alive. Then gratitude enters places where grief once dominated. Not because the pain was unreal, but because perspective has finally caught up with providence. They come to see that the hand that closed one door was the same hand that was refusing to surrender them to destruction.
Still, even when that realization comes, healing rarely looks dramatic from the inside. Most of the time it comes quietly. It comes when the memory that once controlled an entire day now passes through the mind with less authority. It comes when the name that once brought a flood of feeling now carries less power to disturb the heart. It comes when a person notices that they are no longer rearranging their worth around someone else’s behavior. It comes when peace begins to feel more attractive than intensity. It comes when the need to explain oneself to everyone starts fading because the soul no longer depends so heavily on being understood by people. It comes when prayer becomes less about panic and more about surrender. These changes may not impress the world, but heaven sees them clearly. They are the signs of a heart becoming safer to live in. They are the signs of a soul no longer ruled by the old injury.
There is something deeply holy about that phrase, safer to live in. Many people do not realize how dangerous their inner world has become after years of betrayal, mistreatment, disappointment, or neglect. They keep functioning outwardly, but inside, they are living in rooms filled with accusations, fear, shame, and old conclusions that have never been challenged by truth. In that condition, even good moments can feel unstable because the foundation underneath them is still cracked. The soul cannot rest properly where it has learned to expect collapse. That is why God’s healing is not superficial. He is not merely trying to make people feel better. He is rebuilding the interior life so that peace has somewhere to stay. He is teaching the heart to become a place where His truth is more believable than the old wound. He is teaching the mind to stop rehearsing injury as though repetition will somehow create safety. He is teaching the emotions to come under the gentle authority of His presence instead of running wild under the influence of memory and fear.
This inner rebuilding changes more than pain levels. It changes discernment. A person who has truly begun healing becomes more able to notice what once slipped by them. They recognize inconsistency sooner. They feel the difference between flattery and genuine honor. They notice when a relationship is requiring them to shrink instead of grow. They become less drawn to what is merely dramatic and more drawn to what is steady. This is not because they have become hard. It is because truth has begun teaching the soul what it failed to recognize before. In that way, healing is not only recovery. It is education. It is God retraining perception. It is His love restoring sight to places where pain once blurred everything together.
This matters greatly because one of the worst effects of repeated mistreatment is confusion. A person who has been hurt enough times can stop trusting their own ability to see clearly. They start second-guessing themselves even when obvious warning signs appear. They fear becoming cynical, so they overcompensate by ignoring wisdom. They fear being judgmental, so they call things acceptable that are actually destructive. They fear missing love, so they welcome what is not love at all. Confusion is exhausting because it turns every decision into an emotional tangle. The soul feels pulled between hope and self-protection, between faith and caution, between longing and discernment. In that state, even small choices feel heavy because so much more than the present moment is involved. Old pain sits behind every new possibility, whispering its own interpretation. Healing breaks that fog slowly but powerfully. Truth enters. Patterns become visible. Peace becomes a guide instead of merely an occasional feeling.
Some people resist this part of healing because they secretly still want the old story to become true. They still want the one who wounded them to become the one who heals them. They still want the relationship that broke them to somehow turn around and justify every tear by ending in restoration. They still want the past to transform into proof that their suffering meant something. That longing is understandable because the heart naturally wants redemption to happen in the same place where the pain occurred. Yet God does not always choose that route. Sometimes redemption does not look like the old thing becoming what you hoped it would be. Sometimes redemption looks like your heart no longer needing it to. Sometimes it looks like freedom from the need for closure to come from human lips. Sometimes it looks like peace arriving without the apology, without the explanation, and without the ending you once thought you had to have in order to move forward. That kind of freedom is costly, but it is real. It is the soul learning that God is enough to finish a chapter even when people refuse to write the ending with honesty.
There is deep dignity in that. The world often treats dignity as something external, something tied to success, image, admiration, or visible stability. But true dignity begins much deeper. It begins when a person stops begging at doors God has closed. It begins when they stop explaining their value to people determined not to see it. It begins when they stop returning emotionally to places that keep reopening the same wound. It begins when they let God teach them that leaving what dishonors them is not failure. It is wisdom. It is self-respect rooted in divine truth. It is faith refusing to call bondage by a holy name.
This kind of dignity often grows slowly, but once it has grown, it changes how a person moves through the world. They become less frantic. Less impressed by appearances. Less vulnerable to manipulation that once would have worked. They begin to understand that being wanted is not the same as being valued. They begin to understand that chemistry is not character. They begin to understand that attention without integrity is a dangerous thing to build a life upon. They begin to understand that love, if it is real, must have room for peace inside it. It must have room for honesty. It must have room for consistency. It must have room for God. Anything that constantly asks the soul to live in confusion, compromise, secrecy, or fear may feel emotionally intense, but it is not the kind of love heaven blesses.
The person who has been mistreated often needs to hear this more than once because old patterns can feel deeply familiar. Familiarity has a deceptive power. The heart is often drawn not only to what is good, but to what feels known. If chaos was known, chaos can feel strangely magnetic. If inconsistency was known, consistency can at first feel almost suspicious because it is so unfamiliar. If a person spent years having to earn scraps of affection, healthy love can even feel flat at first because it does not recreate the old cycle of anxiety and relief. This is one reason healing requires patience. The soul does not instantly prefer what is healthy. It must often be retrained to do so. It must learn that peace is not boring. It is holy. It must learn that steadiness is not weakness. It is strength. It must learn that clean love may not intoxicate the ego in the same way chaos once did, but it nourishes the spirit in a way chaos never could.
As these changes take root, prayer often changes too. At first, prayer in heartbreak can sound like desperation. It can sound like pleading, searching, crying out for immediate relief or for the return of what was lost. There is nothing wrong with those cries. God hears them with compassion. Yet over time, if healing is unfolding, prayer becomes deeper. It becomes less about controlling outcomes and more about asking God to make the heart whole. It becomes less about persuading Him to open a certain door and more about trusting Him to keep shut what would damage the soul. It becomes less about making pain disappear instantly and more about asking Him to transform what pain is trying to do inside. That is maturity, and it is beautiful because it reflects a soul that has begun to value truth more than quick relief. It reflects a person who would rather be genuinely healed than temporarily distracted.
At that point, the question “When will I be loved?” begins to receive a richer answer. Not always the answer the human heart first imagined, but a better answer because it touches both the present and the future. The answer is that you are loved now by the God who has never mishandled you, and you are being prepared to recognize, receive, and protect what is truly loving when it comes. Those two truths belong together. If a person hears only the first, they may use it to dismiss the real human ache they carry. If they hear only the second, they may keep making an idol out of future love as though their life cannot truly begin until another person arrives. But together, the truths form a strong foundation. You are already loved in full, and therefore you can wait without collapsing. You can heal without panicking. You can hope without settling. You can remain open without becoming reckless. You can long for love without letting longing become your master.
That way of living is powerful because it keeps tenderness and wisdom together. Many people choose one at the expense of the other. Some remain tender but not wise, and so they are easily wounded again and again. Others become wise in a worldly sense but lose tenderness, and so they survive without really living. God’s way is deeper. He does not ask the wounded to stay naïve, but neither does He ask them to harden into cold self-protection. He heals in such a way that the heart can remain alive while becoming discerning. It can remain compassionate while learning boundaries. It can remain open to what is real while refusing what is counterfeit. This is one of the most beautiful kinds of spiritual maturity because it reflects the character of Christ Himself. Jesus was full of grace and truth at the same time. He was tender without being gullible. He was open-hearted without surrendering Himself to what was false. He did not call hardness wisdom, and He did not call naïveté love. In Him, strength and gentleness met perfectly.
For the person who has been mistreated, that means the goal is not merely to avoid future pain. The goal is to become more like Christ in how you carry your own heart. That includes forgiving without excusing evil. It includes grieving without becoming consumed by the grief. It includes telling the truth about what happened without letting the story define your whole identity. It includes learning to bless others without handing them access they have not shown themselves able to steward. It includes becoming a person whose peace is not easily bought, manipulated, or disrupted. That kind of peace is not shallow. It has been fought for in prayer. It has been shaped by tears. It has been defended through obedience. It has been nourished by God in the hidden places where no audience was present.
There is also a certain beauty in realizing that God can use even the pain you never wanted for purposes that go beyond you. This does not mean the wound itself was good. Betrayal is not good. Mistreatment is not good. Neglect is not good. Yet God’s redemptive power is so great that He can take what should have crushed a person and turn it into depth, compassion, clarity, and authority. The one who has suffered and healed often speaks with a weight that untouched people cannot carry. They know how to recognize hidden pain in others. They know how to speak hope without sounding shallow. They know the difference between clichés and truth that has survived the fire. They know that healing is not automatic, and therefore they speak with patience instead of judgment. In that way, even the most painful seasons can become part of a ministry of comfort, not because the pain was desirable, but because grace refused to let it be wasted.
Many people who are aching for love do not realize that part of what God is building in them is the capacity to love more truthfully than they once did. Pain, when surrendered, often exposes how much of what we once called love was mixed with fear, striving, control, insecurity, or self-abandonment. Then, through healing, God teaches the heart a cleaner form of love. He teaches it that love does not require losing oneself. He teaches it that love without truth is not holy. He teaches it that love without peace is not complete. He teaches it that genuine affection should never require silence around what matters most. He teaches it that love can be strong without becoming harsh and tender without becoming weak. This education of the soul is precious because it prepares a person not only to receive love more wisely, but to give it more truthfully as well.
As a result, a person who once asked, “When will I be loved?” may later discover that God was answering in more ways than they knew. He was loving them through protection they did not yet understand. He was loving them through delays that preserved them from deeper damage. He was loving them through truth that stripped away illusions. He was loving them through the strength to leave what once would have held them captive. He was loving them through the stillness that forced them to confront what their soul had been depending on too much. He was loving them through the slow rebuilding of identity. He was loving them through peace that arrived before visible answers did. Then one day the person realizes that while they were crying out for love not to pass them by, love in its deepest form had already been surrounding them, holding them, correcting them, and carrying them forward.
This realization does not remove the possibility that God may also bring beautiful human love into a person’s life. He often does. He delights in good gifts. He delights in companionship rightly ordered under His care. He delights in faithfulness, honesty, and the kind of human tenderness that reflects His own heart. But when such love comes to a healed soul, it is received differently. It is no longer grasped at as though survival depends on it. It is no longer worshiped. It is no longer asked to silence every old fear. It is welcomed with gratitude, stewarded with wisdom, and held under the lordship of God. That is a far safer and more beautiful way to love because it leaves room for peace. It leaves room for honesty. It leaves room for God to remain first. When love comes into that kind of soul, it meets a person who has already learned that their deepest life is hidden in Christ. From there, human love can become what it was meant to be: gift, companionship, shared faithfulness, and earthly reflection, not ultimate savior.
For those who are still in the middle of the ache, however, these truths may feel easier to read than to live. The nights can still feel long. The memories can still rise unexpectedly. The heart can still ask questions it knows not how to answer. That is why hope must be renewed over and over again, not merely admired from a distance. Hope, in a wounded season, often looks less like strong emotion and more like quiet refusal. It is the refusal to believe that pain tells the whole story. It is the refusal to let mistreatment become identity. It is the refusal to call yourself forgotten when God has not left. It is the refusal to make an idol out of what has not yet arrived. It is the refusal to return to what dishonored you merely because loneliness became loud. That kind of hope may not always feel triumphant, but it is powerful because it keeps the heart turned toward truth while healing continues.
And this may be the most important truth of all. Your story is not over because someone mishandled your heart. Your future is not canceled because people failed to recognize your value. Your life is not ruined because love came to you in counterfeit forms before it came in truth. God is still able to build beauty from what has been broken. He is still able to restore what was stolen. He is still able to bring peace into places that have known years of unrest. He is still able to heal the part of you that has been waiting with questions. He is still able to teach you how to live openhearted without becoming vulnerable to every passing shadow. He is still able to give you a future that is not dictated by your old wounds.
So if your heart has been asking in the quiet, “When will I be loved?” hear this clearly and let it settle deeply. You are loved now. Not once you finally stop hurting. Not once another person arrives. Not once all the unanswered questions are resolved. Not once your life looks more like what you hoped. You are loved now by the God who formed you, knows you, sees every hidden tear, and has never once treated your soul carelessly. You are loved in the waiting. You are loved in the healing. You are loved in the nights that still feel unfinished. You are loved in the process of becoming whole. And because that love is true, you do not have to surrender yourself to what is false. You do not have to beg for crumbs from those who have shown you they cannot honor what God calls precious. You do not have to measure your worth by anyone’s inconsistency. You do not have to live as though betrayal had the final word.
Lift your head again, even if only a little. Breathe again, even if slowly. Trust again, not recklessly in people, but deeply in God. Let Him teach your heart that being wounded is not the same as being worthless. Let Him teach your soul that delay is not the same as denial. Let Him teach your emotions that peace is not a trick. Let Him teach your life that holy love never requires self-betrayal to keep it alive. Let Him rebuild the inner places where false conclusions once sat like thrones. Let Him be the One who names you, heals you, steadies you, and guides you.
Then, whether the next visible answer comes quickly or slowly, you will not be standing in the same place inside. You will be stronger. Clearer. Softer in the right ways and firmer in the right ways. You will have learned that the deepest answer to your heart’s cry was never absent. It was already present in the faithful love of God, and from that place all other good things can be received without fear owning the soul.
One day you may look back over this whole stretch of your life and see it differently than you see it now. You may realize that what seemed like endless waiting was full of hidden mercy. You may realize that what seemed like silence was full of quiet guidance. You may realize that what felt like being forgotten was actually being held. You may realize that the love you feared had missed you was at work all along, teaching, protecting, cleansing, restoring, and preparing you for a future that could be entered with peace. Until then, let this be enough for today. Love has not passed you by. God has not left. What was wounded can heal. What was distorted can be made clear. What was shaken can become steady. What was broken can become a testimony of grace. And the heart that once asked, “When will I be loved?” can become the heart that quietly knows, even through tears, “I have been loved by God all along.”
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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Dear Givers
Phonics empowers rural Chinese students by helping to place them on a more equal footing with their urban counterparts, while also equipping them with skills that can support future success. It is important to recognise the persistent education gap between rural and urban areas in China.
Urban students often benefit from higher-quality teachers, stronger academic programmes, and broader access to educational resources. In addition, rural Chinese families frequently face lower incomes and heavier economic burdens. In some rural areas, dropout rates have reportedly reached 40%. Against this backdrop, phonics and English instruction offer students transferable, lifelong skills that can improve opportunity and help break cycles of disadvantage and poverty.
The I Love Learning Education Centre in Liaoning, China, has been using phonics to build literacy skills among rural Chinese students. The core focus of the programme is to teach students the relationship between letters and sounds, with particular emphasis on decoding for reading and encoding for writing.
When teaching newcomer rural Chinese students, experts at the school begin with CVC words in the following way:
Introduce the letters s, a, t, n, i, p.
Teach the corresponding sound for each letter. For example, s represents the sound /s/.
Once students are familiar with the letters and sounds, they are ready to begin decoding. Teachers then use a CVC word flip chart to practise decoding. For example:
Decoding
Step 1
Teacher and Students: “s is /s/, a is /æ/, t is /t/.”
Step 2
Teacher and Students: “/s/ /æ/ /t/”
Step 3
Teacher and Students: “/sæt/”
Step 4
Flip the letters on the Flip Chart and have the class, groups, or individuals repeat the above cycle with the teacher gradually reducing the level of scaffolding.
