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
wystswolf

'What is your home?' A stranger asks.
Home (for you, my love)
Home?
No. Not what I once named it. Not walls, nor roads remembered by the body’s tired return.
Home has slipped its geography. It no longer answers to maps.
Listen, I will tell you, my friend, of a home with no address, no door, no fixed sky...
only a mind.
The mind.
Yours.
Where I wander like a pilgrim without sleep, touching the edges of your thoughts as if they were holy cloth.
I left a place once called home; a source, perhaps, a well I drank from without ever being quenched.
What is a home if the heart refuses it? If it does not loosen there, does not lay down its armor, does not breathe?
No—
Home is not where a man hangs his hat.
It is where he loses himself entirely.
And mine... mine is not here.
Not fully.
It is cleaved. like light through glass, like a prayer spoken in two languages—
here, and there, and in the terrible distance between.
You...
You are my home.
I have driven whole nights through the dark of myself to reach you,
whispering your name like a rhythm against the wheel, like a vow I could not break if I tried.
I would come to you in the hour when breath is deepest, when the world forgets itself—
not to wake you, but to feel you there, to exist in the same quiet as your dreaming body.
That would be enough. God— that would be everything.
There:
in that imagined room, in that borrowed closeness,
I am unafraid.
My demons do not follow. My doubts cannot cross the threshold.
There is only the heat of being known, the slow unraveling of all I pretend to be, the dangerous relief of becoming myself in the presence of you.
Amber-eyed, ocean-removed, twelve hundred leagues of absence and still
you are nearer to me than my own hands.
What is this place we make without touching?
What is this fire that asks nothing and takes everything?
I live there in the thought of you, in the shape of your name inside my mouth, in the quiet confession of wanting.
And one day—
if the world is merciful, or cruel enough
here and there will collapse into one,
and I will stand beside you with nothing left to lose,
and say, at last,
not as metaphor, not as longing—
but as truth:
I am home.
#poetry #wyst
from Blip-A
It’s been a while since I wanted to start a blog. Years really. I kept telling myself that I’m not ready, no one will care, I’m too busy etc. It really is just standard stuff when it comes to starting something new or when you put yourself out there. You make up any excuse just so you can delay the whole thing until you either forget about it or you just don’t care about it anymore. Pretty neat defence mechanism.
You try to justify the whole delay so you can plan out everything in advance, everything can be perfect so you don’t make a mistake. It doesn’t work like that. I should know this by now that I’m 34 years old. Year by year I feel like I lie less to myself but it still happens daily. At least I’m aware. That is something I guess.
Okay so like I said I’m a 34 year old guy. I was born in Hungary but I moved to England in 2014 when I was 23. To this day I don’t know if that decision was good or bad. Probably never will. Because of this, English is my second language and that means I’ll make mistakes. This was another excuse I liked to tell myself. I mean my English is not perfect but I can convey my thoughts pretty well I feel like and I hope it adds some uniqueness to my posts. I don’t want to run through all my stuff through an AI or spellchecker. I’ll obviously try to minimise mistakes especially spelling ones but I don’t want to sound like a robot. I honestly despise this whole new era of “everything is AI”.
The biggest thing that helped me get started was when I realised I don’t have to share this blog with anyone. No one needs to know who I am. It doesn’t matter if anyone reads it or not. I just like writing. I always have. I wrote very basic stories when I was a kid. Okay I admit they were heavily mimicking existing ones. I remember one that was basically Robinson Crusoe but written by a 12 year old.
I really started rambling here. I didn’t think I will write about that Robinson story, I honestly even forgot about it until 2 minutes ago. It is funny how much stuff comes to surface when you are trying to organise your thoughts so you can put them down in a readable fashion.
I have loads of interests and I like taking walks whilst I think about a lot of stuff. I used to have a car but I sold it. I walk to and from work too. I really don’t want to get lazy and I hate driving. I’ll write posts just about anything I think. My plan is to write at least one post per week. (I refuse to call my work an article because it feels pretentious.) I might even write multiple a day. Who knows? I just want to get going.
Without trying to give you the whole list below is the stuff I like the most from the top of my head. This doesn’t mean I’ll only write about these but perhaps it gives you an idea of what kind of guy I am.
Guitar – Especially Rock and Roll, Blues, Hard Rock, Metal (Been playing since 2007.)
Football and Formula 1 – Favourite teams: Arsenal and Ferrari. Pain. I know.
Books – Andy Weir is my favourite author.
Films – Mainly horror, action and science fiction. I have a newfound love for old black and white Japanese films. I like the Human Condition trilogy, okay?
Philosophy – I was always interested and last year I’ve found stoicism which is probably the one I read the most.
Obviously I like ton of other stuff too. Gaming, cooking, hanging out with people, whatever. You get the gist. I really don’t know why I’m trying to make this into a list.
Anyway I think it is time for me to say goodbye and I hope, future me will be very happy that I started this blog.
Thanks,
Blip-A
from folgepaula
I found a moth inside my elevator. I scooped it up with my hands shaped like a bowl and brought it out to my balcony. Then I started imagining what it would tell its moth friends afterward. Like, how she (yes, I am calling her SHE) suddenly entered this brightly lit moving box and got trapped there, no water, no food, and every now and then a giant would appear, absolutely terrifying her.
Until one day or some hours, she cannot really precise, but it felt like an eternity, a giant with long hair and a weird looking white horse (that's Livi in case you missed the ref) showed up, grabbed her with giant hands, and everything went dark again. She was sure that was the end. But then the hands opened, and there she was, at the highest height she's ever been in life, she was back outside, but outside this time was so enormous, she could see all the buildings and the city from above, all this happening as if she’d been teleported to freedom. Her moth friends would probably call the whole thing an abduction.
She’d be invited onto moth podcasts to share her testimony. The hater moths would say, “Fake. She just wants attention, next thing you know, she’s auditioning for Too Hot to Handle”, etc. Eventually, she’d write a book compiling testimonies from other moths who claim to have been abducted, trying to find patterns. Some would say, “My giant had short hair.” Others: “Mine was bald.” Some would insist there was no giant at all, just a huge transparent glass thing, and at the bottom, something that looked like a piece of Spar flyers. Other moths would never swallow the theory of the giant jar with Spar flyers at the bottom. “This is obviously a marketing move from Spar!” they would say.
Damn it's so hard to be a believable moth.
/Apr26
I recently watched the seventh season, second episode of Star Trek: DS9, Shadows and Symbols. The character Benny Russell (played by Avery Brooks) is in a psychiatric room writing his story on the walls. He does this because the doctors refuse to give him paper.
A psychiatrist, Dr. Wykoff (played by Casey Biggs) offers Benny a paint roller to erase his writings so he can be “cured” of his delusions. I won’t spoil any more so go watch. After watching that episode it gave me an idea.
Inside my home I have blue, white, and yellow walls. What color wall would I choose? Or would I write on all of them? Unfortunately, white and yellow walls are too bright even in low lighting. Blue walls are easier on my eyes and still bright enough when there’s not enough light.
However, all of this doesn’t matter. The real question is: how long can my kids and I write on the walls before my wife goes berserk and makes me clean and repaint them?
#writing #blue #ds9 #startrek #walls #white #yellow
from
🌾
#shuacantikharem
Sialan kan Wonwoo jadi kepikiran.
Kalo dibilang apa Wonwoo nyesel nyium bibir Joshua karena sekarang dia jadi buronan di kalangan temen-temennya sendiri (dan entah berapa juta manusia di luar sana yang Wonwoo nggak kenal tapi sama keselnya karena bibir Joshua udah direbut cowok anonim), jawabannya tentu aja enggak ya gaes yaaaaa ☝️
Wonwoo NGGAK AKAN pernah nyesel karena KAPAN LAGI BISA NYIUM BIBIR JOSHUA HONG WOI, MAU DUNIA KEBELAH KEK BODO AMAT YANG PENTING DIA UDAH NGERASAIN BIBIRNYA JOSHUA JISOO HONG‼️‼️‼️‼️
(eit nggak usah ngiri☝️)
Cuma, yeah, tetep aja Wonwoo kepikiran. Kalo reaksi temen-temennya aja udah radikal begitu, apakah bakal ada ekstrimis-ekstrimis lain yang siap nyulik Jeon Wonwoo pas tau dirinya lah perebut ciuman Joshua, terus Wonwoo dihanyutkan ke sungai Gangga? Ato, worse, ditunjuk jadi duta MBG?? 😨 (ih najis)
Dikernyitkannya dahi, auto hidung bangirnya ikut mengerut. Wonwoo berjalan memasuki perpustakaan di area pusat kampus seperti tiap sore dengan kedua lengan melipat di dada. Parasnya kelewat serius buat isi kepalanya yang random saat ini. Kayaknya better Wonwoo agak jaga jarak sama Joshua deh. Nerapin beberapa rules personal yang ketat. Jangan deket-deket biar nggak khilaf ciuman lagi. Jangan berduaan doang di ruang sepi. Jangan—
“Ikh...”
...Yaelah. Langsung muncul itu Joshua-nya depan mata. Baru juga mau dijauhin bjirrrrr. KENAPA SIH??!! SEGITU PENGENNYA SEMESTA INI COMBLANGIN WONWOO SAMA JOSHUA, HAH???!!! YAUDAH DEH KALO MAKSA MAH!!!
Wonwoo menghampirinya. Tapi Joshua juga nggak nyadarin kedatangan Wonwoo sih. Dia tengah sibuk berjinjit sambil ngulurin lengan setinggi mungkin, berusaha menggapai salah satu buku tebal di rak paling atas. Wonwoo diem aja ngeliatin dia dari koridor. Kayak biasa, perpustakaan di jam bubaran kampus gini udah tergolong lengang. Hampir nggak ada orang lain di sekitar mereka. Mungkin ada 1-2 orang yang ngumpet, tapi nggak tau deh lagi pada ngumpet di mana tepatnya.
Joshua berusaha jinjit lebih tinggi lagi. Suatu pemandangan yang separo bikin Wonwoo pengen ketawa soalnya Joshua lucuuuuuu bangettt, separonya lagi kesian pengen bantuin. Padahal beda tinggi badan Wonwoo sama Joshua juga nggak jauh-jauh banget, tapi mayanlah, selisih tinggi itu berperan besar dalam situasi kayak gini. Sementara itu, Joshua udah gemeter sebadan-badan, berusaha mengerahkan seluruh inci tingginya biar tangannya nyampe ke buku itu. “Dikit, uh, lagi...,” gumamnya tanpa sadar.
Alangkah kagetnya Joshua pas ada tangan lain menjulur santai, mengambil buku yang dia maksud tanpa kesulitan sama sekali. Arah pandangnya berputar dari lengan ke wajah orang itu yang lagi dongak kayak dia sebelumnya. Jeon Wonwoo. Lengkap dengan kacamata bingkai hitamnya dan wajah serius nan ganteng yang akhir-akhir ini menghantui pikiran Joshua. Salting, Joshua pun perlahan berbalik badan, menatap Wonwoo yang masih berkutat sama buku di rak atas dan membiarkan degup jantung nggak beraturan dalam dada serta rona merah melalap kedua pipinya.
Joshua menelisik satu-persatu fakta: mereka berduaan (lagi) + semburat jingga dari celah jendela jatuh menerangi perpustakaan sore itu + lorong rak di pojokan yang sunyi sepi + jarak tubuh mereka terlalu dekat + Wonwoo tetep seganteng pas nyium dia waktu itu. Deg degan, Joshua lalu memejamkan mata dan mengangkat sedikit dagunya.
Posisi Joshua yang seperti itulah yang Wonwoo temui saat dia akhirnya menunduk, berniat memberikan buku yang baru dia ambilkan. Namun, niat tersebut sirna seketika. Joshua dalam kukungannya jelas menantikan sesuatu, meminta sesuatu dari Wonwoo dengan tindakannya. Degukan ludah membuat jakun Wonwoo naik-turun. Dia yakin dia tau apa yang Joshua minta darinya, tetapi dia nggak berani ngambil kesimpulan segitu cepetnya.
Masa sih...? Masa cowok secantik ini—makhluk seindah, sesempurna, se-enggak nyata ini—nungguin ciuman dari Wonwoo?
Detik berlalu, meleleh menjadi menit. Nggak kunjung datang sentuhan yang diharapkan, Joshua (dengan penuh tanda tanya) perlahan membuka sedikit celah mata, mencari tau di mana kah keberadaan Wonwoo. Rupanya dia masih ada di hadapannya, masih mengukung Joshua, memojokkannya ke rak buku, tapi sekarang dia menatap Joshua lekat-lekat. Tatap mereka bersirobok dan, spontan, Joshua merasa malu. “Ah, ini, mm,” terbata-bata, sembari mukanya begitu merah bagai tomat kematengan. “A-aku enggak—”
“Mejemin mata gitu maksudnya apaan nih?” seloroh Wonwoo, sengaja. Sumpah deh, Joshua Hong itu kenapa bisa begitu gampangnya mancing sisi jail Wonwoo sih? Minta digodain banget?? “Lo nungguin gue ngapain?”
Makin dan makin kebakar aja pipi Joshua. “Eng-enggak kok, nggak gitu...,” balasnya dalam gumaman rendah, saking lembutnya sampe hampir nggak kedengeran andaikan perpustakaan lagi nggak sesepi itu. “Cuma...muka kamu deket banget, aku kan jadi keinget...lagi...”
...Sumpah.
Cantik. Cantiknya pake banget. Cantiknya nggak ngotak. Wonwoo harap Joshua sadar sepenuhnya kalo dia tuh cantik luar biasa dan bahwa dia berhak banget dipuja-puji, disembah bak ratu berlian pemilik hati para budak cinta. Joshua, sumpah lah...
“Terus, emm, jadi aku mikir apa kamu nggak mau—”
Wonwoo majuin kepala buat nutup mulut Joshua pake bibirnya. Refleks, juga dengan sentakan napas, Joshua mejamin mata lagi. Ciuman itu ringan. Hanya bibir ketemu bibir buat beberapa detik. Suara kecupan lah yang tertinggal kala kedua bibir dipisahkan paksa.
Bagai terhipnotis, Wonwoo mengelusi bibir atas Joshua. Lembut. Merah delima. Sedikit lengket, mungkin sisa lip balm yang masih menempel. Mata yang sayu. Pipi yang merona. Bener-bener secantik—bahkan jauh lebih cantik—di foto-foto majalah itu. Ibu jari Wonwoo turun ke bibir bawah Joshua, menekannya sedikit hingga terbuka, memperlihatkan geligi dan sekelebat ujung lidahnya. Turun lagi hingga membelai rahang dan menangkup dagu. Bisikan yang semakin rendah, semakin berat.
“Cantik...”
Dagu Joshua diangkat. Tangan Wonwoo yang lowong bertumpu pada rak di belakang Joshua. Nggak bisa menahan diri, Wonwoo kembali mencium bibir manis itu. Alih-alih Wonwoo merundukkan badan sedemikian rupa, kini Joshua lah yang harus menegakkan lehernya agar bisa mencapai bibir cowok itu. Dia pasrah, membiarkan Wonwoo terus menerus memberikan kecupan-kecupan kecil pada bibirnya. Sesekali, tautan bibir mereka sedikit lama, sedikit nggak rela harus terlepas meski sedetik kemudian akan langsung terpaut lagi.
Hati Wonwoo bagai melambung ke atas awan. Joshua Hong yang diidamkan cowok dan cewek sekampus kini berada di bawahnya, dengan bibir begitu penurut mengikuti gerak bibirnya. Wonwoo melepaskan ciuman dengan napas agak memburu, berniat memberikan kesempatan pada Joshua untuk menenangkan diri. Mungkin dia kelewat tergesa-gesa. Mungkin Joshua overwhelmed dan butuh time out untuk mengambil napas.
Di luar dugaan, Joshua malah menaikkan kacamata Wonwoo ke rambutnya, merangkulkan kedua lengannya ke leher Wonwoo dan menarik bagian belakang kepala cowok itu untuk menyatukan bibir mereka kembali. Kali ini bukan lagi kecupan naif yang mereka bagi, melainkan segala yang selama ini dibendung baik oleh Wonwoo maupun oleh Joshua. Bibir Joshua mencumbuinya, secara aktif mengajak Wonwoo untuk melepaskan segala hasrat yang dimilikinya. Ciuman demi ciuman yang mereka bagi semakin panas. Tangan Wonwoo menemukan pinggang Joshua, merangkulnya erat dengan harapan menghapus memori akan Seungcheol di sana. Tangannya yang lain menelusuri punggung Joshua melalui bahan kemejanya yang halus. Bagian depan tubuh mereka menempel nggak kalah lekat dari sepasang bibir.