In this way, students learn to move from recognising individual letter sounds to blending them together to read words accurately and confidently. This method helps build a strong foundation in early literacy and gives students the confidence to begin reading independently.
We are deeply thankful for your support, because without it, implementing such a life-changing phonics programme would not be possible. Your contributions help us recruit quality teachers and design and deliver an effective phonics programme for the children of rural China.
Act now and help give 1000 rural Chinese children a quality English education.
Sources
Analyzing the Education Gap Between Rural and Urban Environments in China
from laurentkrauland
Sapporo. Fin d’hiver. Yasuha dans l’air. Recouvrement.
On lui a dit que ce n’était pas un oubli.
La neige ne tombe pas vraiment ; elle s’accumule, lentement, comme si l’air s’était épaissi au point de la retenir un instant avant de la laisser descendre. Elle adoucit les contours sans les effacer, recouvre sans rien résoudre.
Satoshi marche sans se presser. Non pas parce qu’il a du temps, mais parce qu’il n’y a aucun avantage à laisser penser qu’il en manque. La rue est calme, de ce calme que l’hiver impose ; non pas le silence, mais une retenue, comme si le son lui-même préférait ne pas aller trop loin.
Le bâtiment est là où il doit être, et pourtant légèrement en retrait – un décalage trop précis pour être accidentel, trop discret pour être architectural. Un de ces lieux qui n’insistent pas pour être vus, mais qui ne disparaissent pas non plus.
Une lumière à l’étage. Chaleureuse, au premier regard. Puis, après un instant, simplement constante. Sans variation. Comme si rien à l’intérieur n’exigeait d’ajustement.
Il s’arrête de l’autre côté de la rue. Il attend. Non pas un signal. L’absence de signal.
Quelque part au-dessus, une télévision. Des rires... courts, maîtrisés, répétés. Ils atteignent la façade… mais pas vraiment le trottoir. Comme interceptés.
Il traverse.
L’entrée cède sans résistance. Ouverte, ou bien ayant cessé de vouloir être fermée. À l’intérieur, l’air est plus chaud. Mais pas accueillant. Un air qui n’a pas été interrompu depuis un moment.
Près du mur, des chaussures. Alignées avec précision. Une paire manque. Et pourtant, l’absence ne dérange pas l’ensemble. Elle l’achève.
Il n’appelle pas.
Le couloir se resserre en s’éloignant, ou peut-être en donne-t-il seulement l’impression, une fois qu’on y entre ? Les distances ici semblent moins fixes qu’elles ne devraient.
Une porte, devant. Entrouverte.
Il marque une pause. Pas par doute. Pour s’ajuster – laisser l’espace devenir lisible.
À l’intérieur, sur une table basse : la montre.
Elle a été posée là. Délibérément. Pas oubliée. Pas tombée. Placée. Comme on laisse une réponse, plutôt qu’un objet.
Il entre.
Rien ne semble déplacé. Rien n’indique un départ non plus. La pièce se tient dans une continuité suspendue, comme si ce qui s’y est produit n’avait pas encore décidé d’appartenir au passé.
L’aiguille s’est arrêtée. Ou bien elle continue, mais selon une mesure qu’il ne peut plus suivre.
Il la prend.
Froide. Plus froide que la pièce ne l’autorise.
Plus loin, dans l’appartement... quelque chose. Un son, peut-être. Ou l’idée d’un son. Pas un mouvement. Pas une absence non plus. Quelque chose qui ne va pas jusqu’au bout de lui-même.
Il attend.
Rien ne se résout.
Il se tourne.
Le couloir est plus long, maintenant. À peine – mais assez pour que cela compte.
Dehors, la neige a déjà recouvert ses traces. Entièrement.
Il ne se retourne pas.
#citypunk #satoshi
from DrFox
On confond souvent deux états qui n’ont rien à voir. Être seul et être isolé. Être seul peut être simple, parfois même reposant. L’isolement, lui, est un mécanisme. Il peut fonctionner au milieu des autres, dans une vie pleine, active, entourée. Ce n’est pas l’absence de relations qui crée la solitude réelle, c’est l’absence de circulation entre ce qui est à l’intérieur et ce qui peut être partagé à l’extérieur. Quand ce qui est vivant en soi n’a pas trouvé d’endroit pour exister, il ne disparaît pas. Il reste là, actif, mais coupé.
Ce qui reste ainsi devient une dette qui s’installe dans le corps. Pas une dette morale, une dette fonctionnelle. Quelque chose qui n’a pas été accueilli, entendu, intégré. Une expérience non digérée. Et cette dette organise la suite. Elle filtre les liens, elle déforme l’écoute, elle introduit une attente. Pas toujours visible, souvent implicite, mais constante. On n’entre plus en relation librement, on entre avec quelque chose à résoudre. Et tant que cette dette reste centrale, le lien ne peut pas être stable.
À partir de là, beaucoup de comportements prennent une autre fonction. Pas forcément des addictions au sens strict, mais des réponses. Des manières de réguler ce qui ne l’est pas à l’intérieur. Le travail, les loisirs, le sexe, les écrans, la validation, même certaines formes de compréhension ou de quête de sens. Tout peut devenir un moyen d’éviter le contact direct avec cette dette. Ce n’est pas absurde, c’est efficace à court terme. Ça permet de tenir, de fonctionner, de maintenir une cohérence minimale. Mais ça ne règle rien. Ça contourne.
Le problème n’est pas ce que l’on fait, c’est pourquoi on le fait. Quand l’extérieur sert principalement à payer pour l’intérieur, le lien devient instrumentalisé. L’autre n’est plus seulement là, il devient porteur d’une fonction. Quelqu’un qui doit apporter, sécuriser, réparer. Et même si ce n’est jamais formulé, cela s’impose dans la relation. Il y a une pression, une attente, une forme de contrainte.
C’est exactement là que les liens se déséquilibrent. Parce qu’un lien sous contrainte ne peut pas être libre. Il devient instable ou artificiel. L’autre s’adapte, résiste, se retire ou entre dans le jeu. Mais dans tous les cas, la relation ne repose plus sur une rencontre réelle. Elle repose sur une tentative de résolution.
Sortir de cette logique ne passe pas par plus d’isolement. Ce n’est pas en se coupant du monde que le mécanisme s’arrête. Il continue, simplement sans interlocuteur. Et dans cet isolement, la dette ne reste pas stable. Elle s’amplifie. Elle prend plus de place, elle se renforce, elle s’étend à d’autres zones de la vie. Ce qui était local devient global. Progressivement, elle infiltre la manière de penser, de ressentir, de réagir. La sensibilité augmente, mais de manière désorganisée. On devient plus réactif, plus irritable, parfois sans comprendre pourquoi. Les seuils baissent. Ce qui passait avant devient difficile. Et comme il n’y a pas de regard extérieur pour contenir ou ajuster, le système se referme encore plus.
À force, cette organisation finit par ressembler à une identité. On croit que c’est “soi”. On se décrit comme quelqu’un de nerveux, d’exigeant, de distant, d’intense, de fragile, peu importe les mots. Mais ce n’est pas une structure stable, c’est une adaptation. Un ensemble de réactions construites autour de cette dette qui grandit. Plus elle grandit, plus elle impose ses règles. Et plus elle impose ses règles, plus le lien devient difficile.
Sortir de là ne passe pas par supprimer les comportements ni par forcer des relations. Ce qui change la structure, c’est la capacité à laisser exister ce qui est à l’intérieur sans le transformer immédiatement en action extérieure. Sentir une tension sans chercher à la combler. Laisser une insécurité être là sans la projeter sur quelqu’un. Ne pas fuir systématiquement.
C’est discret, mais c’est central. Parce que tant que chaque mouvement interne déclenche une réponse externe, le système reste dépendant. Il ne peut pas s’ajuster autrement. Quand cette capacité apparaît, même partiellement, la dette commence à perdre sa position dominante. Elle ne disparaît pas, mais elle ne pilote plus.
Et c’est là que les liens deviennent sains. Pas parfaits, pas sans émotions, pas sans tensions. Sains dans leur structure. Parce qu’ils ne sont plus construits pour combler quelque chose. Il n’y a plus de dette à faire payer à l’autre. Il n’y a plus cette attente implicite qui transforme la relation en solution.
Cette règle est la même partout. Dans une relation amoureuse, avec un enfant, un ami, un collègue ou un voisin. Ce qui change, c’est le degré d’intimité, le contexte, la fréquence. Mais la nature du lien ne change pas. Un lien sain n’est pas défini par son intensité ni par sa profondeur apparente. Il est défini par l’absence de contrainte interne imposée à l’autre.
Dans un couple, cela veut dire que l’autre n’est pas responsable de ton équilibre. Tu peux aimer, t’attacher, t’engager, sans que ce soit une condition pour aller bien. Avec un enfant, cela signifie qu’il n’a rien à porter qui ne lui appartient pas. Il n’a pas à comprendre, réparer ou contenir l’adulte. Le lien devient un espace de sécurité, pas une charge. Avec les autres, même dans des liens simples, cela se traduit par moins de projection, moins d’attente implicite, plus de justesse.
Chacun reste à son niveau, avec sa manière d’être, sa capacité relationnelle. Certains vont vers plus de proximité, d’autres vers plus de distance. Certains parlent facilement, d’autres moins. Cela ne change rien à la structure du lien. Ce qui compte, c’est qu’il ne soit pas utilisé pour résoudre ce qui n’a pas été traité ailleurs.
À partir de là, quelque chose se simplifie. Le lien redevient un espace de rencontre, pas un espace de réparation. L’autre n’est plus une fonction. Il est une présence. Et dans cette présence, il y a moins de stratégie, moins de contrôle, moins de peur de perdre. C’est progressif comme sentiment, mais ça résonne fort.
C’est aussi là que disparaît cette forme particulière de solitude. Celle où l’on est entouré mais coupé. Parce que ce n’était pas le manque de relations qui créait cette sensation, mais l’impossibilité d’être en lien sans dette.
Quand ce qui est en soi peut exister sans être imposé à l’autre, et que l’autre n’a pas à le porter, mais peut l’accueillir dans cet espace du lien, alors quelque chose circule. Et ce qui circule, c’est précisément ce qui manquait.
from
The happy place
There was blood in the sky; full moon shone strongly with red, and the night sky: purple
Beautiful and ominous
And today it’s snowing
This snow will not make it, it does not belong
But still it does, it is expected. There always will be snow and frost in spring
Because we are in a transformative phase right now.
And in this snow, I saw some buds or whatever on the trees outside.
There were snow flakes on some of them.
I shouldn’t have moved back here. History it’s repeating itself: I become fat and miserable,
Again
I have no future here.
Again
But I have opened my extra eyes now. Maybe I needed to go through this as part of my special personal journey
But that sounds like I’m reading meaning into things where there is none
A survival strategy.
from 下川友
受動的な人間、というものがいる。 命令されたり質問されたりすれば答えられるが、自分から能動的に何かを言うことはない。 俺自身もどちらかといえばそちら側で、その自覚があるぶん、逆にその意識がトリガーになって、たまに能動的に喋ることがある。 ただし、それは人と喋りたいからではない。
仕事をしていると、よく分かる。 よく喋る人と、ほとんど喋らない人がいる。 喋る人は仕事を前に進める。 喋らない人は技術がある。 喋らない人は、いわゆる受動的なタイプで、命令されればそれを遂行する。 たとえ理不尽な命令でも、技術を求められる以上、それをやり遂げる。
つまり、命令、インプットさえあれば動く人間がいる。 だが、それは彼らが「やりたいこと」ではない。 命令を実行することと、彼らの願望はまったく別だ。 それでも彼らは、自分の願望を能動的に語ることはない。
ここで、会社の経営者クラスに聞いてみたい。 彼らに命令するという行為は、彼らのやりたいことを叶えているのではなく、インプットがあれば動く、という習性を利用しているだけではないのか。 本当に彼らの幸せを考えているのか。 その中には、能動的に行動できるようになりたいと密かに願っている人間が、一定数いるような気がしてならない。
能動的に行動できた経験は、自分への自信になる。 良い上司というのは、こちらにある程度長めのプロジェクトを、絶妙な塩梅で渡してくる人だ。 段階を踏んで任せてくれることで、こちらは「自分が能動的に動けている」と錯覚する。 だが実際には、上司の巧みな采配によって、気づかないうちに能動性を引き出されているだけだったりする。 そんな上司には、なかなか出会えない。
だから思う。 弱い人間、もうあえてそう呼ぶが、そういう人間を雇う仕組みの会社を作るなら、 その弱い人間の心を満たす精神的なインフラを、ちゃんと用意しているのか、と。
これを聞いて、 「そんなもの必要ない。自分で成長して強くなればいい。甘えるな」 と思う人もいるだろう。 だが、俺の要求はそんな単純な話ではない。 俺は弱いままで、心が満たされたいのだ。 弱いまま幸せな人が増えるほど、人類が幸せになるのだ。
強くなることで失われるものが多すぎる。 繊細な感性、好きな音楽、好きな映画、好きな喫茶店。弱い心。そういうものが鈍ってしまったらどうする。 大人になった今でも、それだけは捨てたくない。
弱い人間に対する雇用は、昔より増えていると思う。 とりあえず働こうと思えば、コンビニでもどこでも働ける。 その仕組みはもうずっと前に整備されているはずだ。 弱い人間の存在を知りながら、なぜ彼らに能動性を与えるインフラを整えないのか。 経営者は賢いのだから、当然気づいているはずだ。 なのに、なぜ見て見ぬふりをするのか。
このテーマについて、いつか強い人間と話し合ってみたい。
No sé si es una calumnia o si se trata de un malentendido. Quiero pensar en esto último, porque tú eres, o has sido, mi mejor amigo por muchos años, e incluso pudimos haber sido parientes, pues sabes lo que quise a tu hermana, aunque ella no me hizo caso. Por eso digo muchos años, pues habíamos cumplido doce cuando nos conocimos, en la misma bolera donde te vi días más tarde. Imagínate cuánto tiempo.
Bolos, yo jugaba poco, pero lo intenté para caerle bien a ella. Mi problema era cuando había que derribar los bolos que quedaban de pie después del primer lanzamiento, entonces pensaba que tu hermana me estaba mirando, me llenaba de nervios y al lanzar la bola reventaba en la pista y se iba al canal. Cómo crees que me iba a querer, si a fin de cuentas yo era un patoso, por decir lo menos.
Pero eso no te da derecho a decir lo que ha llegado a mis oídos. Otra cosa. Tú sabes que yo sería incapaz de decir algo mal de tí aunque fuera cierto. Y aunque me digas que no fuiste tú, a quién le creo, entonces…
-Gustavo, por favor, sea lo que sea, perdóname y vuelve a la acera, porque ya ves, estoy de servicio dirigiendo el tráfico.
from An Open Letter
My hand somewhat got forced today, and we ended up calling for ~4 hours. I'm just being use voice to text and I don't care about correcting anything who gives a shit anymore honestly. In a way I feel like it's almost poetic using such a scuffed method of input in this sense and not correcting it, because I think it kind of just aligns with that feeling of how I can have some thought in my head when I try to express it when I try to put into words it's just an approximation of what I feel and I think that's part of the human condition of trying to figure out how to put your words to the thoughts in your mind. Unfortunately she said she was not emotionally available and she was not in a place where she could say yes to a date. And she also showered me an incredibly sweet things. Unprompted she told me how she finds me incredibly attractive both physically and personality wise, And she told me she found my profile attractive, my lips attractive, my hair and my voice. And it's kind of funny because I don't like those things too much. And it's really weird for someone to see those things in you and like those. I really don't like the way my voice sounds and it's something I've come to I think tolerate but never really like. I don't really like the way I laugh either, but I do like the fact that I do laugh so brazenly. There were so many things that we talked about and unfortunately we are incredibly compatible in certain aspects. And the things that I told myself that 0 at least she probably doesn't match me in, she matched me beyond what I could have expected. But at the same time we both acknowled it's a situation neither of us wants where it's her just saying wait for me. And I don't want to be a situation ship but it sucks because I really do like her. But at the same time it's not even that she's doing anything wrong, arguably I would say that she's doing something probably better than I am here. She got out of her relationship a little bit over a month ago and she just lost her dog this week. She said that I've been a source of comfort for her and she really enjoys my company a lot and she doesn't want to lose that. But at the same time it wouldn't be healthy and she currently doesn't have that emotional capacity 'cause she's dealing with all these other emotions and she wants to take some time after her breakup to be able to come back to herself and find that person before jumping into something else head first period And that's beyond fair, and I don't think that I'm necessarily unhealthy, I think been able to process a lot of the things from the breakup and Boo move on from them And so I don't blame her and it's kind of funny because we're both very similar people in that sense but at the same time I don't want to be let on and so I guess we've hit this weird little middle place where we both want to keep talking with each other but at the same time for an indefinite amount of time her answer is a no. And of course there's a chance that she changes her mind at some point and feels ready or something like that, but I can never wait for that and I can't just hold out on that hope. But I also don't want to give up the opportunity if I'm being fully honest. One thing that does suck is even though her parents are divorced both of them are incredibly supportive and Loving towards her. And unintentionally she sometimes kind of brags about it in a way. And it's never something that she even thinks that she's bragging about more just being grateful for, Similar to how I am grateful for a lot of the privilege that I have. But It does leave me with this pain in my chest when I think about how fortunate she is to have parents like that. And she told me at one point when she was venting about how some of her friends said that her parents would fly over when they would go through something like a breakup and she thought about how her parents never did that, and when she talked to her parents her parents said they didn't do it not because it was unreasonable but because they thought she wanted her space. My freshman year I tried to kill myself and I didn't even tell my parents. And I know they would have came but at the same time it would've just made it worse and what the fuck was my dad supposed to do. And I feel like I have half of those options of being able to ask my dad to come but for fucking what reason, He loves me but not in a way that is really clear. And he's not even comfortable with things like hugs and stuff like that and so there's a limit to really what I can receive. And so I do feel a little bit envious the people have such the fucking luck to be able to feel sad about not having that due to a misunderstanding. And it sucks because I think she's such a beautiful and fascinating person, But I want except the fact that it truly may not ever happen. And I think it's almost divine intervention in a couple of different ways, with how there are so many different little things that were so incredibly perfect with their juxtaposition or their timing. Additionally I remember I told her how a big thing I wanted to teach myself was to not convince someone to want to be with you and listen to their words. And so today she told me that she's not ready to date or anything like that, and so I had to listen to myself and I had to try to not convince her which is kind of painful. It's like seeing something slowly start to slip away from your hands and fully just taking your hands off of it and letting it go away. And it feels like there's such a small little bit of friction that you could add to keep that there because it does feel like she really does like me and I do like her a lot. But I'm letting myself correct my own brain chemicals by accepting the fact that just like that it could be gone And it's just like that. And it was nice and I think I do have a lot of gratitude for the fact that I recognize fast it was for me to find someone that was so incredibly wonderful and checked a lot of my boxes. And yes this might have been somewhat of a fluke but it very much shows me that there are people like this out there. I think she's pretty emotionally mature from everything I've seen, she's successful, I think she's very kind, and I think we're very compatible. And if it's happened like this it can happen again. If I really think about it I've honestly been in relationships more than I haven't I feel like for the last year or so. And at the end of the day I'm really grateful for the experience and I feel like I just fucking say that every single time and it's like a default response at this point but I guess I am grateful but at the same time fuck off.
from laurentkrauland
Sapporo. Fin d’hiver. Yasuha dans l’air. Recouvrement.
On lui a dit que ce n’était pas un oubli.
La neige ne tombe pas vraiment ; elle s’accumule, lentement, comme si l’air s’était épaissi au point de la retenir un instant avant de la laisser descendre. Elle adoucit les contours sans les effacer, recouvre sans rien résoudre.
Satoshi marche sans se presser. Non pas parce qu’il a du temps, mais parce qu’il n’y a aucun avantage à laisser penser qu’il en manque. La rue est calme, de ce calme que l’hiver impose ; non pas le silence, mais une retenue, comme si le son lui-même préférait ne pas aller trop loin.
Le bâtiment est là où il doit être, et pourtant légèrement en retrait – un décalage trop précis pour être accidentel, trop discret pour être architectural. Un de ces lieux qui n’insistent pas pour être vus, mais qui ne disparaissent pas non plus.
Une lumière à l’étage. Chaleureuse, au premier regard. Puis, après un instant, simplement constante. Sans variation. Comme si rien à l’intérieur n’exigeait d’ajustement.
Il s’arrête de l’autre côté de la rue. Il attend. Non pas un signal. L’absence de signal.
Quelque part au-dessus, une télévision. Des rires... courts, maîtrisés, répétés. Ils atteignent la façade… mais pas vraiment le trottoir. Comme interceptés.
Il traverse.
L’entrée cède sans résistance. Ouverte, ou bien ayant cessé de vouloir être fermée. À l’intérieur, l’air est plus chaud. Mais pas accueillant. Un air qui n’a pas été interrompu depuis un moment.
Près du mur, des chaussures. Alignées avec précision. Une paire manque. Et pourtant, l’absence ne dérange pas l’ensemble. Elle l’achève.
Il n’appelle pas.
Le couloir se resserre en s’éloignant, ou peut-être en donne-t-il seulement l’impression, une fois qu’on y entre ? Les distances ici semblent moins fixes qu’elles ne devraient.
Une porte, devant. Entrouverte.
Il marque une pause. Pas par doute. Pour s’ajuster – laisser l’espace devenir lisible.
À l’intérieur, sur une table basse : la montre.
Elle a été posée là. Délibérément. Pas oubliée. Pas tombée. Placée. Comme on laisse une réponse, plutôt qu’un objet.
Il entre.
Rien ne semble déplacé. Rien n’indique un départ non plus. La pièce se tient dans une continuité suspendue, comme si ce qui s’y est produit n’avait pas encore décidé d’appartenir au passé.
L’aiguille s’est arrêtée. Ou bien elle continue, mais selon une mesure qu’il ne peut plus suivre.
Il la prend.
Froide. Plus froide que la pièce ne l’autorise.
Plus loin, dans l’appartement... quelque chose. Un son, peut-être. Ou l’idée d’un son. Pas un mouvement. Pas une absence non plus. Quelque chose qui ne va pas jusqu’au bout de lui-même.
Il attend.
Rien ne se résout.
Il se tourne.
Le couloir est plus long, maintenant. À peine – mais assez pour que cela compte.
Dehors, la neige a déjà recouvert ses traces. Entièrement.
Il ne se retourne pas.
#citypunk #satoshi
from
Abey Koshy Itty
Fifteen years ago, if you were early to meet a friend, you'd just sit there. Watch people, daydream, or maybe stare at a wall.
Now you'd never even consider it. Your phone is out before you've sat down.

It happens everywhere now. On the metro, in queues, at restaurants, at family dinners. A room full of people, all somewhere else. And this isn't generational anymore. It cuts across age groups. Everyone's in the same loop.
I catch myself less now, but I'm not immune. The instinct to fill every quiet moment with a screen is deep. It's muscle memory at this point.
Those in-between moments used to look different. People daydreamed. They looked out of bus windows. They struck up awkward conversations with strangers. They noticed things, a kid doing something funny, a weird shop name, a dog sleeping in the middle of the road, and it would put a small, private smile on their face.
These moments are small, but they connect you to the world around you in a way that no reel ever can.
We've traded all of that for a feed we won't remember by tomorrow.
Here's the thing most people don't realize: this isn't just a willpower problem. Your phone is engineered to be hard to put down.
Tristan Harris, a former design ethicist at Google who went on to co-found the Center for Humane Technology, has compared smartphones to slot machines. Every time you pull down to refresh a feed, you're pulling a lever.

Maybe something interesting shows up. Maybe it doesn't.
That uncertainty is what keeps you going. It's the same psychological mechanism, called variable-ratio reinforcement, that makes gambling addictive.
Then there's infinite scroll, which was invented in 2006 by a designer named Aza Raskin.
His intent was simple: make browsing more seamless. But the feature removed every natural stopping point.
There's no bottom of the page. No moment where your brain gets a chance to ask, “do I actually want to keep going?”
Raskin has since expressed deep regret about his creation, estimating that infinite scrolling wastes roughly 200,000 human lifetimes per day.
Read that number again. 200,000 human lifetimes. Per day.
And it goes deeper than design tricks. Research from Stanford's addiction medicine clinic has found that smartphone use activates the same dopamine reward pathways as addictive substances.
Every notification, every new post, every like triggers a small hit of dopamine, enough to keep you coming back but never enough to feel satisfied.

As psychiatrist Anna Lembke puts it, with repeated use, the brain adapts by dialing down its own dopamine production.
Eventually, you're not reaching for your phone because it feels good. You're reaching for it to stop feeling bad.
The apps aren't designed to serve you. They're designed to keep you.
I quit Instagram a few years ago, around the time COVID hit. It wasn't a sudden decision. The thought had been sitting at the back of my head for a while. I started small, a digital detox over a weekend, then another one. Eventually, I just stopped going back.
When I looked at my screen time, the number that stared back at me was close to three hours a day. Three hours. That's almost an entire afternoon, every single day, gone to a feed.

When I finally stopped, my days felt longer. Not in a drag, but in a “wait, it's only 7pm?” kind of way. I suddenly had time I didn't know I'd been missing.
Here's a simple experiment: go check your screen time right now. Not the total, just Instagram or YouTube or whatever your default scroll app is. Look at the daily average. Multiply it by 365. That number will probably unsettle you.
The most common pushback I get when I tell people I'm not on Instagram is some version of “but how do you keep up with what's happening?”
The honest answer: I don't, and I'm fine with it.
I miss a lot of stuff. I don't know what's trending. I find out about news late. None of it has mattered. Not once has missing a reel or a post had any real consequence on my life.
If something actually matters, if it involves someone I care about, the news finds its way to me. Either through them directly or through someone else. It always does. Everything else is noise. I have no interest in knowing what everyone had for dinner or where they went on vacation. And I have no interest in broadcasting my own life either.
FOMO is the fuel that keeps the machine running. You're so afraid of missing something online that you miss everything that's right in front of you.
Letting go of that turns out to be a surprisingly peaceful way to live.
I'm not going to tell you to delete your apps. You've heard that sermon before and it doesn't work, partly because these apps are specifically designed to make quitting feel unbearable.
But the next time you're waiting for something, a bus, your food, a friend who's running late, try not reaching for your phone. Just for a few minutes.
See what you notice. See how it feels to just sit there with nothing to consume.
You might be bored. That's the point.
Boredom is where the good stuff lives.
***
Thanks for reading. Just notice something on your way home today!
from Douglas Vandergraph
Before the sky had turned from gray to blue, Jesus was already awake near the river with his hands folded and his head bowed. The city was still half asleep, though Philadelphia never fully sleeps. A truck growled somewhere in the distance. Water moved with a slow dark pull along the Delaware. The air carried that cold early feeling that touches skin before the mind is ready for the day. At Penn Treaty Park, the grass still held the night, and the benches were wet from the thin layer of damp that settles before sunrise. Jesus stood a little apart from the walkway where runners would come later, where dog leashes would tighten and loosen, where men with coffee would stare out at the water while thinking about bills, marriages, doctors, children, and things they were tired of carrying alone. For now it was quiet enough to hear the river touch the edge of the city. He prayed there with no audience and no hurry. His face was calm. His shoulders were still. He was not praying to escape the city. He was praying as one who meant to walk fully into it.
When he lifted his head, the first faint line of light had begun to show beyond the water. The bridge in the distance stood like a dark frame against the coming morning. He stayed where he was another moment and looked over the park, over the path, over the streets that would soon fill. He watched a sanitation truck move along Delaware Avenue, and he watched two men unloading supplies behind a nearby building, both moving with the stiffness of people who had already lived a long day before most would wake. Jesus started walking south with the unforced pace of someone who never needed to rush in order to arrive on time. He passed rows of brick buildings, fences, parked cars with fog on the glass, and corner stores still dark except for one whose owner was switching on the lights inside. The city felt ordinary. That was part of what made it holy. Real need rarely announces itself with music. Most suffering lives inside normal mornings.
By the time he reached Old City, the sidewalks had begun to fill with delivery drivers, early commuters, and people standing outside cafes with paper cups warming their hands. A woman in a dark coat was unlocking the door to a small shop on Arch Street. Across from her, a man sat on flattened cardboard near a closed storefront with a blanket around his shoulders and a black duffel bag tucked close to his leg. Most people glanced once and moved on. Some never looked at all. Jesus slowed before he reached him, not in a dramatic way, just enough that the man noticed the change. His face was lined and worn, but not old enough to have reached the age people would guess from looking at him. He had the tired alertness of someone who slept lightly because too much had been taken before.
“Morning,” Jesus said.
The man looked up as though weighing whether this was one more polite word with no real interest behind it. “Yeah,” he said. “Morning.”
Jesus sat down on the low stone ledge a few feet away, close enough to show he meant to stay and far enough not to crowd him. The man studied him for a second. “You need something?”
“No,” Jesus said. “Do you?”
The man let out a small sound that could have been a laugh if it had not been carrying so much bitterness. “That’s a big question for six in the morning.”
Jesus did not answer quickly. He looked up the street where the shop owner now bent over a display inside her window. “Sometimes the big questions show up before breakfast.”
The man rubbed his face with both hands. “Name’s Leon.”
Jesus nodded. “Leon.”
Leon looked at him again, waiting for the exchange to move into the familiar script where names were traded and advice was offered too fast. When that did not happen, something in him loosened just enough for truth to slip through. “I need one good thing not to fall apart today,” he said. “Just one. I’m tired of waking up and feeling like the whole day is already against me.”
Jesus turned toward him with a softness that did not feel like pity. “What would falling apart look like today?”
Leon’s jaw tightened. For a moment it seemed he might shut down. Then his shoulders gave the answer first. “I was supposed to meet my sister at ten over near Jefferson Station. She said if I show up sober and clean, she might let me see my daughter. Might. That’s what she said. Might. My girl turned nine last month. I ain’t seen her in eleven months. Maybe twelve. I stopped counting because it started sounding worse every time I said it out loud.” He looked down at his shoes. “So that’s what falling apart looks like. Me messing this up before I even get there.”
The city kept moving around them. A SEPTA bus sighed at the curb. A man carrying bread trays pushed through a side entrance nearby. Jesus listened as though there was nowhere else in the world he needed to be. “What makes you think you will mess it up?”
Leon shrugged, though there was no ease in it. “Experience.”
Jesus let that sit between them. Then he said, “You are not standing in front of an empty day, Leon. You are standing in front of a day with choices in it. That is not the same thing.”
Leon looked at him hard then, like a man trying to decide whether he was being helped or handled. “Choices don’t change what I already wrecked.”
“No,” Jesus said. “But they do change what you keep wrecking.”
The answer landed without force, and maybe that was why it reached him. Leon turned his head away toward the street. His eyes had gone wet, though he was trying not to show it. “Everybody talks to me like I’m either trash or a project.”