“Mmh,” suara-suara geraman tertahan menemani bunyi cumbuan yang basah. Di satu momen, Wonwoo menggigit perlahan bibir Joshua, berbagi helaan napas bersama, sebelum memasukkan lidahnya ke celah yang tercipta. “Hng!” Joshua mendesah agak kencang, tapi untungnya lidah Wonwoo keburu menemukan lidahnya dan berhasil membungkam keributan tersebut. Decakan terdengar. Peluh menitik di kening Wonwoo. Kaki Joshua hampir nggak tahan untuk mengalungi pinggul Wonwoo, mengundang cowok itu untuk mencumbuinya terus seperti ini di sudut terpencil perpustakaan sampai malam turun.
“Uhuk, uhuk!”
Suara batuk seseorang. Bagai disiram air dingin, Wonwoo langsung melepas Joshua, hampir-hampir melompat mundur menjauhinya. Segera diturunkannya kacamata agar indra penglihatannya kembali. Dia memandangi Joshua—bibir bengkak dan basah, mata sayu, wajah memerah, serta napas memburu—lalu meneguk ludah. Dia. Dia yang udah bikin Joshua kayak gini. Jeon Wonwoo.
Tapi,
nggak di sini juga anjir. Kalo ada yang liat, gimana? Terus kalo sampe kesebar rumor kalo dia lah cowok yang udah nyium Joshua, gimana? Minimal digebukin, lebih mungkin digantung terbalik di pohon beringin di halaman belakang kampus. Screw that, nggak peduli nasib dirinya deh, tapi nasib Joshua? Wonwoo nggak mau kalo nama Joshua jadi jelek gegara ulahnya. Dia suka Joshua. Suka banget. Cinta. Karena cinta, makanya—
“Ah, Wonu—”
—sebelum Joshua sempet ngomong apapun, Wonwoo udah berbalik dan pergi (sambil doa nggak ada yang nyadar akan jendolan di celananya, amen), meninggalkan Joshua yang berusaha menenangkan dirinya sendirian sambil menyentuh bibirnya, masih terlena oleh ciuman bergairah dari cowok itu.
Terhalang oleh rak-rak buku, Joshua nggak sadar sama sekali kalo ada orang lain yang merhatiin mereka sejak bercumbu tadi. Orang lain yang menyeringai jahil karena suatu rencana udah terangkai manis di dalam kepalanya. Orang lain yang juga merupakan 'musuh' Joshua Hong akhir-akhir ini.
from drpontus
Instead of only criticizing “AI” (when in fact, the commercial LLM services are really the main issue), here is a more optimistic list of things I support 💪 (followed by a list of bad smells 🦨 in AI):
💪 Smarter machine learning models that do more with less: less data, less energy, less waste.
💪 Building models that are better, not just bigger: reliable, effective, and resource-conscious.
💪 Ethical innovation: training AI without exploiting creators or trampling intellectual property rights.
💪 Practical AI use cases that truly help people and society, not just corporate bottom lines.
💪 Sustainable business models that support fair, circular industries instead of endless extraction.
💪 Respect for language and culture – preserve diversity, don’t erase it.
...therefore, I stand against:
🦨 Bloated generative AI systems with bottomless appetites for data, energy, and water.
🦨 The expanding footprint of data centers swallowing land and resources.
🦨 Predatory tactics to grab training data at the expense of human rights.
🦨 Turning AI into a tool for surveillance capitalism and exploitation.
🦨 Pretending to care about AI safety while dodging real accountability.
🦨 Systems that funnel power to a few tech giants, making the rest of us renters in their digital empires.
🦨 Human suffering in AI’s hidden labor force – those forced to filter the internet’s worst as cheap, disposable labor (usually in the Global South).
🦨 Schemes to dodge taxes and skirt regulations, while claiming to build the future.
🦨 Generative AI services aren’t tools – they’re just content repositories, trained on a vast and murky pool of internet data. But the internet is a mess: full of errors, bias, satire, and outright lies. These systems can’t tell truth from fiction, and they strip away context and source credibility. There’s no metadata to distinguish fact from sarcasm or disinformation. It all looks the same to an AI. That’s a disaster waiting to happen.
🧠 The most sustainable, creative, and ethical model isn’t an algorithm. It’s the human brain. If you want art, writing, or ideas, hire a human being. You’ll get quality and originality, not a regurgitated mashup from a statistical prediction machine.
The right place for AI is in support – statistical prediction, maintenance, and optimization. That's proper tools. But generative AI services won’t help us work less or better. They’ll push us to go faster, sacrificing quality, creating stress, and robbing us of agency. To build a future centered on humans, we must focus on human well-being – not just on making tech billionaires richer.
(btw, I have nothing against skunks, the icon just represents “bad smells” 😀)
from
Micropoemas
Qué de la perfección y el disimulo, si hasta las utopías se fueron en la bolsa de la basura. Ya es perfecto lo imperfecto.
from
Micropoemas
El fuego se apodera de todo, crepita la sal, la carne se hace humo, aviva la llama. Más fuego, añade cuerpo.
from
Internetbloggen
När internet började bli tillgängligt för en bredare publik under 1990-talet uppstod ett behov av enklare sätt att publicera innehåll. Tidiga webbplatser var ofta statiska och krävde teknisk kunskap för att uppdateras, men gradvis växte idéer fram om mer personliga och kontinuerligt uppdaterade sidor. Ur detta föddes bloggarna – en blandning av dagbok, publiceringsplattform och offentlig röst, där individer kunde dela tankar, länkar och berättelser i ett löpande flöde.
Samtidigt uppstod ett praktiskt problem: hur skulle man hålla koll på alla dessa uppdateringar utan att behöva besöka varje sida manuellt? Lösningen blev RSS, ett standardiserat sätt att distribuera innehåll automatiskt till läsare. Med hjälp av RSS kunde användare prenumerera på sina favoritbloggar och få nya inlägg samlade på ett ställe, vilket gjorde internet både mer överskådligt och mer levande. Tillsammans lade bloggar och RSS grunden för ett mer dynamiskt, användardrivet nät – långt innan sociala medier tog över scenen.
Under tidigt 2000-tal var bloggar själva ryggraden i det sociala internet. Plattformar som Tumblr, Blogger och WordPress gjorde det enkelt för vem som helst att publicera tankar, guider och dagboksinlägg. RSS, via format som RSS och Atom, blev ett slags distributionslager ovanpå detta: istället för att besöka varje blogg kunde man samla allt i en läsare och få uppdateringar i realtid. Det var en ganska decentraliserad och användarkontrollerad modell.
Sedan kom sociala medier och förändrade spelplanen. Plattformar som Facebook, Twitter och senare Instagram tog över mycket av det som bloggar tidigare stod för. Det blev enklare och snabbare att publicera kortare innehåll, och algoritmer började styra vad vi ser istället för kronologiska flöden. I den miljön tappade RSS sin synlighet, inte för att tekniken slutade fungera, utan för att den inte passade in i affärsmodellen hos de stora plattformarna.
Men det betyder inte att bloggar och RSS försvunnit. Snarare har de blivit mer nischade och ibland mer professionella. Nyhetsbrevstjänster som Substack och Ghost bygger i praktiken vidare på samma idéer: direkt relation mellan skribent och läsare, utan mellanhänder. Många av dessa erbjuder fortfarande RSS-flöden, även om de inte alltid lyfts fram lika tydligt.
Samtidigt finns det en tyst renässans för RSS bland mer tekniskt intresserade användare. Verktyg som Feedly och Inoreader används för att återta kontrollen över informationsflödet i en tid där algoritmer ofta upplevs som brusiga eller manipulativa. I en värld av “doomscrolling” blir RSS nästan ett motgift: du väljer själv vad du vill följa, och inget annat.
Bloggandet i sig har också förändrats snarare än minskat. Mycket av det som tidigare hade varit blogginlägg dyker idag upp som långa trådar på sociala medier, videor på YouTube eller poddar. Formen har skiftat, men drivkraften att publicera och dela perspektiv är densamma.
Så frågan är inte riktigt om bloggar och RSS är på väg bort, utan om de har slutat vara mainstream. De har gått från att vara standard för alla till att bli verktyg för de som aktivt väljer ett mer öppet och kontrollerat internet. Och just därför finns det något nästan tidlöst i dem. När pendeln svänger bort från centraliserade plattformar brukar intresset för öppna standarder och egna publiceringsytor komma tillbaka.
Det dyker också upp nya tjänster för att följa bloggar så som Blogflock. Så än är nog inte bloggar och RSS utdöda.
Det har också kommit mer nischade bloggplattformar. Nouw är en svensk sådan, den växte fram i en tid när bloggandet redan hade blivit etablerat, men höll på att förändras. Den lanserades 2015 som en vidareutveckling och omprofilering av det tidigare communityt Nattstad, med ambitionen att skapa något mer än bara ett tekniskt verktyg för att skriva inlägg.
Till skillnad från klassiska bloggplattformar fungerade Nouw inte bara som en plats där man publicerar texter, utan också som ett slags digitalt magasin. Bloggarna blev en del av ett större nätverk där innehåll kunde lyftas fram, kurateras och nå en bredare publik. Det gjorde att plattformen fick drag av både socialt nätverk och mediekanal, snarare än enbart ett publiceringsverktyg.
Framtiden för bloggar och RSS är svår att spika fast, men mycket pekar på att de inte försvinner utan snarare fortsätter leva i nya former. I takt med att fler tröttnar på algoritmstyrda flöden och centraliserade plattformar kan intresset för öppnare lösningar öka igen, där användaren själv styr vad som konsumeras. Tekniker som RSS finns redan på plats och används fortfarande bakom kulisserna i många tjänster, även när det inte märks utåt. Samtidigt kan nya sätt att publicera innehåll – som nyhetsbrev, poddar och egna plattformar – fortsätta sudda ut gränsen för vad en “blogg” egentligen är. Kanske blir framtidens blogg mindre synlig som begrepp, men desto mer närvarande som idé: en direkt kanal mellan skapare och läsare, utan att någon annan bestämmer vad som ska nå fram.
from An Open Letter
I did an over two hour leg workout with a ton of drop sets and failure and I feel good. I do believe that I have a life worth living and I would like to experience it and I’m grateful for all of the additional chances that I get to be appreciative for what I have.
from
Talk to Fa
She often shares pictures and videos of her daughter. The baby is 8 months old. I get the impression that she is more entertained by the baby than gently loving her. She is learning to love, to love herself by loving her daughter. The baby is filling the mother's lack of love. She gave birth to a girl rather than a boy because the girl is the healer for the mother.
from Douglas Vandergraph
Before sunrise, while the lights of El Paso still glowed beneath the dark shape of the Franklin Mountains, Jesus was alone in quiet prayer above the city on Scenic Drive. The air was cool in a way it would not stay for long, and down below, windows were still lit in apartments where people had not really slept, kitchens were already alive with worry, and a thousand private battles were waking up before the sun. A woman named Teresa Lucero was sitting in her old Corolla outside her apartment in Segundo Barrio with both hands locked around the steering wheel because she could not make herself go inside yet. She had just come off a night shift at Hotel Paso del Norte. Her feet hurt. Her eyes burned. There was a folded rent notice on the passenger seat that she had read three times and still hated more each time. Her father was inside with a bandaged foot that was not healing. Her son had been out most of the night again. She had run out of soft ways to say hard things a long time ago, and she knew the second she opened that apartment door, whatever patience she had left was going to be tested before dawn even broke. Above the city Jesus prayed in silence, steady and near, while below him Teresa sat in the dark and whispered something she would never have admitted out loud in front of anybody. “I cannot keep doing this.”
When she finally went in, the apartment already felt crowded with strain. The television was on with the volume low. Her father, Manuel, sat in his recliner in an old T-shirt and jeans, awake too early again because pain had become his alarm clock. Her son Mateo was stretched out on the couch in yesterday’s clothes, not sleeping, just staring at nothing with that flat look he wore now whenever he wanted the world to know nobody could get through to him. The air smelled faintly of instant coffee, menthol rub, and the fried onions from the downstairs neighbor’s kitchen that always seemed to drift up through the vent no matter the hour. Teresa saw the empty pill bottle on the table before she saw anything else. She picked it up and looked at her father. Manuel looked away. Then she looked at Mateo, because it had been his one job to stop by the pharmacy while she worked. He pushed himself up and rubbed his face and told her they had closed early. Teresa asked why he had not gone sooner. Mateo told her he had other things to do. She laughed once, but it was not because anything was funny. It was the sound that came out of a person whose nerves were too tired to hold a real response. Her father muttered that he could go without a day or two. Teresa snapped that this was exactly why nothing ever got better in that house. Mateo fired back that he was sick of being talked to like he was ten. Manuel told them both to stop. Nobody did. The room kept tightening until Teresa looked at her son and said the thing she regretted the second it left her mouth. “Every day with you feels heavier than it should.” Mateo stood up so fast the couch cushion slapped the frame. Hurt crossed his face, but it hardened before it could stay there. He grabbed his keys, said, “Then carry it without me,” and walked out.
Manuel shut his eyes like a man listening to a storm beat against thin glass. Teresa stood in the middle of the room holding the empty pill bottle and could feel her heart pounding with that sick mix of anger and shame that made both of them hotter. She wanted to run after Mateo. She wanted to apologize. She wanted to tell him she had not meant it the way it sounded, except some part of her knew there had been enough truth inside it to make the apology more complicated than one sentence. But Manuel had an appointment at University Medical Center of El Paso in less than an hour. The foot wound from a cut he should have treated weeks earlier had gotten ugly. His sugar was never stable. His pride was always stronger than his judgment. Teresa set the pill bottle down, went to the sink, splashed water on her face, and stared at herself in the cracked mirror above it. She was forty-two years old, but some mornings she looked older than her own father. Not because life had been unusually cruel, but because it had been relentless. That was a different kind of wearing down. It did not always leave dramatic scars. It just took the softness out of a person one hard week at a time. She dried her face, changed her shirt, helped Manuel to the car, and drove east as the first light spread over the mountains and the city began to show itself.
By then Jesus had already risen from prayer and was walking down from the overlook toward the waking streets. The city opened around him piece by piece. Trucks rolled out. Coffee shops unlocked their doors. A bus hissed at the curb. In San Jacinto Plaza, a maintenance worker pushed water across the pavement while a few early people moved quietly through the square with the look of those who had somewhere to be before they had the strength to get there. Near one of the benches sat an older man in a pressed button-down shirt holding a small plastic grocery bag and staring straight ahead. He was dressed as if he were on his way to something important, but he had the hollow, paused look of a man who had left the house before he was ready to sit in his own silence. Jesus sat beside him without hurry. The man glanced over with the mild suspicion of someone from a city who knew how to be careful around strangers, but the suspicion did not last. His name was Victor. His wife had died eleven months earlier, and in all that time he had learned how to answer every practical question people asked him while avoiding the real one nobody knew how to say. Jesus asked if he had eaten. Victor shook his head. He said he was not hungry. Jesus looked at the grocery bag and said softly, “Grief can make a person call numbness peace.” Victor’s fingers tightened around the plastic handles. He did not cry. Men like him had spent too many years believing tears were what happened after privacy, not during it. But his face changed. He looked down at his shoes and said, “I keep leaving the house so I don’t have to hear how quiet it is.” Jesus did not fill the air with many words. He only said, “You do not have to outlast love to survive loss.” Victor sat there with that sentence like it had found the exact locked place in him it was meant for. When he finally looked up, something in his eyes had loosened.
Traffic was thicker by the time Teresa got to UMC. Manuel moved slowly from the car to the building, irritated at being helped and unable to refuse it. Inside, the waiting room had the same tired look most hospital waiting rooms carried no matter the city. People sat with pain, worry, paperwork, and the strange patience that comes from knowing nobody can tell you exactly how long you will wait. Teresa checked her father in, sat beside him, and called the pharmacy. Then she called her manager to ask if she could come in late that evening if the appointment ran long. Then she checked her bank balance and wished she had not. Mateo had not answered her text. She typed three different versions of an apology and deleted all of them. Manuel watched her out of the corner of his eye and said he was fine. It was the kind of lie older men said when their body had been telling the truth for months. Teresa went to get him water and stood at the vending machine longer than she needed to because the act of staring at rows of snacks felt easier than going back and sitting under fluorescent lights with all her thoughts. She had only a few crumpled bills and coins. She started to buy one bottle of water and one packet of crackers, then stopped and put the crackers back. Hunger had become another thing she knew how to postpone. When the bottle dropped into the tray, she bent to get it, and when she stood, Jesus was there beside the machine as if he had always been in that hallway.