“I’m talking to you like you are a man who is still being called back,” Jesus said.
Leon breathed in and let it out slowly. No lightning split the sky. No crowd gathered. But something honest had entered the morning. Jesus stood and asked him if he would walk a while. Leon looked uncertain, then rose, gathered his duffel, and fell into step beside him.
They moved west along Market Street as the city woke around them. Storefronts brightened. Metal grates rolled upward. The smell of coffee thickened in the air, mixing with bus exhaust, damp concrete, and the first warm notes of breakfast from kitchens opening across Center City. On one corner a woman in hospital scrubs stood staring at her phone with eyes too tired for the hour. On another, two construction workers joked loudly in the flat brave way men sometimes do when they are already tired and do not want to say it. Jesus walked as if he could see the hidden line running through all of it, the thread of strain beneath routine. Leon kept glancing at him from time to time, still not sure why he had decided to come along.
When they reached Reading Terminal Market, the doors were open and the inside had begun its daily rising hum. The place was alive with motion even before the full rush hit. Workers stacked cups, wiped counters, arranged pastries, lifted crates, shouted small things to each other over the clatter of preparation. The smell was rich and mixed, bacon, coffee, frying onions, bread, sugar, and the heavier scent of cleaned floors not yet overtaken by the day. Jesus stepped inside and Leon followed, his duffel over one shoulder and his body carrying that half-defensive tension of a man who has spent too much time being watched.
Near one of the counters, a young woman was arguing with the register clerk in a voice low enough to show embarrassment and sharp enough to show panic. She had two small breakfast items and a carton of milk on the counter. A little boy beside her, maybe five years old, was rubbing one eye with his fist and leaning against her coat. The clerk was not cruel, only impatient in the efficient way the city can teach. The woman checked her wallet again as if money might appear if she looked hard enough. “I know what I have,” she said, trying to keep her voice steady. “I’m saying the card should’ve gone through.”
“It didn’t,” the clerk said. “You want me to hold this or cancel it?”
The boy looked up at his mother. “Mama?”
Jesus stepped forward before shame could finish its work. He spoke to the clerk with simple courtesy and paid for the food. The woman turned immediately. “No, I can’t—”
“You can feed him,” Jesus said.
Her mouth tightened as she fought the urge to cry in public. That battle was clear in her face because she had likely fought it many times. “Thank you,” she said quietly. “I thought I transferred money last night. I work nights. I must’ve done something wrong.” She looked at the boy and touched the back of his head. “We’re trying to make it to school and then I gotta get home before I go back out again.”
Jesus nodded. “What is his name?”
“Micah.”
Jesus crouched enough to meet the boy’s eyes. “Good morning, Micah.”
Micah, still half asleep, leaned more into his mother and whispered, “Morning.”
Jesus smiled. “You take care of your mother today.”
Micah gave a solemn little nod that made Leon look away for a second. Something about that child’s sleepy trust had reached him where arguments could not. The woman thanked Jesus again, then hesitated as though she wanted to explain herself to this stranger who had seen her at a breaking point. “I’m not usually like this,” she said. “It’s just been one thing after another.”
Jesus answered her in a voice so even it seemed to lower the noise around them. “You do not owe dignity to anyone who only recognizes it when life is easy.”
She held his gaze for one second longer than strangers usually do. Then she took her son’s hand and moved off into the market, carrying breakfast and the fragile relief of having been spared one more humiliation. Leon watched them disappear into the crowd. “You say stuff like that a lot?” he asked.
“When it is needed,” Jesus said.
Leon shook his head once. “I don’t know if people really hear you.”
“They hear more than they show,” Jesus said.
They found a quieter edge inside the market near a seating area not yet full. Jesus brought Leon coffee and food without making it feel like charity. That mattered. Leon accepted it because it was given without ownership. He ate slowly at first, then faster once his body remembered hunger. Across the room a vendor laughed loudly with a coworker. Somewhere behind them a tray hit stainless steel with a hard bright clang. The market kept filling, and with every minute more of the city entered carrying its own invisible freight. Jesus sat across from Leon and asked him about his daughter.
At first Leon answered in fragments, the way men do when love has become mixed with regret. Her name was Nia. She liked drawing and used to make whole neighborhoods with markers on scrap paper. She used to ask why the moon followed the car home at night. She hated loud hand dryers in public bathrooms. She would not eat crusts unless he told her a story while she pulled them off piece by piece. The more he spoke, the more the roughness in him gave way to grief. He had not lost love. He had lost proximity. For some people that hurts even worse because they know the person is still somewhere on the earth, still laughing, still growing, still living days without them in it.
“I used to think I had time to fix things later,” Leon said, staring into the coffee. “I kept telling myself that. Later. Later when I got steady. Later when I was feeling better. Later when I stopped messing up. Then later turns into almost a year.”
Jesus watched him with the kind of stillness that gives a man room to stop performing. “A lot of lives are damaged by the lie that later is always waiting.”
Leon swallowed hard and looked away. “I don’t know how to stand in front of my sister without hearing everything she got a right to say.”
“You let her say what is true,” Jesus answered. “And you do not run from what is true just because it hurts.”
“That sounds easy when you say it.”
“It will not feel easy,” Jesus said. “But it will still be right.”
When they stepped back out onto Market Street, the morning was fully alive. Office workers moved with that familiar determined speed of people threading narrow spaces between time and obligation. Food carts sent up steam. A man selling bottled water from a cooler called out to passersby. The sidewalks around City Hall had thickened into movement and noise. Jesus led Leon south toward Dilworth Park, where the fountain sent a thin bright spray into the air and people crossed through the open space in diagonal lines of purpose. City Hall rose over them with its great stone weight and detail, dignified and watchful, as if it had seen every kind of human promise and failure pass beneath it.
Near the edge of the park sat a woman in a motorized wheelchair with a paper bag on her lap and a look of contained frustration on her face. She kept trying to reach something that had fallen near the wheel but could not bend low enough without risking tipping forward. People streamed around her with the expert unseeing of commuters who tell themselves they are late. Jesus stepped toward her and picked up the dropped item, a small orange prescription bottle. He placed it gently in her hand.
She exhaled in relief and then in annoyance at herself. “Thank you. I hate when that happens.”
Jesus smiled. “It does not lessen you to need a hand.”
She gave a short skeptical sound. “Maybe. But this city teaches you to move like help ain’t coming.”
“Has it been that kind of morning?” Jesus asked.
She snorted softly. “That kind of year.”
Her name was Denise. She had come in from West Philly for a medical appointment that had been rescheduled after she had already paid for transit and arranged for a neighbor to check on her dog. The bottle in her hand was for nerve pain. Her landlord had raised the rent again. Her younger brother no longer called unless he needed money, which she did not have. She was speaking more freely than she expected to, and every sentence seemed to surprise her, but Jesus listened with the gentleness of someone who treated interruptions as invitations rather than inconveniences. Leon stood nearby, silent, holding his duffel and watching.
When Denise finished, she looked embarrassed by her own honesty. “Sorry. You probably didn’t ask for all that.”
Jesus shook his head. “There are many people carrying pain in public while trying to look private.”
That made her laugh for real, though only once. “That’s about right.”
He asked if she had eaten. She said not yet. Jesus pointed toward a nearby stand and told Leon to help her get something warm. Leon looked startled by being included, but Denise was already turning her chair. “You coming or what?” she said.
It was the first time that morning Leon had been needed by someone other than himself. He followed her across the park. They came back with coffee and a breakfast sandwich, and Denise looked faintly astonished at the fact that the man with the duffel had waited patiently while her order took longer than expected. “You got a daughter?” she asked him out of nowhere.
Leon froze for a beat, then nodded.
“I can tell,” she said. “You stand like a man who misses somebody.”
There are moments when truth enters sideways and goes deeper than if it had come straight on. Leon did not answer. He just looked at Jesus, then away. Denise ate while the city moved around them, and after a little while she left for the subway elevator, turning once to lift two fingers in a small gesture of thanks that was half salute, half blessing. Leon watched her disappear. “She didn’t even know me,” he said.
“Some people know enough when they see sorrow clearly,” Jesus replied.
From Dilworth Park they moved east again, then south, crossing streets where the city kept changing block by block. Around Washington Square the pace shifted slightly. There was more room in the sidewalks, more filtered light, more of the old brick and stone that makes parts of Philadelphia feel as though history still breathes close to the surface. They passed small storefronts, office doors, apartment entrances, and people living whole interior lives behind ordinary expressions. Outside a corner pharmacy, a man in his thirties stood talking too loudly into his phone, the kind of loud that tells you he is scared and does not know where to put it. “No, I’m telling you they said maybe today, maybe tomorrow, but I can’t just leave her there.” He turned away and pressed his hand against his forehead. “I know what the insurance lady said. I heard her.”
Jesus slowed. The man ended the call and stared hard at nothing. His tie was loosened. His shirt was clean, but wrinkled from wear. He carried a takeout bag he had clearly forgotten he was holding. Jesus asked if someone he loved was in the hospital.
The man looked ready to brush him off, but exhaustion often lowers walls faster than politeness does. “My wife,” he said. “Pennsylvania Hospital. Complications after surgery. They keep telling me things that sound careful but not clear. I got a six-year-old with my mother in South Philly. I’ve missed two days of work. My boss started out sympathetic. Now he’s just saying, ‘Keep me updated.’ You know how people say that when they don’t want details.” He laughed once, but it was empty. “I came out here because I thought if I stayed in that room one more minute, I was gonna stop being useful.”
Jesus asked his name. “Eric.”
“Eric,” Jesus said, “you do not have to carry tomorrow before it arrives.”
Eric gave him the hollow look of a man too tired for sayings. “That doesn’t help me much with payroll.”
“No,” Jesus said. “But fear multiplies faster than facts. You are speaking to worst-case shadows as if they have already become your life.”
Eric stared at him, thrown off by the accuracy. His eyes reddened. “How do you not do that?”
Jesus glanced toward the hospital buildings standing into the sky a few blocks away. “You stay with what is in front of you. You love the person who is in front of you. You take the next honest step. You let tomorrow come as tomorrow.”
Eric looked down at the takeout bag, then back up. “I used to pray,” he said, as if admitting something shameful. “Then years go by and real life gets loud and you don’t know what to say anymore except when things go bad.”
Jesus answered without a trace of rebuke. “Then say the frightened thing. Say the tired thing. Say the confused thing. God is not made distant by honest speech.”
Eric’s face changed, not into peace exactly, but into recognition. He nodded once, slowly. “I should get back in there.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “Go sit by her again.”
Eric turned and walked toward the hospital, a little straighter than before, still carrying fear, but not as if fear was all that remained. Leon watched him go. “You didn’t tell him it would be okay.”
“No,” Jesus said.
“Why not?”
“Because people need truth more than performance,” Jesus said. “And sometimes truth is that they are not abandoned inside uncertainty.”
That answer stayed with Leon as they continued. Around noon the sky had brightened and then dulled again under a thin cover of cloud. The city’s sound deepened into full daytime volume. On Broad Street, horns pressed into each other. Near Walnut Street, buses kneeled to the curb and rose again. A cyclist cursed at a car door. Someone laughed too hard outside a restaurant. A church bell rang somewhere at a distance and was swallowed by traffic. Philadelphia was not polished. That was part of its honesty. It showed wear. It showed struggle. It showed pride and fatigue living side by side.
They moved west toward the Schuylkill, passing through Rittenhouse for a stretch where the sidewalks filled with strollers, shoppers, delivery workers, dog walkers, men in expensive jackets, women answering work calls with careful voices, and people sitting alone on benches pretending to look at their phones while fighting interior battles no one else could see. In the square itself, the trees held the early season lightly, not yet full but alive. The fountain moved. Sparrows hopped near crumbs. A man in business clothes sat bent forward with both elbows on his knees, staring at the ground between his shoes as if something precious had fallen there and could not be found.
Jesus noticed him immediately. He always noticed the people pain made invisible.
The man was not old, maybe early forties, with the kind of clean professional appearance that can hide collapse for months at a time. His phone lay facedown beside him on the bench. His wedding ring caught a little gray light. Jesus sat at the far end of the bench and waited. After a minute, the man spoke without looking up. “You ever get tired of hearing your own thoughts?”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “Many people do.”
The man gave a grim half smile. “Good. Then I’m not special.”
Jesus looked out over the square. “Do you want to tell me what they are saying?”
For a while the man said nothing. Then the words came with the flatness of someone who had rehearsed them in silence. “That I blew up my life in a way I can’t fix. That I kept telling myself I was under pressure and that pressure explained everything. That I worked late and drank more and stayed out and drifted and lied in smaller pieces until the lies added up to a house I could no longer live in. My wife found messages two weeks ago. She took our daughter to her sister’s. My lawyer says keep things civil. My brother says give her space. My mother says fight for your family. Everybody has advice. Nobody can tell me how to sit inside myself right now.”
Jesus let the man’s words breathe in the air between them. A woman pushed a stroller past the bench. Somewhere nearby a dog barked sharply and was hushed. The world kept moving. “What is your name?”
“Adam.”
Jesus nodded. “Adam, there are people who only feel sorry because they got caught. That sorrow does not heal much. Then there are people who finally see the damage clearly and cannot bear what they have become. That pain can become a doorway if they stop defending themselves.”
Adam looked at him then, really looked. “You saying there’s still a way back?”
“I am saying truth is the only road that goes anywhere worth going,” Jesus answered. “Not image. Not excuse. Not strategy. Truth. You cannot rebuild a house while hiding the fire.”
Adam shut his eyes for a moment. “I keep thinking if I just say the right thing, maybe I can control what happens.”
“You cannot control forgiveness,” Jesus said. “You can only become honest enough to receive it if it is offered and honest enough to live rightly if it is not.”
That was harder than comfort. It was also cleaner. Adam pressed his thumb against his wedding ring and stared ahead. “I don’t know who I’ve been for a long time.”
Jesus looked at him with grave kindness. “That is a painful thing to see. But it is better than dying without ever seeing it.”
A long silence followed. Then Adam nodded once with tears on his face he had stopped trying to hide. When Jesus and Leon rose to leave, Adam was still sitting there, but no longer like a man hiding from himself. He looked like a man who had begun the hardest conversation of his life in the only place it could begin.
They crossed the river later on the Walnut Street Bridge, with the wind moving harder over the Schuylkill and the water below carrying broken reflections of buildings and cloud. On the western side the air shifted. University City held a different rhythm, students with backpacks, researchers, hospital staff, maintenance crews, patients, families waiting on corners, ride-share drivers double-parked near medical entrances, and the deep unspoken tension that always gathers around places where people fear losing someone. The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania rose ahead with its glass and stone and constant flow of need. Jesus did not enter immediately. He stood for a moment outside one of the public areas where people came and went with flowers, overnight bags, bad coffee, and brave faces.
A young woman sat near the entrance with two vending machine snacks beside her and both hands wrapped around a cup she was not drinking. Her hair was pulled back carelessly, her eyes swollen with lack of sleep. She stared at the automatic doors each time they opened, then looked away as if she could not bear one more uncertain update. Jesus sat near her and asked who she was waiting for.
She answered without thinking, like someone grateful that a question had been asked gently. “My father. Stroke. They say he’s stable. They keep saying stable like it should make me feel something better.” She swallowed hard. “My mom died four years ago. It’s just been me and him since then. He drives a school bus. He still packs his lunch in the same old cooler. He calls me if a warning light comes on in his car like I know anything. He still leaves me voicemails if I don’t answer even though I’m thirty-two.” Her mouth trembled. “I’m not ready for this.”