He did not startle her because there was nothing abrupt about him. He only looked at her with the steady calm of someone who was seeing more than the face she was making. Teresa gave him the quick guarded glance women gave unknown men when they had spent enough time in the world to learn caution. Jesus did not step too close. He asked if she was waiting on someone. Teresa said, “My father.” Then, because exhaustion had stripped most of the social polish off her, she added, “And I’m late for three problems I can’t fix.” Jesus nodded like a man who understood the shape of that better than she did herself. She turned to leave, but the machine knocked loose another packet and dropped it into the tray. Teresa frowned and looked down. Crackers. She had not paid for them. She straightened and said there was a mistake. Jesus said, “Take them.” She answered too fast, “I didn’t ask for them.” His face did not change. “Not everything given to you is something you have to earn first.” Teresa stared at him, annoyed at the way that sentence landed harder than it should have. She said, “You don’t know me.” Jesus replied, “You have been carrying so much for so long that kindness feels suspicious.” She gave a tired little shake of her head, snatched the crackers because leaving them there would have drawn more attention than taking them, and walked back to her father with the unsettled feeling that comes when a stranger has said one true thing too close to the bone.
Manuel noticed her mood right away, but he said nothing. His generation had many ways of loving people without prying into them. When the nurse finally called his name, Teresa helped him up and followed him down the hall. The nurse was a woman in her thirties named Daniela Ruiz. She moved quickly, spoke clearly, and had the look of somebody who had been trying to keep a sinking boat afloat for too many weeks without admitting she was tired. She was not cold by nature. She was worn thin by repetition. Another chart. Another wound. Another patient who had waited too long. Another family member carrying more stress than they knew how to name. Daniela cleaned Manuel’s foot with practiced care and asked questions in the brisk rhythm of somebody trying to get through necessary work before the next interruption arrived. Manuel answered with quiet embarrassment. Teresa jumped in to fill the gaps. Daniela began explaining how serious it had become and how close he was getting to more damage if he did not follow instructions. Manuel stared at the wall. Teresa’s shame rose again, not because she had done nothing, but because she had done everything she knew and still felt accused by the outcome. Daniela was not trying to be unkind, but fatigue can sharpen the edges of a voice without permission. Jesus stood in the doorway for a moment, unseen by the rush that ruled the clinic and yet more present than any noise in it. He looked at Daniela the way he had looked at Teresa, as if he could see the place where compassion and depletion were straining against each other inside her. When Daniela stepped into the hall to grab supplies, Jesus spoke to her. “People can feel when you are treating them like work you need to finish.” Daniela turned, more startled than Teresa had been. She had not even heard him approach. Her first response was defense. She said she was doing her job. Jesus answered, “You are. But your heart is disappearing while you do it.” Her jaw tightened. He did not accuse her any further. He only added, “You are allowed to be tired without turning numb.” Something flickered across her face. Not agreement yet. Just recognition.
At almost the exact same hour, Mateo was sitting on a low concrete wall near Chamizal National Memorial with a can of warm soda and the kind of anger that felt better than grief because at least anger gave the body something to do. He had driven with nowhere in mind until he got tired of driving and parked. He had ignored three calls from his mother and one from a friend asking if he could cover a shift at a tire shop off Alameda. He was nineteen, but lately he had felt both older and younger than that, depending on the hour. He had left community college halfway through the semester after telling everybody it was temporary. He had said he needed to help at home. That had been partly true. The fuller truth was uglier. His grandfather had gotten sicker. Money had gotten tighter. His father, who had not lived with them in years, had called twice with promises and vanished again. The future Mateo had pictured for himself had not exploded all at once. It had thinned out. That was harder to explain. People knew how to comfort catastrophe. They were less useful with erosion. He was staring at the dirt with his elbows on his knees when Jesus sat down on the wall a little distance away. Mateo looked over, expecting either a question or one of those false-friendly openings strangers used when they wanted something. Jesus only looked ahead for a while. Children’s voices carried faintly from farther off in the park. A bus moved in the distance. Wind dragged softly through the grass. Mateo finally said, “You waiting for somebody?” Jesus replied, “I am here for people who are trying to disappear while they are still alive.” Mateo gave a short bitter laugh. “Then you got a big job.” Jesus turned and looked at him fully. “You have been wearing anger because it feels stronger than hurt.” Mateo’s face closed. “You don’t know anything about me.” Jesus said, “You miss the boy you were before disappointment became your daily language.” Mateo looked away fast and swallowed. He was not ready for that sentence. Not yet.
Back in the clinic, Teresa was sitting beside her father after the dressing had been changed and the instructions had been repeated more than once. Manuel was irritated with the whole thing. Teresa was irritated with him for being irritated. Neither one had the energy left to say what they really felt, which was that both of them were scared. When Daniela came back with a printed sheet and began going over medications, Jesus was still nearby. The room felt different, though nobody there could have explained why. Manuel listened more carefully than usual. Teresa did too. Daniela’s tone softened without her noticing. It was not dramatic. No heavenly light. No public moment. Just a room where gentleness began to return to people who had been operating without it. Manuel asked a quiet question about whether he would lose the foot. The fear in his voice was small but obvious. Teresa had not heard that tone from her father since her mother’s funeral. Daniela looked at him and answered honestly without stripping the answer of hope. “Not if you start taking this seriously now.” Then, because Jesus was nearer than her own fatigue in that moment, she pulled up a chair instead of standing over him. She explained things again in a slower voice. She asked Teresa whether she had help at home. Teresa almost laughed at the idea. Help. The word sounded expensive. She said they were managing. Jesus looked at her, and she knew right away he did not believe the lie, but she was too tired to care whether a stranger did.
When the appointment ended, Manuel insisted he could walk out on his own. Teresa let him, but only because she had to stop at the billing desk and then the pharmacy window. A woman with a crying toddler was in front of her. The line crawled. Her phone buzzed with a message from her manager asking whether she could still make tonight’s shift. Then another message came through from the landlord reminding her about the overdue amount. Then another from Mateo, and for one hopeful second she thought it might be the apology she wanted more than she had admitted. It was only five words. Stop calling me. I’m fine. Teresa read the text and felt something sink inside her. Fine. People said fine when they did not want to be found. People said fine when they were already halfway gone emotionally. People said fine when they were angry enough to wound and too hurt to explain it. By the time she finished at the window and hurried back outside, Manuel was no longer sitting where she had left him. Teresa checked the nearest chairs, then the restroom, then the entrance. Panic moved through her body in a fast hard line. Her father did not move quickly anymore, but fear has a way of putting old men on their feet. She asked the security desk if they had seen him. They had not. She called his cell phone, though she already knew he often forgot to charge it. Straight to voicemail. She stood under the bright dry El Paso sun with her purse sliding off her shoulder, the pharmacy bag in one hand, and the feeling rising inside her that if one more person she loved slipped out of reach today, she was going to come apart in public.
Jesus found Manuel at a bus stop not far from the hospital. The old man was sitting with both hands on the top of his cane, staring at traffic with the ashamed look of a father who knows he has become one more burden in the house of his own child. Jesus sat beside him. Manuel glanced over, and unlike Teresa, he did not look suspicious. Older people sometimes trusted calm faster than younger ones because they had spent more years learning what was false. Manuel said, almost to himself, that he used to be the one who drove everybody everywhere. Jesus answered, “You still think love only counts when you are the strong one in the room.” Manuel looked down at his bandaged foot. “A man doesn’t want his daughter washing dishes at midnight and dragging him to clinics in the morning.” Jesus said, “A man also does not need to make himself impossible to help just to feel dignified.” Manuel smiled despite himself, because he knew the sentence had caught him. He asked if Jesus was from around there. Jesus looked out toward the city and said, “I know this place well enough to know how many people in it are tired of acting tougher than they are.” Manuel chuckled once, but the sound broke in the middle. Then he admitted what he had hidden from Teresa. He was afraid of losing his foot, yes, but even more than that, he was afraid of being the reason his daughter’s life grew smaller. Jesus listened without interrupting. A bus passed. A siren moved in the distance. Heat rose from the pavement. Nothing in the city paused for one old man’s shame, but Jesus did.
Teresa searched the hospital entrance again, then the curb, then the shaded edge of the parking area where patients sometimes sat to rest. Daniela saw her from down the hall and came after her. Teresa’s face had changed enough that no explanation was needed. Daniela helped her check the lobby and the side entrance. She called security. She spoke in the steady voice people used when trying not to add their own alarm to somebody else’s. Teresa kept apologizing, though for what she was not even sure anymore. For not watching closely enough. For being angry that morning. For failing to keep everybody together. Daniela put a hand lightly on her arm and said, “We’ll find him.” Teresa almost said, “People keep telling me that right before they don’t,” but she swallowed it. She was too close to tears and too proud to cry in a hospital corridor. Jesus had left some trace of tenderness in Daniela, and it stayed with her as she walked Teresa outside. She asked whether there was somewhere Manuel might go. Teresa thought of his old routines, his vanished habits, the places he used to take her mother, the streets he still talked about from years ago when downtown felt different. One place rose right away. San Jacinto Plaza. Her father had loved sitting there when he was younger, back when the city still felt to him like possibility instead of memory. Teresa said the name out loud and turned toward the parking lot.
Mateo was still at Chamizal when Jesus stood and began walking. For reasons he would not have been able to explain, Mateo got up and followed him for half a block before stopping himself. Pride is a strange leash. It lets people come close to help just long enough to remember they are afraid of needing it. Jesus turned as if he had expected him to still be there. Mateo shoved his hands in his pockets and said, “You talk like you know people.” Jesus replied, “I do.” Mateo kicked at a loose stone. “Everybody thinks I’m messing my life up.” Jesus did not argue with the obvious. “And what do you think?” Mateo took too long to answer. Then he said, “I think I got tired of trying and still feeling behind.” He was surprised at his own honesty. He had not meant to give that much away. Jesus nodded. “So you started acting like you did not care.” Mateo looked straight at him. “What was I supposed to do?” Jesus answered with the kind of plainness that made excuses sound thin. “Tell the truth sooner.” Mateo breathed out through his nose and shook his head. “Truth doesn’t pay rent.” Jesus said, “No. But lies make a home harder to live in.” Mateo thought of his mother’s face that morning. He thought of how quickly her hurt had turned to anger and how his had done the same. He hated that he was old enough now to recognize himself inside the same patterns that wounded him. Jesus kept walking. After a few more steps he said, “Your mother is not only angry. She is scared all the time.” Mateo’s eyes dropped. He knew that. What he had not let himself know was how much he had begun using her fear as permission to harden further.
By the time Teresa reached downtown, the sun was high and the city had moved fully into its daytime rhythm. People crossed streets with drinks in hand. Cars edged through traffic. The Plaza Theatre stood bright and familiar against the square like it had watched generations arrive burdened and leave changed or not changed at all. San Jacinto Plaza held its usual mix of office workers, old men in conversation, people passing through, and those who had nowhere urgent to be. Teresa walked fast, scanning benches, trees, shade, every face that could possibly be her father’s. Her pulse had moved beyond panic into something more exhausted and desperate. She checked her phone again. Mateo had not answered. She wanted to be furious at him for that, but underneath the fury was another truth she hated. She wanted him there. She wanted help lifting the day. She wanted not to be the one person everyone leaned on while she leaned on nobody. She passed one bench, then another, then stopped so suddenly a man behind her had to step around her. Under the shade of a tree sat Manuel, cane across his knees, looking more peaceful than he had looked in weeks. Beside him sat Jesus. They were not in deep dramatic conversation. They were simply there together, as if Teresa’s father had not vanished into fear but had been led gently into rest. Manuel looked up and saw his daughter first. His face tightened with guilt. Teresa’s relief hit her so hard it came out as anger before it could become anything softer. She marched toward them with tears already burning behind her eyes and said, “Do you have any idea what you put me through?”
Manuel started to rise, but Jesus touched his arm lightly and he stayed seated. Teresa stood there breathing hard, gripping the pharmacy bag so tightly the paper crinkled in her fist. People around the plaza kept moving. Nobody knew that for her the whole day had narrowed down to this bench. Manuel said he had only needed air. Teresa said he could have died crossing those streets. Manuel muttered that he was not dead yet. The old family reflexes came alive instantly. Defensiveness. Sharpness. Love hiding under bad delivery. Teresa turned toward Jesus because some part of her needed an explanation for him too. “And you,” she said, not rude but not warm either, “who are you?” Jesus looked up at her with that same calm she had met in the hospital hallway and said, “Someone who is not frightened by how close to breaking people can get.” The sentence stopped her. Not because it solved anything, but because it named exactly what she had been hiding from since before dawn. She had not been trying to stay organized. She had been trying not to break. Manuel looked between them and said quietly, “He sat with me.” That simple statement carried more weight than a long defense would have. Teresa’s eyes moved from her father to Jesus and back again. The anger in her chest was still there, but it had lost some of its certainty. Jesus stood then, and before Teresa could gather herself enough to speak again, he said, “You have been trying to keep your family alive by tightening everything inside it. Nothing living grows that way.” She stared at him, stunned and exposed and suddenly more tired than before. Across the square a bus pulled up. Somewhere behind them church bells carried faintly through the city air. Jesus stepped away from the bench and into the movement of downtown, and Teresa had the unmistakable feeling that if she let him walk out of her day too easily, something she desperately needed would go with him.
So she followed him.
She did not tell herself that was what she was doing. She told herself she was only making sure her father could get back to the car without trying something foolish again, only getting a better grip on a day that had refused to stay in her hands from the start. But when Jesus crossed the edge of the plaza and moved toward El Paso Street, Teresa found herself walking after him with Manuel beside her, his cane tapping slow against the pavement. The city moved around them in the full brightness of afternoon. Cars rolled past. A man in a dress shirt hurried by while finishing a call. Two women came out of a shop laughing about something one of them had not meant to say. Nothing around them announced that anything unusual was happening, but Teresa felt the way a person feels when they know they are near a truth that might cost them something if they hear it clearly enough. She kept wanting to ask Jesus where he was going, but the stranger thing was that it seemed less important than the fact that wherever he went, people stopped performing quite so hard around him.
They walked only a short distance before Manuel asked to sit. His pride would normally have made him push farther, but something about Jesus had made him more honest than usual. They found a shaded bench near the edge of the sidewalk where the older buildings still carried the weight of other decades. Teresa sat on the far side of her father and looked down at the pharmacy bag in her lap. It felt like proof of responsibility, but also proof of how much responsibility there still was. Jesus remained standing for a moment, watching the movement of the street, and then sat across from them on a low wall. No one spoke right away. It was Manuel who broke the silence. He looked at Jesus and said, “My daughter thinks everything falls apart if she lets go for five minutes.” Teresa opened her mouth to defend herself, but Jesus spoke before she could. “Because much of her life has taught her that it might.” Teresa’s throat tightened. She hated being understood that quickly. It felt invasive even though nothing in his manner was forceful. He had not taken a thing from her, yet she felt seen in a way that made hiding more difficult.
She said she did not have the luxury of falling apart. The words came out with more edge than she intended, but she was beyond caring how polished she sounded. She told him rent was late, work kept changing her schedule, her father’s health was worse than he admitted, and her son was walking around with enough anger in him to ruin his own life before twenty. Then she said the truest thing she had said all day, maybe all year. She said she was tired of being the only one in the family who seemed to understand that everything had consequences. Jesus listened without interrupting, which made the words keep coming. She told him how every month felt like barely making it to the next month. She told him she did not remember the last time someone asked how she was and waited for a real answer. She told him she had begun to resent the people she loved for needing her. The second she said it, shame rose up in her again, because good mothers were not supposed to admit things like that and good daughters were supposed to be more patient than she had been that morning. But Jesus did not flinch from her honesty. He only said, “Resentment often begins where exhaustion has been pretending to be love.”
Teresa looked away fast. A bus turned the corner. Somebody shouted across the street. The noise of the city kept going, but for her everything had narrowed to that sentence. Manuel stared at the ground and rubbed a hand over his mouth. He knew enough to hear himself in it too. For years Teresa had held their home together through effort and speed and worry and a kind of fierce competence that did not leave much room for softness. At first that strength had felt admirable. Then necessary. Then normal. Somewhere along the way it had become the only way she knew how to move through a day. Jesus looked at her with neither pity nor pressure. “You believe that if you stop gripping everything, you will lose everything. So now even tenderness feels dangerous to you.” Teresa wanted to argue. She wanted to say that tenderness did not pay bills, did not fill prescriptions, did not keep nineteen-year-old boys from throwing away their future. But the harder truth underneath it was one she did not want to face. She had begun to speak sharply not only because the world was hard, but because hardness made her feel less helpless.
Manuel let out a slow breath and said in a low voice that the boy had heard enough sharpness for one day. Teresa did not snap back this time. She only sat there with wet eyes she kept refusing to wipe. Jesus turned to Manuel and said, “And you keep making your daughter carry your fear because you call it dignity.” The old man bowed his head. It was not humiliation. It was relief. There is relief in being told the truth when you are too tired to defend yourself anymore. Manuel admitted that he had been hiding how bad the foot had gotten because he did not want to see the look on Teresa’s face when one more problem landed on her shoulders. He admitted that he had been pretending strength long past the point where it helped anybody. Jesus said, “Strength that refuses to be helped often becomes another kind of pride.” Manuel nodded once, almost like a schoolboy caught out by a teacher he respected.
They sat there long enough for the anger in Teresa’s chest to cool into something more painful and more useful. She finally asked the question that had been circling her since the hospital hallway. “Why do you keep saying things like you have known us forever?” Jesus answered her simply. “Because I know what people carry when no one else sees the weight of it.” Then he stood and looked at Teresa with that same quiet steadiness. “Your son is not as far from home as he looks.” She searched his face for some clue as to whether he meant that literally or not, but there was none. With him, meanings did not come wrapped in theatrics. They landed plain and then kept opening after they were heard. Manuel pushed himself to his feet. Teresa rose too. Jesus began walking south, not fast, and after one glance at her father, Teresa found herself following again.
They made their way back toward Segundo Barrio by slow steps and side streets, the kind of path a person takes when the day has changed shape and the direct route no longer feels like the only possible one. The city around them was alive in its ordinary way. A delivery truck idled outside a storefront. Somebody carried boxes through a back door. Music drifted from an open car window and vanished just as quickly. When they passed near Sacred Heart Church, the doors were open and a few candles flickered inside in the afternoon dimness. Manuel hesitated. He had not been a consistent church man in years, though he still crossed himself when ambulance sirens passed too close to home. Teresa almost kept walking, then stopped because Jesus had stopped. He turned toward the church and stepped inside. The air changed at once. Outside there had been heat, traffic, and movement. Inside there was that particular hush old churches hold, not because they are empty but because too many burdens have been carried into them over too many years for noise to remain untouched.
Teresa did not kneel. She had no energy for performance, even religious performance. She sat in a back pew with her father and stared at the far wall while dust moved in the slanting light. Jesus went farther in, not drawing attention to himself, just standing for a long moment near the front where the candles burned. Manuel whispered that he used to bring Teresa’s mother there when money was tight and neither one of them wanted to let the other see how worried they were. Teresa had not known that. Or maybe she had known it once and forgotten. Hard years make people forget the gentle pieces of family history first. Manuel said her mother always prayed for a softer heart, never an easier life. Teresa looked at him then. That sounded exactly like her mother and exactly unlike the way Teresa had been living. She had prayed for survival, for money, for relief, for somebody else to finally step up. She had not prayed for softness in a very long time because softness felt like something life punished quickly.
Jesus came back to the pew and sat beside them. He did not sermonize. He did not use the room to intensify the moment. He only asked Teresa what she was afraid would happen if she apologized to her son first. She answered too quickly and too honestly. She said he might think that meant he was right. Jesus asked, “And if he knew instead that he was loved even while he was wrong?” Teresa stared ahead at the candles. The answer should have been simple. It was not. In her house love had been present, but not always legible. It had shown up as overtime hours, paid bills, rides to appointments, arguments that were really fear in work clothes. Mateo had grown up inside sacrifice, but sacrifice does not always look like love to the person receiving it. Sometimes it only looks like pressure. Manuel said quietly that he should apologize too. He should have backed Teresa more. He should have told the boy sooner that drifting was not freedom. He should have stopped using silence as a shortcut when courage was required. Jesus said, “Then tell the truth while there is still time for truth to heal more than it wounds.”
Across the city, Mateo was standing in line at the pharmacy with two refill slips in his hand. He had finally gone home because anger burns hot but not long, and once it had cooled, the apartment had felt different without the people he was angry at. The rent notice was still on the passenger seat of his mother’s car key hook. The sink still held the coffee mug she had left in a rush. His grandfather’s recliner was empty. Mateo had stood in the middle of the room and felt, maybe for the first time in months, how much his absence had become one more problem in a house already full of them. He had found the old prescription numbers and driven to the nearest place that could fill them. Pride kept telling him not to make too much of it, not to get sentimental, not to act like picking up medicine erased months of distance and attitude. But another part of him knew this was not about erasing. It was about turning around before he got so good at leaving that he no longer knew how to come back. When his turn came at the counter, he paid with money he had been saving for a new phone screen. It was not noble. It was just necessary. Necessary can be holy when a person finally stops resisting it.
While Mateo waited, his phone buzzed again. This time it was the friend from the tire shop asking whether he still wanted some hours that evening. Mateo looked at the message for a long time. Work would help. Money would help. But what pressed on him more than money in that moment was the thought of walking back into the apartment and facing what he had become inside it. He texted that he could take the shift tomorrow instead. Then he pocketed the phone and looked up to find Jesus standing by the end of the aisle near cold medicine and bandages. Mateo did not act surprised this time. He was too unsettled to bother pretending. Jesus asked, “Did you come because you were told to, or because you knew what was right?” Mateo said, “Does it matter?” Jesus answered, “It matters to you.” Mateo leaned against the shelving and let out a breath. “I’m tired of feeling like the bad guy in my own house.” Jesus replied, “Then stop building your identity out of your worst reactions.” Mateo swallowed. Nobody had ever said it to him that way. People had called him lazy, stubborn, selfish, disrespectful, lost. Those words had only hardened him more. This was different. It left room for him to become something else without pretending what he had done had not mattered.
He told Jesus he had dropped out because he could not focus, because school felt fake when bills were real, because every time he sat in class all he could think about was how his mother’s hands looked when she came home from work. He admitted that once he got behind, shame took over and made every missed assignment feel like proof he was not built for anything better. Jesus listened and then said, “Shame keeps many people from re-entering the very place where their life could begin again.” Mateo looked down at the prescription bag in his hand. He said he did not even know where to begin fixing things. Jesus answered, “You begin where truth begins. Not with promises you make to impress people. With the next honest step.” Mateo nodded slowly. It sounded both smaller and harder than the speeches people usually gave. Then Jesus added, “Your mother has been speaking from fear. You have been hearing only accusation. Both of you are bleeding under words that were never meant to carry that much weight.” Mateo shut his eyes for a second. He did not want to cry in the pharmacy. He did not want to cry anywhere. But his throat tightened anyway. When he opened his eyes, Jesus was already walking toward the door. Mateo followed him out into the late afternoon glare.
Back at Sacred Heart, Teresa finally stood. The quiet in the church had done something to her that argument never could. It had not fixed her money. It had not repaired the morning. It had not removed the fact that tonight she was still supposed to show up at work and smile for strangers in a hotel lobby as if nothing in her own life was fraying. But it had slowed her enough to hear herself clearly. Jesus walked with her and Manuel back outside into the bright street. On the way home they stopped at Bowie Bakery because Manuel said Teresa’s mother never stayed angry on an empty stomach and because old men often know that bread and coffee have saved more households than pride ever has. Teresa almost refused because money was tight, but the woman behind the counter recognized Manuel and slipped two extra conchas into the bag with a look that said she knew more than she would mention. Teresa nearly cried at that. Not because of the bread, but because small kindnesses hurt when a person has been living as though kindness was mostly for other people.
When they reached the apartment building, Mateo was sitting on the front step with the pharmacy bag by his feet. He stood as soon as he saw them. Teresa stopped dead on the sidewalk. For one long second nobody moved. Heat shimmered off the street. Somewhere nearby a dog barked twice and fell quiet. Mateo looked older to Teresa in that moment, not because his face had changed, but because shame had finally reached him in a way she could see. He lifted the bag a little and said, “I got the medicine.” The sentence was simple. It was also his first unguarded offering of the day. Teresa wanted to run to him and wanted to hold back at the same time. Habit does that. Love and protection do not always move at the same speed. Manuel took the bag from him and said thank you with a gravity that told Mateo he understood what it had cost. Then the old man went inside slowly, as if giving the other two space without making a show of it.
Jesus remained near the steps, quiet, present, not forcing the moment forward. Teresa looked at Mateo and said his name in a way she had not all day. Not sharp. Not managerial. Just his name. Mateo rubbed a hand over the back of his neck and said he should not have left like that. Teresa said she should never have said what she said. Mateo winced and looked down. “It hit because I already feel like that,” he admitted. Teresa’s face crumpled before she could stop it. She said she had been scared and tired and angry and none of that changed the fact that she had wounded him. Mateo said he had been acting like every request was an attack because it felt easier than admitting he was ashamed of how stuck he was. Jesus said nothing. He only stood there while truth did what truth does when people finally stop using it as a weapon and start using it as a doorway.
They went inside together. The apartment was still small. The rent was still due. Manuel’s foot still needed care. Nothing material had changed in the forty minutes since Teresa had stormed across San Jacinto Plaza. But the room felt different because the people in it were no longer bracing against one another in the same way. Manuel sat back down in his chair. Mateo brought him water before anyone asked. Teresa put on coffee though it was late enough that she knew it would keep her awake longer than she needed, but there are days when sleep is not the point and company is. Jesus sat at the table like he belonged there, not as an honored guest, not as an interruption, but as someone more at home in human struggle than the people struggling themselves. Mateo finally told the whole truth. He said he had not just dropped classes because money was tight. He had started failing before he quit. He said every time he thought about going back he heard his own thoughts telling him he would only fail again. He admitted he had begun spending time with people who made wasting time feel normal because then he did not have to think so hard about the life he was avoiding. Teresa listened with tears in her eyes and no interruption in her mouth, which might have been the strangest part of the whole day.
Then Teresa told the truth too. She said she had been treating everybody in the apartment like one more item on a list because if she let herself feel how overwhelmed she really was, she was afraid she would stop functioning. She said she had grown so used to carrying the emotional weather of the house that she no longer knew how to walk into a room without trying to control it first. She admitted there were nights she sat in the car outside and begged God for a break and then came upstairs already angry that the break had not come. Manuel stared at his hands and then said he had made both of them do too much guessing about his pain because he was trying to keep from feeling old. Jesus listened to each of them with the same grounded stillness. Then he said, “A house can survive poverty longer than it can survive people who stop letting themselves be known.” The room went quiet. They all knew it was true.
The landlord knocked just after six. Under other circumstances the sound would have thrown Teresa straight back into panic, but she was too wrung out for panic by then. She opened the door to find Mrs. Alvarez standing there with a folder against her chest and weariness in her own face that Teresa had never really noticed before. She was not a villain. She was a woman with repairs stacking up, a son out of work, and tenants who thought she enjoyed knocking on doors with bad news. Mrs. Alvarez started with business because people like her do not always know how to begin any other way. Teresa started to apologize, but Jesus had come to stand just behind her, and something about his nearness steadied her voice. She told Mrs. Alvarez the truth. Not a dramatic speech. Just the truth. Her father had medical issues. Money was tight. She was working. Her son was trying to get back on his feet. She could make part of the payment by Friday if the rest could wait one more week. Mrs. Alvarez looked past Teresa into the apartment and saw Manuel with his bandaged foot and Mateo standing there holding a coffee cup like he was trying to remember how to be useful. The older woman exhaled through her nose and softened. She said Friday and next Friday. Two parts. Teresa nearly thanked her too many times. Mrs. Alvarez waved that off and said, “Just keep talking to me before it gets worse.” Then she left. Teresa shut the door and leaned against it. No miracle had fallen from the ceiling. No envelope of cash had appeared. What had happened was quieter and more like the kingdom of God than people often want. Truth had been told in time to keep fear from making everything harder.
As evening settled, the heat eased enough for the windows to be opened. Sounds from the neighborhood moved through the apartment in familiar layers. Children somewhere downstairs. A television through thin walls. A car stereo at the curb. Someone laughing across the alley. Teresa made eggs with potatoes and the bread from the bakery. Mateo cut fruit and did not have to be asked twice. Manuel actually took his pills without turning it into a debate. Jesus sat with them at the small table and ate what they ate. That mattered more to Teresa than she would have expected. Holiness that cannot sit in an ordinary kitchen has never been much help to ordinary people. While they ate, conversation came in uneven little turns, not polished, not fully healed, but real. Mateo said he could take more hours at the tire shop and also talk to the community college about what going back would actually require. Not promise it all at once. Just ask. Teresa said she could stop pretending she was fine long enough to let people know when she was not. Manuel said he could let his daughter drive him to appointments without acting like it was a moral defeat. Jesus smiled then, not because the work was finished, but because they were finally speaking as if change belonged to the next honest step and not to some impossible overnight transformation.
When Teresa checked the time, she realized she was late to decide whether she could still make her shift. The old dread rose again, but not with the same power. She called the hotel and explained. Her manager started with irritation and ended with a compromise. She could come for the last few hours if she wanted them. Teresa looked at the table, at her father and son, at Jesus sitting there in the deepening evening light, and for the first time in longer than she could remember, she made a decision that was not ruled entirely by fear. She said she would be there. Then she asked Mateo if he could stay with his grandfather. He said yes before she finished the sentence. The yes felt simple, but Teresa heard the return inside it.
Jesus walked with her part of the way back toward downtown as dusk settled over El Paso. The city looked softer then. The mountains darkened. Streetlights came on one row at a time. People spilled from restaurants and storefronts into the evening. Teresa told him she was still scared. About money. About Mateo. About turning back into the same sharp version of herself the next time life came fast. Jesus said, “Peace is not the absence of what threatens you. It is the refusal to let fear become your only voice.” She looked at him and said she did not know how to live that way consistently. He answered, “Most people do not begin with consistency. They begin with willingness.” They had reached the edge of San Jacinto Plaza again by then, the place where panic had nearly swallowed her only hours earlier. Victor was there on a bench with a small bouquet of grocery store flowers beside him, not because grief was gone, but because he was finally going home with something in his hands besides silence. Across the street Daniela came out of a rideshare still in scrubs, saw an elderly woman struggling with the door to her building, and went to help without that dead-eyed hurry she had worn in the clinic. Teresa noticed both without fully knowing their stories. She only felt the city differently now, as if pain were everywhere, yes, but so was the possibility that people could stop numbing themselves long enough to love one another again.
At the entrance to Hotel Paso del Norte, Teresa stopped. The gold light from inside spilled onto the sidewalk. She turned to Jesus because she could not bear the thought of losing sight of him without saying something that mattered. She thanked him, though the words felt too small and late. He looked at her with the same calm he had carried all day and said, “Go inside lighter than you came out this morning.” Then he added, “And when tomorrow tries to harden you again, remember that love does not grow stronger by becoming colder.” Teresa nodded, and before she could ask where he would go next, he was already moving down the street into the evening crowd.
She worked those last hours differently. The problems waiting for her at home had not vanished, but she was no longer carrying them like armor. A guest complained about a reservation mix-up, and Teresa handled it without feeling personally insulted by the inconvenience. A woman checking in with two tired children looked on the edge of tears, and Teresa slid the family an extra bottle of water and spoke gently enough that the woman’s face changed. Near the end of her shift she stepped outside for air and looked across the city at the dark shape of the mountains. For the first time in a long time she did not pray for escape. She prayed for enough softness to stay human inside a hard life.
Much later, when the city had thinned into night and the traffic sounds had pulled farther apart, Jesus walked alone near the Rio Grande where the dark line of the land held the last of the day’s warmth. Behind him El Paso still glowed in scattered windows, street lamps, motel signs, porch lights, and the small stubborn lights of people who had not yet gone to sleep. In one apartment in Segundo Barrio, Manuel rested with his medicine beside him, and Mateo sat at the kitchen table filling out the first boring forms required to talk to school again while Teresa’s untouched coffee cup cooled by the sink. In another part of the city, Victor put flowers in a glass on a table that had been empty too long. Daniela took off her badge, sat on the edge of her bed, and called her son just to hear his voice before sleep. Nothing about the city was perfect. Not the rent. Not the bodies. Not the grief. Not the unfinished futures. But in each place where he had passed, people were telling the truth a little more clearly and hiding a little less from love.
Jesus lifted his face toward the quiet above the city and prayed. He prayed without display, without witnesses gathered around him, without anything in his voice except deep nearness to the Father. The night held still around him. The mountains stood dark. The city breathed below. And over El Paso, with all its strain and beauty, all its private ache and ordinary courage, he remained what he had been from the first light of morning to the last hush of night: calm, present, compassionate, carrying quiet authority into the places where human beings were tired of pretending they were fine, and leaving behind not a performance, not a spectacle, but the kind of hope that can sit at a small kitchen table and stay.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph
Support the ministry by buying Douglas a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/douglasvandergraph
Financial support to help keep this Ministry active daily can be mailed to:
Vandergraph Po Box 271154 Fort Collins, Co 80527
from Millennial Survival

Resilience. One word that can determine whether you survive or not. One word that can determine whether you pick up and keep going or gradually fade into the background, no longer relevant to the word around you.
I was reminded about what it means to be resilient recently when I was not selected for a job role, despite being one of the two finalists. I gave it my all, I had great conversations with my interviewers, and I felt good coming out of the final round of interviews. Then I started to notice the signs. Follow up wasn’t as forthcoming as I expected it to be despite how enthusiastic the organization was about me. I was told to expect feedback as of a certain date, it didn’t come. Then I was going to receive it by a slightly later date. It came. I was a strong candidate, the decision was hard, but I wasn’t selected. Someone that was closer to where the organization is headquartered was. Someone that wouldn’t require relocation. I lost the opportunity because my situation was harder to deal with logistically for this organization that what the other candidate’s situation was.