Jesus asked her name.
“Marissa.”
He looked toward the doors with her. “Love makes people feel unready for loss, even when loss has not yet arrived.”
She stared at the cup in her hands. “I’m ashamed of how little time I made lately. I kept telling him I was busy. I was busy. But now all I can think about is every dinner I said no to because I was tired or had work or just wanted to be home.”
“You are speaking from fear and love at the same time,” Jesus said. “Do not turn that into self-punishment while he is still here to be loved.”
Her breath caught. “I don’t know how to just sit and wait.”
“Then sit and love him in the waiting,” Jesus answered. “Be there when he wakes. Hold his hand if he can feel it. Let him hear your voice even if he cannot answer. Do not waste the living hour by grieving the hour that has not come.”
Marissa looked at him with tears pushing up again. There was no easy relief in his words, but there was direction, and direction can feel like mercy to a person drowning in helplessness. She nodded slowly. “I can do that,” she said, almost to herself.
Leon had gone quiet again. The hospital seemed to unsettle him. He kept glancing at doors, nurses, orderlies, patients in wheelchairs, people with wristbands, people clutching paperwork, people walking fast because standing still would mean feeling too much. Jesus noticed. “Who are you thinking about?” he asked.
Leon looked away. “My mother.”
“Is she here?”
“No. Temple, last I heard. Rehab floor after a fall.” He swallowed. “My sister told me a week ago. I ain’t gone.”
Jesus said nothing at first, and in that silence Leon heard his own answer more clearly than if it had been dragged out of him. “She used to cover for me,” he said. “Back when I was messing up worse. Lied to people for me. Gave me money she ain’t have. Missed work to come find me. Then one day she stopped answering. Can’t even blame her. I made a whole career outta taking.” His eyes fixed on the hospital entrance. “I don’t know how to stand in front of her without seeing every version of me she had to survive.”
Jesus looked at him steadily. “Then do not stand there pretending to be better than what you were. Stand there true.”
Leon’s jaw worked. “What if she don’t want to see me?”
“Then you will still have done what was right,” Jesus answered.
The words did not solve it. They did something better. They made hiding harder.
By midafternoon the clouds had thickened, and a light rain began to fall, the kind that darkens sidewalks and puts a sheen on streets without fully committing. Jesus and Leon moved back east, sheltering briefly under overhangs and awnings, passing small stores, takeout spots, laundromats, and blocks where life looked worn but active. In Kensington the rain seemed to deepen what was already heavy there. On Kensington Avenue beneath the tracks, the city showed one of its rawest faces. People moved with the restless drag of addiction, trauma, survival, and numbness layered together. Some stood in clusters. Some wandered. Some sat folded into themselves against walls or bus stops while the rest of the city, only a few miles away, kept buying salads, going to meetings, and speaking about efficiency.
Jesus walked there without disgust and without distance. That alone changed the air around him. People feel when they are being looked at as a warning sign instead of a soul. Near a storefront with a security gate half down, a woman in a green rain jacket sat on an overturned milk crate, shivering though it was not cold enough to explain all of it. Her hands were unsteady. Her eyes carried that torn, worn brightness of a person whose body and mind had both been through too much. A younger man stood nearby trying to keep watch without seeming to hover. He was angry in the way people become angry when love has run out of tools.
The woman saw Jesus first. “You got any cash?” she asked, not aggressively, just tired.
Jesus came close enough to speak without making her strain. “What is your name?”
She frowned as if the question itself were unusual. “Tasha.”
“And yours?” he asked the younger man.
“Malik.”
Tasha looked between them. “If this is church stuff, I ain’t in the mood.”
Jesus did not flinch. “It is human stuff.”
That caught Malik off guard enough that he gave a short laugh despite himself. Tasha did not laugh. She looked as though she had long ago become suspicious of everyone who approached with clean words. “I been through every program,” she said. “Every speech. Every promise. So unless you can make me not be me for five minutes, I don’t need it.”
Jesus knelt so his eyes were level with hers. Rain tapped the metal above them in soft irregular clicks. A train thundered somewhere overhead. “You do not need me to lie to you,” he said. “You need someone to tell you that your life has not become worthless because pain and poison have been fighting inside it.”
Her mouth tightened. “That sound nice.”
“It is not decoration,” Jesus said. “It is truth.”
Malik had gone still. “I’m her brother,” he said. “I come out here every week. Sometimes I find her. Sometimes I don’t. I got two kids, a job in Port Richmond, rent going up, and every time my phone rings I think maybe it’s the call. You know what she tells me? She tells me stop coming because she don’t want them kids to remember their aunt like this. But she’s still my sister.” His voice cracked on the last word with anger and grief locked together. “I don’t know what I’m supposed to do anymore.”
Jesus stood and faced him. “Love without control is one of the hardest burdens a person can carry.”
Malik rubbed both hands over his face. “That’s exactly it. I can’t save her. I can’t leave her.”
“No,” Jesus said. “But you can keep telling the truth. You can keep refusing to treat her like she is already gone. And you can remember that being unable to carry another person out by force is not the same as not loving them enough.”
Tasha was crying now, though quietly and with obvious irritation at herself. “I used to braid hair,” she said. “I was good too. People used to wait on me. Saturday mornings my kitchen would be full. Music on. Coffee going. My girl sitting on the floor with her coloring books. I had hands then. Steady hands.”
Jesus looked at her hands where they trembled in her lap. “They are still your hands.”
She shook her head fiercely. “No they ain’t.”
He did not argue in a way that would make her defend despair even harder. He only said, “The deepest thieves do not only steal money or time. They try to steal identity. That is why you must hear me. You are not only what has happened to you.”
The rain continued. The city moved past at a distance. Malik stood with tears in his eyes and his fists clenched because love sometimes feels humiliating when it has failed to protect someone. Tasha lowered her head. For a long time no one spoke.
At last she whispered, “I’m tired.”
Jesus answered with great gentleness. “Then let tired be true. But do not call tired the end.”
That was where the afternoon bent. Not into a neat miracle that wrapped pain cleanly. Into something smaller and more difficult. Tasha agreed to go with Malik to a nearby outreach center she had refused before, not because all hunger for the old numbing had disappeared, but because for one thin honest moment she remembered she was still someone worth carrying. Malik did not celebrate too early. He simply put his hand lightly at her back as they moved. Before they left, Tasha looked once over her shoulder at Jesus with a face full of confusion, shame, hope, and fear all at once, which is often what the beginning of return looks like.
When they were gone, Leon stood under the edge of the awning staring out at the rain. “That place gets in your chest,” he said.
“Yes,” Jesus replied.
Leon’s voice was different now. Less guarded. “I keep thinking maybe I’m one bad month from ending up somewhere people look at me like that.”
Jesus turned toward him. “Then stop walking toward the cliff while telling yourself you are only visiting the edge.”
Leon closed his eyes. He did not argue. The rain softened. Somewhere up the block a siren rose and fell.
By the time they headed back toward Center City, the afternoon had begun slipping toward evening. The rain cleared and left the city washed and reflective. Puddles held bits of sky. Tires hissed over wet streets. Food smells returned stronger in the cooler air. Leon checked the time and stopped walking.
“It’s almost five,” he said.
Jesus looked at him.
“My sister said ten, but then she texted me noon saying plans changed. Said if I was serious, come by her place in South Philly after work. She sent the address.” He swallowed. “I didn’t answer because I wasn’t sure.”
“Are you sure now?” Jesus asked.
Leon stared down the street as if the answer might be written there. “No,” he said. “But I know I ain’t supposed to run.”
Jesus nodded once. “Then go.”
Leon looked at him with something close to fear. “You coming?”
Jesus smiled, but there was gravity in it. “This next walk is yours.”
Leon’s face tightened the way it had that morning when he first named the possibility of seeing his daughter. “What if she slams the door?”
“Then you will have stood there truthfully,” Jesus said again. “And truth is never wasted.”
Leon let out a shaky breath. “I don’t even know how to start.”
“Start without defending yourself,” Jesus answered. “Start with what is true and leave room for what is painful.”
Leon nodded slowly. Then, because some men need one more permission before they move, he asked the question underneath all the others. “You really think a man can come back from being who he’s been?”
Jesus looked at him with quiet certainty. “A man can come back when he stops calling darkness home.”
Leon stood still for one last second. Then he adjusted the duffel on his shoulder and turned south toward the subway, not steady exactly, but willing. Sometimes willingness is the first strong step a soul takes after years of collapse.
Jesus watched him go until the crowd took him. Then he turned and began walking east through the city as the lights came on one by one. Offices emptied. Restaurants filled. Hospital windows glowed. Traffic thickened near the bridges. The evening gathered people into all the places where life goes on, apartments, shelters, waiting rooms, kitchens, train platforms, bars, church basements, row houses, corners, parks, and bedsides. Philadelphia was beautiful in the way honest places are beautiful, not because pain was absent, but because people kept carrying one another through it in a thousand imperfect ways.
He walked toward the waterfront again, back through Old City where dinner voices were rising from restaurant patios and tourists moved past brick facades without knowing the private heartbreaks unfolding behind nearby doors. Somewhere in South Philly, Leon was likely climbing steps toward a conversation he should have had months earlier. Somewhere at HUP, Marissa was sitting beside her father and speaking to him while the machines kept their measured watch. Somewhere near Pennsylvania Hospital, Eric was opening the takeout bag he had forgotten and eating cold food beside his wife rather than imagining tomorrow into a monster. Somewhere in Kensington, Malik was waiting through intake with his sister, not trusting the moment enough to feel safe, but not walking away either. The city held all of them at once.
And as Jesus continued toward the river in the coming dark, the day was not yet done.
The sky over the Delaware had turned the color of cooled steel by the time Jesus reached the stretch of waterfront near Spruce Street Harbor Park. Evening had settled in, though the city was still fully awake. Lights reflected in the water in long broken lines. Voices drifted from small groups gathered under the trees and near the walkways. A couple stood at the railing saying very little. A man in a work uniform ate from a takeout container with the tired focus of someone finally stopping after too many hours on his feet. Somewhere behind the brighter public spaces, a woman argued on her phone in the sharp low voice people use when they are trying not to let strangers hear the shape of a private disaster. The river moved as it had before dawn, indifferent to schedules and arguments and human fear, yet somehow fitting all of it inside its steady dark flow.
Jesus kept walking without hurry, taking in each face, each posture, each small sign of what the day had cost people. He passed a family with two children running ahead and a mother calling after them to slow down. He passed a young man pretending to laugh too hard with his friends while his eyes kept dropping toward his phone between jokes. He passed an older woman in a nurse’s jacket standing still by the water, not looking at anything except the black surface below. She had the posture of someone who had spent a lifetime taking care of others and had now run up against a sorrow too close to professional distance. Jesus did not stop with every person because love is not always shown through interruption. Sometimes it is shown through witness. Sometimes it is prayer that happens without the other person knowing someone has seen them at all.
He moved north along the river and then inland again, back toward the narrower blocks where the city closes in and lives are stacked beside one another in old brick and thin walls and sounds that carry. Evening in Philadelphia has its own texture. Delivery scooters cut through the streets. Music leaked from open windows. Pots clanged faintly from kitchens. Someone somewhere practiced trumpet badly and with conviction. SEPTA trains carried people home to apartments, row houses, shelters, and borrowed couches. At the entrance to a station near Market East, Jesus paused as people came up from below in waves, each wearing the face of a life still in progress. Some looked numb. Some looked irritated. Some looked already spent though the night had barely begun. One teenage girl climbed the steps with a backpack hanging from one shoulder and tears she was trying to blink back before she reached the sidewalk. A boy about her age followed a step behind, saying something careful and quiet. She shook her head without stopping. Jesus watched them go. Pain was everywhere, but not all pain wanted an audience. He let them pass.
A little later, near Chinatown, the streets were bright with signs and restaurant windows and the scent of cooking that reaches out onto the sidewalk and wraps around passing strangers. The city there felt compressed and alive, conversation spilling from doorways, kitchen workers moving fast, families stepping around one another with practiced ease. On one block Jesus saw a delivery driver sitting on the curb beside his scooter with one hand pressed against his stomach and his phone in the other. His insulated bag leaned against a fire hydrant. At first glance he looked like any worker catching a fast break. At second glance he looked like a man trying not to unravel.
Jesus stepped over and sat on the curb beside him. The driver glanced up, wary and embarrassed to have been seen in weakness. “I’m good,” he said automatically.
Jesus looked at the phone in his hand, then at the untouched bottle of water by his foot. “You are trying to be.”
The man gave a tired laugh with no joy in it. “That obvious?”
“Only to someone looking,” Jesus said.
The man put the phone face down on his knee and rubbed both hands over his face. He was in his late twenties maybe, with the weathered fatigue of somebody carrying more than one job, more than one expectation, more than one version of himself that never quite lined up. “My name’s Rafael,” he said. “I’m supposed to be dropping off two more orders, but I just got a message from my cousin that my uncle got picked up again. DUI this time. My aunt’s losing her mind. My mother wants me to call everyone. My boss from the warehouse texted asking if I can come in early tomorrow. Rent’s due next week. And my girl says we need to talk, which is never good.” He lifted his hand vaguely toward the street. “I’m just trying to sit here for five minutes before I turn into somebody I don’t like.”
Jesus nodded. “What kind of somebody is that?”
Rafael looked away. “The kind that snaps at people who didn’t do nothing. The kind that acts like everybody needs something and nobody asks whether I’m holding too much already. The kind that starts thinking maybe if I just disappeared for a few days everybody would figure themselves out without me.”
Jesus let the last sentence settle because people often speak their deepest exhaustion in disguised ways first. “And would disappearing bring peace?”
Rafael stared at the scooter parked beside them. “No. Probably just more problems.”
“Then it is not peace you are imagining,” Jesus said. “It is relief.”
Rafael looked at him, surprised by the precision. “Yeah,” he said after a moment. “That’s right.”
A waitress emerged from a nearby restaurant carrying a bag to a waiting customer. A bus rolled past at the corner. Night traffic reflected off wet patches still left from the afternoon rain. Jesus spoke in the steady tone that had marked him all day. “Relief matters. But people often chase it in ways that cost them more than the burden they were trying to escape.”
Rafael swallowed and nodded. “That sounds like my whole family.”
Jesus smiled softly, not because it was amusing, but because recognition can be the first step toward mercy. “Then perhaps tonight you should do one honest thing instead of ten frantic things.”
Rafael frowned. “Like what?”
“Deliver what you have in front of you. Drink the water by your foot. Call the one person who most needs calm, not the ten who will only multiply chaos. Then go home and speak truthfully to the woman who wants to talk to you.”
Rafael let out a breath and shook his head. “That sounds too simple.”
“A lot of what saves a life feels too simple when a mind is crowded,” Jesus said.
The young man sat with that. Then he picked up the water bottle, opened it, and drank. It was a small thing, almost nothing from the outside. But sometimes the soul returns through ordinary doors. He looked at Jesus again with the expression people wear when something in them has just been steadied enough to keep going. “You ever do this all the time?” he asked.
Jesus stood. “All the time.”
Rafael smiled then, faint but real. “Thanks,” he said.
Jesus left him on the curb, not cured of pressure, not freed from complexity, but no longer spinning inside it the same way.
As he moved south again, the night deepened and the city thinned in places while crowding in others. In Society Hill the old streets held a quieter kind of wealth, though behind those doors too there were fights and regrets and silent meals and rooms where someone sat awake beside a lamp wondering how life had come to feel so lonely while looking so complete from the outside. Jesus passed through those blocks as naturally as he had passed under the tracks in Kensington. He carried no preference for polished suffering over visible suffering. Pain did not become more important because it had a better address.