The anger set in, as did the frustration, the disappointment, and the questions about what I could have done differently. Rather than getting the chance to make a positive impact within an organization, I was shown the exit. I had little explanation as to why and a lingering feeling that I wasn’t selected because someone didn’t want to deal with the logistics involved with me taking the role.
The response to this kind of situation could becoming a defining moment in my professional and personal life. Either I choose to double down in my current role and excel where I am or I disengage, become bitter, and resent that I wasn’t going to be where I wanted to. I made a conscious decision to choose the former. I chose resilience. No organization is perfect; the organization I work in today is far from perfect. Yet if I choose to be resilient, I choose to engage more and choose to find opportunity in times of setback when I know I can make the organization better.
I refuse to let the decision made by someone else define my outlook, my attitude, or whether or I am happy or not. I choose to be resilient. I chose to move forward.
from
SmarterArticles

In January 2026, Kristalina Georgieva, the Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, stood before an audience at the World Economic Forum in Davos and offered a statistic that landed with the quiet brutality of a footnote in a corporate restructuring memo. The number of translators and interpreters at the IMF, she said, had dropped from 200 to 50. The cause was not a budget crisis or a policy realignment. It was technology. The fund had simply decided that machines could handle most of the work that humans used to do.
Georgieva presented the figure as evidence of a broader transformation. Forty per cent of global jobs, she argued, would be transformed or eliminated by artificial intelligence, with that figure climbing to 60 per cent in advanced economies. But it was the specificity of the translation example that stuck. This was not a hypothetical projection or an economist's forecast. It was a headcount. Real people, with real expertise in the precise rendering of financial policy across languages and cultures, had been replaced by systems that could approximate their output at a fraction of the cost.
The IMF is not alone. Across the global translation industry, now valued at an estimated 31.70 billion US dollars according to Slator's 2025 Language Industry Market Report, a similar pattern is playing out. Large language models and neural machine translation systems have not simply made human translators obsolete. They have restructured the profession from the inside, converting skilled practitioners into quality controllers for text they did not write. The question this raises is not whether AI can translate. It demonstrably can, often to a standard that passes casual inspection. The question is what happens to a profession, and to the cultural knowledge it carries, when the market decides that “good enough” is good enough.
A 2024 survey conducted by the United Kingdom's Society of Authors, which polled 787 of its 12,500 members, found that 36 per cent of translators had already lost work to generative AI. Forty-three per cent reported a decrease in income as a direct result of the technology. Over three-quarters, some 77 per cent, believed that generative AI would negatively affect their future earnings. Eighty-six per cent expressed concern that the use of generative AI devalues human-made creative work. These are not projections. They are reports from working professionals describing what has already happened to their livelihoods.
The income data from individual translators is more granular and more alarming. Brian Merchant, writing in his newsletter Blood in the Machine, documented cases across the profession in mid-2025. One technical translator with 15 years of experience reported earning just 8,000 euros in 2025, down from six figures in previous years. A French-English translator based in Quebec described a 60 per cent income decline in 2024, with projections suggesting an 80 per cent drop from peak earnings by the end of 2025. An Italian-English translator in Rome reported that work requests had ceased entirely for the month of June 2025, after years of working 50 to 60 hours per week. An English-Portuguese translator documented that post-editing rates had collapsed from 0.04 euros to 0.02 euros per source word, halving the already modest compensation for correcting machine output.
In the United States, Andy Benzo, president of the American Translators Association, told CNN in January 2026 that many translators were leaving the profession entirely. Benzo noted that the risks of using AI translation in “high-stakes” fields remain “humongous,” yet the exodus continues regardless. Ian Giles, chair of the Translators Association at the UK's Society of Authors, confirmed the same pattern, noting that translators were seeking retraining “because translation isn't generating the income it previously did.” The exits are not dramatic. There are no picket lines or public protests. People are simply disappearing from a profession that can no longer sustain them.
The scale of this workforce is not trivial. There are approximately 640,000 professional translators globally, and three out of four are freelancers. It is this freelance majority that has borne the brunt of the disruption, lacking the institutional protections and guaranteed workloads that might have cushioned the blow.
A study published in 2025 by Carl Benedikt Frey and Pedro Llanos-Paredes at the Oxford Martin School quantified the scale of displacement with unusual precision. Analysing variation in Google Translate adoption across 695 local labour markets in the United States, the researchers found that a one percentage point increase in the use of Google Translate corresponded to a 0.71 percentage point reduction in translator employment growth. The cumulative effect, they estimated, amounted to more than 28,000 fewer translator positions created over the period from 2010 to 2023. And that figure captures only the impact of a single, relatively crude machine translation tool that preceded the large language model era. The arrival of systems like GPT-4, Claude, and Gemini has accelerated the process enormously, because these models do not just translate. They handle idiomatic expression, register, and contextual nuance at a level that earlier statistical systems could not approach.
In July 2025, Microsoft researchers published a study examining which occupations were most exposed to generative AI capabilities. Translators and interpreters ranked first on the list, with 98 per cent of their work activities overlapping with tasks that AI systems could perform with relatively high completion rates. The study analysed 200,000 real-world conversations between users and Microsoft's Copilot system to arrive at its rankings. The researchers were careful to note that high exposure does not automatically mean elimination. But the practical effect has been unmistakable. Employers have used the availability of AI translation as justification for cutting rates, reducing headcounts, and restructuring workflows around machine output.
The restructuring of translation work follows a pattern that is becoming familiar across AI-affected professions. The human does not vanish. Instead, they are repositioned downstream in the production process, tasked with reviewing and correcting output that a machine generated in seconds. In the translation industry, this workflow is known as Machine Translation Post-Editing, or MTPE, and it has rapidly become the dominant model for commercial translation work.
According to Slator's 2025 survey of the language industry, 60 per cent of all respondents were using machine translation, with adoption reaching 80 per cent among language service providers. Among those using machine translation or large language models, between 90 and 98 per cent performed some level of post-editing on AI-generated content. Eighty-four per cent of language service integrators reported that clients had specifically requested human editing services to review AI-generated translations. The human, in other words, has not been removed from the process. But the nature of their involvement has been fundamentally altered. They are no longer creating. They are correcting.
The compensation reflects this downgrade. Post-editing rates typically fall between 50 and 70 per cent of standard translation rates, with some agencies offering as little as 25 per cent of what a full human translation would command. Industry data from 2025 indicates that MTPE work commands between 0.05 and 0.15 US dollars per word, compared with 0.15 to 0.30 dollars per word for standard human translation. One translator documented by Equal Times, an international labour news platform, described pre-translated segments paying just 30 to 50 per cent of original rates, while fully automated platforms paid up to seven times less than standard. The economic logic is straightforward. If the machine does 80 per cent of the work, the reasoning goes, then the human should be paid for only 20 per cent. What this calculation ignores is that post-editing often requires comparable time and cognitive effort to translation from scratch, because the translator must not only identify errors but also understand the systematic patterns of how the AI fails and where its confidence is misplaced.
The workflow itself has been transformed in ways that strip autonomy from the translator. Texts no longer arrive as clean source documents to be rendered thoughtfully into a target language. They arrive pre-segmented, with machine-generated suggestions already populating each segment. The translator's task becomes one of triage: deciding which suggestions are acceptable, which need modification, and which must be discarded entirely. Automated platforms distribute this work via alerts that give translators minutes or even seconds to claim individual segments, creating a piecework dynamic more reminiscent of a fulfilment warehouse than a skilled profession. Some platforms threaten automatic disconnection for translators who dispute corrections imposed by quality-assurance algorithms.
Jean-Jacques, a 30-year veteran translator quoted by Equal Times, described the shift bluntly. “It's not really a matter of translating anymore,” he said, “but revising and correcting the segments proposed by the machine.” Another translator, identified as Alina, captured the paradox at the heart of the arrangement. “AI is both a tool and a threat,” she said. “We ourselves are teaching it how to translate, how to improve.” Each correction a post-editor makes feeds back into the training data that will make the next generation of AI translation marginally better, and the human's role marginally less essential.
This dynamic, in which skilled workers are conscripted into training their own replacements, is not unique to translation. It has appeared in content moderation, coding, and legal document review. But in translation, the irony is particularly sharp, because the expertise being extracted is precisely the kind that AI systems struggle most to develop on their own: cultural sensitivity, tonal awareness, and the ability to navigate the space between what a text says and what it means.
The case for human translation has always rested on something more than accuracy. It rests on the claim that translation is an interpretive act, a creative negotiation between two linguistic and cultural systems that requires not just knowledge but judgement. Jhumpa Lahiri, the Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist who has written extensively about translation, describes the process as “a radical act of reshaping text and self.” In her essay collection Translating Myself and Others, published by Princeton University Press in 2022, Lahiri argues that “a translator restores the meaning of a text by means of an elaborate, alchemical process that requires imagination, ingenuity, and freedom.”
This is not the language of quality assurance. It is the language of craft, of a practice that involves the translator's full intellectual and emotional engagement with a text. Emily Wilson, the first woman to translate Homer's Odyssey into English, has spoken repeatedly about the impossibility of separating linguistic from cultural knowledge in translation. The hardest part of translation, she has argued, is not understanding the original but “figuring out how to create it entirely from scratch in a totally different language and culture.” Wilson's translation of the Odyssey was widely praised precisely because it made choices that no algorithm would make: tonal decisions, rhythmic choices, and interpretive framings that reflected not just the Greek text but Wilson's own understanding of what the poem means to contemporary English-speaking readers.
Gregory Rabassa's English translation of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude is perhaps the most celebrated example of translation as creative achievement. Marquez himself reportedly said that he considered the English translation a work of art in its own right, a remarkable statement from an author about a rendering of his own novel. Edith Grossman, the acclaimed translator of both Marquez and Cervantes, described Rabassa as “the godfather of us all,” crediting him with introducing Latin American literature to the English-speaking world in a way that preserved not just meaning but spirit.
These examples belong to the domain of literary translation, which remains relatively insulated from AI disruption. Literary commissions have continued to flow to human translators, in part because publishers recognise that the qualities that make a literary translation valuable are precisely the qualities that machines lack. But the insulation is narrower than it appears. The vast majority of professional translation work is not literary. It is commercial, legal, technical, medical, and administrative. And it is in these domains that the restructuring has been most severe, not because the cultural stakes are lower, but because the market has decided they are.
Consider the translation of a medical consent form from English into Tagalog for a Filipino patient in a London hospital. The document is not literary. It will never win a prize. But the accuracy of its translation has direct consequences for a person's understanding of what is being done to their body. A machine translation might render the words correctly while missing the pragmatic force of the language: the way a particular phrasing might sound reassuring or threatening, the cultural assumptions embedded in notions of consent, the difference between informing someone and making them feel informed. These are not edge cases. They are the bread and butter of professional translation, and they are the first tasks being handed to machines.
Or consider immigration proceedings, where a mistranslation can determine whether an asylum seeker's testimony is deemed credible. The translator in that context is not merely converting words. They are mediating between legal systems, cultural frameworks of narrative and evidence, and the emotional register of a person recounting traumatic experiences. The difference between “I was afraid” and “I feared for my life” is not a matter of synonymy. It is a matter of legal consequence, and navigating it requires the kind of situated cultural judgement that no statistical model possesses.
The industry's preferred narrative for this transition is “human-AI collaboration.” The framing suggests a partnership: the machine handles the heavy lifting, and the human provides the finishing touch. But the power dynamics of this arrangement are radically asymmetric. The machine sets the terms. The human adjusts.
This is not collaboration in any meaningful sense. It is supervision, and it is supervision of a peculiarly degrading kind, because the supervisor is being paid less than they would earn if they were simply doing the work themselves. The translator who once sat with a source text and crafted a target text from scratch, making hundreds of micro-decisions about register, idiom, rhythm, and cultural resonance, now sits with a machine-generated draft and decides, sentence by sentence, whether it is wrong enough to fix.
The cognitive experience of post-editing is qualitatively different from translation. Several translators have described it as more fatiguing and less satisfying than original translation work. The machine's output creates a kind of gravitational pull. Even when the translator knows a better rendering exists, the effort required to override the machine's suggestion and compose something from scratch can feel disproportionate to the compensation. Over time, this produces a phenomenon that linguists and labour researchers have begun to call “anchoring,” in which the translator's own instincts are gradually subordinated to the machine's defaults. The result is not a blend of human and machine intelligence. It is machine intelligence with a human stamp of approval.
A 2025 survey of translators found that a majority, some 66 per cent, acknowledged that MTPE can be useful but still requires substantial human intervention. Roughly half of respondents refused to offer discounts for post-editing work, arguing that the effort required is routinely underestimated by clients and agencies. Among those who did discount, the most common reduction fell between 10 and 30 per cent, far less than the 50 to 75 per cent cuts that many agencies impose unilaterally.
Rosa, a translator quoted by Equal Times, described the economic logic with characteristic directness. “Profit is the only thing that matters,” she said, “and translation has become like a commodity that they extract from us at the lowest possible price.” The commodity metaphor is precise. What was once a craft, defined by the individual translator's knowledge, taste, and cultural fluency, has been reframed as a raw material to be processed at industrial scale.
There is a version of this story in which what is happening to translators is tragic but temporary, a painful adjustment period that will eventually stabilise as the technology matures and the market finds a new equilibrium. In this version, AI translation will continue to improve until the quality gap between machine and human output narrows to insignificance, at which point the remaining human translators will occupy a small, highly specialised niche: literary translation, diplomatic interpreting, and other domains where the stakes are too high for automation.
But this narrative assumes that the qualities human translators bring are merely a matter of degree, that machines are doing a slightly worse version of the same thing, and that incremental improvement will close the gap. There is a competing argument, advanced by translators, linguists, and cognitive scientists, that the gap is not quantitative but structural. That what human translators do when they translate with cultural sensitivity and emotional intelligence is not a more refined version of pattern matching. It is a fundamentally different cognitive operation.
A study published in Nature's Humanities and Social Sciences Communications in 2026, examining AI performance in literary autobiography translation, found that while AI models could produce grammatically correct and largely accurate translations, they consistently failed to capture the emotional texture and cultural specificity of the original texts. The researchers concluded that human translators brought interpretive capacities that were not simply absent from AI systems but categorically different in kind. AI models could identify the surface layer of meaning but failed to recognise cultural allusions and deeper emotional context, elements that are essential not just to literature but to any communication that carries weight beyond its literal content.
This distinction matters because it determines whether human translators are a temporary patch or a permanent necessity. If translation is ultimately a pattern-matching problem, then machines will eventually solve it. If it is an interpretive problem, requiring the kind of embodied cultural knowledge that comes from living inside a language and its associated worldview, then machines will not solve it, regardless of how much training data they consume. The patterns they learn are drawn from existing translations, which means they can only reproduce what human translators have already created. They cannot originate the kind of interpretive leap that makes a translation feel alive.
Poetry, with its reliance on rhythm, rhyme, and figurative language, remains a particularly formidable challenge. A machine can translate the denotative content of a poem. It cannot translate its music. It cannot decide, as Emily Wilson did with the Odyssey, that the opening word of an epic should be “Tell me” rather than “Sing to me,” and understand the cascade of interpretive consequences that follows from that single choice.
The structural incapacity argument, however compelling, runs into a problem that is not technological but economic. The market for translation services is not optimised for craft. It is optimised for throughput, cost reduction, and acceptable quality at scale. And by this measure, AI translation is already good enough for the vast majority of commercial applications. The Slator survey found that while 72 per cent of respondents cited accuracy concerns with machine translation and 68 per cent cited quality concerns, adoption continued to accelerate regardless. Trust grew slowly, but adoption grew fast. The concerns are real. They are also, from a procurement perspective, manageable.
This is the uncomfortable truth at the centre of the translation crisis. The question is not whether AI can match human translators in quality. It demonstrably cannot, particularly in contexts requiring cultural nuance, tonal sensitivity, or interpretive judgement. The question is whether the market values those qualities enough to pay for them. And the evidence, from rate compression to headcount reduction to the restructuring of workflows around machine output, suggests that it does not.
The AI-enabled translation services market, valued at 5.18 billion US dollars in 2025 according to Precedence Research, is projected to reach 50.69 billion by 2035, expanding at a compound annual growth rate of 25.62 per cent. These are not numbers that suggest a market hedging its bets. They describe an industry that has made a decisive bet on automation, with human involvement reduced to the minimum necessary to maintain an acceptable error rate. Software platforms already dominate the market, holding nearly 73 per cent of 2025 revenue, and they are growing faster than any other component as enterprises embed AI-driven localisation into core workflows.
The parallel to other creative and knowledge-work professions is instructive. Journalism, graphic design, customer service, and legal research have all experienced similar dynamics: AI systems that produce output of variable but often adequate quality, followed by a restructuring of human roles around review, correction, and oversight rather than creation. In each case, the same rhetorical move occurs. The technology is presented as a tool that augments human capability. In practice, it becomes a ceiling that constrains it. The human is not empowered. The human is made cheaper.