Near a small corner grocery not far from South Street, he saw a boy of maybe sixteen sitting on the stoop beside the shuttered storefront next door. A bicycle lay on its side nearby. The boy had a hoodie pulled up though the evening was not cold enough to require it. He was not doing anything obvious to attract attention. That was the point. He was trying to disappear in plain sight. Jesus sat on the stoop a short distance away and waited until the boy acknowledged him with a sideways glance.
“You waiting for someone?” Jesus asked.
The boy shrugged. “Not really.”
“What’s your name?”
“Tyrese.”
Jesus nodded. “Tyrese, you look like somebody trying very hard not to go home.”
The boy did not answer immediately, which was answer enough. Cars passed on the wet street. Music from a bar farther down the block drifted in and out as the door opened and closed. Finally Tyrese said, “My mother’s boyfriend gets drunk on Thursdays.”
Jesus did not move. “And tonight is Thursday.”
Tyrese nodded once, his face still angled away. “He ain’t always crazy. That’s the thing. He can be normal enough that people think my mom’s overreacting. Then other nights he talks too loud and starts knocking stuff over and asking questions he already knows the answer to. If I’m there, he likes to push. If I’m not there, I don’t know what’s happening to my little sister.” He pressed both palms against the step between his knees. “So I sit out here till I think he passed out or left.”
Jesus listened as though the whole city had narrowed to one stoop and one frightened boy. “Does your mother know you wait outside?”
“She knows without us talking about it,” Tyrese said. “She says she’s handling it. But handling it just means making excuses in a tired voice.”
That sentence carried more years in it than his age should have allowed. Jesus asked where his sister was.
“Inside. She’s eight. She acts brave when he gets loud. Starts drawing or doing school stuff like if she looks busy, he won’t notice her.”
A car pulled up to the curb across the street, then moved on when someone else took the spot. Tyrese watched it, then watched nothing. “I keep thinking I should do something big. Like call the cops or grab my sister and leave or hit him with something if he puts his hands on my mom again. But then I think about foster care or my mom crying or me getting locked up and I just…” He shook his head. “I don’t know how to save everybody.”
Jesus turned slightly toward him. “You are carrying a burden a child should not have been handed.”
Tyrese’s jaw tightened because boys who are forced into early manhood often do not know what to do when someone names the injustice of it. “I’m not a child.”
“No,” Jesus said gently. “You are being made old too soon.”
The boy’s eyes filled, though he fought it. “I can’t keep living like this.”
Jesus looked toward the row house Tyrese had been trying not to look at. “Tonight, you need one thing more than anger. You need light.”
Tyrese frowned. “What does that mean?”
“It means what is hidden must be brought where truth can see it,” Jesus answered. “Who is one adult outside that house who already knows enough to believe you?”
Tyrese hesitated. “My aunt Keisha. She lives in West Philly.”
“Call her,” Jesus said.
The boy gave him a helpless look. “Right now?”
“Yes.”
Tyrese stared at the phone in his pocket as though it were heavier than it should be. “She’s gonna be mad.”
“Let her be mad at what is wrong,” Jesus said. “Not at you for telling the truth.”
Tyrese pulled out the phone slowly. His hands shook, whether from fear or adrenaline or both. He scrolled, stopped, backed out, found the name again. Then he looked at Jesus. “What if this blows everything up?”
Jesus answered with a clarity that left no room for confusion. “Some things need to be blown open because too many people are being crushed under the silence.”
Tyrese pressed call. He did not put the phone on speaker, but enough of his aunt’s voice could be heard in sharp concerned bursts to know she answered on the second ring. At first he said the usual nothing, “You busy?” Then his face changed and the truth began coming out. He spoke in fragments. He looked embarrassed. He nearly backed away from it twice. But he stayed with it. When the call ended, he looked sick with fear and also slightly relieved, which is how honesty often feels the first time it breaks through a sealed room.
“She’s coming,” he said.
Jesus nodded. “Good.”
Tyrese wiped his face roughly with the sleeve of his hoodie. “I don’t even know who you are.”
Jesus looked at him with deep kindness. “Someone who wanted you to stop sitting alone in the dark with a problem that was hurting all of you.”
The boy laughed once through his tears. “That’s… yeah.” He could not finish.
Jesus stayed with him until headlights pulled up twenty minutes later and a woman got out fast, already angry in the right direction. She moved with the fierce focus of someone who had suspected and now had confirmation. Tyrese stood when he saw her and suddenly looked younger, as children often do the second real help appears. She crossed to him, took his face in both hands, asked one hard quick question, and then wrapped him in her arms. Jesus stepped away before she turned toward the house. Some moments belong to families once truth has reached them.
The city gave off more shine now that full night had taken hold. South Street carried its usual mix of noise, youth, impatience, performance, hunger, and loneliness dressed up as movement. People lined up outside bars. Groups passed laughing too loudly. A man argued with a parking app and lost. Two women carrying leftovers walked arm in arm and said almost nothing because one of them was crying. Jesus moved through it all as if he could hear the single human ache beneath a thousand different expressions.
He continued south into neighborhoods where the blocks narrowed and homes sat shoulder to shoulder under porch lights and window glow. Somewhere ahead, in a modest row house on a quieter street, Leon had reached the address his sister had sent. Jesus did not walk there, but his mind and prayer held the moment as surely as if he stood beside the steps.
Inside that house, Leon had stood in a narrow entryway with rain-damp shoes and his duffel hanging uselessly from his shoulder while his sister, Renee, looked at him with the guarded disbelief of a woman who had learned not to trust hope too early. She was younger than her tired eyes made her seem. Her work badge still hung from her neck. The smell of onions and something roasting had filled the house, and a cartoon voice could be heard faintly from another room, where Nia sat unaware that the whole emotional balance of the evening stood on the threshold. Leon had opened his mouth, probably with a plan, and the plan had vanished.
“I know,” he had likely said first, because people often begin there when the shame is larger than language.
Renee would not have let him hide inside vague sorrow. “Do you?” she might have asked. “Because I do not have energy for half of this tonight.”
And because Jesus had told him not to defend himself, Leon would have done something unusual for a man with his history. He would have stayed with the truth. He would have said he had lied, drifted, promised what he did not keep, disappeared when it hurt others most, and used pain as permission to keep doing damage. He would have said he did not come to ask for trust on credit. He came because he was done treating later like a guarantee. He came because he missed his child. He came because their mother was in rehab and he had hidden from that too. He came because he was tired of becoming less than the man he once thought he might still be.
None of that would have made the room easy. Truth rarely makes a room easy first. It makes it real.
Nia would have heard his voice then and come to the doorway with a pencil in her hand and caution in her eyes. Children remember absence differently than adults. They do not always have words for it, but their bodies know. Leon would have seen in one instant how much time had happened to her without him. She would have grown taller. Her face would have changed in small ways. Her expression might have held both wanting and uncertainty. That is one of the hardest combinations a father can face because it tells him love remained, but safety did not.
If he knelt then, it would not have been theatrical. It would have been because standing felt impossible. Maybe he would have said only her name. Maybe that was all he could trust himself with. Maybe she would not have run to him right away. Maybe she would have stood there examining the distance between memory and reality. But children are often braver in love than the adults who fail them. She might have stepped forward slowly and asked the question that mattered most to her, not the grown question about sobriety or reliability or systems or court arrangements, but the child question. “Are you staying for dinner?”
That question alone could have broken a man open. Because hidden inside it are other questions. Are you leaving again? Are you real tonight? Do I get to relax? Am I allowed to hope? Leon, standing in the wreckage of the life he had helped make, would have had only one honest answer available. “If your aunt says I can.”
And perhaps Renee, still not soft but no longer closed, would have turned back toward the kitchen and said, “Take off your shoes then. Don’t make me regret it.”
Mercy often enters a room sounding almost ordinary.
Jesus carried all of that in the quiet place of his spirit as he walked through the city night, though he did not interfere with what those people themselves needed to choose. Love does not always remove consequence. Sometimes it walks beside people until they stop lying and become capable of receiving grace without cheapening it.
Later, near Broad and Snyder, he stepped into a small carryout place where the fluorescent lights were harsher than the mood of the room. A woman behind the counter moved fast with the flat efficiency of the dinner rush. Two men waited for sandwiches. A delivery app chimed from somewhere behind the register. At the far table sat an older man in a Phillies cap slowly eating fries without much appetite. Jesus noticed his hands first, stiff and marked, the hands of someone who had labored long and now did not know what to do with evenings. When one of the younger men brushed past him too quickly and knocked a napkin holder from the table, the older man flinched with a sensitivity that came from more than surprise. Jesus took the seat across from him after asking if it was free.
The man shrugged. “Long as you don’t mind the company.”
Jesus smiled. “I don’t.”
For a minute they sat without speaking. The hum of the refrigerator case filled the space between orders being called. The man finally said, “You look like somebody who ain’t scared of quiet.”
“It can be a friend,” Jesus said.
The man nodded and chewed once more before setting the fries aside. “Not for everybody.”
Jesus waited.
“My wife died in November,” the man said. “Forty-one years. House been too loud empty ever since.” He tapped a finger on the table. “You’d think after all this time I’d know how to be by myself for an evening. Turns out I don’t.” He looked up. “Name’s Walter.”
Jesus repeated it gently. “Walter.”
Walter stared toward the counter where nobody needed him. “I keep leaving the TV on because silence feels like proof. My daughter says join a group. My neighbor says get a dog. Church people say she’s with the Lord, which I believe, but that don’t change that her slippers are still under the bed and I still turn to tell her stuff before remembering.” He let out a breath. “I ain’t angry at God. Not exactly. Just… I don’t know what to do with the shape of my life now.”
Jesus looked at the man with the deep patience of one who honors grief by not tidying it up. “A long love leaves a long echo.”
Walter blinked hard and looked away. “That’s true.”
“It is not weakness that the house feels altered,” Jesus said. “It is testimony.”
Walter sat still under that word. Testimony. Not failure. Not inability to cope. Evidence of real love having filled the place for decades. His eyes went wet. “Nobody says it like that,” he murmured.
Jesus glanced at the untouched fries. “Who have you spoken to honestly this week?”
Walter gave a short tired laugh. “A pharmacist. Cashier at Acme. Fella at the hardware store who thought I wanted to discuss leaf bags.”
“Then tonight when you go home,” Jesus said, “call your daughter and tell her one true thing, not the safe thing. Tell her what hurts. Let love answer love.”
Walter nodded slowly. “I can do that.”
When his order number was called, Jesus rose. Walter looked up at him with something steadier in his face now, not joy, but less isolation. “You from around here?” he asked.
Jesus smiled. “Close enough.”
Outside, the night air had cooled. He walked east again, then north, letting the city carry him through one more sweep of its neighborhoods and lights and need. Philadelphia after dark was still Philadelphia, fierce and bruised and funny and tired and stubbornly alive. Men unloaded restaurant supplies by hand trucks. A woman in scrubs waited for a bus and leaned against the pole like sleep might claim her where she stood. Teenagers clustered at a corner store and performed toughness for one another because they were afraid softness would not survive the neighborhood. An apartment window above the street framed a woman watering one plant while talking on speakerphone to someone she missed. Everywhere, ordinary life. Everywhere, the immense hidden weight of it.
At one point Jesus passed a church with its doors closed and steps damp from the earlier rain. A small handwritten notice near the entrance announced a food pantry schedule and a grief support meeting on Tuesdays. He stopped for a moment and looked at the paper taped crookedly to the glass. This too was the city. Not only sorrow and not only sin, but the countless worn places where people kept making room for one another in God’s name with folding chairs and coffee urns and donated cans and small brave prayers. The kingdom often comes quietly through tired volunteers and badly printed signs and rooms that smell faintly of old carpet and mercy.
As midnight drew nearer, the streets thinned. The louder parts of the city remained loud, but there were longer stretches now where footsteps could be heard on their own. Jesus made his way back toward the river. He did not move in a straight line because love rarely does. He let the city have him one block at a time. In that wandering return, he passed Jefferson again and thought of the woman from morning who had been trying to buy breakfast for her son. Perhaps Micah was asleep now, one arm thrown over a blanket while his mother packed for another shift or sat on the edge of the bed doing arithmetic with money that still did not stretch. He passed near City Hall and thought of Denise getting home with pain still in her body and maybe one warm meal inside her instead of none. He passed the route that could have led toward Rittenhouse and thought of Adam sitting alone somewhere with his phone in his hand, finally writing the message that told the truth instead of negotiating around it. He passed spaces that opened toward the hospitals and thought of Eric and Marissa in rooms where time had become medical and strange, each hour watched differently than in normal life. He passed the invisible line leading toward South Philly and held Leon and his family in prayer once more.
When he reached Penn’s Landing and the wider dark of the river again, the city behind him had settled into that late-hour rhythm where motion continues but with less disguise. The noise was lower. The wind off the water carried a clean cold edge. A few people still walked the path. A man smoked near the railing and looked out at nothing. Two friends stood shoulder to shoulder talking in low voices that sounded like confession. Farther off, a cyclist passed with a blinking red light and was gone. The bridges burned with electric color above the dark water. Jesus kept walking until he found a quieter place near a bench and a patch of open view where the river could be seen without interruption.
There, as the day had begun, he turned toward prayer.
He did not pray as someone escaping the world he had just walked through. He prayed as someone carrying it fully. The woman with the tired eyes in the market. The child leaning against his mother before school. The man ashamed of the father he had been becoming. The sister whose love had grown sharp from repeated disappointment. The daughter still deciding whether to trust the sound of her father’s voice again. The exhausted brother in Kensington who loved someone he could not rescue by force. The frightened woman sitting outside a hospital with too many regrets crowding the living hour. The widower in the carryout place learning that loneliness was testimony to long love. The teenage boy on the stoop waiting between violence and silence. The city itself with its old stones and transit lines and row houses and cracked sidewalks and polished towers and hospitals and shelters and schools and kitchens and all the private prayers rising from bedsides and buses and bathrooms and park benches and prison bunks and crowded apartments and empty ones.
The river moved, and the lights trembled on it. Behind him Philadelphia breathed in thousands of rooms at once. Jesus bowed his head.
In the quiet, he prayed for the people who did not know how to pray anymore. He prayed for those who were too angry, too ashamed, too numb, too busy, too skeptical, too wounded, or too tired to form a clean sentence toward heaven. He prayed for the ones who thought their lives had narrowed too far to matter. He prayed for the hidden mercies already moving in places no one would post about or celebrate. He prayed for courage to tell the truth where silence had become a trap. He prayed for tenderness to survive in people who had learned hardness as a means of survival. He prayed for sons returning, for daughters protected, for marriages facing what was true, for addicts not to call fatigue the end, for overworked souls not to mistake relief for destruction, for the grieving not to confuse emptiness with the end of love, for children who had become old too soon, for caregivers, transit workers, cleaners, nurses, cooks, janitors, teachers, delivery drivers, cashiers, caseworkers, maintenance men, security guards, clerks, and all the others who keep a city standing while carrying private burdens no one sees.