The consequences of this restructuring extend beyond the economic fortunes of individual translators. Languages are not neutral containers for information. They are living systems of meaning, shaped by history, geography, power, and culture. A translator who has spent decades working between English and Arabic, or Mandarin and Portuguese, or Hindi and German, carries within them a form of knowledge that is not reducible to a bilingual dictionary or a statistical model trained on parallel corpora.
The Frey and Llanos-Paredes study at Oxford Martin documented an additional finding that received less attention than the employment data but may be more consequential in the long term. Areas with robust Google Translate usage saw job postings demanding Spanish fluency grow by about 1.4 percentage points less than in other regions, with similar declines of roughly 1.3 and 0.8 percentage points for Chinese and German respectively, and measurable dampening even for Japanese and French. The adoption of machine translation, in other words, is not just replacing translators. It is reducing the perceived value of knowing another language at all.
This is a feedback loop with serious cultural implications. As machine translation becomes more capable and more widely adopted, the incentive to invest in human language skills diminishes. Fewer people pursue translation as a career. Fewer organisations invest in in-house linguistic expertise. The pool of human knowledge about how languages relate to one another, how cultural contexts shape meaning, and how texts function differently across linguistic boundaries gradually shrinks. And the AI systems that replace this knowledge are trained on the output of the very translators they displace, creating a closed loop in which the training data grows stale as the human source of fresh interpretive insight dries up.
Ian Giles, in his capacity as chair of the Translators Association, has raised precisely this concern, questioning whether “the demand for subtlety and craft from enough readers and publishers” will “save highly skilled individuals from becoming mere AI post-editors.” The word “mere” carries the weight of the entire argument. It acknowledges that the role of post-editor exists. It questions whether the role is sufficient to sustain the expertise it depends upon.
The problem is compounded by the pipeline effect. If experienced translators leave the profession and aspiring translators are deterred by collapsing incomes, the next generation of human translators simply will not exist in sufficient numbers. The craft knowledge that takes years to develop, the intuitive feel for how a sentence should land in a target language, the awareness of cultural registers that no textbook teaches, is not the kind of knowledge that can be stored in a database and retrieved on demand. It lives in people. When those people leave, it leaves with them.
Professional translators have long occupied a peculiar position in the knowledge economy. Their work is invisible when done well. A reader who encounters a beautifully translated novel does not think about the translator. A patient who reads a clearly rendered medical document in their own language does not consider the person who bridged the linguistic gap. This invisibility made translators vulnerable long before AI arrived. It meant that their expertise could be devalued without anyone noticing, because the beneficiaries of their work rarely understood what it involved.
What is happening to translators now is therefore not just a story about one profession. It is a preview of what happens when AI is deployed not to eliminate human workers but to restructure their role in ways that extract their expertise while diminishing their authority, autonomy, and compensation. The translator who becomes a post-editor is still needed. But the nature of the need has changed. They are needed not for what they can create but for what they can catch. Not for their vision but for their vigilance.
Georgieva's statistic from Davos, those 150 translators who lost their positions at the IMF, represents one institution's calculation that the cultural and interpretive knowledge those individuals carried was worth less than the cost savings achieved by replacing them with technology. That calculation is now being replicated across every sector that relies on translation, from international law to pharmaceutical regulation to immigration services. In each case, the logic is the same. The machine produces output that is adequate for most purposes. The remaining humans clean up whatever the machine gets wrong. And the expertise that once defined the profession gradually atrophies, because there is no economic incentive to develop it and no structural pathway through which it can be transmitted to the next generation.
The question, then, is not whether AI translation will continue to improve. It will. And it is not whether human translators will survive in some form. They will, at least for a while, as post-editors and quality reviewers and specialists in the narrow domains where machine output remains unreliable. The question is whether a society that systematically devalues the ability to translate with feeling, with cultural awareness, with the full depth of human interpretive intelligence, will eventually discover that it has lost something it cannot rebuild. Not because the technology failed, but because the market decided that what translators knew was not worth preserving.
CNN. “Meet the translation professionals losing their jobs to AI.” CNN Business, 23 January 2026. https://www.cnn.com/2026/01/23/tech/translation-language-jobs-ai-automation-intl
TIME. “The IMF's Kristalina Georgieva on the AI 'Tsunami' Hitting Jobs.” TIME, January 2026. https://time.com/collections/davos-2026/7339218/ai-trade-global-economy-kristalina-georgieva-imf/
Slator. “Five Ways AI Reshaped the Translation Industry in 2025.” Slator, 2025. https://slator.com/five-ways-ai-reshaped-translation-industry-2025/
Slator. “Slator 2025 Language Industry Market Report.” Slator, 2025. https://slator.com/slator-2025-language-industry-market-report/
Society of Authors. “SoA survey reveals a third of translators and quarter of illustrators losing work to AI.” Society of Authors, April 2024. https://europeanwriterscouncil.eu/soa-survey-uk-ai-2024/
Merchant, Brian. “AI Killed My Job: Translators.” Blood in the Machine, 2025. https://www.bloodinthemachine.com/p/ai-killed-my-job-translators
Equal Times. “Artificial intelligence, dehumanisation and precarious work: translators on the frontline of tech-induced job degradation.” Equal Times, 2025. https://www.equaltimes.org/artificial-intelligence?lang=en
Frey, Carl Benedikt and Llanos-Paredes, Pedro. “Lost in Translation: Artificial Intelligence and the Demand for Foreign Language Skills.” Oxford Martin School, March 2025. https://www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk/publications/lost-in-translation-artificial-intelligence-and-the-demand-for-foreign-language-skills
CEPR. “Lost in translation: AI's impact on translators and foreign language skills.” CEPR VoxEU, 2025. https://cepr.org/voxeu/columns/lost-translation-ais-impact-translators-and-foreign-language-skills
Fortune. “Microsoft researchers have revealed the 40 jobs most exposed to AI.” Fortune, July 2025. https://fortune.com/article/what-are-the-jobs-most-exposed-to-ai-microsoft-research/
CNBC. “These 10 jobs are the least AI-safe, according to new Microsoft report.” CNBC, 5 August 2025. https://www.cnbc.com/2025/08/05/these-10-jobs-are-the-least-ai-safe-according-to-new-microsoft-report.html
Precedence Research. “AI Enabled Translation Services Market Size 2025 to 2035.” Precedence Research, 2025. https://www.precedenceresearch.com/ai-enabled-translation-services-market
Lahiri, Jhumpa. Translating Myself and Others. Princeton University Press, 2022. https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691231167/translating-myself-and-others
Princeton University. “Jhumpa Lahiri champions the writerly art of translation.” Princeton University News, 4 September 2020. https://www.princeton.edu/news/2020/09/04/jhumpa-lahiri-champions-writerly-art-translation
Wilson, Emily. Conversations with Tyler, Episode 63. “Emily Wilson on Translations and Language.” https://conversationswithtyler.com/episodes/emily-wilson/
Nature. “Exploring AI's performance in literary autobiography translation: how closely do AI models match human translation.” Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 2026. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41599-026-06630-4
Washington Post. “AI is taking on live translations. But jobs and meaning are getting lost.” Washington Post, 26 September 2025. https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2025/09/26/ai-translation-jobs/
The Bookseller. “A third of translators report losing work to generative AI systems, SoA survey reveals.” The Bookseller, 2024. https://www.thebookseller.com/news/a-third-of-translators-report-losing-work-to-generative-ai-systems-soa-survey-reveals
World Economic Forum. “Putting a figure on it: Davos 2026 in numbers.” WEF, January 2026. https://www.weforum.org/stories/2026/01/davos-2026-in-numbers/
GTS Translation. “The State of Machine Translation Post-Editing (MTPE) in 2025: What Translators Think.” GTS Blog, 7 April 2025. https://blog.gts-translation.com/2025/04/07/the-state-of-machine-translation-post-editing-mtpe-in-2025-what-translators-think/

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
from 下川友
人の行動は、すべて外的な事象に対する反応、もしくは体調の変化など内的な要因に対する反応によって生まれるものだと考えている。 つまり、純粋な能動的な行動というものは人間には存在しない。
火事や地震が起きたとき、身体が自動的に防衛反応を示すように、あらゆる行動は何かしらの刺激に対する応答である。それらは日常の中で小さく、視覚的に分かりにくくなっているだけで、本質的にはすべて、受けたものに対するカウンターだ。
部屋が汚いから掃除をする。 お腹が空いたから食事を作る。 体が冷えたから服を着込む。 これらはすべて、能動的に見えて実際には受動的な反応である。
努力という言葉がある。 努力は能動的な行動ではなく、それができること自体が才能だ、という意見がある。 自分も概ねその意見には賛成だが、どちらかというと、行動回数というのは「事象に反応するスイッチが入る回数」だと考えている。
会社でバリバリ働いている人は、一見すると主体的に努力しているように見える。 しかし、人間の行動をすべて受けたものへの反応と捉えるなら、それは例えば、貧しい生活への危機感に対する応答とも言える。 つまり、その人が能動的に動いているのではなく、状況に対して反応しているだけと解釈できる。 では、不幸な人間だけが行動するのかというと、そうではない。 「大切な人に美味しいものを食べさせたい」とか、「愛する人が病気なら治療費を出したい」といったように、人が動く理由は無数にある。
要するに、人は「受け取った刺激の回数」に応じて行動する。 そして、その刺激に関心を持つかどうかが個性になる。
どれだけ感受性があるか。 どのような刺激に反応するか。 それに対する応答のパターンをどれだけ持っているか。 それらが人の違いを形作っている。
ここまで考えると、人を動かすには「どれだけ刺激を与えるか」という話になる。 ただし個性がある以上、何に反応するかは人それぞれであり、特定することは難しい。 だからこそ、多様な刺激を、繰り返し与えるしかない。
しかし人は経験的に「つらいことが含まれているもの」には手を出さなくなる。 そのため、自力では到達できない領域が多く存在する。
そこで他人の存在が必要になる。 人は、他人からの刺激を待っている。
ただし、他人が自分に刺激を与える明確な理由は基本的にない。 だから、それは頻繁には起こらない。
ではどうするか。 自分が他人に刺激を与えれば、結果としてそれが自分にも返ってくるのではないか。
そう考えると、他人から刺激を受けたいなら、自分が先に与えるしかないという結論に至る。 これは、自分が動くための一つの理由になる。
人間の行動がすべて外的要因への反応の連続であるならば、 その中であえて自分が他者に刺激を与えにいくという行為は、どこか矛盾を含んでいるようにも感じる。 それでも、その矛盾が結果として自分を動かす理由になるのであれば、ここまで考えた意味はあったのだと思う。
ここで一度、思考を止める。 次は「では、何を相手に与えるべきか」を考えたい。
from Douglas Vandergraph
Before the city had fully opened its eyes, Jesus was awake beneath the old trees at the Oval. The grass still held the cold of night, and the campus carried that thin blue light that comes before sunrise when everything feels suspended between what has been and what is coming. He knelt in quiet prayer while the town around Him breathed in slow and shallow, as if even Fort Collins was not ready yet for another day of carrying what it had been carrying. Delivery trucks would soon rattle through Old Town. Lights would blink on in kitchens, offices, dorm rooms, and apartments where people had slept badly or not at all. Phones would light up with reminders and warnings and bills and messages nobody wanted to answer. Hearts would harden before breakfast just to make it through. Jesus prayed while all of that approached, and He prayed without hurry. He prayed for the woman already driving downtown with tears burning behind her eyes and not enough sleep to trust her own thoughts. He prayed for the boy who had learned how to make anger do the work of grief. He prayed for the old woman whose mind had become a hallway with too many open doors. He prayed for the ones who still believed they could hide their ache by staying busy, and for the ones too tired even to pretend. Then He rose, and the quiet authority He carried did not feel sharp or loud. It felt like someone had turned toward the exact places in the city that hurt the most and had no intention of looking away.
Dana Mercer had been awake for twenty-three hours, though she would have sworn she was no longer fully alive. She drove into Old Town with her shoulders locked and her jaw aching from clenching it all night. She had finished an overnight cleaning shift in a downtown office building and should have gone home, but home had become a place where every room asked something from her before she even took off her shoes. Her mother, Viv, had called three times after midnight asking where her husband was, forgetting again that he had been dead for nine years. Her son, Keaton, had not come home until sometime after two because she had heard the apartment door and then the refrigerator and then his bedroom door close with the kind of force that says more than words ever do. On the passenger seat beside her lay a grocery receipt, two unpaid utility notices, a folded printout from her mother’s neurologist, and an email from Poudre High she had not opened because she already knew it would not say anything good. She parked near Library Park because she could not bear the thought of going straight back to her apartment, and for a long moment she left both hands on the steering wheel and stared through the windshield at a morning that looked too normal to be trusted. The city was beginning to stir. A man crossed the street carrying a box of produce. Someone unlocked a side door nearby. A cyclist rolled past with a backpack and a look of clean purpose she resented on sight. Dana leaned her head against the seat and shut her eyes for what she meant to be five seconds. Instead she felt her throat tighten. She put one hand over her mouth because crying had become one more thing she did not have time for.
When she opened her eyes, Jesus was standing just beyond the front of her car, not imposing, not waving, not trying to startle her, simply present in a way that made the whole moment feel steadier than it had a second before. She frowned at Him through the glass as if He might be another thing demanding something from her. He waited until she opened the door. She did it mostly because something in His face made it harder not to than to. The morning air hit her cheeks, and she stepped out with the stiffness of someone who had been bracing for too long. “You look like you’ve been carrying the night by yourself,” He said. It was such a plain sentence that it should have irritated her, but instead it landed with the painful accuracy of truth. Dana gave a short laugh that had nothing funny in it. “That would be because I have.” Jesus glanced toward the bench near the edge of Library Park, then back at her. “Sit with Me for a minute.” She almost said no. She almost said she did not sit, she did not rest, she did not do small gentle things with strangers in the middle of a weekday morning because her life had already moved beyond soft options. But her knees felt unsteady, and she was suddenly aware that if she stayed upright much longer she might simply fold. So she followed Him to the bench. The park was quiet except for the far-off hiss of tires on a damp street and the faint metallic clatter of someone setting up for the day. Dana sat forward with her elbows on her thighs. Jesus sat beside her as if He had all the time in the world and was not nervous around pain that had started to smell like failure.
For a while He did not question her. He let the silence settle until it felt less like pressure and more like room. Dana watched a breeze move through the trees and hated how close she already felt to unraveling. “I’m too tired to be nice,” she said finally. “That’s the truth. I’m too tired to be patient. I’m too tired to be hopeful. I’m too tired to be the version of me everybody seems to need.” Jesus looked at her hands, at the cracked skin along one knuckle, at the chemical burn near her wrist from work, at the way her fingers kept rubbing the same spot against her jeans. “How long have you been telling yourself you can do this if you just push a little harder?” He asked. Dana swallowed. “Long enough for it to stop sounding like courage and start sounding stupid.” Her voice broke on the last word, and she hated that too. “My mother is slipping,” she said. “My son is angry all the time. I work nights and sleep when I can and smile when I have to. I forget things. I say terrible things when I’m stretched too thin. Then I lie in bed for forty minutes replaying them like I need extra punishment on top of everything else. I used to think if I held it together long enough the hard part would pass. Now it just feels like life keeps finding new ways to lean on the same bruise.” Jesus did not rush to fix her sentence with a verse or a speech. He only asked, “When was the last time someone took your pain seriously before asking you to be stronger?” Dana stared straight ahead. The answer came to her with humiliating speed. “I don’t know,” she said. “I don’t remember.”
Her phone buzzed in her coat pocket, and she flinched so hard it was almost a recoil. She did not take it out. The buzzing stopped, then started again. Jesus said, “You are waiting for bad news that may already be here.” Dana shut her eyes. “Every time that phone goes off it costs me something.” The call ended. A voicemail alert appeared. Another email notification dropped in right after it. She let out a slow, angry breath. “It’s school,” she said. “Or my landlord. Or my mother’s doctor. Or somebody reminding me that I missed something I couldn’t afford to miss.” Jesus nodded once. “Listen to the school first.” She turned toward Him. “Why that first?” He answered with the kind of calm that did not feel theoretical. “Because the wound there is still speaking, and you already know it.” Dana opened the voicemail with numb fingers. The vice principal’s voice came through flat and practiced, saying Keaton had missed multiple classes again, saying there had been another confrontation, saying they needed to discuss whether he was still willing to participate in school or if other interventions were needed. The message was careful and professional, which somehow made it hurt worse. Dana stared at the phone when it ended as though it had personally betrayed her. “He was not like this,” she whispered. “He was not always like this.” Jesus asked, “When did he start disappearing while standing right in front of you?” Dana laughed again, but this time the sound was smaller, like something breaking under a blanket. “Probably around the time his father left and I started turning every conversation into a list of what needed to be done. Or maybe when my mom moved in and all the air left the apartment. Or maybe when I stopped hearing the difference between him being angry and him being hurt. Pick one.”