And as he prayed, the day did not conclude with neatness. Philadelphia had not become simple. No city ever does. There were still arguments behind closed doors. There were still people using, lying, hiding, trembling, mourning, and waiting. There were still systems too cold and rooms too lonely and streets too sharp. But something true had moved through the city that day. Not spectacle. Not performance. Not the kind of story people tell to flatter themselves. Something quieter and stronger than that. A man had gone to his daughter instead of into the night. A frightened daughter had asked whether he was staying. A grieving brother had carried his sister toward one more chance at life. A frightened daughter in a hospital had chosen presence over anticipatory sorrow. A burdened worker had done the next honest thing instead of drowning in all the later things. A boy on a stoop had called for help before anger made the decision for him. A widower had been reminded that the ache in his house was not proof of failure, but the shape left by faithful love.
This is how redemption often enters a city. Not all at once. Not with noise large enough to satisfy pride. It enters by refusing to overlook the person everyone else has learned to step around. It enters by telling the truth without humiliation. It enters by making room for honesty where people have only been performing roles. It enters in kitchens and waiting rooms and sidewalks and hospital chairs and cramped row houses and transit stations and markets before breakfast. It enters through one clear sentence given at the right moment by someone calm enough not to need control. It enters when a life that has been drifting decides not to drift one more day.
Jesus remained there in prayer until even the small sounds around him had thinned. At last he lifted his head. The river was still dark. The city was still there. Mercy had not erased reality. It had met it. That is what love does when it comes from heaven into an actual place. It does not float above the human scene. It walks the streets, hears the voices, feels the weather, sees the hidden wound, speaks plainly, stays calm, and keeps moving with quiet authority until someone who thought they were forgotten begins to understand that they were seen all along.
Then he rose from the place of prayer and stood for one more moment with the wind off the water touching his face and the city behind him full of sleeping and waking souls. Philadelphia remained what it was, wounded, beautiful, restless, burdened, stubborn, and loved. And somewhere within it, in more than one room now, hope was still awake.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph
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Vandergraph Po Box 271154 Fort Collins, Colorado 80527
from
M.A.G. blog, signed by Lydia
Lydia's Weekly Lifestyle blog is for today's African girl, so no subject is taboo. My purpose is to share things that may interest today's African girl.
Fresh Greens for Growth: Green, the colour of growth and renewal, is making its mark in corporate Accra this year. From lush emerald to mint and olive, green represents balance, harmony, and freshness. Whether you’re walking into a client meeting or prepping for a conference call, green will not only boost your confidence but also symbolize your growth as a professional.
Why it works: Green is a colour that radiates calm yet commands attention. It’s subtle but impactful — perfect for the modern corporate woman.
Style tip: Go for an olive green jacket with tailored trousers or a soft mint blouse with a fitted skirt. Pair with gold jewelry for a classy, polished finish.
Powerful Purples & Reds: Purple is synonymous with royalty, while red represents strength and confidence. Together, they create a palette that demands attention. A powerful combo in any corporate setting, purple tones (think amethyst and lavender) can add sophistication, while fiery red can bring an energizing, bold statement to your look. These colours are perfect when you want to make a lasting impression, whether you're presenting a proposal or leading a team.
Why it works: Red and purple are assertive, magnetic colours that draw people in. They’re not afraid to make a statement, and neither are you.
Style tip: Try a deep purple blouse tucked into a high-waisted pencil skirt or trousers. Add a red handbag for an extra pop, or rock a full red dress with purple accessories for a truly regal effect.
So, whether you're building your empire or climbing the corporate ladder, remember: your wardrobe is one of your most powerful tools. Make sure it reflects the dynamic, fearless, and creative woman you are!
Let me know — which of these colours are you most excited to try out in your own corporate wardrobe this year?
Luxury fashion becomes luxury food? In their quest to collect more money from the rich the big names like Belmond, which is owned by LVMH have already diversified into luxury hotels and luxury nostalgic trains. Dior, better known for fashion and perfumes has now opened a Michelin star restaurant, (the opening comes first, and if you are good Michelin may award you 1, 2 or 3 stars) following trailblazers Gucci and Chanel. The restaurant is called Monsieur Dior and is situated in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, next to Gallerie Dior.
It is managed by Yanninck Alléno, who already manages another 18 star restaurants, so he seems to be good at it. Prices of course are a bit up, the potato puree with caviar goes for 1290 GHC, the salad Catherine for 350 GHC, a sole fish in butter costs 860 GHC, and calf fillet ticks 750 GHC. Taxes and service included, no games here. Do reserve a table, monkeys play by sizes. The aim of course is to get 3 Michelin stars, then the same sole fish will go for anywhere between 1600 and 2600 GHC. Hurry up, the sole season in Ghana ends at end of April…

Early make up? Throughout the world the effect of social media on the youth is being scrutinized with several countries imposing a minimum age of 15 or 16 years old and schools banning smartphones. Sweden, which in 2009 changed books for computers in schools is presently also making a U turn, and Meta (Facebook and Instagram) just had a fine of 375 million USD in New Mexico (State in the USA) and 6 million in California for knowingly addicting children to social media. Tiktok was sued earlier on. Yeah, grab them early.
But this article was about make up? Yes, in Italy the authorities are taking a very close look at Sephora and Benefit. Both owned by LVMH (which also owns Bulgari, Celine, Dior, Fendi and Givenchy). Sephora is a big beauty retailer, selling 340 + different brands of make up and skin care products and fragrances through its 2000+ shops. The suspicion is that their covert marketing strategies target girls as young as 10 years old, fueling an unhealthy skincare and anti aging obsession called cosmeticorexia. These make up addicted kids are now nicknamed Sephora kids. It is known that almost all make up products contain dangerous chemicals, and especially young skins are more sensitive. And imagine what happens in Ghana where anything at all is imported, some product even without a brand name.

Dubai. There’s a saying that Kentucky Fried Chicken and iPhones are responsible for a load of juvenile pregnancies. We could add Dubai, the magic city. Why? Apart from the current troubles there, which have now made any trip there risky, what is then the magic of Dubai?
Magic indeed is that in the middle of the desert sand they have managed to create a big financial and trading hub, complete with greens lawns, irrigated with desalinated sea water. And apart from that? Lots of hotels and shopping malls and eateries, and expensive playgrounds. So why do we all want to go there? Not so long ago a Ghanaian needed a visa for about any country apart from the Ecowas states, even South Africa and Kenya were beyond reach. Enter Emirates Air and a big advertising campaign, and finally we could leave Africa. At the cost of an iPhone, hotel included. But things have changed now, Ghanaians can travel without real visa hassle to 54 countries like Botswana, India, Jamaica, Singapore, South Africa, and others. Personally I would prefer Morocco or a Kenya safari, or India with it’s 22 official languages and 44 Unesco World Heritage sites (France has 53, Morocco 9, Kenya 8 and Dubai has none). All for the price of an iPhone. Take KFC tonight and dream.
from
SmarterArticles

Eighty thousand people walked into a room, metaphorically speaking, and told one of the world's most prominent artificial intelligence companies exactly what frightens them. The question now is whether anyone on the other side of the screen was genuinely listening.
In December 2025, Anthropic opened its Claude chatbot to a sweeping conversational experiment. Over one week, 80,508 users across 159 countries and 70 languages sat down with an AI-powered interviewer and answered open-ended questions about what they wanted from artificial intelligence, and what kept them awake at night. The result is what Anthropic calls the largest multilingual qualitative study on AI aspirations ever conducted. It is also, depending on how you read the data, either a roadmap for the industry or a warning siren.
The findings landed with a paradox at their centre. The features that draw people to AI are the same features that terrify them. Productivity gains? Yes, please, said 32% of respondents who reported AI had already helped them work faster. But 22.2% named job displacement and economic anxiety as a primary fear, while 21.9% worried about losing their autonomy and agency. Perhaps most striking was the 16% who expressed concern about losing the ability to think critically; a fear of cognitive atrophy that suggests people are not merely worried about their livelihoods, but about their minds.
This is not an abstract policy debate. It is a massive, real-time expression of ambivalence from the very people who are already using the technology. And it lands at a moment when the gap between what AI companies say and what the public feels has never been wider.
Anthropic branded the study “Light and Shade,” a title that captures the contradictory landscape the data reveals. On the light side, 67% of respondents held a broadly positive view of AI. The top three aspirations, professional excellence at 18.8%, personal transformation at 13.7%, and life management at 13.5%, accounted for 46% of all responses. People were not asking AI to do their jobs. They wanted it to handle the repetitive, soul-draining tasks so they could focus on strategy, creativity, and, quite simply, leaving work on time. Time freedom itself ranked as the fourth most cited aspiration at 11.1%, followed by financial independence, societal transformation, and entrepreneurship.
But the shade is thick. Unreliability topped the list of concerns at 26.7%, ahead of both job fears and autonomy worries. The fifth major concern, cited by 15% of respondents, was the absence of adequate regulation and unclear accountability when things go wrong. On average, each respondent voiced 2.3 distinct concerns. Only 11% said they had zero fears about AI. The remaining 89% carried a mixture of hope and dread that defies the neat narratives preferred by corporate communications departments.
Regional differences added further complexity. Users in Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America expressed 10 to 12% lower rates of negative sentiment compared with those in Western Europe and North America. In emerging economies, AI is framed less as a threat and more as a “capital bypass mechanism,” a way to start businesses without the traditional infrastructure of funding, hiring, and physical premises. The vision of AI for entrepreneurship resonated most strongly in Africa, South and Central Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America, where respondents described AI as a way to circumvent the capital barriers that have historically prevented economic participation. In East Asian markets, by contrast, the fear of cognitive degradation ran notably higher, with 18% expressing concern about cognitive atrophy and 13% worried about loss of meaning, a culturally distinct set of anxieties compared with the West's emphasis on regulatory concerns.
When asked whether AI had already taken steps towards their goals, 81% of respondents said yes. Productivity gains came first at 32%, but unmet expectations came second at 18.9%, ahead of cognitive partnership at 17.2%, learning support at 9.9%, and emotional support at 6.1%. That nearly one in five respondents reported that AI had failed to meet their expectations is itself a data point worth pausing on. The technology's most enthusiastic adopters are already encountering its limits, and that experience is shaping their anxieties about the future.
The study has limitations that deserve acknowledgement. Its 80,508 respondents were all existing Claude users, not a random cross-section of humanity. Self-selection bias is real. But the sheer scale, the linguistic diversity, and the open-ended methodology give it a weight that smaller, more structured surveys often lack. And its findings are remarkably consistent with independent research from institutions with no commercial stake in the outcome.
If Anthropic's study tells us what users feel, a constellation of other research tells us how dramatically those feelings diverge from the boardroom consensus.
In late 2025, nonprofit organisation JUST Capital, in partnership with The Harris Poll and the Robin Hood Foundation, surveyed corporate executives, institutional investors, and the American public about AI. The results exposed a chasm. Roughly 93% of corporate leaders and 80% of investors said they believed AI would have a net positive impact on society within five years. Among the general public, that figure dropped to 58%. On productivity, the gap was even starker: 98% of corporate leaders believed AI would boost worker productivity, compared with 47% of the public.
Nearly half of Americans surveyed by JUST Capital expected AI to replace workers and eliminate jobs outright. Only 20% of executives shared that expectation. Flip the lens: 64% of executives said AI would help workers be more productive in their current roles. Just 23% of the public agreed. On the question of how AI profits should be distributed, the public favoured spreading gains across lower prices for customers, workforce support for displaced workers, and investments in safety and security. Investors, predictably, believed the majority of gains should flow to shareholders.
The safety spending divide was equally revealing. Roughly 60% of investors and half of the public said companies should spend more than 5% of their total AI investment on safety. Meanwhile, 59% of corporate leaders said spending should be capped at 5%. When the people building AI want to spend less on safety than the people using it, the trust implications are difficult to overstate.
Pew Research Centre has been tracking American sentiment on AI with growing urgency. In a June 2025 survey, 50% of US adults said the increased use of AI in daily life made them feel more concerned than excited, up from 37% in 2021, a 13-percentage-point increase in roughly four years. Only 10% said they were more excited than concerned. More than half, 53%, said AI would worsen people's ability to think creatively. Fifty per cent said the same about forming meaningful relationships. More than 56% of the public expressed extreme or very high concern about AI eliminating jobs, more than double the 25% of AI experts who shared that level of worry. On the question of whether they trusted the US government to regulate AI effectively, Americans were nearly evenly split: 44% expressed some trust, while 47% had little to none.
The partisan dimension is worth noting. Pew found that nearly identical shares of Republicans and Democrats, 50% and 51% respectively, said they were more concerned than excited about AI's growing use in daily life. This bipartisan unease represents a notable shift; in previous years, Republicans had been consistently more concerned. The convergence suggests that AI anxiety has transcended the familiar left-right divides of American politics.
The 2025 Edelman Trust Barometer added an international dimension. Trust in AI ranged from 87% in China and 67% in Brazil down to 39% in Germany, 36% in the United Kingdom, and just 32% in the United States. Three times as many Americans rejected the growing use of AI (49%) as embraced it (17%). In the UK, 71% of the bottom income quartile felt they would be left behind rather than realise any advantages from generative AI. Two-thirds of respondents in developed nations believed business leaders would not be fully honest with employees about the impact of AI on jobs. Edelman also found a significant class divide within the workplace: only one in four non-managers regularly used AI, compared with nearly two-thirds of managers, suggesting that the benefits of AI are accruing unevenly even within organisations.
The Stanford Human-Centred Artificial Intelligence Institute's 2025 AI Index Report confirmed a global trust paradox: countries with the highest AI investment and the most advanced AI ecosystems expressed the most scepticism about AI products and services. In the United States, only 39% of people surveyed believed AI products were more beneficial than harmful, compared with 80% in Indonesia and 83% in China. Confidence that AI companies protect personal data fell globally from 50% in 2023 to 47% in 2024.
These are not marginal findings from obscure polls. They represent the most comprehensive body of public opinion data on artificial intelligence ever assembled, and they all point in the same direction: the public is significantly more worried about AI than the people building it believe them to be.
What makes this moment unusual is that some of the loudest warnings are coming from inside the industry itself. Anthropic's chief executive, Dario Amodei, has been remarkably blunt for a man running a company valued in the tens of billions for its AI technology. In May 2025, Amodei warned that rapid advances in AI could eliminate up to 50% of all entry-level white-collar jobs within five years, potentially pushing unemployment to 10 to 20%, the highest rates since the Great Depression.
“We, as the producers of this technology, have a duty and an obligation to be honest about what is coming,” Amodei told CNN. “I don't think this is on people's radar.” He proposed a “token tax” requiring AI companies to contribute 3% of revenues to government redistribution programmes to compensate displaced workers, a suggestion that, as he freely acknowledged, ran against his own economic interest. By September 2025, Amodei had doubled down on his warnings, telling CNN that AI was advancing “very quickly” and had already begun replacing jobs. He noted that Anthropic tracks how people use its AI models, currently about 60% for augmentation and 40% for automation, with the latter growing.
Microsoft AI chief Mustafa Suleyman went further in early 2026, telling the Financial Times that AI would automate most professional tasks within 12 to 18 months, including work performed by lawyers, accountants, marketers, and project managers. “I think that we're going to have a human-level performance on most, if not all, professional tasks,” he said, specifically referring to work where people are “sitting down at a computer.” He pointed to software engineering as evidence the shift was already underway, noting that many software engineers were now using AI-assisted coding for the vast majority of their code production.
Not everyone in the industry agrees. At VivaTech 2025 in Paris, Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang offered a sharp rebuttal to Amodei's predictions. “I pretty much disagree with almost everything” Amodei says, Huang told the audience. His argument rested on historical precedent: “Whenever companies are more productive, they hire more people.” Huang also took a pointed swipe at Anthropic's positioning: “One, he believes that AI is so scary that only they should do it. Two, that AI is so expensive, nobody else should do it. And three, AI is so incredibly powerful that everyone will lose their jobs, which explains why they should be the only company building it.”