The sun was beginning to reach the edges of Old Town by then, and the square a few blocks away was waking into its public face. Dana and Jesus rose from the bench and began walking without making a formal decision about it. The movement helped. People were easier to bear when she did not have to look directly at them for too long. They moved past the quiet edge of the morning toward Old Town Square, where chairs were stacked and shop lights were starting to warm the windows. Dana told Him about Keaton in pieces, the way tired people do when they no longer trust themselves to build a neat story. He was seventeen. He used to draw. He used to stay up talking to her about music and cars and which city he wanted to disappear into after graduation. Then his father left, and later Viv moved in, and later still the apartment became a place of medication alarms, forgotten burners, sharp words, apologies said too late, and an ache that never really sat down. Keaton had learned to live outside the home before he ever moved out of it. He skated, wandered, slept at friends’ apartments, skipped class, came back only when he needed socks or food or a shower. Dana said she kept telling herself this was a phase because the truth was too hard to hold in her bare hands. “I know I sound like every mother who says she did her best,” she said as they crossed near the Square. “But I did do my best. It just wasn’t enough.” Jesus looked at the faces of people passing and then back at her. “Doing your best while starving in the soul will always leave blood on the edges,” He said quietly. “That does not make you faithless. It makes you wounded.” Dana stopped walking for a second. Nobody had called her that. Tired, yes. Overwhelmed, yes. Stressed, irresponsible, behind, maybe. But wounded carried mercy inside it, and mercy had become unfamiliar.
By the time they reached Old Town Library, the doors had opened and the day had properly begun. Dana was a familiar enough face there that the woman at the front desk lifted her eyebrows in concern before saying anything. “You’re here early,” she said gently. Dana tried to smile and failed. “Needed a place to sit for a minute.” The woman, whose name tag read Asha, gave a small nod that held no pressure. “You know where everything is.” There was something about the library that always made Dana feel two opposite things at once. One was relief, because the building still belonged to quiet and order and the possibility that not everything had to be loud to matter. The other was grief, because Viv had loved this place when her mind was clearer, and now even rows of books could not keep memory from drifting. Dana sat at a public computer but did not touch the keyboard. She opened the email from school. It said what she expected and still hit harder than expected. Keaton had cursed at a counselor. He had shoved past staff. He had walked out before lunch. The school wanted a meeting. The school wanted a plan. The school wanted her to do what every system wants from mothers who are already drowning, which is more. Then her phone lit up with a text from the woman in the apartment next door. Your mom isn’t in your place. I knocked because the TV was too loud. Door was unlocked. Thought you should know. Dana read it twice before the meaning fully reached her body. When it did, her legs went weak so quickly she had to grip the edge of the desk. Asha saw it from across the room and started toward her. Jesus was already there.
Panic is too small a word for what rushed through Dana then. It was not just fear. It was guilt with a heartbeat. It was every late pill, every hurried answer, every impatient tone, every moment she had half-listened to Viv while doing three other things at once, all rising together and saying now look. Dana stood so fast the chair rolled backward. “She wanders when she gets confused,” she said, though nobody had asked for explanation. “Not far, usually. Except sometimes she thinks she’s going somewhere from thirty years ago and then she keeps walking because the place in her head is still there.” Her breathing had turned thin and fast. “I should have gone home. I knew I should have gone home.” Jesus put one hand lightly against the edge of the desk, not touching her, not crowding her, but holding the space steady. “Shame will not help you find her,” He said. “Love will. Stay with what helps.” Dana shook her head because that sounded too simple for a problem with real streets and real danger in it, but His voice made room for her mind to return to itself. She called Viv’s phone. It rang from the apartment, which made everything worse. She called a neighbor. Nothing. Another. Nothing. Then an older man near the copier glanced up and said, “I saw a woman matching that description near College a little while ago. Gray sweater? Slippers?” Dana turned so fast he stepped back. “Yes.” He frowned as he tried to place it. “She seemed turned around. Kept asking how to get back to where the music used to be on campus.” Dana covered her face with both hands for half a second. Viv had worked in a music building office decades ago when Dana was small. Or at least Dana thought she had. Memory in their family had started becoming slippery in more than one direction. “The Oval,” Dana said. “She might mean the Oval.”
They left the library in a hurry that was not quite running but close enough to feel it in the chest. College Avenue had filled out by then, and the city looked fully itself now, which felt almost offensive. People laughed outside a café. A dog pulled its owner toward a crosswalk. A student hurried with headphones in, lost in some private urgency. Dana wanted to scream at all of them for continuing. Jesus walked beside her without quickening into frenzy. That steadiness began, against her will, to help. “She used to bring me to campus when I was little,” Dana said as they moved south. “She’d say the trees there made everything feel older in a good way. Safer somehow. Like life had already been through hard things and was still standing.” Her voice thinned. “I don’t even know if that’s a real memory anymore or one I built out of pieces after she got sick.” Jesus said, “Some memories hold because love touched them deeply. Even when the edges blur, the truth inside them can remain.” Dana wanted to believe that. She also wanted something more practical, like a tracker or a map or a guarantee. They passed a city worker unloading equipment from a truck, and one of the cases slipped from his hands and spilled tools across the sidewalk. Dana barely noticed, but Jesus stopped long enough to kneel and help gather them. The man muttered an apology he did not need to give and then, in the clumsy way sorrow sometimes breaks loose around unexpected gentleness, said, “My head’s not right today.” Jesus handed him a wrench. “Then be kind to your hands.” The man blinked at Him as if those six words had reached somewhere private. Then they were moving again. Dana looked back once. The worker stood still beside the truck for a long moment before returning to his job slower than before, as if he had remembered he was a human being and not only a function.
They reached the Oval beneath a brighter sky, and the campus had begun to populate with the ordinary rhythm of movement and distance and ambition. Students crossed the grass with coffee cups and backpacks, talking in half-finished sentences. Bikes clicked past. The old elms spread their branches wide above the open green, and for one strange second Dana understood why her mother’s mind might have reached for this place when everything else inside her had become uncertain. There was something about the Oval that made even transience feel anchored. Jesus scanned the space the way a shepherd reads a hillside. Dana was still looking for her mother when she saw Keaton first. He was sitting near the trunk of a tree with his skateboard beside him and one knee pulled up, staring into the middle distance like somebody trying not to be seen. His hair was flattened on one side, his hoodie was yesterday’s, and his face carried that familiar teenage mixture of defiance and hurt that made mothers angry because it hurt them to recognize it. “Keaton,” Dana said, and his eyes cut toward her with immediate irritation, as though the fact of her voice alone had accused him. “What now?” he said. Dana stopped three feet away because every conversation between them had started feeling like the moment before broken glass. “Grandma’s gone,” she said. “She left the apartment. I’m trying to find her.” The color shifted in his face. Not enough for anyone who did not love him to notice, but enough for a mother who still did. “Since when?” he asked. “I don’t know. This morning.” He stood too fast, then covered the movement with anger. “And you’re telling me now?” Dana stared at him. “You were not home.” He looked away. “That’s not the same thing as not being there.”
Jesus stepped closer, not between them but near enough that the space changed. Keaton’s eyes landed on Him with suspicion that bordered on hostility. “Who is this?” Dana opened her mouth and realized she had no normal answer. “He’s helping me,” she said. Keaton gave a hard, humorless laugh. “Right. Great. That clears it up.” He grabbed his board and started to move, but Jesus said, “You are more frightened than angry.” Keaton stopped because the sentence went where most people never aimed. He turned halfway back. “You don’t know anything about me.” Jesus looked at him with the kind of attention that does not flinch when it meets a wounded animal. “You are seventeen and tired in a way nobody sees because you cover it with volume. You keep leaving before people can leave you. You learned that if you stay hard, nobody can hand you one more thing to carry. But it has not made you lighter.” Keaton’s mouth opened, then closed. Dana had not seen him lose language like that in years. He glanced at her, maybe to see if she had been talking to this stranger, but she was too stunned for strategy. For a second the campus noise seemed to pull back. Keaton shifted his weight. “I didn’t ask for any of this,” he said, and the words came out smaller than the posture holding them. Jesus nodded. “No. You did not.” Something in Keaton softened just enough for grief to show through. “She keeps calling me by my grandfather’s name,” he said. “Or by my dad’s. Like I’m not even in the room, just some old memory standing where I am. Then my mom looks at me like I’m one more disaster. So yeah. I leave.”
Dana flinched because he was not fully wrong, and wrong enough still to hurt. She started to defend herself, to explain, to remind him of nights she had stayed up and shifts she had taken and forms she had filled out and doors she had held shut with her own body. Jesus lifted His gaze to her before she spoke, and something in that look asked her to listen for the wound before she answered the accusation. Keaton stared down at the grass. “Last night she was up again,” he said. “Walking around. Asking where her purse was. Asking if she was late. I told her to go back to bed. She wouldn’t. She kept opening my door. I yelled.” His voice roughened. “I said if she hated being there so much maybe she should just go where she wanted. Then I left.” Dana closed her eyes. The sentence struck both of them at once. “Keaton,” she whispered. “I didn’t mean it like that,” he said, too quickly, because boys only start rushing when they are close to breaking. “I was mad. I was just mad.” Jesus said, “Anger is often grief that has run out of safe places to kneel.” Keaton looked at Him then the way a person looks at a locked door that has somehow opened. The resistance did not vanish, but it lost its swagger. Dana sat down on the low edge of a walkway because her body had stopped cooperating with the demand to stay composed. She pressed her palms together between her knees and stared at nothing. The day had somehow widened and narrowed at once. Her mother was missing. Her son was hurting. She was learning the truth about both of them from a Man she had met less than two hours earlier.
A woman walking her bike nearby slowed when she heard Dana describe Viv. “I think I saw her,” she said after a moment. “Maybe not long ago. Older woman, gray sweater, house slippers. She asked me where the water was. Not a fountain. She kept saying real water.” Dana stood again so quickly her vision blurred. “Which way did she go?” The woman pointed east, then hesitated. “I told her there was the creek trail if she kept going, but I don’t know if she understood me.” Spring Creek Trail. Dana repeated it in her head like something she could hold. Viv loved moving water. She always had. Even after the diagnosis, she still calmed when she could sit near a creek or hear a river working over stone. Keaton was already lifting his board under one arm and starting in that direction before anyone asked him to. Dana looked at him, really looked, and for one aching instant she saw not a problem to manage but a boy who had said a cruel thing because pain had overfilled him and who now would have given anything to pull the night back and try again. Jesus started walking with them, and neither of them questioned it now. They moved away from the Oval and toward the trail with the kind of silence that is not empty but crowded. Dana’s breathing was still uneven. Keaton kept scanning ahead as if he could force the world to return what it had taken. Jesus walked between their fear and their shame without being trapped by either one. By the time they reached the path and the sound of water came up faint and living beneath the city noise, all three of them knew the day had gone somewhere none of them could fake their way through. They stepped onto the trail together, and the search began to feel like more than finding Viv. It began to feel like the exposed edge of everything this family had been avoiding for years.
The creek ran beside them with a sound that did not care how frightened they were, and that made Dana want to scream. Water always had the nerve to keep moving. It slipped over stone and bent around roots and carried light without asking permission from anybody’s pain. She walked fast enough that her breath was starting to catch, and every older woman she saw ahead on the trail made her heart lurch before the shape resolved into someone else’s mother, someone else’s grandmother, someone else whose family had the luxury of assuming where she would be at noon. Keaton kept ranging a little ahead and then falling back, too restless to stay beside them and too afraid to get truly out of sight. Jesus neither pushed them nor slowed them. He moved with the kind of presence that made panic feel seen without being allowed to steer. Cyclists passed. A runner moved by with the glazed face of a person measuring life in miles because miles were simpler than feelings. Somewhere nearby a dog barked twice, then settled. Dana kept calling Viv’s name every few minutes, and every time there was no answer the word mother inside her chest seemed to turn heavier, as if the title itself were being made of stone.
They came to a bend where the trail widened near a bench and a patch of low grass still wet from the morning. An older man in a City of Fort Collins work shirt was crouched beside an irrigation box with two tools in his hand. He looked up as they approached and read the fear in Dana’s face before she had fully spoken. “I’m looking for my mother,” she said. “Gray sweater, house slippers, maybe confused, maybe asking for water.” The man stood carefully, knees cracking with the honesty of age, and thought for a moment. “I saw somebody like that maybe twenty minutes back,” he said. “She wasn’t scared exactly. More like she was trying to remember what the place was called while she was standing in it.” Dana stepped toward him. “Which way?” He pointed farther east along the trail. “Toward the stretch where it opens up a bit. She stopped when she heard the creek. Just stood there listening. I asked if she was all right. She smiled at me like she knew me from somewhere, then asked if the concert had started yet.” He gave Dana an apologetic look. “I didn’t know what to do with that.” Dana’s throat tightened. Viv used to take her to outdoor performances in the summer when money was tight and hope was cheap enough to carry in folding chairs. Later, when life got narrower, music had remained one of the last things that could still reach her mother through the fog. The worker shifted his tool from one hand to the other. “She wasn’t moving fast,” he added. “You’ve probably got time.” Dana thanked him, but her gratitude came out thin. Time was exactly what she did not trust anymore.
As they resumed walking, Keaton kicked a stone off the edge of the trail so hard it disappeared into brush. “I told her to leave,” he said, not looking at either of them. Dana inhaled sharply, ready again to say what mothers say when they are scared enough to use blame as a railing. Jesus spoke first. “You told her what pain tells the mouth to say when the heart is cornered.” Keaton’s jaw worked. “That doesn’t make it better.” “No,” Jesus said. “But it tells the truth about why you are shaking now.” Keaton looked down at his own hands as if he had not realized they were trembling. Dana saw it too and hated what it did to her. Part of her wanted to gather him in the way she had when he was six and feverish and small enough to fit against her chest like he belonged there by nature. Another part wanted to stay angry because anger was cleaner than grief and easier than admitting she had missed just how lost he had become while living twelve feet from her in the same apartment. “Do you know what it feels like in there?” Keaton said suddenly, still not looking at her. “Every day. Do you know what it smells like. The pills, the old food she forgets about, the TV running, the panic when she can’t remember something and then acts mad at us because she knows she can’t remember it. And you walking around like if you stop for five minutes everything collapses. I can’t breathe in there.” Dana felt the words hit every place they were meant to hit. She wanted to say I know. She wanted to say you think I can breathe. Instead she said nothing because for once nothing was more honest than a defense.
The trail dipped under a road and the temperature changed for a moment, cooler beneath the underpass, the sound of traffic overhead muffled and indifferent. On the far side, they saw a woman sitting on the low wall beside the path with a stroller angled toward the creek. Her little boy had dropped a toy truck and was crying with the blunt injustice only toddlers can sustain. The woman was trying to soothe him while also bouncing a baby against her shoulder, and the effort in her face looked less like competence than survival. She glanced up as they approached, embarrassed to be seen in the middle of failing at three things at once. Jesus bent, lifted the truck, and offered it back to the boy, who went quiet from surprise more than comfort. The mother let out a breath that sounded almost like laughter but not quite. “Thank you,” she said. “I have not had coffee. Or patience. Or any spiritual maturity at all today.” Dana would have kept walking, but Jesus paused long enough to ask, “How long have you been trying to pretend you are not lonely?” The woman’s eyes widened in the raw, involuntary way people’s eyes do when someone has stepped directly onto the hidden floorboard that creaks loudest. “That’s a rude question for a stranger,” she said, though her voice had softened. “Only if it is not true,” Jesus replied. Her mouth twitched. Then to Dana’s surprise, the woman’s face broke open just a little. “My husband travels all week,” she said. “My family lives in Nebraska. Everybody says this is the season I’ll miss someday, which makes me want to scream into a pillow because it is also the season where I feel invisible.” She adjusted the baby and looked ashamed for saying any of it out loud. Jesus said, “The love you give in hidden exhaustion is not lost because nobody applauds it.” The woman swallowed hard and nodded once. Dana watched the exchange while her own shame rearranged itself. She had believed, quietly and for too long, that the whole city moved in cleaner houses with sturdier people inside them. Yet here was another human being one hard sentence away from tears, carrying children and isolation under a sky that looked normal above both of them. Before they left, Dana described Viv. The woman thought a moment and said, “I passed an older lady farther up by the water. She was touching the railing like she was remembering it with her hands.”
They quickened again, and the search began to feel narrower, more immediate. The noon light was rising toward its dry Colorado brightness now, and the city had lost all traces of morning softness. Keaton walked beside his mother for the first time since they entered the trail, but the closeness felt fragile, like both of them were borrowing it for necessity rather than trust. After a while he said, “That message from school.” Dana looked at him. “What about it.” He shrugged like he did not care, which only ever meant he cared too much. “I wasn’t just skipping.” She waited. “There’s this kid in one of my classes,” he said. “Not a friend. Just a kid. His dad got arrested a while back and everybody knows it. Some guys were making fun of him in the hallway. Saying things. Recording him. He shoved one of them and then it became a whole scene. I stepped in. Then the counselor started telling me to calm down like I was the problem and I just…” He opened his hands as if the rest explained itself. “I know that doesn’t make me look great.” Dana stared at him. The vice principal’s voicemail had said confrontation. It had not said intervention. It had not said defense. It had not said your son recognized humiliation because he has lived too near it and could not stomach watching it happen to someone else. “You should have told me,” she said, but the sentence came out softer than either of them expected. Keaton barked a laugh. “When. Between the med reminders and the electric bill and Grandma calling me by somebody else’s name. When was the ideal time for a meaningful parent-son debrief.” The bitterness was real, but so was the plea under it. Dana nodded once because it would have been dishonest not to. “You’re right,” she said. Keaton’s whole body seemed to stop for a second. He turned to her, suspicious. “About what.” Dana kept walking because she needed movement to say it. “About there not being room. About me making everything in that apartment feel like emergency weather. About you learning not to bring me one more thing because it looked like I was already one thing away from breaking.” Keaton looked forward again. “You kind of were.” “I know.” The admission hurt, but it also loosened something. Jesus said nothing for a while, which made His silence feel like shelter instead of absence.
The trail curved toward a busier crossing, and there, near a railing where the creek widened and the sound of the current deepened, they finally saw Viv. She was not in danger at that exact moment, which made Dana nearly collapse with relief and fresh fear all at once. Viv stood with one hand on the metal rail and her face turned toward the water, as still as if she had been placed there. Beside her was a man in a Denver Broncos cap holding a bicycle helmet under one arm, talking to her gently without expecting coherent replies. Dana reached them first. “Mom.” The word came out in a whisper because anything louder would have broken her. Viv turned slowly. For a second her eyes were clear with recognition, so clear it felt like a mercy sent directly from heaven. “There you are,” she said, with the slight annoyance of a mother who has been waiting on a child rather than the other way around. Dana laughed and cried in the same breath. “Yes,” she said. “I’m here.” Viv squinted at Keaton next. “And you.” Her expression shifted, uncertain, searching through shelves inside herself for the correct label. Keaton froze. Dana saw the fear in him before the disappointment even arrived. Then Viv smiled. “You’ve gotten taller,” she said. It was not perfect recognition. It was not his name. But it was him enough to pierce him straight through. He nodded once and looked away toward the creek, jaw tight. The man with the helmet said, “She seemed okay, just not sure where okay was. I stayed because my mom went through this.” Dana thanked him so earnestly it made her voice shake. He shrugged with that modesty people wear when compassion has cost them something before. Jesus met the man’s eyes and said, “The kindness you learned in sorrow has become shelter for others.” The man blinked, gave a crooked little smile, and put his helmet back on as if he needed motion after standing too close to something sacred.
Dana stepped carefully toward her mother, like approaching both a reunion and a fracture. “Mom, you scared me.” Viv looked back at the water. “I was trying to get to the music,” she said. “I could hear it before.” Dana followed her gaze and understood that in Viv’s mind, the creek, the breeze, the metallic rattle from a nearby bike, and the distant noise of the city had become a half-remembered concert from decades earlier. “It’s beautiful here,” Dana said, because correction would have been cruel and pointless. Viv nodded. “Yes. It is.” Then her face changed. Fear came into it fast, like a weather front. “Did I do something wrong.” Dana moved closer and took her hand. It felt colder than it should have. “No,” she said. “You just got turned around.” Viv looked at her with the vulnerable confusion of a child wearing an adult face. “I do that now.” It was not really a question. Dana’s throat burned. “Sometimes,” she said. “But you’re not alone.” Viv lowered her eyes and whispered, “I hate needing help.” The sentence split Dana clean through because at last the disease spoke in a human voice instead of a clinical one. She had spent so many hours managing symptoms that she had almost forgotten the humiliation inside them. Jesus stepped near enough for Viv to see Him clearly. “Being held is not the same thing as being erased,” He said. Viv looked at Him a long moment. Then, with the uncomplicated honesty of someone whose filters had been stripped away by illness, she asked, “Do I know You.” Jesus smiled, and the smile did not feel ornamental. It felt like rest. “You have been known by Me a very long time.”
They did not hurry her home. That was the first small miracle of the afternoon. Dana would once have rushed the whole thing, propelled by fear and a thousand practical concerns. Medication times. Neighbor questions. Lost hours at work. The fact that lunch had not happened. The fact that life still had its hand out even after this. But Jesus seemed to alter time merely by refusing to obey panic. They found a shaded place not far from the trail where Viv could sit. Keaton brought water from a nearby bottle-filling station without being asked. Dana watched him hand it to his grandmother and saw the awkward care in the movement, like tenderness trying to remember how to use its own body. Viv drank, then leaned back and looked up through the branches. “Your father liked cottonwoods,” she said suddenly to Dana, and for the first time all day she sounded completely anchored in the right year. “He said they always seemed to be whispering without gossiping.” Dana laughed through fresh tears. “That sounds like him.” Viv smiled faintly, pleased to have reached a true thing. Then the clarity shifted again, and she looked at Jesus as though trying to place a neighbor from a street she no longer lived on. Keaton sat down on the curb edge with his elbows on his knees and covered half his face with one hand. “I’m sorry,” he said, not loudly, not theatrically, not even entirely toward anyone specific at first. Then he lifted his head and turned to Viv. “About last night. I was mad and I said something ugly and I’m sorry.” Viv studied him. “Everybody says ugly things when they’re hurting,” she replied. “That doesn’t make them good. But it does mean they might be telling the truth about being tired.” Keaton gave a wet laugh and wiped quickly at one eye as if he could still hide it. “Yeah,” he said. “Okay.” Dana looked from one of them to the other and realized how rarely apology had been allowed to breathe in their home. Usually it came rushed, defensive, already drowned by the next emergency. Here it sat in the air long enough to become something like repair.
Eventually they began the slow walk back. Not straight to the apartment at first, but westward in stages, stopping when Viv needed to, listening when she drifted into fragments of memory that might once have been stories. Near Lee Martinez Park, a group of kids were yelling over a pickup game, and one voice in particular rose sharp enough to make Keaton glance over. A boy had just thrown down a glove and stormed off the field while a man who was probably his father shouted after him in the tone of someone who had mistaken pressure for love too many times to notice anymore. The whole scene lasted seconds, but it left a bruise in the air. Keaton watched the boy cut away toward the parking lot with his shoulders set in that same teenage armor he knew by heart. “That’s how it happens,” he muttered. Dana looked at him. “How what happens.” He shoved his hands into his hoodie pocket. “People decide you’re trouble before they ever ask why you’re on fire.” Jesus turned His gaze toward the field, then toward Keaton. “Many people know how to correct behavior,” He said. “Far fewer know how to look beneath it without fear.” Keaton nodded without sarcasm this time. Dana let the sentence sink into her because it named not only school administrators and angry fathers on park sidelines. It named her too. She had corrected, redirected, threatened consequences, negotiated curfews, confiscated chargers, checked grades, and used every practical tool she knew. But how often had she sat long enough under Keaton’s anger to ask what wound kept feeding it. Not often enough. Maybe never with full courage.
By the time they came back toward Old Town, the afternoon had thickened. Chairs were out on patios. A violinist near the Square was working through a melody with more feeling than polish, and Viv slowed, turning her head toward the music as if someone had called her by a true name. Jesus stopped with her. The violinist, a young man with tired eyes and a case on the ground containing more coins than bills, kept playing until he noticed he had gathered a different kind of audience. When the piece ended, Viv clapped with surprising delight. “That one knew where it was going,” she said. The violinist smiled. “I’m glad somebody thinks so.” Jesus asked him, “Who taught you to keep playing when the room no longer promises reward.” The young man looked down at the instrument in his hand. “My grandmother,” he said after a second. “She used to say some things are worth doing even when nobody notices.” He gave a sheepish half-shrug. “I guess I’m testing that theory.” Jesus nodded. “Faithfulness is often mistaken for obscurity while it is being built.” The young man absorbed that in silence. Dana found herself dropping the only five-dollar bill in her wallet into the open case and not regretting it for once. Viv kept listening to the next piece with her eyes closed. Keaton stood beside his mother and, for no reason other than the moment allowing it, leaned his shoulder lightly against hers. Dana did not move away. The city carried on around them, but for a minute they were not being dragged by it.
When they finally reached the apartment, Dana braced herself for the usual feeling of crossing a threshold into static and obligation. The clutter was still there. The dishes had not washed themselves. The utility notices remained what they were. The TV was still on because the neighbor had only turned down the volume, not off. Nothing external had transformed into a cleaner version of reality. Yet something inside the rooms felt less accusing with Jesus present. He did not make the apartment look impressive. He made it look inhabited by souls worth tenderness. Viv sat at the table while Keaton turned off the television and opened a window to let in air. Dana stood in the kitchen with both hands on the counter, staring at the unopened mail, the bottle of pills, the sink full of evidence that life had been outrunning her for months. “I don’t know how to do this,” she said quietly, not because she expected a strategy but because the truth had finally pushed past her pride. Jesus stood near enough that she did not feel abandoned inside the admission. “Not all at once,” He said. “That is how fear describes the future. Love takes the next faithful thing and does not pretend it is the whole staircase.” Dana let that settle. Then she laughed once, tired and real. “The next faithful thing feels less inspiring than I wanted my life to be.” Jesus answered, “It is often holier than the life people imagine for themselves.”
The next faithful thing turned out to be embarrassingly plain. Keaton made grilled cheese sandwiches because it was the only thing in the refrigerator that could become dinner without a trip to the store. Viv folded and unfolded the same paper napkin until Dana sat beside her and gently took it away. Dana called the school back, not to defend, not to perform, but to ask for a meeting where someone could tell the full truth instead of the administrative version. She expected resistance. Instead the vice principal, hearing something different in her voice, softened enough to say they would talk the next morning. Keaton overheard and looked almost startled that she had not come at him first. After the call, Dana sat at the tiny table while the late light moved across the floorboards and realized she could not remember the last meal they had eaten without some active tension taking up half the room. This meal was not cheerful. Nobody turned magically easy. Viv asked twice where her husband was and once why Dana was not at school, which would have been funny if it had not hurt. Keaton snapped at that second question, then caught himself and said, “Sorry,” before the moment could sour completely. Dana looked at him and saw effort instead of insolence. That alone felt like the beginning of a road. Jesus sat with them, and His presence did not turn their apartment into a sermon. It turned it into a place where the truth did not have to wear makeup to be bearable.
After they ate, Viv drifted toward sleep in the old recliner by the window. The hard edge in Keaton had lowered enough that he looked suddenly younger, almost fragile in the face, like the boy he had been was still somewhere underneath all the practiced indifference. Dana stood with him in the kitchen while rinsing plates. “Why didn’t you tell me about school,” she asked, quieter this time. Keaton leaned one shoulder against the doorway. “Because every time I bring you something hard, I can see you calculating what it costs before you even answer.” Dana shut off the water and let his words stay where they landed. “That’s fair,” she said. “And I hate that it’s fair.” He stared at the floor. “I know you’re trying.” She nodded. “I know you’re hurting.” He gave a tiny, almost disbelieving smile. “That sounds like something a real mom would say.” Dana looked up sharply, but his tone had no cruelty in it, only sadness. She dried her hands slowly. “I have been a real mom,” she said. “Just not always an available one.” Keaton swallowed. “Same difference sometimes.” The sentence could have started another fight on any other day. Instead it became a doorway. Dana stepped toward him. “I know,” she said. He looked at her then with red around the eyes and all the old caution still present. “I don’t want Grandma to die with us all being mad all the time,” he said. The confession came out so plain it was devastating. Dana reached for him carefully, giving him room to refuse. He did not. He let her pull him in, stiff at first, then suddenly not stiff at all. He folded into her with the exhausted weight of someone who had been holding himself upright by anger for too long. Dana held the back of his hoodie and shut her eyes and cried without making a show of it. Over his shoulder she saw Jesus watching them with that same quiet authority, and for the first time all day she understood that authority could look like patience instead of force.
Evening settled over Fort Collins in layers. The heat eased. The sounds from the street outside changed from workday motion to the looser pattern of people heading somewhere they hoped might restore them. Jesus rose to leave while there was still a little light in the sky. Dana wanted to ask Him not to. The selfishness of the urge startled her because she was not used to naming what she needed that clearly. “Will I see You again,” she asked. Jesus looked at her, then at Viv sleeping in the chair, then at Keaton sitting on the floor beside the window with his skateboard in his lap and no performance left in him. “You will not have to look as far as you think,” He said. Then to Keaton He added, “The tenderness you bury is not your weakness. It is the part of you that still knows how to love without an audience. Do not let pain train it out of you.” Keaton lowered his eyes but nodded. To Dana He said, “You have called yourself failing when much of what you are is weary. Learn the difference. Then let grace enter the room where punishment has been sitting in your name.” She breathed that in like medicine. There were no dramatic lights, no thunder, no command to become instantly transformed. Only truth, placed exactly where it needed to go. Jesus touched the doorframe as He passed through, not because He needed to, Dana thought, but because even wood and chipped paint and ordinary apartments seemed to matter differently around Him.
Night came on by degrees. After helping Viv to bed and setting out tomorrow’s medication in the little plastic organizer that had become both tool and symbol of a life narrowed by need, Dana stepped outside because the apartment felt too full of tenderness for her to know what to do with it. Keaton joined her a minute later. They stood on the walkway in the cooling air while somewhere down the block somebody laughed too loud and a car stereo pulsed through half a song before fading. “Do you think He was…” Keaton started, then stopped because language felt too small. Dana answered with a question of her own. “Does it matter what word we use first if we both know nobody else walks into a day like that.” Keaton gave a tiny snort. “Fair.” He kicked lightly at the edge of the concrete. “I might go to the meeting tomorrow.” Dana looked at him. “I would like that.” He nodded once. “I’m not promising to become a youth group poster kid.” She almost smiled. “That would have worried me if you had.” He glanced toward the dark window of the apartment where Viv slept. “I’ll stay home tonight.” Dana swallowed around fresh gratitude. “Thank you.” For a long moment they stood without filling the silence. It no longer felt like emptiness. It felt like ground.
Across town, Jesus had returned to quiet. The city was dimmer now, but not quieter in any absolute way. Tires still moved over roads. Porch lights glowed. Arguments continued behind doors. Lonely people scrolled themselves numb in the blue wash of screens. Workers on late shifts tied aprons, checked inventory, lifted boxes, answered dispatch calls, wiped counters, stocked shelves, and kept the machinery of ordinary life from falling apart. A man sat alone on a bench in Old Town pretending he had nowhere else to be because that sounded more dignified than admitting he had nowhere he felt wanted. A woman in a townhouse near Harmony stared at a calendar and tried not to panic about numbers that would not stretch. A college student on campus smiled in a crowded room while quietly deciding whether anyone would notice if he disappeared for a week. Jesus carried all of it as He made His way back toward prayer. He did not move through Fort Collins like a tourist collecting impressions. He moved through it like a Shepherd who knew exactly which ones were closest to giving up, exactly which hearts had grown hard from surviving, exactly which apologies were one brave sentence away from beginning. He reached a quiet place beneath the evening sky and knelt again, the way He had that morning, and the day folded back into the same stillness from which it had begun. He prayed for Dana, that exhaustion would no longer convince her she was worthless. He prayed for Keaton, that anger would stop being the only language he trusted. He prayed for Viv, that fear would not own the halls of her fading mind. He prayed for the lonely mother by the trail, for the violinist in the Square, for the city worker with the scattered tools, for the cyclist who had stayed with a confused old woman because sorrow had made him gentle, and for the many others whose faces had flashed before Him without anyone else seeing the full weight they carried.
The night deepened, and Jesus remained there in quiet prayer while Fort Collins went on breathing around Him. Some answers would come slowly. Some wounds would reopen before they closed. There would still be bills and school meetings and hard days with no visible music in them at all. Viv would wake some mornings knowing exactly who everyone was and some mornings knowing almost nothing. Keaton would not become easy overnight. Dana would still have to learn how not to punish herself for having limits. But something essential had shifted. Not the city. Not the difficulty. The lie at the center of their suffering had shifted. They were not abandoned in it. They were not invisible inside it. They were not merely problems to solve or burdens to drag. They had been seen in the exact shape of their fatigue and fear and regret, and being seen by Him had already begun to change what the pain was allowed to say about them. Jesus stayed bowed in the dark a while longer, calm and grounded and fully present, the same way He had been all day. Then the wind moved through the trees, and the city, for one brief holy moment, felt as if it knew it had been prayed for.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph
Support the ministry by buying Douglas a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/douglasvandergraph
Financial support to help keep this Ministry active daily can be mailed to:
Vandergraph Po Box 271154 Fort Collins, Colorado 80527