The clash between Huang and Amodei captures the industry's internal schism with unusual clarity. One camp insists AI will create more jobs than it destroys, citing historical patterns of technological change. The other argues that the speed and scale of AI advancement makes historical analogies unreliable, that this time genuinely is different. Both positions carry real consequences for how the public's concerns are addressed, or dismissed. And as one commentator observed of the broader dynamic, “the people making the most aggressive predictions about AI wiping out white-collar work are the same people selling the tools to do it.” That does not make them wrong, but it does raise questions about the line between warning and marketing.
The debate might feel more academic if it were not for the numbers already appearing in employment data. According to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, nearly 55,000 job cuts in 2025 were directly attributed to AI, out of a total 1.17 million layoffs, the highest level since the pandemic year of 2020.
In the first two months of 2026, the pace accelerated. Artificial intelligence was cited in 12,304 US job cuts announced between January and February, representing 8% of the layoff total during that period. A March 2026 working paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research, based on the Duke CFO Survey of 750 US chief financial officers, found that 44% of firms planned AI-related job cuts this year. When extrapolated across the broader economy, that amounts to approximately 502,000 roles, roughly a ninefold increase from 2025.
The headline layoffs tell their own story. In February 2026, Jack Dorsey's fintech company Block announced it was cutting approximately 4,000 employees, roughly 40% of its workforce, explicitly citing AI. “Intelligence tools have changed what it means to build and run a company,” Dorsey wrote to shareholders. “A significantly smaller team, using the tools we're building, can do more and do it better.” Block's share price surged up to 24% on the news. The market's reaction was instructive: investors celebrated the human cost of AI-driven efficiency with the same enthusiasm they might greet a new product launch.
Amazon eliminated 16,000 corporate roles, with leadership explicitly citing AI and automation as drivers. Atlassian cut 10% of its workforce. Meta was reportedly planning to cut 20% of jobs. These are not struggling companies desperately cutting costs. They are among the most profitable technology enterprises in history, and they are telling the world that AI allows them to do more with fewer people.
The impact falls disproportionately on the young. Workers aged 22 to 25 in the most AI-exposed roles saw a 6% drop in employment from late 2022 to September 2025. Software developers in that age bracket experienced an almost 20% decline from their late-2022 peak. Among 20 to 30-year-olds in tech-exposed roles more broadly, unemployment has risen by nearly three percentage points since early 2025. Workers aged 18 to 24 are 129% more likely than older workers to fear AI could make their jobs obsolete, and 49% of Generation Z job seekers believe AI has already diminished the value of their university education.
The Duke CFO Survey's co-author, John Graham, cautioned against catastrophic interpretations. The projected 502,000 job losses represent just 0.4% of approximately 125 million US roles, “not the doomsday job scenario that you might sometimes see in the headlines,” he told Fortune. But for the workers in that 0.4%, particularly those at the beginning of their careers, the statistics offer cold comfort. And as a February 2026 Fortune report noted, thousands of chief executives admitted that AI had produced no measurable impact on employment or productivity at their firms, resurrecting the productivity paradox that economist Robert Solow identified forty years ago: organisations can see AI everywhere except in the productivity statistics.
The standard corporate response to AI displacement anxiety follows a well-rehearsed script: we will retrain workers for the jobs of tomorrow. OpenAI published its “AI at Work: Workforce Blueprint” in October 2025 and convened labour leaders in Washington, DC to discuss the technology's impact on jobs and skills. Chief executive Sam Altman, speaking in Chennai in February 2026, called for “policies that help people adapt to these changes, including lifelong learning and reskilling programs.” The company is reportedly developing a jobs platform and certification programme, with secondary reporting suggesting a goal of certifying up to 10 million Americans by 2030. OpenAI is also collaborating with North America's Building Trades Unions to accelerate data centre construction, committing funding to union training and recruitment initiatives.
The rhetoric is appealing. The execution is another matter entirely. A 2025 PwC survey found that 74% of workers were willing to learn new skills or retrain entirely to remain employable, but access to affordable training remains a barrier, particularly in developing economies. PwC's Global AI Jobs Barometer found that workers with advanced AI skills earn 56% more than peers in the same roles without those skills, creating a powerful incentive to upskill, but also a widening gap between those who can access training and those who cannot.
Deloitte's 2026 State of AI in the Enterprise survey found that the most common organisational response to AI talent strategy was educating the broader workforce to raise AI fluency, cited by 53% of companies, followed by designing and implementing reskilling strategies at 48%. But as workforce researchers have repeatedly observed, most enterprise reskilling programmes fail to deliver because they treat learning as something separate from work. When employees must choose between doing their job and doing their training, the job wins every time. The reskilling programmes that actually work start with a task-level skills assessment, understanding exactly which tasks are being automated, which are being elevated, and which entirely new categories are emerging.
The structural problem runs deeper still. Harvard researcher Rachel Lipson has noted that workforce development in the United States remains “chronically underfunded compared to peer nations,” despite no shortage of innovative training models or motivated workers. The gap between corporate reskilling promises and government investment in workforce infrastructure suggests that the burden of adaptation is being quietly shifted onto the workers least equipped to bear it.
There is also a fundamental tension in the reskilling narrative. If AI can automate entry-level tasks, and the industry's own leaders say it will do so within one to five years, then retraining workers for AI-adjacent roles only works if those roles exist in sufficient numbers and remain resistant to further automation. The World Economic Forum's Future of Jobs Report 2025, which drew on surveys of more than 1,000 leading global employers, projected 170 million new roles created and 92 million displaced between 2025 and 2030, a net gain of 78 million jobs. The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation's December 2025 analysis offered a more optimistic assessment, finding that through 2024, AI's job creation effects were outpacing its displacement effects, primarily because the AI boom generated significant employment in data centre construction, hardware manufacturing, and AI development itself. Construction jobs exposed to the data centre build-out increased by 216,000 since 2022. Whether this infrastructure-driven job creation can absorb the white-collar workers being displaced remains the central uncertainty of the decade.
The European Union's AI Act represents the most ambitious attempt yet to regulate artificial intelligence comprehensively. Its phased enforcement timeline began with prohibited AI practices taking effect in February 2025, followed by general-purpose AI transparency requirements in August 2025, with the bulk of remaining obligations due by 2 August 2026. Penalties for non-compliance are severe: up to 35 million euros or 7% of global annual turnover for the most serious violations.
But regulation alone cannot bridge the trust deficit revealed by the survey data. The Edelman Trust Barometer found that people place greater confidence in business than in government to use AI responsibly; across five markets surveyed, only 34% of respondents were comfortable with government's use of AI, compared with 46% for business overall and 56% for their own employer. Employees are 2.5 times more motivated to embrace AI when they feel their job security is increasing rather than decreasing. In the United Kingdom and the United States, two in three AI distrusters feel the technology is being forced upon them.
The JUST Capital survey found that 56% of the American public did not think companies should determine AI standards on their own, with majorities favouring co-regulation involving government, industry, universities, and civil society. In the United States, 73.7% of local policymakers agreed that AI should be regulated, up from 55.7% in 2022, according to the Stanford HAI AI Index. Support was stronger among Democrats (79.2%) than Republicans (55.5%), though both registered notable increases. The strongest backing was for stricter data privacy rules (80.4%), retraining for the unemployed (76.2%), and AI deployment regulations (72.5%).
What the public appears to want is not a choice between corporate self-governance and heavy-handed state regulation, but a model in which multiple stakeholders share responsibility. The EU AI Act, with its requirement that each member state establish at least one AI regulatory sandbox by August 2026, gestures toward this approach. Whether it will prove sufficient remains deeply uncertain, particularly given that the European standardisation bodies CEN and CENELEC have been unable to develop the required technical standards within the original timeline.
Return to the original question: are the companies building AI actually listening? The evidence suggests a complicated answer.
Anthropic's decision to conduct the 81,000-person study in the first place represents a form of listening that few competitors have matched. The company's willingness to publish findings that include substantial criticism of AI, including fears about dependency, cognitive degradation, and economic displacement, suggests a genuine interest in understanding user sentiment, not merely managing it. Amodei's repeated public warnings about job displacement, however self-serving critics may find them, place Anthropic in the unusual position of sounding the alarm about the very product it sells.
But listening and acting are different things. Anthropic continues to develop increasingly capable AI models, including systems that can work independently for nearly seven hours. The company tracks usage patterns showing a gradual shift from augmentation, where AI assists human workers, to automation, where AI replaces them. Currently, approximately 60% of Claude usage falls under augmentation and 40% under automation, but the latter is growing. Acknowledging a problem and accelerating the technology that causes it is a particular kind of cognitive dissonance.
The broader industry picture is less encouraging. The JUST Capital data showing that 98% of corporate leaders believe AI will boost productivity, against 47% of the public, suggests not a listening problem but a hearing problem: executives receive the information and discount it. The Harvard Business Review reported in November 2025 that leaders assume employees are excited about AI, and they are wrong. The Edelman finding that “someone like me” is on average twice as trusted as a chief executive or government leader to tell the truth about AI suggests that top-down corporate communications about AI's benefits are falling on increasingly deaf ears. Employees want to feel that their embrace of AI is voluntary, not mandatory; in the UK and the US, two in three AI distrusters feel it is being forced upon them.
There is also the matter of incentive structures. Block's share price soaring 24% after announcing AI-driven layoffs of 4,000 people sends an unmistakable signal to every public company: the market rewards efficiency gains, regardless of human cost. When Goldman Sachs economist Joseph Briggs says “the big story in 2026 in labor will be AI,” and projects that 6 to 7% of workers could be displaced over a decade-long adoption cycle, the framing remains fundamentally economic. The 81,000 voices in Anthropic's study were talking about something different. They were talking about meaning, agency, cognitive independence, and the fear that the tools designed to liberate them might instead diminish them.
If the industry were genuinely responsive to the concerns raised by its own users and the broader public, several things would need to change.
First, companies would need to move beyond the rhetoric of reskilling and invest directly in workforce transition infrastructure, not as a public relations exercise, but as a core business obligation. Amodei's proposed token tax of 3% of AI revenues directed toward displaced worker support represents one model. Whether a voluntary industry fund or a mandatory levy, the principle of producers bearing responsibility for displacement costs has precedent in industries from mining to pharmaceuticals.
Second, transparency about automation rates would need to become standard practice, not an occasional research publication. If companies know how much of their AI usage is augmenting human work versus replacing it, that data should be disclosed regularly, with the same rigour applied to financial reporting. The Anthropic study's 60/40 augmentation-to-automation split is valuable precisely because it is rare. Making such disclosures routine would give workers, policymakers, and the public the information they need to prepare.
Third, governance structures would need to include genuine public representation, not merely expert advisory boards populated by academics and industry insiders. The JUST Capital finding that the public wants AI profits distributed across lower prices, workforce support, and safety investment, rather than concentrated in shareholder returns, represents a fundamentally different vision of AI's purpose than the one currently driving corporate strategy.
Fourth, the industry would need to take the fear of cognitive dependency seriously, not as a communications challenge to be managed, but as a design challenge to be solved. The 16% of Anthropic's respondents who worried about losing the ability to think critically were articulating something profound: a suspicion that convenience and capability come at a cost that has not been honestly accounted for. Building AI systems that explicitly preserve and strengthen human cognitive skills, rather than gradually replacing them, would require a different approach to product design, one that prioritises human flourishing over engagement metrics.
None of these changes would be easy. None of them are inevitable. And therein lies the deeper lesson of the 81,000-voice study. The public is not anti-AI. Sixty-seven per cent of Anthropic's respondents viewed the technology positively. They are using it, benefiting from it, and simultaneously afraid of where it is heading. They are, in the study's own framing, living in the light and the shade at once.
The question is whether the companies that have collected this extraordinary data will treat it as a genuine mandate for change, or as another data point in a quarterly report. If the industry's response to 81,000 voices expressing fear about dependency, displacement, and diminished cognition is to build faster, automate more, and promise reskilling programmes that chronically underfunded governments cannot deliver, then the answer to the original question is clear. They heard the words. They simply chose not to listen.
Anthropic, “What 81,000 People Want and Don't Want from AI,” published March 2026. Available at: https://www.anthropic.com/81k-interviews
JUST Capital, in partnership with The Harris Poll and Robin Hood Foundation, “AI Sentiment Survey,” published December 2025. Reported by CNBC, 9 December 2025.
Pew Research Center, “How Americans View AI and Its Impact on Human Abilities, Society,” published September 2025. Available at: https://www.pewresearch.org/science/2025/09/17/how-americans-view-ai-and-its-impact-on-people-and-society/
Pew Research Center, “What the Data Says About Americans' Views of Artificial Intelligence,” published March 2026. Available at: https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2026/03/12/key-findings-about-how-americans-view-artificial-intelligence/
Pew Research Center, “Republicans, Democrats Now Equally Concerned About AI in Daily Life,” published November 2025. Available at: https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2025/11/06/republicans-democrats-now-equally-concerned-about-ai-in-daily-life-but-views-on-regulation-differ/
Edelman, “2025 Trust Barometer Flash Poll: Trust and Artificial Intelligence at a Crossroads,” published November 2025. Available at: https://www.edelman.com/trust/2025/trust-barometer/flash-poll-trust-artifical-intelligence
Stanford Human-Centred Artificial Intelligence Institute, “AI Index Report 2025: Public Opinion Chapter.” Available at: https://hai.stanford.edu/ai-index/2025-ai-index-report/public-opinion
World Economic Forum, “Future of Jobs Report 2025,” published January 2025.
Fortune, “CFOs Admit Privately That AI Layoffs Will Be 9x Higher This Year,” published 24 March 2026. Reporting on NBER working paper based on Duke CFO Survey.
CNN Business, “Why This Leading AI CEO Is Warning the Tech Could Cause Mass Unemployment,” Dario Amodei interview, published May 2025.
CNN Business, “Anthropic CEO: AI Is Advancing 'Very Quickly,' Could Soon Replace More Jobs,” published September 2025.
Fortune, “Microsoft AI Chief Gives It 18 Months for All White-Collar Work to Be Automated by AI,” Mustafa Suleyman interview, published February 2026.
Fortune, “Nvidia's Jensen Huang Says He Disagrees with Almost Everything Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei Says,” VivaTech 2025 coverage, published June 2025.
CNN Business, “Block Lays Off Nearly Half Its Staff Because of AI,” published February 2026.
Fortune, “Thousands of CEOs Just Admitted AI Had No Impact on Employment or Productivity,” published February 2026.
Challenger, Gray & Christmas, AI-related layoff data for 2025 and early 2026, reported across multiple outlets.
OpenAI, “AI at Work: Workforce Blueprint,” published October 2025. Available at: https://cdn.openai.com/global-affairs/f319686f-cf21-4b8e-b8bc-84dd9bbfb999/oai-workforce-blueprint-oct-2025.pdf
PwC, “Global AI Jobs Barometer 2025.”
Deloitte, “State of AI in the Enterprise Survey 2026.”
Harvard Business Review, “Leaders Assume Employees Are Excited About AI. They're Wrong,” published November 2025.
European Commission, “AI Act: Regulatory Framework for Artificial Intelligence.” Available at: https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/regulatory-framework-ai
Lloyd's Register Foundation and Gallup, “World Risk Poll 2024: Resilience in a Changing World.”
Ipsos, global AI sentiment surveys conducted in 2022 and 2024, as reported in the Stanford HAI AI Index 2025.
Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, AI job creation analysis, published December 2025.

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk