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from 00692285
There is a sense that many Americans get when they visit other countries abroad. It’s a sense that in some places outside the US there is just something different about the way people live and enjoy life. The writer Gary Shteyngart attributes this to something called sensualism. Sensualism is a sort of hedonist impulse to enjoy life through the senses. It is the appreciation of craft, of human creativity, typified by the enjoyment of good food, drink, clothes, and arts. It is made possible by robust communities tied together by strong families and governmental systems that nurture the artisanal over the mass-produced. It is also something considered in short supply in American culture, and by extension modern secular culture. Writers like Shteyngart argue that American culture has strayed away from sensualism in favor of ruthless optimization—things like looksmaxxing and the endless pursuit of health and wellness optimization all point to the same soulless, corporate haze that has come to define much of what we consume. What’s the point of a living a life that’s optimized to the max if you can’t enjoy it?
When I hear the term sensualist, I do somewhat recognize a few of its traits in me. I too prefer the artisanal over the corporate. I too believe that American culture has favored optimization and efficiency over beauty. I find workout culture and health tracking tedious and not-fun. Shteyngart advocates for more sensualism—that we don’t have enough sensualism in our society. To me, the choice between going for a run or sitting in a hot tub is obvious—I’d rather not run. Yeah, I get it. Working out is healthy and can extend your life, but who cares how long your life is if you’re just going to spend it running and working out all the time?

Despite my disdain for health-optimization and workout-culture, sensualism presents its own problems. I love sensual pleasures. I love good food, I love a good hot tub. I like buying and enjoying things like clothes and gadgets. I like music (sometimes) and I like tobacco. These are all wonderful sensory pleasures that I often seek out but when I do I’m usually burned by how fleeting and unrewarding these experiences ultimately are. They never last and they never seem to be enough. Even worse, the more I seek them out the more unsatisfactory they become—not to mention the various negative downstream effects they accumulate on the mind and body.
Often times I find myself in the middle between these two impulses, unsatisfied by both. Optimization makes me feel like a soulless robot constantly needing training and upgrades to extend a life filled with more training and upgrades. Sensualism and all its material pleasures leave me in a constantly dissatisfied state too. A state that is always chasing the next hit. It is exhausting and unfulfilling.
It is only natural for humans to want to do more of the things they like. So often we believe the more we do of one thing the more we gain from it—more sensualism, more optimization. In these modern times, I often see so many of us running around doing more and more trying to wrest some state of bliss that will never come. The idea of sensualism is nice, it’s attractive; it feels like the answer to what feels like a soulless amalgam of corporate slop.
My more Buddhist impulses tell me to find a middle way—neither the life of an ascetic, nor the life of a hedonist. The answer according to the Buddha is not to entirely reject sensual pleasures and live the life of an ascetic, but to recognize, embody, and acknowledge that all of life is transient and fleeting. It is the realization that there is nothing outside of the self that will ever be fulfilling—neither material pleasures nor optimization, so just stop.
But even practiced meditators can fall into the trap of believing that the more you meditate, or the more you acknowledge the transient nature of material desire, the more enlightened you’ll be. Like one Buddhist monk put it, “You have to stop believing that meditation will do anything for you.” But this is truly infuriating to hear, and a mind bogglingly difficult concept to practice concretely. So difficult, in fact, it can cause people to abandon meditation entirely. The reason it’s so difficult is because it is unnatural for us to not be seeking—to want to do more of something.
Perhaps we shouldn’t be fighting the natural human urge to look for something out there. The human urge to seek is not a weakness, nor is it a defect to be eliminated in order to find fulfillment. The human urge to seek is our spiritual engine. We have a natural impulse to do more of something in order to reap its rewards. The perennial problem of the human condition is that our natural urge to seek is almost always directed at the wrong things—things that can never fulfill us in the way we need. So our seeking needs to be channelled—it needs to be redirected.
For me, personally, I’ve found that Islam offers precisely the road map to channel this urge to seek and learn. But that’s just me. Others find it in the other Abrahamic traditions and that’s fine too. But this isn’t about which religion is better or worse, it’s simply to offer the idea that when our urge to seek is channeled to God, Allah, the Ultimate Reality, whatever you might want to call Him, sensualism arises naturally. When we seek out God’s grace, forgiveness, blessings, the material offerings of the world become gifts to be grateful for. We slow down and savor them. We appreciate them as gifts and not a means to an end. Seek God, not sensualism; sensualism will arise out of that.
So now when I sit in a hot tub enveloped in the warm, luxurious pulses of the jets, I recognize that it’s not the hot tub that will save me. The hot tub is a gift given to me. I say thank you—thank you for letting me be alive in this very moment. Thank you for everything that’s come together in this precise way to allow me to enjoy this, even if only for a moment. That is sensualism.
from Dave Amis

I’m sitting here writing this piece, dripping with sweat. We’re (hopefully) coming towards the end of a few days of what to me feels like a period of unprecedented heat here in the UK. It’s not just the temperature, it’s the humidity which feels like it’s off the scale. This has been sapping my energy levels in a way I’ve never experienced before. I’m normally pretty active but over the last few days, I’ve not felt like doing anything. All I can focus on is getting through the day, staying hydrated and resting as best I can.
I’m seventy years old. I’m a Boomer/Generation Jones – a generation which feels like it’s becoming one of the most despised ones yet. I personally hate inter-generational strife, not least because of the way it’s whipped up so that we’re all pitted against each other as part of the strategy of divide and rule being implemented by the shady psychopaths who presume to rule over us. Anyway, that’s a piece for another time, a long piece as well…
I mention my age because I lived through the long hot summer of 1976. A number of Boomers have been accused of harking back to their experiences of the long, hot summer of 1976 in the UK, saying that they ‘just got on with it’ and moaning at people being ‘snowflakes’ in the current heatwave. Yes, some Boomers have been saying this. I’m emphatically not one of them! I also think that some people have been making up stories about Boomers coming out with some utter crap about 1976 because they’ve got themselves sucked into this pointless inter-generational conflict.
The long hot summer of 1976 was an ordeal, that’s for sure. People did die because of the heat. There was a drought and water shortages were something we had to deal with. There were numerous wildfires on the hills and moors. There was a simmering undercurrent of tension as the cracks in the social contract started to become clear to see. The riot at the end of the Notting Hill Carnival on the August Bank Holiday weekend was a taste of what was to come over subsequent decades. As was the start of the punk movement when disaffected youth started to kickback against what they saw as stifling social mores.
There’s a lot of misplaced nostalgia amongst some of my age group for 1976 in particular and the 1970s in general. Misplaced because any objective assessment of that decade can tell you that in all honesty, it was pretty shite. Why there is this misplaced nostalgia is probably the subject of yet another piece that needs to be written…
The one thing the summer of 1976 was not and that’s as hot, humid and sodding uncomfortable as the last few days have been. This is the first time in the seventy years I’ve been alive that I’ve experienced a combination of heat and humidity that is as debilitating as this. I’m saying this as someone who, apart from a few issues with having to use catheters to urinate, is in reasonably good health. For anyone who’s not in good health, this combination of heat and humidity is bad news, quite possibly deadly.
From buildings designed to retain heat in the winter months through to a lack of air conditioning, we’re simply not equipped to deal with the conditions that are being inflicted upon us at the moment. This is not just homes but also schools, colleges and a range of other public buildings. Then there’s the seeming lack of any contingency planning to deal with the consequences of this heat and humidity. Also, the general enshittification of modern life that leaves all of us more vulnerable to adverse impacts from climate events as the systems we have break down and fail to cope with them.
I’ve had reason to walk along our local high street a few times over the last few days and it’s like a ghost town. It almost felt like the early days of the lockdown of 2020. A number of schools have had to close because their buildings are not designed to cope with these conditions. A number of cafes and coffee shops have shut their doors over the last few days. I honestly don’t blame them. How can anyone expect a chef to slave away in a kitchen when the temperature, in old money, is going to be over 100F? A number of shops closed early because come the afternoon, the high street was pretty much empty. What is the point of keeping a shop with no air conditioning open if no one is coming in through the door?
If anyone one is having a moan about all of this, they seriously need to take a long hard look at themselves in the mirror. Also, if anyone in the ‘truther’ community is having a moan about the mini-lockdown that has taken place, they need to take some time out to think about how that moaning contributes to the strategy of divide and rule, and consider that they may in fact be a part of the problem.
As for the causes of this heatwave, there isn’t a debate about it. Well, not a reasoned debate that allows for nuance and grey areas. There’s been a lot of tribalist trench warfare that’s stood in for a rational, fact based discussion about the weather we’ve been experiencing recently. One the one hand, there are those who are convinced that we’re now experiencing the payback for what they think is unchecked global warming. On the other hand, there’s the ‘drill baby, drill’ crowd claiming that global warming is utter tosh and that industrial civilisation should carry on unchecked. Then there are a fair number of us not falling for getting dragged into this trench warfare because it only serves the agenda of the shady psychopaths in the background who wield the real power and want us divided.
What I will add are my observations from looking up at the sky over the last few days where I am in Keynsham, on the border between Somerset and Gloucestershire. On Monday (22.6), the day started off with a sky that looked as though high level aircraft were drawing up a giant grid for a game or two of noughts and crosses. As to whether the trails from these aircraft were chemtrails or contrails is the subject of a slanging match – reasoned debate doesn’t really enter into that. As Monday proceeded, those trails merged to form a blanket of cloud. One that kept getting darker and darker until come the evening, a massive thunderstorm which had been slowly tracking its way up from Devon finally hit us, making its mark with a lot of flash flooding across the region.
Thunderstorms normally help to clear the air a bit. This one didn’t. Tuesday, Wednesday and today saw a hazy, milky blue sky. Only just about blue though because of the haze. Not the kind of sky I remember seeing during the long hot summer of 1976. As already mentioned, these three days also gave us a degree of humidity I’ve never experienced before in my life.
I’ve been looking up into the daytime sky since Tuesday and guess what – I’ve not seen a single trail coming out the back of a high flying aircraft. Have all the airlines ceased to fly? I don’t think so. What appears to have ceased for the moment is the pumping out of anything that would form a trail. What it subjectively feels like we’ve got is a haze that’s keeping the heat in to the point it’s becoming unbearable. As this piece is merely my initial thoughts on what has been a weird few days, I’ll admit that the proposition that the weather is somehow being engineered is one that needs further investigation. Suffice to say, I’m keeping an open mind on this.
Then in the middle of all of this weather related weirdness Kier Starmer resigns as the Prime Minister of the UK. Stepping forward in a bid to assume that role is one Andy Burnham, the former mayor of Greater Manchester and as of Thursday 18th June, the elected MP for the constituency of Makerfield after a by-election was called following the ‘departure’ of the previous incumbent. At the time of writing, no other candidate has thrown their hat into the ring so it looks like a straightforward coronation for Burnham as leader of the Labour Party and the Prime Minister of the UK. Starmer was obviously deemed a liability by the shadowy bastards in the background pulling the strings, hence the rushed coronation of Burnham, someone they think will be a more effective World Economic Forum stooge.
Since 2016, we’ve had David Cameron, Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Liz Truss, Rishi Sunak (all Tories) and Kier Starmer (Labour) as Prime Ministers who have been and gone. The (dis)United Kingdom is starting to look like a basket case, isn’t it? All part of a strategy of controlled demolition that’s designed to wean us mere plebs off of the illusion of democracy? That’s certainly something to consider isn’t it?
As the title of this piece states, it has been a weird week and, it’s not over. I just thought it was worth getting my initial thoughts about how weird it’s been written down for posterity. Essentially, this is me thinking out loud while writing what to all intents and purposes is a mere snapshot in time. Which essentially applies to quite a few pieces I’ve written over the years. The question is, how long will it be before ‘events’ play out and make this piece redundant? Only time can tell. Anyway, I’ve flagged up a few themes that deserve some deeper investigation. More will follow, trust me on that...
from An Open Letter
Today I called out of work because I was emotionally feeling that drained. If I’m being completely honest I don’t really wanna get into it right now, and so I just won’t. I will say that I do feel like I am seeing tangible growth in myself, both in the way that I handle communication, and in the way that I respect my need for time or space before I handle something, as opposed to acting out of emotion.
I went to the gym and I felt really weak because I’m sick and drained, and when I got home after doing other stuff I decided I might as well just take a Polaroid of my body because I was walking around shirtless and I kind of did like the way that I looked. Or at least it felt like it was a familiar thought to feel happy with how I look even if I don’t necessarily fully feel it. And I was hoping that have a nice Polaroid would make me feel good, but on the first one my face was in it and I didn’t know and so I wasn’t making any real expression and I look psychotic and I don’t like the way I look there. I was going to throw away the Polaroid, even though in my scrapbook I have kept every Polaroid even the ones that don’t develop or developed poorly. I decided to try to use my lighter to get the photo to essentially sensor my face, but it ended up just burning the Polaroid. I felt like it was almost poetic in a sense, the burn marks over my face to cover my insecurities and to try to mask it with my body. And it feels almost like intentional objectification of myself, as a way to distract from flaws. To provide my own value in such a clear unconnected sense.
from
Hiroaki Satou's Music Blog
There is a genre called post-rock. Layers of sound interweave, guitars stack upon guitars, and textures emerge that seem impossible for any ordinary band to produce. Since Godspeed You! Black Emperor and Mogwai earned their worldwide reputations, the genre has been associated with a certain kind of grandeur — sound accumulated in the studio, effects piled on effects, sonic architecture meticulously constructed in a DAW. That became one of post-rock's defining templates.
But a band from Kent, Ohio called The Six Parts Seven did something else entirely.
The Six Parts Seven was founded in 1995 by the Karpinski brothers — Allen on guitar and Jay on drums. Tim Gerak joined as a second guitarist in 1997, and from there the lineup remained fluid, though the three of them stayed at the core.
Their instrumentation was distinctive: multiple clean-toned (undistorted) electric guitars, bass, and drums, joined by electric lap steel guitar, vibraphone, grand piano, and occasionally viola or trumpet. Rather than strumming chords, each instrument carried a single-note melodic line, and the sound arose from the way those lines intertwined.
What matters is that this was not the product of DAW-based overdubbing — it was the sound of real musicians gathered in a real studio. Everywhere and Right Here (2004) was recorded at Magnetic North in Cleveland. Little live footage survives, so the full picture is hard to verify from video alone. But this is not music assembled from dozens of retakes and edited together in a DAW. It is the sound of people in a room, listening to each other, playing — and that is what gives it its particular texture.
The Six Parts Seven released their records on Suicide Squeeze Records, an independent label founded in Seattle in 1996. It began with singles from Elliott Smith and Modest Mouse, and over time its roster came to include The Black Keys, Russian Circles, and Iron & Wine — a label with genuine standing in the indie world.
And yet The Six Parts Seven never broke through.
The fact that their music was regularly used as background and transition music on NPR's All Things Considered says everything about where they stood. The music played. The name never stuck. One reviewer put it plainly: the band tended to be overlooked because it had no vocalist. Sigur Rós, he noted, owed much of its popularity to the presence of a singer — even one singing in Icelandic that almost no one could understand, that voice created a kind of gravity. Whether Six Parts Seven would ever cross that invisible line, he wasn't sure.
In 2008, the band went on indefinite hiatus.
This is their finest work. Eight instrumental tracks, most running over five minutes, drawing the listener quietly deeper through repetition and subtle variation.
“What You Love You Must Love Now.” “Already Elsewhere.” “A Blueprint of Something Never Finished.” The titles function like poetry. The music speaks only in sound, and leaves its resonance only in sound. The sweet tone of the lap steel, the clear ring of the vibraphone, the layered harmonics of multiple guitars moving together. All of it achieved without electronics, through nothing but human performance.
Things Shaped in Passing (2002) was their first album for Suicide Squeeze. The vinyl pressing was limited to 500 copies — a modest release by any measure — yet one Discogs commenter called it “one of the most important instrumental rock albums ever recorded.” With the addition of lap steel and piano, it was the first record to capture the band's sound in its fully realized form. AV Club described it as offering “the attentive listener a brief mental vacation to a stark but scenic landscape.”
Casually Smashed to Pieces (2007) was their final studio album, recorded at Studio Litho in Seattle and the Ice House in Akron, Ohio, with a wide cast of guest musicians. The band entered hiatus the following year.
There is music that was never spoken of loudly, yet existed with an unmistakable completeness. The Six Parts Seven were that kind of band.
from
Hiroaki Satou's Music Blog
post-rockというジャンルがある。多重レイヤーの音が絡み合い、ギターが幾重にも重なり、通常のバンド編成では不可能なはずのテクスチャーが広がる音楽だ。Godspeed You! Black EmperorやMogwaiが世界的な評価を得て以降、このジャンルはある種の「壮大さ」と結びついて語られることが多い。スタジオで音を積み上げ、エフェクトを重ね、DAWで緻密に構築された音の建築物——それがpost-rockのひとつの定型になった。
だが、オハイオ州Kentから現れたバンド、The Six Parts Sevenはまったく異なるやり方でそれをやってのけた。
The Six Parts Sevenは1995年、KarpinskiブラザーズのAllen(ギター)とJay(ドラム)によって結成された。1997年にギタリストのTim Gerakが加わり、以降はメンバーが流動しながらも核となる三人を中心に活動を続けた。
このバンドの楽器編成が独特だった。複数のクリーントーン(歪みなし)エレキギター、ベース、ドラム。そこにエレクトリック・ラップスティールギター、ビブラフォン、グランドピアノ、ときにビオラやトランペットまで加わる。コードをかき鳴らすのではなく、それぞれの楽器が単音のメロディラインを担い、それが絡み合うことでサウンドが立ち上がる。
重要なのは、これがDAWによる多重録音ではなく、実際に複数のミュージシャンがスタジオに集まって演奏した音だということだ。2004年のアルバム Everywhere and Right Here はクリーブランドのMagnetic Northスタジオで録音されている。ライブ映像がほとんど残っていないため、その全貌を映像で確認することは難しい。だが少なくとも、DAWで何十テイクも録り直して組み上げたような音ではない。人間が部屋に集まり、耳を傾け合いながら鳴らした音がそのまま作品になっている——その手触りが、このバンドの音楽の本質だ。
The Six Parts Sevenが在籍したSuicide Squeeze Recordsは、1996年にシアトルで設立されたインディーレーベルだ。Elliott SmithやModest Mouseのシングルから始まり、The Black Keys、Russian Circles、Iron & Wineなども名を連ねた、インディー界では誠実な評価を得るレーベルだった。
それでも、The Six Parts Sevenの音楽は届かなかった。
NPRの報道番組 All Things Considered のBGMや転換音楽として彼らの曲が使われていたという事実が、その立ち位置を象徴している。音楽は流れた。でも名前は残らなかった。あるレビュアーはこう書いている——「ボーカリストがいないせいで、このバンドはいつも見過ごされてきた。Sigur Rósがあれほど人気なのは、誰もアイスランド語を理解できなくてもヴォーカリストの存在がある種の引力を生むからだ。Six Parts Sevenがその見えない線を越えられるかどうか、私にはわからない」と。
2008年、バンドは活動休止状態に入った。
このアルバムが彼らの到達点だ。8曲、いずれもインストゥルメンタル。5分を超える曲が多く、反復とわずかな変化によって聴き手を静かに深いところへ連れていく。
「What You Love You Must Love Now」「Already Elsewhere」「A Blueprint of Something Never Finished」——曲名自体が詩のように機能している。音だけで語り、音だけで余韻を残す。ラップスティールの甘い音色、ビブラフォンの澄んだ響き、複数のギターが作る立体的なハーモニー。これだけの楽器を、エレクトロニクスに頼らず人間の演奏で成立させている。
Things Shaped in Passing(2002)はSuicide Squeeze移籍後の初作。ヴァイナルは500枚限定プレスという小さなリリースながら、Discogsでは「インストゥルメンタル・ロック史上最も重要なアルバムのひとつ」という声もある。ラップスティールとピアノが加わり、バンドのサウンドが最初に完成した形で記録された一枚だ。AV Clubはこのアルバムを「注意深く聴く者にとっては、荒涼としながらも美しい風景への短い精神的な旅」と評した。
Casually Smashed to Pieces(2007)は最後のスタジオアルバム。シアトルのStudio Lithioとオハイオのアクロンで録音され、多くのゲストミュージシャンを迎えた集大成的な作品。バンドはこの翌年に活動休止に入る。
大きな声で語られることなく、しかし確かな完成度とともに存在した音楽がある。The Six Parts Sevenはそういうバンドだった。
from The disconnect blog
Have you ever heard the argument that we use paper money because of how heavy metal is? You wouldn’t want to lug around all of that heavy gold would you? Well that argument is pretty silly because there were banks that people used and checks were normal. But if you want to carry around your paper dollars or gold coins it’s now heavier and MUCH bulkier to carry around all that paper. Check out the numbers below. We’ll go over USD for this fun mathematical exercise. Each bill denomination is very close in size and weight.
So up to this point it was a decent argument. As the dollar has plummeted in value this argument has become more and more ridiculous. Maybe that’s why you don’t hear people say it as much today. I have heard this argument recent enough and I wanted to see how legitimate it is anymore.
Today 1oz gold is around $4,000. It peaked around $5,600 before the Iran war, or conflict, or whatever that all is.
4,000 $1 bills = one troy oz gold value today
200 $20 bills = one troy oz gold value today
40 $100 bills = one troy oz gold value today
Wish more people wanted to use gold and silver now and skip the fraudulent fiat paper.
Further information:
The Creature from Jeckyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve – book by G. Edward Griffin
Century of Enslavement: The History of the Federal Reserve – documentary by James Corbett
from
Hiroaki Satou's Music Blog
serph is a Tokyo-based electronic musician. Since his debut in 2009, he has built a sonic world unlike anyone else's, drawing on jazz, techno, classical, and film music. At the heart of his music lies a layered melodic architecture — multiple instruments trading a single phrase, passing it hand to hand — combined with an density of editing that defies comparison. Early years spent making music out of hunger, in near-total solitude. A life-changing encounter through the N-qia project. And in 2026, the release of Destiny Land, an album made with something lighter in its step. This article traces the arc of serph as a musician.
This article revisits serph, who was featured in an earlier post: “Three Incredible Japanese Indie Musicians You Need to Hear”. That piece left too much unsaid, so this is a dedicated deep dive.
serph is a solo project by a man based in Tokyo. He debuted in 2009 with accidental tourist, an album completed just three years after he began learning piano and composition. Since then, he has released work at a steady and prolific pace. Drawing on jazz, techno, classical, film music, and progressive rock, he has built a sound that is entirely his own.
vent, released in 2010, was the album that introduced serph's musical voice to the world.
What makes it unusual is how the instruments behave. Rather than a single instrument carrying a melody from beginning to end, multiple instruments take turns — passing the phrase between them, layering as they go. A piano states a motif, a synth picks it up, strings weave in, a woodwind adds the accent. Before you realize it, a full architectural structure of sound has risen around you.
To call it escapism would be to underestimate how precisely this escape has been designed.
Heartstrings (2011) is the album most widely recognized as serph's defining work.
What stands out is the sheer density of sound. In three or four minutes, he packs in more than most producers would attempt in twice the time. serph himself put it plainly in an interview: “I want to cram in the feeling of being alive — that sense of 'music is incredible' — into three or four minutes.” And: “I probably won't be going in a minimal direction.”
Something worth saying plainly: this music is not the same experience on every playback system. On cheap speakers or earphones, the sheer volume of sound can collapse into a wall of noise. The layered textures, the depth of the space, the placement of each instrument — these only resolve into something you can actually hear when the system is up to the task.
That serph chose to make music this dense — knowing what it would mean for commercial reach — says something about the kind of artist he is. He knew this road didn't lead to mainstream success. He took it anyway.
Looking at the broader scene that emerged from the noble label, two peers stand out for their international reach: kashiwa daisuke and world's end girlfriend. kashiwa daisuke released his debut on the German label onpa, and in 2009 toured eight cities across Europe including a performance at Berghain in Berlin. world's end girlfriend, operating through his own Virgin Babylon Records, had Seven Idiots distributed in the US and UK via the London-based Erased Tapes Records, with licensing across Asia.
What these two have in common is a particular kind of sound — music that sits at the intersection of crushing intensity and near-ambient space. That combination translates into the post-rock and shoegaze vocabularies that English-language media know how to reach for. Pitchfork can place it. So can The Wire.
serph's music resists that framing entirely. The melodic layering, the density of the edits — it doesn't fit neatly into post-rock, ambient, or electronica as those terms are used internationally. Pitchfork has never reviewed him. Neither has Rolling Stone or AllMusic. Heartstrings has 46 ratings on Rate Your Music and around 5,700 listeners on Last.fm. Those numbers bear no relationship to the quality of what's there.
The reason serph is unknown outside Japan is not a question of quality. It is that his music refuses to sit inside any category that already exists.
Below, for comparison: an early work by kashiwa daisuke, and one of the more accessible tracks from world's end girlfriend.
Anyone who has made music with a DAW will understand this intuitively.
Stacking dozens of sounds onto a single track, adjusting the volume, panning, EQ, and timing of each one individually, then balancing the whole — this is work that demands enormous concentration and enormous amounts of time. A single bar can take hours to complete. That serph has reported making around 300 tracks a year gives some sense of what this commitment actually looks like.
Now add the knowledge that the work will not be commercially rewarded. Choosing to build music at a density that overwhelms most playback systems means giving up on most potential listeners from the start. Maximum effort, minimum return — and yet the work continues. In that sense, calling it a life-or-death undertaking is not an exaggeration.
Before his debut, serph said this: “I make music every day to satisfy a kind of mental hunger.” He was isolated, socially adrift, unable to find his place. Music was the only space where he was allowed to exist. That hunger was what produced the density.
To understand how serph's music changed, you have to understand N-qia.
Around 2010, a vocalist named Nozomi sent a message to serph through MySpace: “Please let me sing.” He listened to her demo without high expectations, then met her, and they started making music together. That was N-qia — and later, a marriage.
In a 2016 CINRA interview, serph described what the encounter meant: “Meeting her, I rediscovered a version of myself that could be open and uncomplicated. The suspicion I'd carried for so long just gradually loosened.”
In an earlier interview, he had described making music from a place of “mental hunger.” That hunger had roots — isolation, a sense of not belonging, accumulated self-negation. Music was the “escape.” But Nozomi slowly changed that structure.
By 2018, he was saying: “I used to say I made music out of hunger. Now it's the complete opposite.”
The music he had made at such cost, having mastered it completely, was beginning to feel lighter.
On March 6, 2026, serph released Destiny Land — eleven tracks, his latest album.
The density is still there. So is the layered architecture that has defined his sound since Heartstrings. But something has shifted. There is a looseness to it, a sense that the music is being made from a different place than it once was — not from hunger, but from something more like fullness.
serph's music makes demands of the listener's equipment. That is not a barrier — it is an invitation.
He chose density over accessibility, craft over commerce, and kept choosing it through years when the choice cost him enormously. That commitment is audible in every track. And now, for the first time, the music carries something the early work didn't quite have: the sound of someone who has come through the other side.
Listen to Destiny Land on the best system you have access to.
from
Hiroaki Satou's Music Blog
概要 serphは東京を拠点とする電子音楽家だ。2009年のデビュー以来、ジャズ、テクノ、クラシック、映画音楽を横断しながら、他の誰にも似ていない音響世界を構築してきた。その音楽の核心にあるのは、重層的な楽器の交代によるメロディーの構築と、常人離れした密度のエディットだ。商業的成功とは相容れない道を選び、飢餓感の中で作り続けた初期。N-qiaという活動を通じた人生の転換。そして2026年、肩の力が抜けた新作Destiny Landのリリース——この記事はserphという音楽家の軌跡を追う。
この記事は以前掲載した「もっと知られてほしい日本のインディーミュージシャン3組」でserphを取り上げたが、紹介しきれなかった部分が多かったため、改めて単独で掘り下げることにした。
serphは東京在住の男性によるソロ・プロジェクト。2009年、ピアノと作曲を始めてわずか3年で完成させたアルバム『accidental tourist』でデビュー。以来、コンスタントに作品をリリースし続けている。ジャズ、テクノ、クラシック、映画音楽、プログレなど多彩な要素を取り込みながら、独自の音響世界を構築してきた電子音楽家だ。
2010年リリースの2ndアルバム『vent』は、serphという音楽家の輪郭を世に知らしめた作品だ。
この作品の特異さは、楽器の使い方にある。ひとつのhttps://write.as/hiroaki-satou/yin-nohong-shui-nini-reru-serphnoshi-jie/editメロディーラインを単一の楽器が担うのではなく、複数の楽器が交代でそのメロディーを受け渡しながら、重層的に積み上げていく。ピアノが提示したフレーズをシンセが引き継ぎ、そこにストリングスが絡み、管楽器がアクセントを加える——気づけば音の建築物が目の前にそびえ立っている。
2011年の『Heartstrings』は、serphの代表作として広く認知されている。
この作品で顕著なのは、音の密度の凄まじさだ。3〜4分という短い尺の中に、これでもかと音が詰め込まれている。serph自身、インタビューでこう語っている——「3、4分の中で、とにかく生きている実感というか、音楽ヤバい!という感覚をぶち込みたい」「ミニマルな方向は自分はたぶん行かない」と。
正直に言っておきたいことがある。この音楽は、再生環境によって全く異なる体験をもたらす。安価なスピーカーやイヤフォンでは、音の洪水に飲み込まれて轟音になってしまうことがある。細部に折り重なった音の層、空間の奥行き、各楽器の定位——それらはある程度の再生環境があって初めて解像度を持って聴こえてくる。
それほどまでに緻密なエディットを施した音楽が商業的に成功しにくいことは、serph自身が誰よりもよく知っているはずだ。それでもその道を選び、極め続けた。
同じnobleレーベルから生まれた日本エレクトロニカのシーンを見渡すと、kashiwa daisukeとworld's end girlfriendはいずれも海外との接続に成功している。kashiwa daisukeはデビュー作をドイツのonpaレーベルからリリースし、2009年にはベルリンのBerghainを含む欧州8都市でツアーを行った。world's end girlfriendは自身のレーベルVirgin Babylon Recordsを拠点にしながら、UK拠点のErased Tapes Recordsが欧米での配給を担い、アジア各国でもライセンスされた。
両者に共通するのは音楽性だ。暴力的なまでの音圧と、アンビエントに近い空間感の共存——それは言語を超えてポストロックやシューゲイザーの文脈で受容されやすい音楽だった。Pitchforkをはじめとする英語圏メディアもこの文脈で語ることができる。
serphの音楽はその構造が根本的に異なる。重層的な楽器の交代と、濃密なメロディックエディットは、ポストロックやアンビエントの文脈に単純には収まらない。PitchforkもRolling StoneもAllMusicも、serphを取り上げたことがない。Rate Your MusicでのHeartstringsの登録数は46件、Last.fmのリスナー数は約5,700人にとどまる。この数字は、その音楽の完成度とはおよそ釣り合わない。
serphが海外に知られていない理由は、音楽の質の問題ではない。その緻密さが、既存のカテゴリに収まることを拒んでいるからだ。
Daisuke Kashiwaの初期の代表作
World’s ends girlfriendsの曲の中でもポップで聴きやすい作品の一つ
DTMで音楽を作ったことがある人なら、直感的にわかることがある。
ひとつのトラックに何十もの音を重ね、それぞれの音量・定位・EQ・タイミングを微調整し、全体のバランスを整える作業は、集中力と時間の消耗が極めて激しい。一小節を仕上げるのに何時間もかかることがある。serphが年間300曲ほど制作していると語っているのは、その作業量の凄まじさを物語っている。
さらに、その緻密さが商業的成功と相容れないことをserph自身が知っている。再生環境によっては轟音になるほどの密度で音を重ねるということは、大多数のリスナーへの訴求を最初から手放すことを意味する。労力は最大、リターンは最小——それでも作り続けるという選択は、精神的なコストという意味でも、命懸けの作業と呼ぶに値する。
デビュー前、serphはこう語っていた。「精神的な飢餓感を満たすために毎日曲を作っている」。孤独と社会的不適合感の中で、音楽だけが唯一の居場所だった。その飢餓感が、あの密度を生み出していた。
serphの音楽の変遷を語るとき、N-qiaというユニットを避けることはできない。
2010年頃、MySpaceでボーカリストのNozomiから「歌わせてください」というメッセージが届いた。serphは軽い気持ちで音源を聴き、会い、一緒に音楽を作り始めた。それがN-qia——後に夫婦ユニットになる出会いだった。
2016年のCINRAのインタビューで、serphはその意味をこう語っている。「彼女と出会って、素直でいられる自分を再発見して、猜疑心みたいなものがどんどんほぐされました」。
デビュー前、serphは「精神的な飢餓感を満たすために毎日曲を作っている」と語っていた。その飢餓感がどこから来ていたか——孤独、社会への不適合感、自己否定の蓄積。音楽はその「逃げ場」だった。
しかしNozomiとの出会いは、その構造を少しずつ変えていった。2018年のインタビューでは「飢餓感で音楽を作ってるという話をしたと思うんですけど、今は真逆なんですよ」と語っている。
命懸けで作り続けた音楽が、その道を極めたことで、少しずつ軽くなっていった。
2026年3月6日、serphは新作アルバム『Destiny Land』を11曲でリリースした。
『Heartstrings』以来の密度と、N-qia以降に獲得した軽やかさが共存している。重層的な音の構築はそのままに、どこか肩の力が抜けた感触がある。飢餓感ではなく、充足から生まれた音楽の手触りだ。
serphの音楽は、再生環境を要求する。それは敷居ではなく、招待状だと思う。
轟音になりうるほどの密度で音を重ね、商業的な成功とは相容れない道を選び、それでも作り続けてきた。そのストイックさが音楽に染み込んでいる。そして今、その音楽はかつての飢餓感ではなく、解放の感触を帯びはじめている。
Destiny Land を、できれば良い環境で聴いてほしい。
from
Hiroaki Satou's Music Blog
On May 29, 1997, in Memphis, Tennessee, Jeff Buckley walked down to Wolf River — a tributary of the Mississippi — with a friend. He was in town recording his second album. He waded into the water fully clothed and disappeared. His body was found six days later. He was thirty years old. The autopsy found no alcohol or drugs in his system. The fact that he was still dressed when he entered the water is among several details that have never been fully explained. That mysterious end has only deepened the legend of a man who left behind just one album.
That album was Grace, released in 1994.
Jeff Buckley was born in 1966 in Anaheim, California. His father was the folk singer Tim Buckley, but Jeff was raised apart from him and the two had almost no relationship. He eventually made his way to New York, where he built a following playing solo at a small East Village club called Sin-é, and signed with Columbia Records. Grace came out in August 1994.
What makes Grace such a singular record is its musical promiscuity. The hard rock intensity of Led Zeppelin, the soul and jazz of Nina Simone, the spiritual vocal ecstasy of Pakistani qawwali singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan — all of it was somehow channeled through one voice and one guitar. Buckley once described himself in his own press bio as “the warped lovechild of Nina Simone and all four members of Led Zeppelin.”
The album's most celebrated track is a cover of Leonard Cohen's “Hallelujah.” Cohen wrote the original in 1984, a work dense with religious and poetic weight. Buckley's direct reference point, however, was not Cohen's version but the spare 1991 recording by former Velvet Underground member John Cale — piano only, stripped of the synth-heavy original arrangement. Buckley took that as his starting point and rebuilt the song into something entirely his own: sensual, almost unbearably fragile, yet emotionally overwhelming. Today, when people say “Hallelujah,” they mean Buckley's version. The cover has eclipsed the original.
“Lover, You Should've Come Over” is perhaps the most purely lyrical moment on the record — the side of Buckley that was above all a songwriter. The vocal delicacy and the density of the words occupy the same space without crowding each other.
Grace sold poorly in the United States on release. In Britain, the reaction was different. Critics recognized something singular in it immediately, and a devoted audience followed. David Bowie cited it in Pulse as one of the albums he would take to a desert island. Bono called Buckley “a pure drop in an ocean of noise” in the U2 fanzine Propaganda and dedicated multiple shows on the PopMart tour to him.
Part of what drew British audiences to Buckley was the nature of his voice itself. A staggering four-octave range, an absolute commitment to emotional honesty, and the freedom to move between falsetto and full-throated power without it ever sounding mannered — it spoke directly to what British rock in that moment was reaching for.
On September 1, 1994, Radiohead and their producer John Leckie attended a Jeff Buckley show at The Garage in London. They were in the middle of recording The Bends and struggling. Buckley played alone — just a Telecaster and a pint of Guinness. Bassist Colin Greenwood later recalled it in an interview with Uncut: “It was just fucking amazing, really inspirational.”
The next day, Yorke went back into the studio and recorded “Fake Plastic Trees” alone on acoustic guitar. He played three takes and then burst into tears. He didn't want to use the recordings — “too vulnerable,” he said. His bandmates convinced him otherwise. Those takes became the final version. Producer Leckie described what the Buckley concert had unlocked: “It made him realize you could sing in a falsetto without sounding dripping.”
In a 2008 interview on BBC Radio 1, Coldplay's Chris Martin was asked about the band's debut single “Shiver.” His answer was unambiguous: “It's a blatant Jeff Buckley attempt. Not quite as good, that's what I think. We were 21 and he was very much a hero, and as with those things it tends to filter through.”
In a separate interview, Martin went further: “One of the key people who's responsible for us being a band is probably Jeff Buckley. His music was so powerful — that's when we were getting the band together, and I certainly found a lot of inspiration in it, to the point of trying to actually sound like him for at least the first few singles.”
Radiohead and Coldplay are only the most documented cases. The reach of Grace extended well beyond them, across generations and genres.
Jimmy Page (Led Zeppelin) In a 2003 interview, Page said: “Nothing has had the impact on me that Jeff Buckley did.” He and Robert Plant made a point of going to see Buckley live, and Page described the experience as “absolutely scary.” Watching Buckley play in standard tuning what seemed impossible, he said: “I thought, oh gee, he really is clever, isn't he?”
Elton John When asked by Mojo to name his all-time favourite album, John cited Grace: “Like an album made by someone from another planet.”
Bono (U2) Listening to “Hallelujah” on the radio, Bono said: “I was just envious — just raw envy.” He singled out Buckley's 22-second held note and added: “For me, as a singer, it's very humbling.”
Chrissie Hynde (The Pretenders) “He was such a great guitar player, Jeff. When someone is a good singer and songwriter you tend to overlook that, but he was a shit-hot guitar player — he really blew us away that night when we saw what he was really up to with the guitar.”
Matt Bellamy (Muse) Bellamy acquired the Fender Telecaster Buckley had used on stage and in the studio. “I didn't buy it to hang it on the wall,” he said, “but to actually use it and keep this guitar part of music. I'd like to believe that's what Jeff would have wanted.”
When Buckley died, the sessions for his second album — working title My Sweetheart the Drunk — had barely begun. The demos and studio recordings that existed were released posthumously as Sketches for My Sweetheart the Drunk, but no one listening could mistake them for a finished work.
With a single album, Buckley changed the course of British rock. An American, he reached into the heart of the British scene and left his mark on some of its most defining music. What he might have made next is a question that will never have an answer. Which is perhaps why Grace keeps sounding the way it does — like something that isn't finished yet.
from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter 1: The Moment You Hope Nobody Notices
The hardest kind of need is often the kind that happens in public. It is one thing to struggle behind a closed bedroom door, in a parked car, or at the kitchen table after everyone else has gone to sleep. It is another thing to stand in a grocery line with people behind you, a cashier in front of you, a child watching your face, and a payment machine telling the whole world what you were trying to carry quietly. That is the human place inside the Day 1 Mercy Creek video about Jesus in small town America, and it is also the quiet doorway into this article, because most people do not just fear going without. They fear being seen going without.
Maybe you know that feeling in your own way. Maybe it was not a grocery store. Maybe it was the moment your card declined at the gas pump and you stared at the screen as if staring longer might make the money appear. Maybe it was the bill you opened and then folded back into the envelope because you did not have the strength to think about it yet. Maybe it was a child asking for something small, not a luxury, not a spoiled request, just one small thing, and you had to do the math in your head before answering. That hidden pressure is why the deeper Christian encouragement about being seen by Jesus in ordinary life matters so much. Faith cannot only speak to people when they feel strong. It has to meet them when they are trying not to fall apart in the cereal aisle.
There is a particular sadness that comes when you are doing your best and your best still does not feel like enough. You can be responsible, hardworking, careful, loving, and still find yourself short. You can love God and still count dollars. You can pray in the morning and still worry in the afternoon. You can be the person others depend on and still feel one unexpected expense away from breaking. That is not failure. That is life in a world where burdens do not always arrive politely, and where many good people are carrying more weight than they let anyone see.
I think this is why the words of Jesus in Matthew 25 reach so deeply into ordinary life. He does not speak about mercy as an idea floating somewhere above the ground. He brings it down to food, water, welcome, clothing, sickness, and imprisonment. He talks about the things people actually need when life has pressed them low. He does not say, “I was hungry and you analyzed Me.” He does not say, “I was thirsty and you explained what I should have done differently.” He does not say, “I was a stranger and you waited until My life looked safer, cleaner, and more understandable.” He says, “I was hungry and you gave Me food.” That is so simple that we almost miss how serious it is.
Because if Jesus identifies Himself with the hungry person, the thirsty person, the stranger, the sick person, and the one in prison, then our treatment of need is not a small thing. It reveals what kind of eyes we are learning to have. It shows whether we see people as interruptions, burdens, warnings, embarrassments, projects, statistics, or neighbors. It shows whether we have allowed the love of Christ to move from our beliefs into our hands.
Most of us like the idea of mercy until mercy asks us to step forward in an uncomfortable moment. It is easy to say we believe in helping people. It is harder when the person needing help is standing three feet away and the situation feels awkward. It is harder when we do not know whether stepping in will embarrass them. It is harder when everyone else is silent and we are waiting for someone else to move first. It is harder when we are not sure if we have enough, if we should get involved, if we are being wise, if we are being used, if we are making things worse. Real mercy often begins in that uncomfortable pause between seeing and acting.
In Mercy Creek, that pause happens in a grocery line. Nora Reyes is not careless. She is not lazy. She is not trying to take advantage of anyone. She is a nurse, a mother, a tired human being doing math in her head while her little boy holds animal crackers. That detail matters because people often build cruel stories around need so they do not have to respond to it. If they can convince themselves someone deserves their struggle, then they can step away without guilt. If they can turn a person into a lesson, a warning, or a political argument, then they do not have to look into the face of someone who is hurting right now.
But Jesus never lets us reduce people that way. He sees the person inside the situation. He sees the mother behind the declined card. He sees the child trying to understand why a small box of crackers has become too much. He sees the cashier who does not know how to help. He sees the people in line who care but freeze. He sees the pride that makes receiving hard. He sees the fear that makes giving slow. He sees the whole room, not with disgust, but with truth.
That is important. Jesus does not shame the crowd for hesitating. He teaches them. There is a difference. Shame crushes a person and leaves them smaller. Conviction wakes a person and invites them higher. A lot of people already carry enough shame. They do not need more weight thrown on their backs. They need the kind of holy interruption that helps them see what love is asking of them right now.
I have noticed that in real life, the people who need help are often the ones who least want to ask for it. They are the dependable ones, the steady ones, the ones who show up early and stay late. They are the parent who says, “I’m fine,” because the kids are listening. They are the worker who takes an extra shift because the rent is coming due. They are the caregiver who sits in the parking lot for five minutes before going inside because they need to gather enough strength to be cheerful again. They are the friend who answers everyone else’s messages but never sends the one that says, “I am not okay.”
Need becomes especially heavy when your identity has been built around being useful. If you are used to helping, receiving can feel like a loss of dignity. You may know how to bring meals, send money, offer rides, pray for others, sit beside hospital beds, listen late at night, and encourage people through their storms. But when the storm is yours, something inside you may resist being seen. You may feel exposed, weak, or embarrassed. You may tell yourself other people have it worse. You may minimize your own pain so you do not have to admit how tired you are.
That is where Jesus speaks gently to the hidden place. Need is not the same thing as worthlessness. Needing help does not mean you have failed as a person. It means you are human. God made us to live with Him and with one another. The Christian life was never meant to be a performance of constant self-sufficiency. The body of Christ is not a stage where strong people pretend they never limp. It is a family where burdens are carried, tears are noticed, food is shared, prayers are spoken, and nobody has to earn compassion by looking impressive.
There is something deeply healing about help that does not humiliate. We have all seen the other kind. The kind that helps but makes sure you know it helped. The kind that gives but also lectures. The kind that rescues but leaves a person feeling smaller. That is not the spirit of Jesus. Jesus has a way of meeting need without stripping dignity from the person who needs Him. He does not pretend the need is not real. He simply refuses to make shame the center of the moment.
In the grocery line, the words that matter are not only, “Leave the groceries.” They are also, “I know you can.” That matters because Nora is not being treated like a helpless object. She is being honored as a person. Jesus is not saying, “You are incapable.” He is saying, “You should not have to carry everything alone.” That is a very different kind of help. It does not insult strength. It gives strength room to breathe.
Many of us need to learn both sides of that mercy. We need to learn how to give help without pride, and we need to learn how to receive help without self-hatred. Some people are good at giving because giving keeps them in control. Receiving asks them to trust. Giving lets them remain the strong one. Receiving lets someone else come close. Giving can be done from a safe distance sometimes. Receiving requires honesty.
A mother standing at a register with a declined card does not only need money for groceries. She needs the moment not to become a wound her child remembers. She needs the people behind her not to turn her into a spectacle. She needs someone to protect her dignity while meeting her need. She needs mercy with a gentle voice.
A man sitting alone at his kitchen table with a disconnect notice needs more than advice about budgeting. Maybe budgeting matters, but in that moment he also needs hope. He needs someone to remind him that his life is not over because one bill is late. He needs to know God has not walked away from him because the numbers are ugly. He needs a way to breathe, pray, tell the truth, and take the next right step.
A teenager whose shoes are worn out needs more than a lecture about gratitude. Maybe he laughs it off. Maybe he acts like he does not care. But he knows. Kids know when money is tight. They hear the tone in the house. They see the look between parents. They learn to stop asking before anyone tells them to. A small need can become a quiet message in a child’s heart: do not want too much, do not need too much, do not be a burden.
This is why ordinary mercy matters so much. It interrupts the messages people start believing about themselves. It says, “You are not invisible.” It says, “Your need does not make you disgusting.” It says, “You are not alone in this line.” It says, “God can use human hands to remind you that He still sees you.”
For the person who gives, mercy also interrupts something. It interrupts comfort. It interrupts indifference. It interrupts the habit of assuming someone else will handle it. It interrupts the silent agreement of a room where everyone notices but no one moves. Sometimes love begins when one person takes the risk of being the first to step forward.
That first step can feel small. A twenty-dollar bill on a counter. A bag of groceries left at a door. A ride to an appointment. A meal with no speech attached. A text that says, “I was thinking about you today.” A quiet question asked with no pressure: “Do you need anything right now?” These things may not look dramatic, but the Kingdom of God often enters a life through what looks small to everyone else.
We live in a time where people can argue for hours about compassion and still miss the person beside them. We can have opinions about poverty, responsibility, charity, justice, work, family, and faith, and some of those conversations may matter. But Jesus keeps bringing us back to the person in front of us. Not as an excuse to avoid larger problems, but as the place where obedience begins. The hungry person in front of you is not a theory. The tired parent in front of you is not an issue. The lonely neighbor in front of you is not a talking point. They are someone Jesus loves.
This does not mean wisdom disappears. It does not mean every situation is simple. It does not mean every request can be answered exactly the way it is asked. But wisdom should not become a costume for coldness. Discernment should not become a locked door. Good boundaries should not become an excuse for a hardened heart. The way of Jesus is not careless, but it is also not cruel.
There is a quiet question underneath this whole subject, and it may be uncomfortable if we let it come close. How many times have we seen a need and looked away because looking fully would have required something from us? Not because we were evil. Not because we did not care at all. But because we were busy, tired, unsure, stretched, or afraid of getting involved. I think most honest people can remember a moment like that. A moment when we crossed the road in our own way.
The grace of God is that Jesus does not only expose that in us to condemn us. He exposes it to heal it. He teaches us how to see again. He softens the parts of us that life has made defensive. He reminds us that mercy is not only for the person in need. Mercy also saves the person who has stopped noticing.
A town like Mercy Creek is not changed all at once. Neither is a heart. A grocery line does not become holy because everyone in it suddenly becomes perfect. It becomes holy because Jesus is there, and because one moment of need becomes an invitation for love to become visible. One person steps forward. Then another. Then another. The silence breaks. Shame loses some of its power. The person who needed help gets to leave with groceries and dignity. The people who gave help get to leave with a clearer understanding of what faith looks like when it leaves the church pew and walks into the market.
Maybe that is where this article needs to begin, not with a grand command, but with a simple recognition. Somewhere today, someone is doing math in their head and trying to keep their face still. Someone is hoping the card works. Someone is opening the bill with a tight chest. Someone is deciding which item to put back. Someone is making the smaller meal stretch one more night. Someone is saying, “We’ll see,” to a child when their heart wants to say yes. Someone is tired of being brave.
And somewhere today, someone else has enough in their hand to become part of God’s answer.
Not enough to fix the whole world.
Not enough to solve every problem.
Not enough to make every story easy.
But enough to step forward.
Enough to notice.
Enough to let mercy become visible.
Enough to show someone, in one ordinary moment, that Jesus still comes near.
Chapter 2: When Receiving Feels Harder Than Giving
Nora sat in her car for a few minutes after she got home, even though the rain was coming down and Mateo was getting restless in the back seat. The grocery bags were still in the trunk. The animal crackers were still in his hands. The windshield wipers moved back and forth, back and forth, like they were trying to clear more than rain. She had been helped. The groceries were paid for. Her child had food. Nothing bad had happened, and yet her chest still felt tight because receiving help had touched a place in her she usually kept locked.
There are moments when kindness comforts you, and there are moments when kindness exposes you. Nora was thankful, but she was also embarrassed. She could still feel the quiet of the grocery line. She could still hear the machine beep when her card was declined. She could still see the cashier’s face trying not to show pity. She could still feel all those eyes behind her, even the eyes that were kind. That is how shame works. It does not always need someone to insult you. Sometimes it just takes a hard moment and whispers, “Now everyone knows.”
A lot of good people live with that fear. They are not trying to be proud in an ugly way. They are trying to survive with dignity. They want to pay their own bills, carry their own groceries, solve their own problems, protect their own children, and not become another burden on someone else’s already crowded life. They know people have their own struggles. They know everyone is tired. So they tell themselves to keep going. Keep smiling. Keep answering, “I’m fine.” Keep being useful. Keep the private pressure private.
But there is a hidden danger in always being the strong one. If you are never allowed to need, then love can only move through you in one direction. You can give, but you cannot receive. You can serve, but you cannot be served. You can pray for others, but you cannot admit when you need prayer. You can encourage everyone else to trust God, but when your own life gets heavy, you may feel like you have somehow disqualified yourself by needing the same grace you tell others to accept.
That is not how Jesus treated people. He did not build a kingdom where some people were always helpers and others were always helped. He built a body, a family, a living fellowship where strength moved around as needed. Sometimes Peter was bold, and sometimes Peter wept. Sometimes Thomas questioned, and sometimes Thomas confessed. Sometimes the disciples handed out bread, and sometimes they cried out in a storm because they were afraid. Jesus did not shame them for being human. He taught them what to do with their humanity.
Think about the night Jesus washed His disciples’ feet. Peter resisted. He did not want the Lord kneeling in front of him with a basin and towel. Something in him pushed back against receiving that kind of humble love. I understand that. Many of us do. There is a part of the human heart that would rather do something great for God than sit still and let God love the dirty, tired, exposed places. Peter wanted to be loyal. He wanted to be strong. He wanted to stand for Jesus. But before Peter could stand rightly, he had to learn how to receive.
That scene matters because Jesus was not only teaching the disciples to serve. He was teaching them to be served without running from it. If Peter could not let Jesus wash his feet, then Peter still had not understood the kind of love Jesus came to give. Real love is not always flattering. Sometimes it kneels in front of what we would rather hide. Sometimes it touches the dust we hoped nobody noticed. Sometimes it says, “Let Me come near right here, not after you clean yourself up.”
Nora had spent years being useful. At the clinic, she knew how to take blood pressure, calm anxious patients, explain medication instructions, and talk gently to older people who were afraid to admit their pain was getting worse. She knew how to notice when someone said they were okay but held their shoulder like they were not. She knew how to tell a mother that her child’s fever would break. She knew how to bring water, call the doctor, find the right form, and make a frightened person feel less alone. Helping came naturally to her. Being helped felt like standing in the room without skin.
Maybe you have felt something like that. Maybe someone tried to give you money once, and instead of feeling only relief, you felt a hot wave of embarrassment. Maybe someone offered to watch your kids so you could rest, and you almost said no because you did not want them to know how exhausted you really were. Maybe someone asked, “Are you okay?” and you told them yes because the honest answer would have opened a door you did not know how to close. Maybe you have become so practiced at being dependable that you no longer know how to be held.
There is a kind of loneliness that strong people carry. It is not always the loneliness of having nobody around. Sometimes it is the loneliness of being surrounded by people who benefit from your strength but do not know your strain. They love you, but they assume you are fine because you have always acted fine. They ask you for help because you are good at helping. They lean on you because you are steady. And after a while, you begin to believe your value is tied to how little you need.
Jesus breaks that lie with tenderness. He does not say you are valuable because you never need anything. He does not say you are loved because you are always steady. He does not say your place in His heart depends on how well you hide your weakness. He comes close to the tired, the hungry, the overwhelmed, the frightened, the grieving, the guilty, the sick, and the worn down. He does not step back from need. He steps toward it.
That is why the grocery line matters. It is not just about food. It is about the spiritual healing that begins when a person learns that being helped does not make them less worthy. Nora did not leave Miller’s Market as a failure. She left as a beloved daughter of God who had been allowed to receive through the hands of other people. That may sound simple, but for someone who has survived by staying useful, receiving can feel like surrender.
There is a difference between surrendering your dignity and surrendering your isolation. Jesus never asks you to give up your dignity. He restores dignity. But He does ask you to give up the lonely belief that you must carry everything by yourself. He asks you to let love reach you. He asks you to allow the body of Christ to be more than a phrase. He asks you to stop calling isolation strength just because it feels safer than honesty.
Some people never receive well because they have been hurt by the way help was offered in the past. Someone helped them and then reminded them of it for years. Someone gave them something and used it later as control. Someone offered support with a smile in public and judgment in private. When help has been tied to humiliation, the heart learns to refuse even good help because it is trying to protect itself. That is understandable, but it is also heavy. A person can become so guarded against false mercy that true mercy has trouble getting through.
This is where we need Jesus to teach us how to give differently. If we are the one stepping forward, we should not make ourselves the hero of someone else’s hard moment. We should not turn their need into our story. We should not require them to perform gratitude in a way that makes us feel important. A quiet gift can sometimes carry more of Christ than a loud one. A meal with no speech can sometimes do more healing than a lecture filled with good advice. The goal is not to be seen helping. The goal is for the person to feel seen by God.
There is also something practical here for families, churches, and communities. If the only way people can receive help is by being publicly embarrassed, many will wait until the problem becomes much worse. A church pantry should not feel like a courtroom. A family conversation about money should not feel like a trial. A friend asking for help should not have to prove they are desperate enough to deserve compassion. There can be wisdom, order, and accountability without stripping people of their humanity.
Picture a father sitting in his truck outside work after his hours have been cut. He has not told his wife yet because he does not want to see fear move across her face. He grips the steering wheel and tries to calculate the mortgage, groceries, insurance, school fees, and gas. He is not refusing faith. He is trying to breathe. What would mercy look like for him? It might look like a friend who does not give a speech, but sits with him and says, “Let’s look at the next step together.” It might look like someone sliding a grocery card into his hand without announcing it. It might look like a prayer that does not pretend the problem is small, but also refuses to let fear be the only voice in the cab of that truck.
Picture an older woman in a quiet house after the funeral visitors have stopped coming. Her refrigerator has food from people who cared, but the silence is still there every morning. She does not need someone to explain grief to her. She needs someone to keep remembering after the crowd has moved on. Mercy may look like a phone call three weeks later. It may look like a chair pulled up at her kitchen table. It may look like someone asking about the person she lost and not rushing her answer.
Picture a young man at church who always volunteers but never talks about his own life. He carries chairs, runs sound, helps with parking, smiles at everybody, and leaves quickly. One Sunday someone notices that his smile is thinner than usual. Mercy may look like noticing without cornering him. It may look like saying, “I’m glad you’re here,” and meaning it. It may look like giving him room to be more than useful.
These examples matter because need rarely announces itself clearly. More often, it leaks out through a tired face, a shorter answer, an unpaid bill, an empty pantry, a child’s quiet disappointment, or a person who keeps serving while slowly running out of strength. If we are going to follow Jesus, we have to become people who notice gently. Not suspiciously. Not intrusively. Gently. There is a holy way to pay attention.
At the same time, if we are the one in need, we have to let God soften the reflex that says, “I cannot let anyone see this.” Not everyone is safe, and not every person deserves access to your private pain. But someone does. God often sends help through people, and if we reject every hand because we are embarrassed, we may miss one of the ways He is trying to care for us. Pride is not always loud. Sometimes it sounds like, “I should be able to handle this alone.”
Nora did not become less strong when she accepted help. She became more honest. Her strength was not erased by that grocery line. It was given a place to rest. That is a beautiful thing. Rest is not the enemy of strength. Rest is one of the ways strength survives.
When Jesus meets us in need, He does not only provide what is missing. He reveals what was false. He reveals the false belief that we are only loved when we are useful. He reveals the false belief that being seen in weakness means being rejected. He reveals the false belief that dignity depends on never needing anyone. He reveals the false belief that our value rises and falls with our ability to keep everything under control.
The rain kept falling over Mercy Creek that evening, and Nora eventually got out of the car. She carried the bags inside. Mateo ran ahead with his animal crackers. The kitchen light flickered once when she flipped the switch, and for a moment she stood there with wet hair, tired hands, and a heart still trying to settle. Nothing about her life had magically become easy. Tomorrow she would still go to work. Bills would still come. The car would still need gas. But the room felt different because the day had given her a truth she could not ignore.
She was not invisible.
She was not alone.
And receiving mercy had not made her smaller.
It had reminded her that Jesus was near enough to see.
Chapter 3: The Kind of Help That Leaves Dignity Standing
The next morning, Grace Bennett opened the diner before sunrise and stood for a few seconds with her hand on the light switch. The dining room looked the same as it always did. Red stools. Chrome napkin holders. Salt shakers lined up beside pepper shakers. A pie case that needed cleaning. A floor that would look dirty again ten minutes after she mopped it. But Grace was not looking at the room the same way. She kept thinking about Nora at the register, Mateo holding the animal crackers, and Jesus saying, “Then let them learn gently.”
That sentence stayed with her because it named something she had never quite put into words. People need help, but they also need gentleness. A person can be rescued in a way that bruises them. A person can be given food and still feel stripped of dignity. A person can receive money and still walk away feeling smaller than before. Grace had seen that kind of help. She had probably offered that kind of help without meaning to. Most of us have. We step in, but we step in loudly. We give, but we also explain. We help, but we make sure the other person understands how much we helped.
That morning, before the first customer arrived, Grace took a small piece of cardboard from the office and wrote a sign with a black marker. It said, “If you need a meal, ask quietly. No explanation needed.” She taped it beside the register, then stepped back and stared at it. It was not fancy. It was not a program. It was not a church committee. It was just a small sign in a diner, but something about it felt like obedience.
Still, she worried. What if people took advantage of it? What if the diner could not afford it? What if someone mocked her? What if the same people who loved the idea of mercy from a distance started complaining when mercy cost a few dollars in real life? Grace knew the numbers. She knew the freezer repair was still waiting. She knew Lily needed shoes. She knew generosity sounded simple until it stood beside a stack of unpaid bills.
That is where mercy becomes real. Not when it costs nothing. Not when it fits neatly into our comfort. Not when we can give from abundance and never feel the pinch. Mercy becomes real when we still have questions, still have limits, still have responsibilities, and still decide that another person’s hunger matters.
There is a quiet temptation to wait until we feel rich enough, healed enough, wise enough, organized enough, or spiritually strong enough before we become useful to anyone else. We imagine that someday, when life calms down, we will be generous. Someday, when our schedule opens, we will visit the lonely person. Someday, when our bank account feels safer, we will help the family in trouble. Someday, when our own heart is less tired, we will encourage someone else. But Jesus often asks for love today, with what is actually in our hands.
That was the lesson of the loaves and fish. The disciples saw a crowd and saw a problem too large for them. Jesus saw a boy’s small lunch and saw a doorway for God’s provision. The miracle did not begin with enough. It began with what was offered. That matters because most people look at their lives and say, “I do not have enough to make a difference.” Not enough money. Not enough time. Not enough training. Not enough energy. Not enough influence. But the Kingdom of God has always had a way of beginning with what looks too small.
Grace did not have enough to feed the whole county. She did not have enough to erase poverty from Mercy Creek. She did not have enough to repair every broken home, pay every light bill, or carry every single mother through the next hard month. But she had a grill, a coffee pot, yesterday’s biscuits, and a heart that had been disturbed by Jesus. That was enough to begin.
A few hours later, an older man named Mr. Alvarez came in. He had worked at the old mill before it closed and now lived alone two blocks behind the post office. He usually ordered coffee and toast, counted exact change, and left a nickel under the cup because he believed no one should leave a table without tipping something. That day he stood near the register longer than usual, pretending to read the sign about the daily special. Grace saw his eyes move to the cardboard note and then away.
She almost said something. Then she remembered gentleness.
Instead, she walked over and said, “Morning, Mr. Alvarez. I made too many eggs. You want the usual with a little extra on the side?”
He looked at her carefully. “I do not want charity.”
Grace nodded. “Good. I do not have any charity back there. I have breakfast.”
He looked down, then gave the smallest smile. “Then I suppose I can help you with your egg problem.”
He sat in the corner booth. Grace brought him eggs, toast, potatoes, and coffee. She did not announce it. She did not ask questions. She did not make him explain himself. He ate slowly, with both hands wrapped around the coffee cup between bites, as if warmth itself was part of the meal. When he left, there were three nickels under the cup.
That is the kind of mercy that protects dignity. It does not pretend the need is not there, but it does not turn the need into a public display. It sees without staring. It steps forward without taking over. It offers without cornering. It gives the person room to receive without having to perform humiliation first.
In real life, that kind of help takes thought. It asks us to pay attention to more than the problem. It asks us to pay attention to the person. A family dropping off groceries may mean well, but if they make a big show of it in front of the neighborhood, they may add embarrassment to relief. A church helping with rent may do a good thing, but if every conversation feels like an interrogation, the person may feel less like a brother or sister and more like a case file. A friend may offer money with love, but if the offer comes with a long speech about life choices, the gift may land with a sting.
We should care about how our help feels when it reaches the person. Jesus cared about this. He healed people in many different ways because He was not treating them like identical problems. Sometimes He touched. Sometimes He spoke. Sometimes He asked a question. Sometimes He took someone aside privately. Sometimes He sent someone home. Sometimes He told someone to tell what God had done. Sometimes He told someone to say nothing. His mercy was personal. It met the need, but it also saw the soul.
That should shape us. If we are going to help in the name of Jesus, we should not only ask, “What does this person need?” We should also ask, “How can I offer this in a way that honors them?” That question can change everything. It can soften our tone. It can make us quieter. It can keep us from using someone’s hard moment to make ourselves feel righteous. It can help us remember that the person receiving help is not beneath us. They are beside us.
The truth is, roles can change quickly. Today you may be the one paying for groceries. Tomorrow you may be the one hoping the card works. Today you may be the one bringing soup. Tomorrow you may be the one too tired to cook. Today you may sit beside the hospital bed. Tomorrow someone may sit beside yours. Life has a way of humbling everyone eventually. The ground is more level than pride wants to admit.
This is why Christian mercy should never sound like superiority. We are not saviors. Jesus is Savior. We are servants who have received mercy ourselves. Every gift we give is given by someone who also lives by grace. Every meal we share is shared by someone who also depends on daily bread. Every prayer we pray for another person is prayed by someone who also needs God to hold them together.
There is freedom in remembering that. It means we do not have to help from above. We can help from beside. We can say, “I have needed mercy too.” Maybe not in the same way. Maybe not in the same season. But every honest person has stood somewhere with empty hands. Every honest person has needed patience, forgiveness, provision, comfort, guidance, or strength they did not possess. When we remember our own dependence on God, our help becomes more tender.
Later that day, Grace found Lily standing near the sign by the register.
“Do you think people will ask?” Lily said.
“Maybe.”
“What if they are too embarrassed?”
Grace leaned against the counter. “Then I guess we learn how to notice without making them feel watched.”
Lily thought about that for a moment. “Is that what Jesus does?”
Grace looked through the front window. Across the street, Hank was opening the garage. Down the sidewalk, Pastor Caleb was carrying boxes toward the church pantry. Mercy Creek looked ordinary again, but Grace no longer trusted ordinary to mean empty.
“Yes,” she said. “I think Jesus notices without making people feel small.”
That sentence stayed in the diner all day, even after Lily went to school and the breakfast crowd thinned. It stayed when Mr. Alvarez left his three nickels. It stayed when a young mother asked for a cup of soup “to go” and Grace added bread without saying a word. It stayed when Deputy Reed came in for coffee and read the cardboard sign twice but did not comment. It stayed when Hank walked in, saw the sign, frowned at it, and then placed a folded twenty under the register while pretending to look for toothpicks.
Grace saw him do it. He knew she saw him. Neither of them said anything. For Hank, silence was probably the most dignified form of generosity he could manage.
The more Grace practiced quiet mercy, the more she realized it was not only changing the people receiving help. It was changing her. It was making her less afraid of scarcity. Not careless. Not foolish. But less ruled by the fear that there would never be enough. Every time she gave a meal gently, she was also placing her own worry before God. She was saying, in the language of eggs and toast and coffee, “Lord, I still have needs, but I will not let fear turn me cold.”
That may be one of the hardest and holiest prayers a person can live. To say, “I am still worried, but I will still love.” To say, “I do not know how everything will work out, but I will not close my hands around what You have asked me to share.” To say, “I have bills too, but this person is hungry now.” That kind of faith is not loud. It probably will not impress the world. But heaven sees it.
By closing time, the cardboard sign was still taped by the register. It was already curling at one corner from the steam of the coffee station. Grace could have made a nicer one. She could have printed something cleaner, maybe laminated it, maybe used better words. But she left it alone. It looked human. It looked like something written by a person who was still learning.
And maybe that was right.
Because Mercy Creek was still learning.
Grace was still learning.
We are all still learning.
We are learning that help should not humiliate. We are learning that generosity does not have to be loud to be faithful. We are learning that dignity matters because people matter. We are learning that Jesus is not only present in the miracle of enough, but also in the manner of the giving. We are learning that a meal can preach when no speech is needed, and that sometimes the kindest thing love can do is meet the need while leaving the person standing.
That night, Grace turned off the diner lights and stepped outside into the damp air. The storm had passed, and the street smelled like rain on warm pavement. The town was quiet except for the hum of the garage sign across the street and the low rush of water in the gutters. She locked the door, then looked back through the glass at the little cardboard note by the register.
She thought about Jesus in Miller’s Market. She thought about Nora’s tired face. She thought about Mr. Alvarez and his three nickels. She thought about Hank’s folded twenty. Then she whispered a prayer so simple it barely felt like a prayer at all.
“Help me help people gently.”
And in a small town still learning what mercy looked like, that was a very good prayer.
Chapter 4: The Fear That There Will Not Be Enough
Pastor Caleb found the bottom shelf of the church pantry almost empty just after lunch. He had been carrying canned soup from Miller’s Market into the small room behind the fellowship hall, the one with the humming refrigerator, the old bulletin board, and the folding table where people filled out request cards when they needed help. He stacked chicken noodle beside vegetable beef, then reached for the last box and stopped. The shelves looked better than they had that morning, but not good enough. There were too many gaps. Too many families. Too many quiet needs in a town that looked stronger from the road than it felt inside.
He stood there with one can in his hand and felt the old pastoral pressure rise in his chest. He wanted to help everybody. He also knew the church budget was thin. The roof needed repair. The youth room had a leak in the corner. The electric bill had climbed again. Two families had already asked for assistance that week. Another man had called about gas money so he could get to work. Caleb believed in generosity, but belief did not make the numbers easier. He leaned against the pantry shelf and whispered, “Lord, I do not know if we have enough.”
That is one of the most honest prayers a person can pray. It may not sound polished, but it is real. Parents pray it over bank accounts. Caregivers pray it over energy they no longer have. Church leaders pray it over needs they cannot meet. Small business owners pray it over payroll. Adult children pray it when they are trying to care for aging parents, raise their own kids, work full time, and still stay kind. “Lord, I do not know if there is enough” can be about money, but it can also be about patience, strength, time, wisdom, courage, or emotional room.
We often talk about generosity as if the only question is whether someone cares. But many people do care. They care deeply. The problem is that they are also afraid. They are afraid that if they give, they will not have enough left. They are afraid that if they open their door to one need, ten more will come behind it. They are afraid that if they say yes this time, they will be expected to say yes every time. They are afraid that compassion will become a hole in the floor and everything they have will fall through it.
That fear is not always selfish. Sometimes it comes from responsibility. A mother may want to help a neighbor but also knows her own children need shoes. A grandfather may want to give to the church fund but also knows his medication costs went up. A diner owner may want to feed hungry people but also knows that eggs, coffee, rent, and repairs are not paid with good intentions. We should be honest about that. Real life has limits. Faith does not ask us to pretend math is fake.
But faith does ask us who gets the final word in our hearts. Will fear get the final word, or will Jesus? Will scarcity shape us until we become closed and suspicious, or will trust keep us open enough to obey? There is a difference between living wisely with limits and living fearfully behind walls. Wisdom counts the cost. Fear counts the cost and then refuses to love unless love feels completely safe.
The disciples faced that tension when Jesus told them to feed the crowd. They saw the size of the need and measured it against what they had. That is what humans do. They looked at thousands of hungry people, then looked at a small amount of food, and the conclusion seemed obvious. Not enough. Send them away. Let them handle it themselves. That response probably felt practical. It may have even sounded responsible. But Jesus saw something they did not see. He saw that what looked insufficient in human hands was not insufficient when surrendered to the Father.
That does not mean every small offering becomes a visible miracle exactly the way we imagine. It does not mean the bank account always fills overnight or the pantry shelves always overflow by morning. Sometimes God provides through slow faithfulness, careful stewardship, community help, hard conversations, and daily bread that arrives one day at a time. But the miracle of the loaves and fish still teaches us something essential. We are not called to despise small offerings just because they are small. We are called to place them in the hands of Jesus.
Caleb looked at the pantry shelves and thought of the boy with the lunch. The boy did not feed the crowd by himself. He offered what he had. Jesus did what only Jesus could do. That distinction matters. Some people burn out because they try to be Jesus instead of serving Jesus. They take responsibility for outcomes that belong to God. They carry every need as if the whole Kingdom rests on their shoulders. They think love means never saying no, never resting, never admitting limits, and never disappointing anyone. That is not mercy. That is collapse wearing religious clothing.
Christian love is not the same as pretending you are limitless. Jesus Himself rested. Jesus withdrew to pray. Jesus did not heal every sick person in every town during His earthly ministry. He obeyed the Father. He moved with compassion, but He did not live under the panic of trying to satisfy every demand. That should comfort us. If the Son of God lived in perfect obedience without acting as if every human expectation had a claim on Him, then we are allowed to serve faithfully without pretending we can meet every need.
This is where many tenderhearted people need freedom. You can care without carrying what only God can carry. You can help someone today without promising to solve their whole life. You can give a meal without becoming their entire safety net. You can answer a need without surrendering every boundary. You can be generous and still be wise. In fact, wise generosity often lasts longer because it does not destroy the giver.
A fresh kind of honesty is needed here. Some people need to become less selfish. Others need to stop confusing exhaustion with holiness. A person can give and give and give until resentment grows under the surface. Then the help becomes tense. The smile becomes thin. The kindness becomes quiet anger. That is not the free mercy of Jesus. That is a warning light on the dashboard of the soul.
Imagine a daughter caring for her aging mother. She brings groceries, schedules appointments, argues with insurance, sorts pills, pays bills, and still feels guilty every time she goes home. Her mother needs help, and the daughter loves her. But the daughter is also tired. She has a job, a marriage, children, laundry, and a body that has started carrying stress in her shoulders. If she believes love means having no limits, she may keep giving until she breaks. But if she brings her small lunch to Jesus, she can ask a better question: “Lord, what are You asking me to offer today, and what am I trying to carry that You never gave me to carry?”
That question can save a life. It can save a family. It can save a ministry. It can save a kind person from becoming bitter. Jesus does not call us into coldness, but He also does not call us into self-destruction. He calls us into abiding. Fruit comes from the branch staying connected to the vine, not from the branch trying to manufacture life alone.
Back at the pantry, Caleb started sorting the cans by meal instead of by type. Pasta with sauce. Soup with crackers. Peanut butter with bread. He began thinking less about the entire town and more about the next family. That was not indifference. It was obedience made possible. The whole need was too large for his hands, but the next faithful step was not. Sometimes anxiety grows because we keep staring at the entire crowd, while Jesus is asking us to bring Him the lunch in front of us.
A few minutes later, Grace came through the side door carrying two large containers from the diner. “Extra soup,” she said. “And biscuits. They will not be better tomorrow, so they might as well bless somebody today.”
Caleb smiled. “You had extra?”
“Not really,” she said. “But enough.”
That word settled between them. Enough. Not overflowing. Not comfortable. Not impressive. Enough. There are seasons when enough does not look like abundance. It looks like obedience. It looks like today’s bread. It looks like one more meal, one more prayer, one more hour of strength, one more person helped gently. Enough may not silence every fear about tomorrow, but it gives us a way to be faithful today.
Then Ruth Caldwell arrived with a paper grocery bag of canned peaches, oatmeal, and tea. She said she had been cleaning her cabinets and “accidentally” bought too much. Everyone knew Ruth did very few things accidentally. Deputy Reed dropped off a case of bottled water and left quickly before anyone could thank him. Later, Hank Miller brought in a box of crackers and muttered something about a sale. By three o’clock, the shelves did not look full, but they looked less empty.
Caleb stood in the pantry doorway and saw a lesson forming in cans and cardboard boxes. God had not rained bread from heaven in a dramatic way. He had stirred ordinary people. He had moved through a diner owner, a widow, a deputy, and a mechanic who did not like being seen doing kind things. The provision came quietly, piece by piece, through people who were still imperfect, still worried, still learning.
That is often how God provides. We may want the kind of miracle that removes our dependence on others, but God often sends the kind of mercy that deepens it. He provides through hands, names, doors, kitchens, phone calls, bags of food, shared rides, small checks, honest conversations, and people who finally step forward. This can be humbling because it means we do not get to live as isolated heroes. We have to belong to one another.
The fear of not having enough can make us clutch what we have until our hands forget how to open. Jesus teaches another way. He does not shame our fear, but He does not let fear disciple us. He invites us to bring Him the real amount. Not the amount we wish we had. Not the amount that would make us look generous. Not the amount that would impress the crowd. The real amount. The small lunch. The half-empty pantry. The tired body. The limited time. The ordinary skill. The little bit of courage left after a long week.
Then He teaches us to ask, “What can love do with this?”
That question is different from asking, “Can I fix everything?” Most of the time, you cannot fix everything. You cannot repair every life, answer every prayer the way someone wants, erase every consequence, or meet every need in your town. But love can still do something. Love can cook soup. Love can make a phone call. Love can give twenty dollars. Love can sit beside someone in a waiting room. Love can check the pantry. Love can create a quiet way for people to ask. Love can refuse to let fear be the only voice at the table.
By evening, Pastor Caleb locked the church door and walked across the wet parking lot. The clouds had broken, and the low sun made the puddles shine like little pieces of glass. He was still tired. The pantry was still not full. The roof still needed repair. The budget still looked thin. But his prayer had changed. It was no longer only, “Lord, I do not know if we have enough.”
Now it was, “Lord, show us what is in our hands.”
That is a prayer Jesus can work with.
Chapter 5: The Hunger That Looks Like Hardness
Hank Miller closed the garage later than he needed to, mostly because going home meant sitting in a quiet house with nothing to fix except himself. The rain had stopped, but water still dripped from the edge of the roof into a metal bucket he kept meaning to move. The old Miller Brothers sign buzzed above the office door, one half brighter than the other, just like it had been for years. He stood beneath it with a rag in one hand, wiping grease from his fingers even though the work was already done.
On the desk beside the cash box sat a half-eaten pack of animal crackers. He had bought them as a joke after paying for Mateo’s box at the market, or at least that was what he told himself. He had eaten three while pretending not to think about the little boy’s smile. Hank was not used to being softened by anything. He had spent too many years confusing tenderness with weakness and silence with strength. But something about that grocery line had gotten under his skin, and he did not like it.
Hard people are not always hard because they do not care. Sometimes they are hard because caring once cost them too much. Sometimes they were disappointed, betrayed, embarrassed, abandoned, or left carrying a burden they never chose, and instead of healing, they built a shell. Over time, the shell starts to look like personality. People say, “That is just how he is,” or, “She has always been that way,” but underneath the sharp words, the distance, the sarcasm, or the cold face, there may be a person who is hungry in a way that food cannot touch.
Hank’s hunger had a name, but he did not say it out loud. Sam. His younger brother. The other name that belonged on the garage sign. Years earlier, Sam had left Mercy Creek after an argument that started over money, grew into accusations, and ended with words neither brother could pull back. Their father had built the garage, and after he died, the brothers tried to run it together. For a while it worked. Then grief, pressure, pride, and old resentment did what they often do. They found every weak place and pushed.
Now Hank told people he was better off alone. He told himself that too. Alone meant no one disappointed you. Alone meant no one spent money without asking. Alone meant no one left town and made you explain to customers why the sign still said brothers when only one brother showed up for work. Alone meant you could be angry without having to admit you were hurt.
But after the market, that story did not feel as clean as it used to.
Jesus had said that need is an invitation for love to become visible. Hank did not like sentences like that. They sounded too simple until they started following you around. He could understand Nora needing groceries. He could understand Mateo needing crackers. That was clear enough. But what about a man who needed forgiveness and did not want to admit it? What about someone who was starving for reconciliation while still acting like he had no appetite? What about a person who had lived so long with bitterness that peace felt suspicious?
There are many kinds of hunger. Some hunger sits in the stomach. Some sits in the chest. Some sits in a quiet house after a family has broken. Some sits in the empty chair at Thanksgiving. Some sits in the phone call you do not make because you have rehearsed being right for too long. Some hunger sounds like anger because anger feels safer than longing. It is easier to say, “I do not care,” than to say, “I miss them.” It is easier to say, “They made their choice,” than to say, “I wish they would come home.”
In the New Testament, Jesus was always noticing the hunger under the surface. When He met Zacchaeus, other people saw a corrupt tax collector, but Jesus saw a man starving for a different life. When He met the woman at the well, others might have seen scandal, but Jesus saw thirst. When Peter denied Him, Jesus did not only see failure. He saw a disciple who would need restoration. Jesus has never been fooled by the costume pain puts on.
That matters because we often treat visible need and hidden need very differently. If someone has no food, we may understand they need help. If someone has no money, we may understand they are in trouble. But if someone is harsh, defensive, controlling, or distant, we may only see the behavior. We may not wonder what hunger is underneath it. This does not excuse cruelty. It does not mean people get to wound others without responsibility. But it does remind us that Jesus sees more than the surface, and if we want to follow Him, we have to let Him teach our eyes.
Hank sat at the desk and opened the drawer where he kept old invoices. Beneath them was a photograph from fifteen years earlier. Two brothers stood in front of the garage, both younger, both thinner, both smiling like they believed time would be kind. Their father stood between them with one arm around each son, oil on his shirt and pride in his face. Hank stared at the picture longer than he meant to. Then he put it back under the papers as if the photograph had accused him of something.
A person can be hungry for forgiveness and still push it away. That is one of the strange things about the human heart. We may long for peace but protect the resentment that keeps peace out. We may want a relationship healed but refuse the humility healing would require. We may pray for God to restore what is broken while also rehearsing every argument that keeps the break alive. Bitterness can become familiar. It may hurt, but at least we know how to live with it.
Forgiveness asks us to enter uncertain ground. It does not promise the other person will respond well. It does not erase what happened. It does not mean trust returns instantly. It does not make every consequence disappear. But forgiveness does open the locked room inside us where we have been keeping someone else’s failure alive. It lets Jesus enter a place anger has been guarding.
Hank was not ready to forgive Sam that night. Maybe that sounds disappointing, but it is honest. Real people do not always move from bitterness to peace in one clean moment. Sometimes the first movement is smaller. Sometimes it is not a hug, a phone call, or a tearful reunion. Sometimes it is only the first crack in the wall. Sometimes it is looking at an old photograph and not throwing it away. Sometimes it is admitting, even silently, that the anger has not made you free.
There may be someone reading this who understands that exact place. You are not ready to call. You are not ready to trust. You are not ready to say everything is fine. But you are tired of being ruled by the wound. You are tired of proving your pain by staying hard. You are tired of letting one chapter of your life keep writing the rest of the book. You may not know how to forgive yet, but you are beginning to realize that bitterness has been eating at your table for too long.
Jesus meets people there too. He does not only meet the person who is ready to take the final step. He meets the person who is barely willing to loosen their grip. He meets the person who can only pray, “Lord, I want to want to forgive.” He meets the person who has to tell the truth before they can release anything. He meets the person who has confused healing with pretending and needs to learn that forgiveness is not denial. It is surrender.
At the garage, Hank’s phone buzzed. For a moment, he thought it might be Sam, which irritated him because no one had told his heart to hope. It was not Sam. It was Grace.
The message said, “Thanks for the twenty today. I will not tell anybody.”
Hank stared at the screen and shook his head.
He typed, “What twenty?”
Grace replied, “Exactly.”
For the first time all evening, Hank smiled.
Then he looked again at the old sign through the office window. Miller Brothers Auto Repair. He had left it up partly because replacing a sign was expensive and partly because removing it felt like admitting something final. Some things stay in place because we are too busy to change them. Others stay because some buried part of us is still waiting.
That is another kind of hunger: the hunger for something not to be over. People carry that hunger after divorce, after family arguments, after friendships collapse, after children stop calling, after a parent dies, after someone moves away, after a church wound, after words spoken in anger change the shape of a relationship. Life goes on, but some part of the heart keeps looking at the sign, still bearing a name that no longer comes through the door.
What does mercy look like there? It may not look like immediate reconciliation. It may not mean pretending the damage was small. It may not mean giving unsafe people access to hurt you again. Sometimes mercy begins with prayer instead of contact. Sometimes it begins with asking God to bless someone you are still too hurt to face. Sometimes it begins with confessing your own part without taking responsibility for theirs. Sometimes it begins with setting down the need to keep proving that you were the injured one.
The cross of Jesus tells us that forgiveness is costly. We should never make it sound cheap. God did not forgive us by saying sin did not matter. He forgave through the suffering love of Christ. Mercy is beautiful, but it is not flimsy. It tells the truth about wrong and still opens a door for grace. That is why Christian forgiveness is not weakness. It is one of the strongest things a person can do, because it refuses to let evil, betrayal, pride, or pain have the final authority over the soul.
Hank walked out into the garage bay and turned off the compressor. The sudden quiet felt almost too loud. He leaned against the hood of an old pickup and thought about Sam’s laugh. That annoyed him too. Memory has a way of being inconvenient when you are trying to stay angry. It brings back not only the offense, but also the good. The fishing trips. The late nights fixing engines. The time Sam slept on the garage couch for two weeks after their father died because neither brother wanted to go home to a house without him. The way grief had made them both meaner than they wanted to become.
Maybe that is part of healing too, when God lets you remember the whole person instead of only the wound. Bitterness edits the story until the other person becomes nothing but what they did. Mercy does not remove accountability, but it does resist that kind of reduction. Jesus never reduces people to their worst moment. If He did, Peter would only be the denier. Paul would only be the persecutor. Thomas would only be the doubter. The woman at the well would only be her history. But Jesus sees the whole person, including what grace can still restore.
This does not mean every relationship will be restored in the way we want. Some people are gone. Some are unsafe. Some are unwilling. Some apologies never come. Some conversations cannot happen. But even when reconciliation is not possible, the heart can still be freed from the prison of rehearsed anger. Jesus can still meet the hunger for peace. He can still teach us how to live without letting the wound become our identity.
Hank picked up his phone again. He opened Sam’s contact and stared at the number. His thumb hovered over the screen. He did not call. Not yet. But he did something he had not done in years. He changed the contact name from “Sam” back to “Sammy,” the name he had used when they were boys and their father would send them both out to sweep the shop before supper.
It was small. Almost nothing.
But sometimes the first sign of grace is almost nothing.
He turned off the lights and locked the garage. Outside, Mercy Creek was damp and quiet. The streetlights reflected in the puddles. Across town, someone needed groceries. Someone else needed rest. Someone else needed courage. Hank needed forgiveness, though he would not have said it that plainly. He pulled his jacket tighter and walked toward his truck.
Before he got in, he looked up at the sign one more time.
Miller Brothers Auto Repair.
For once, he did not resent it.
He just stood there, letting the old name tell the truth.
Chapter 6: The Small Eyes That Learn From Us
The next day, Lily Bennett sat at her school lunch table with a peanut butter sandwich, a bag of chips, and the kind of serious look children get when they are thinking about something larger than anyone around them realizes. The cafeteria was loud with trays sliding, chairs scraping, milk cartons popping open, and kids laughing too hard at things that would not be funny to adults. Lily had her notebook beside her, the same one she carried into Miller’s Market, and she had written one sentence at the top of the page: “People learn by watching.”
She had been thinking about Mateo and the animal crackers. She had been thinking about the way everyone in the grocery line got quiet when Nora’s card declined. She had been thinking about Jesus stepping forward without making Nora feel foolish. But most of all, she had been thinking about what would have happened if nobody moved. Would Mateo remember that too? Would he remember the silence more than the food? Would he grow up believing that need is something you hide because people look at you differently when they see it?
Children may not understand everything adults are facing, but they often understand the room better than we think. They notice tone. They notice faces. They notice who gets ignored. They notice who gets laughed at. They notice whether the grown-ups become softer or colder when someone is struggling. They may not have the words for it yet, but they are learning. Every ordinary moment is teaching them something about people, about God, about worth, about mercy, and about what love is supposed to do.
That is why the way we respond to need matters beyond the person directly in front of us. Someone else is usually watching. A child in the cart. A teenager at the next table. A coworker across the room. A neighbor looking through the window. A son in the back seat. A daughter standing near the register. Even when we do not mean to teach, we are teaching. We are showing the people around us whether faith is only something we talk about or something that changes our reflexes.
Jesus understood the spiritual seriousness of children watching adults. He welcomed children when others tried to move them out of the way. He warned against causing little ones to stumble. He said the Kingdom belongs to such as these. He placed a child in the middle of grown men who were arguing about greatness, as if to say that the people adults overlook may understand something adults have forgotten. Children are not interruptions in the Kingdom of God. They are witnesses.
At lunch that day, Lily noticed a boy named Carter sitting at the end of the table with no tray. Carter was in her class, and he was the kind of child other kids described with quick labels. Weird. Quiet. Messy. Always late. His shoes were worn at the sides, and his sweatshirt sleeves had little holes near the cuffs. He kept his head down, tracing invisible lines on the table with one finger. A teacher walked past and asked if he was eating. He shrugged. She said something about checking with the office and moved on.
Lily looked at her sandwich.
Then at Carter.
Then back at her sandwich.
Mercy can feel simple when someone else is doing it. It can feel beautiful when Jesus steps forward in a grocery line. It can feel inspiring when adults place money on a counter. But when the moment comes to your own small hands, even a child can feel the pressure. What if he gets embarrassed? What if other kids laugh? What if he says no? What if sharing means she will still be hungry?
She thought about Jesus saying, “Let them learn gently.”
So she did not announce anything. She did not stand up and make a speech. She did not call attention to him. She simply slid her bag of chips across the table and said, “I’m not that hungry.”
Carter looked at the chips.
Then he looked at her.
“You sure?”
Lily nodded.
He took them slowly, like he was afraid the kindness might disappear if he moved too fast.
That was all. No music played. No crowd applauded. Nobody else even noticed. But heaven sees small things differently than we do. A child sharing chips with another child may not look like much to the world, but it may be the first time that day someone’s need was met without shame. It may be the moment a child learns that he is not invisible. It may be the moment another child learns that mercy is not only for adults, churches, pastors, or people with extra money. Mercy can move through a lunchbox.
This is where faith becomes very practical. If children learn by watching us, then one of the most important things we can do is let them see mercy lived in normal places. Not performed. Not bragged about. Lived. Let them see us speak respectfully to the cashier who is overwhelmed. Let them see us leave a generous tip when we can. Let them see us apologize when we are wrong. Let them see us slow down for the elderly neighbor. Let them see us bring food without gossip. Let them see us pray for people without turning their pain into entertainment.
They are also watching how we talk about people who struggle. A child hears the comments from the front seat. They hear what we say about the person asking for help, the family whose lights were shut off, the teenager who got in trouble, the single mother, the man who lost his job, the person standing on the corner with a cardboard sign. They hear whether we speak with contempt or compassion. They hear whether our first instinct is judgment or concern. Over time, those words build a world inside them.
This does not mean we teach children to be naïve. Wisdom matters. Safety matters. Discernment matters. But we can teach wisdom without teaching hardness. We can teach caution without teaching cruelty. We can teach boundaries without teaching indifference. A child can learn that not every situation is safe and still learn that every person has value. A child can learn that we cannot help everyone in the same way and still learn that we should not mock people in pain.
There is a deep difference between explaining reality and passing down bitterness. Sometimes adults think they are preparing children for the real world, but what they are actually doing is handing them cynicism as if it were wisdom. They say things like, “People are just lazy,” or, “Nobody changes,” or, “That is what they get,” and children absorb it. They begin to believe compassion is foolish. They begin to believe mercy is weakness. They begin to believe the safest way to live is to stay untouched by other people’s trouble.
Jesus gives us another way to prepare them. He does not train us to be blind to evil, but He also does not train us to lose our tenderness. He sends His followers into the world as people who are wise and innocent, awake and loving, honest and merciful. That balance is not easy, but it is Christlike. We do not have to choose between being foolish and being cold. The Holy Spirit can form in us a kind of compassion that has eyes open and hands ready.
A parent may live this out in a drive-through when the employee is slow and the order is wrong. The child in the back seat is listening. The parent can snap, sigh, mock, and teach impatience. Or the parent can remember that the person at the window may be on hour seven of a hard shift and choose a different tone. That moment may not feel spiritual, but it is. Children are learning what kind of people Christians become when inconvenienced.
A grandfather may live it out at a family dinner when someone brings up a relative who has made a mess of things again. The easy path is to shake his head and speak with disgust. The harder path is to tell the truth without forgetting love. He might say, “What happened was wrong, but we are still going to pray for him.” A child at that table learns that accountability and mercy can sit in the same room.
A teacher may live it out when a student has no supplies for the third time that week. She may feel frustrated. She may know there is more going on at home than she can fix. She may be tired of buying pencils with her own money. But the way she places a pencil on the desk can either embarrass the child or protect him. Even a pencil can carry dignity if it is given gently.
Lily did not understand all of that at her lunch table. She only knew that Carter looked hungry and that Jesus had shown her something at the market. That is how discipleship often begins in children. They see love, and then they imitate it in the small world they can reach. They may not be able to explain Matthew 25, but they can share chips. They may not know the language of theology, but they can recognize when someone is being left out. They may not understand every doctrine of the church, but they can learn that Jesus cares about hungry people.
Adults sometimes make faith seem more complicated than obedience. We study, discuss, debate, plan, and organize, and there is a place for all of that. But then a person is hungry in front of us, and the question becomes simple again. Will love move? Will mercy act? Will we teach the children watching us that Jesus is real in this moment too?
Later that afternoon, Grace picked Lily up from school. Lily climbed into the passenger seat, buckled herself in, and looked out the window for a while before speaking.
“Mom?”
“Yes, baby?”
“I gave Carter my chips.”
Grace glanced over. “Were you still hungry?”
“A little.”
“Why did you give them to him?”
Lily shrugged. “He looked like Mateo did.”
Grace kept both hands on the wheel, but her eyes filled.
“That was kind.”
Lily was quiet for another block. Then she asked, “Do you think Jesus saw?”
Grace smiled through the tears she was trying to hide.
“Yes,” she said. “I think Jesus always sees when mercy moves.”
Lily nodded like that answer settled something important.
Then she opened her notebook and wrote another sentence beneath the first.
“Small mercy still counts.”
Grace did not correct the grammar. Some sentences are too true to edit.
That evening, while the diner filled with the supper crowd, Lily sat in the back booth doing homework. Carter came in with his grandmother to pick up a takeout order. He saw Lily and gave a tiny wave. She waved back. No one else knew about the chips. No one needed to. Mercy does not have to be public to be real.
Jesus came into the diner near closing time and sat at the counter. Grace brought Him coffee without asking. Lily brought Him a slice of pie, then stood beside Him like she had been waiting all day.
“I shared my chips,” she said.
Jesus looked at her with warmth. “I know.”
Lily smiled. “Mom said You saw.”
“I did.”
“Was it enough?”
Jesus looked toward the window, where the last light of day rested on the wet street.
“When love obeys with what it has, it is never small to the Father.”
Lily thought about that.
Then she said, “Tomorrow I might bring extra.”
Jesus smiled.
“That is how mercy grows.”
Chapter 7: The Morning After Mercy Moves
The next morning, Mercy Creek looked almost too normal. The rain had washed pollen from the windshields, left little streams along the edges of Main Street, and made the old courthouse lawn shine under the early sun. Grace unlocked the diner while the sky was still pale. A delivery truck rattled behind Miller’s Market. Hank’s garage door groaned open across the street. Somewhere a dog barked at nothing. If someone had driven through town at that hour, they would have seen a quiet place waking up and assumed nothing important had happened there.
But that is how mercy often works. It does not always leave behind fireworks. It does not always change the skyline. It does not always make the news, gather a crowd, or announce itself with a sound. Sometimes mercy moves through a grocery line, a diner sign, a school lunch table, a pantry shelf, a folded twenty-dollar bill, and a box of animal crackers. Then morning comes, and the world looks the same, but the people inside it are not quite the same anymore.
Grace stepped inside the diner and saw the cardboard sign still taped beside the register. One corner had curled overnight. She pressed it flat with her thumb. “If you need a meal, ask quietly. No explanation needed.” It was such a small sentence, but it had changed the way she saw her own counter. Before, the register had been a place where people paid. Now it had also become a place where people could be protected from shame. That may not sound like much until you have been the person standing there without enough.
A few blocks away, Nora Reyes packed Mateo’s lunch before her clinic shift. She placed the animal crackers in a little plastic bag, then paused and added a second bag. Mateo noticed. “Is that for me too?” he asked. Nora smiled and said, “One is for you. One is in case someone else needs some.” He accepted that with the simple seriousness of a child who had seen adults learn something and decided he could learn it too. Nora zipped the lunchbox and felt a quiet gratitude she could not fully explain. Her life was still hard. But yesterday had placed one solid truth under her feet: needing help had not made her unloved.
At the church, Pastor Caleb opened the pantry door and saw the shelves with new eyes. They were still not full. There were still empty spaces. But the emptiness no longer mocked him the same way. It reminded him to ask what love could do with what was there. He wrote a note for Sunday, not a sermon title yet, just a sentence: “Do not wait until you can feed the whole crowd before you offer the bread in your hand.” Then he sat down at the folding table and prayed for the families who would come by that week, asking God to let every bag of food carry more than calories. Let it carry dignity. Let it carry hope. Let it carry the message that Jesus sees.
At Miller’s Garage, Hank Miller stood under the old sign and stared at Sam’s contact in his phone again. He still did not call. His thumb still hovered and then moved away. But something had shifted. The number did not feel only like a threat anymore. It felt like a door. Maybe locked. Maybe swollen shut from years of weather. Maybe painful to open. But still a door. He slid the phone into his pocket and picked up a wrench. For now, that was all he could do. Some mornings, grace looks like a changed contact name and a heart that is not quite as proud as it was yesterday.
This is important because we often expect spiritual change to feel bigger than it does. We think if Jesus is working, everything should become clear right away. The fear should vanish. The relationship should heal instantly. The money should arrive. The apology should come. The bitter person should soften completely. The tired person should wake up full of energy. The child should understand the whole lesson. The church should become exactly what it was meant to be overnight.
But most of the time, Jesus grows mercy in us the way morning grows over a town. Slowly. First one window catches the light. Then a roof. Then the wet pavement. Then the whole street looks different, though nothing has moved. Grace often begins that way. Not as a completed transformation, but as light touching one place that used to be dark.
That can encourage someone who feels discouraged by small progress. Maybe you prayed and still feel afraid. Maybe you forgave in your heart, but the relationship is still complicated. Maybe you helped someone and still felt awkward. Maybe you received help and still felt embarrassed later. Maybe you want to become more generous, but fear still argues with you. Maybe you want to trust God, but you still check the bank account three times. Do not despise the first signs of life. A seed does not look like a harvest, but it is not nothing.
Jesus was always honoring small beginnings. A mustard seed. A little yeast. A cup of cold water. A widow’s small offering. A child’s lunch. One sheep carried home. One coin found. One sinner restored. The Kingdom of God does not need human impressiveness to be real. It often enters through what looks small enough to ignore.
That means the grocery line matters. The diner sign matters. The chips Lily gave Carter matter. The three nickels Mr. Alvarez left under the coffee cup matter. Hank’s hidden twenty matters. Pastor Caleb’s pantry prayer matters. Nora’s second bag of animal crackers matters. Not because any of these things saved the world by themselves, but because each one became a place where the love of Jesus touched the ground.
The world can make us feel foolish for believing small mercy matters. It can tell us the problems are too large, the systems too broken, the pain too widespread, and the needs too endless. And yes, the needs are large. There is no honesty in pretending they are not. But if the size of the need becomes our excuse to do nothing, then hopelessness has discipled us more than Jesus has. Christ does not ask us to fix everything before we obey. He asks us to be faithful with what is in front of us.
That faithfulness may be very close to your real life today. It may be in your kitchen, where someone needs patience more than another sharp answer. It may be in your workplace, where a tired coworker needs one person to notice they are drowning. It may be in your church, where someone sits in the back and leaves quickly because they do not know whether they are welcome. It may be in your family, where the person who acts the hardest is actually the one most hungry for peace. It may be in your own heart, where you need to stop treating your need as proof that you have failed.
There is a man somewhere who will sit in a parking lot today and try to decide whether to go inside and ask for help. There is a mother who will add up groceries before she reaches the register. There is a teenager who will pretend not to care that they have less than the other kids. There is an elderly neighbor who will go all day without hearing their name spoken. There is a caregiver who will smile through another appointment and cry in the car afterward. There is a pastor, teacher, nurse, mechanic, cashier, father, widow, student, and friend who looks fine from a distance but is carrying a private weight.
And there is also someone close enough to notice.
Maybe that someone is you.
Not because you are perfect. Not because you have everything figured out. Not because you have no needs of your own. Grace had bills. Caleb had empty shelves. Hank had bitterness. Lily had only a bag of chips. Nora had just been helped herself. Yet mercy still moved through them. That is one of the beautiful truths of following Jesus. God does not only work through people who have no problems. He works through people who are willing to let His love move through their problems.
A person who has needed mercy can become more merciful. A person who has been ashamed can become careful with the shame of others. A person who has been hungry can learn to feed. A person who has been lonely can learn to notice the lonely. A person who has been forgiven can become less eager to condemn. Nothing is wasted when Jesus is allowed to touch it. Even the places where life has humbled us can become places where compassion grows.
That does not mean we turn pain into a slogan. Pain is still pain. Need is still hard. Fear still hurts. Broken relationships still leave marks. But in the hands of Jesus, these things do not have to make us colder. They can make us more human, more awake, more useful, more gentle, more willing to stop when someone else is wounded beside the road.
By midmorning, Jesus walked down Main Street again. No crowd followed Him. No banner announced Him. He passed the market where Nora had stood embarrassed at the register. He passed the diner where Grace’s sign waited beside the coffee. He passed the church where Caleb was still learning that enough begins in surrendered hands. He passed the garage where Hank worked under a sign that still told the truth about a brother he missed. He passed the school where Lily would open her lunchbox and remember to look around before eating everything herself.
Mercy Creek did not yet understand what was happening. Not fully. Towns are like people that way. They can be visited by grace and still need time to recognize it. But the lesson had begun to settle into ordinary places. The lesson was not complicated. Jesus had taught it long ago, and He was still teaching it now: when someone is hungry, do not send them away untouched. When someone is ashamed, do not make shame heavier. When someone is tired from being strong, do not require them to prove they deserve kindness. When love is in your hand, offer it.
That is not a small way to live. It is a Kingdom way to live.
And maybe this is where the first day in Mercy Creek reaches out of the story and into us. We may not live in that town. We may not know Grace, Nora, Lily, Caleb, Hank, Mateo, Ruth, Deputy Reed, or Mr. Alvarez. But we know what it feels like to need. We know what it feels like to notice someone else needing. We know the pause. We know the fear. We know the excuses. We know the quiet voice of Jesus asking whether love will stay a belief or become an action.
The answer does not have to be dramatic. It just has to be faithful.
Buy the meal. Make the call. Share the lunch. Give the ride. Leave the note. Ask gently. Listen longer. Protect dignity. Receive help when it is your turn. Offer what is in your hand. Trust Jesus with what is not.
Because somewhere in the middle of ordinary life, Christ is still walking into places people overlook. He is still standing near the embarrassed, the hungry, the tired, the ashamed, the lonely, and the proud. He is still teaching us that mercy is not a theory. Mercy is love with work clothes on. Mercy is faith at the register. Mercy is grace in a lunchbox. Mercy is a cardboard sign beside a diner counter. Mercy is a folded twenty placed quietly where it can help. Mercy is someone deciding that another person’s dignity matters.
The first day in Mercy Creek began with a need that nobody wanted to see.
It ended with a town learning how to see gently.
And that is a good beginning for any heart, any home, any church, any family, any street, and any life that wants to follow Jesus for real.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph Support the Christian encouragement library through GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-douglas-vandergraph-build-a-christian-encouragement-lib Support the daily work by buying Douglas a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/douglasvandergraph
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On a Friday in late April 2026, a holding company controlled by one of the most famous people alive walked into the United States trademark system and tried to claim ownership of a few seconds of sound. The applications, filed by Taylor Swift's TAS Rights Management and spotted by the intellectual-property attorney Josh Gerben, sought to register two recordings of Swift's voice speaking the phrases “Hey, it's Taylor Swift” and “Hey, it's Taylor”, along with an image of her on stage holding a guitar. The filings were not about merchandise or branding in any conventional sense. They were a defensive manoeuvre against artificial intelligence, an attempt to build a federal cause of action around the most basic facts of a human being: how she sounds, and what she looks like.
Swift was not the first to try. Four months earlier, the actor Matthew McConaughey had quietly secured eight trademarks through the US Patent and Trademark Office, including a sound mark on the audio of him drawling “Alright, alright, alright” and a clutch of short video clips of himself standing on a porch and sitting in front of a Christmas tree. His lawyers at Yorn Levine had pursued the strategy precisely so that, in a world where deepfakes proliferate faster than any takedown system can manage, their client would have standing to sue in federal court. As one of those attorneys, Jonathan Pollack, put it, “In a world where we're watching everybody scramble, we have a tool now to stop someone in their tracks or take them to federal court.”
This is what the cutting edge of identity protection now looks like: the richest and most recognisable people on the planet contorting trademark law, a body of rules designed to stop you from selling fake handbags, into a makeshift shield for the human self. It works, after a fashion, for them. The deeper and more uncomfortable question is what it tells us about everyone else. Because if the price of protecting your voice and face from machine replication is a trademark portfolio, a federal litigation budget, and a commercial profile valuable enough to demonstrate financial loss, then the overwhelming majority of people have no protection at all.
To understand why a pop star is filing sound marks instead of invoking some clean, dedicated right to her own voice, you have to understand that no such right reliably exists. What exists instead is a patchwork, and the load-bearing piece of that patchwork in the United States is the right of publicity, a doctrine that was never designed for this and has always belonged, in practice, to the famous.
Its origin is almost comically commercial. In 1953, in a dispute between two chewing-gum companies over the right to print baseball players' photographs on cards, the federal judge Jerome Frank coined the phrase “right of publicity” and, in doing so, recognised something new: that a person's persona had an economic value that could be licensed and protected as a kind of property, separate from the older and more dignified right to privacy. The right of publicity, in other words, was born not as a defence of human dignity but as a recognition of human marketability. It protects the commercial value of your identity. The Supreme Court has examined it only once, in the 1977 case of a human cannonball named Hugo Zacchini whose entire act was broadcast on the local news without his consent, and even then the court framed the harm in terms of lost commercial gate receipts rather than any violation of selfhood.
This commercial DNA matters enormously, because it determines who the right actually serves. If the harm the law recognises is the misappropriation of your identity's market value, then the people the law protects are the people whose identities have market value. A film star whose face sells products has a claim. A session musician whose voice is cloned to dodge fraud-detection algorithms has a far weaker one. A nurse in Leeds whose face is grafted onto a pornographic video, or a teenager in Bengaluru whose voice is synthesised to humiliate her, has, under this framework, almost nothing, because the law was built to ask “how much money did you lose?” rather than “what was done to you?”
The right of publicity is also relentlessly local. In the United States it is a matter of state law, recognised in some form in around half the states and varying wildly from one to the next. A claim that succeeds in California may evaporate at the border with Nevada. This fragmentation is exactly why McConaughey's and Swift's lawyers reached for trademark in the first place. Trademark infringement can be litigated in federal court, with nationwide reach and the prospect of statutory damages and injunctions. The right of publicity cannot. So the celebrity strategy is not really about trademark being the right tool. It is about trademark being the only tool with a federal handle on it.
The trouble with using trademark law to protect a human identity is that trademark law was not built to protect human identities, and it strains audibly under the weight.
A trademark exists to identify the commercial source of goods or services and to prevent consumer confusion about who made what. To register the sound of your own voice, you have to convince examiners that the sound functions as a brand, a distinctive identifier of products in commerce, rather than as, well, your voice. Alexandra Roberts, a professor of media law at Northeastern University, has been cautiously sceptical about whether the famous catchphrases at the heart of these filings can clear that bar. Swift's specific sound marks, she has suggested, have some chance of adoption precisely because of the narrow limits of trademark law's reach, but the casual phrases involved, essentially announcements of a new album, do not map neatly onto what trademarks are supposed to do.
Other lawyers are blunter. Matthew Asbell of Lippes Mathias has pointed out that “you don't just own words or recordings of words”, and that any attempt to enforce a trademark against the general timbre of a person's voice would likely fail, calling it “a very narrow right”. A New York court in July 2025 dismissed claims that suggested celebrities could bring trademark actions based on their likeness as a product, a ruling that could undercut the entire approach. And there is an awkward subtext to McConaughey's particular crusade that captures the contradiction of the whole moment: he is an investor in the AI voice company ElevenLabs and has partnered with it to produce a Spanish-language version of his own voice for his newsletter. The objection, in other words, is not to voice cloning as such. It is to voice cloning he does not control and profit from. The right being asserted is, once again, fundamentally a commercial one.
This is the spectacle that the celebrity trademark wave really represents. It is not the arrival of a coherent identity right. It is the sound of the powerful improvising, jamming the levers of an ill-fitting body of law because the law that should exist does not. As the analysis SME Futures published in January 2026 observed, trademark law is being conscripted to perform the function of identity and privacy law in the absence of any dedicated framework. A tool designed to stop counterfeit trainers is being asked to defend the boundaries of the self, and it will do so only for those who can afford to wield it and who have a commercial self worth defending.
The clearest way to see the gap is to look at who is actually being harmed, and to compare that population with the population the law currently protects. They are almost mirror images of each other.
In February 2026, India notified its Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Amendment Rules, drafted in late 2025 and brought into force on 20 February 2026, requiring platforms to prominently label AI-generated and synthetic content with visual markers covering at least ten per cent of the surface area and introducing a three-hour takedown deadline for flagged unlawful material, and the Delhi High Court spent much of 2025 issuing protective orders to a procession of celebrities. The spiritual leader Sadhguru secured one in May. The actor Aishwarya Rai Bachchan secured one in September. The journalist Rajat Sharma secured one in November. Each obtained court-ordered takedown regimes against the AI misuse of their likeness, months before any statute made such protection generally available. The personality-rights machinery worked, and it worked for people with names worth protecting.
Set against this is the research documented and amplified across Indian feminist media reporting, including by Feminism in India, which in its November 2025 coverage of gender, AI and digital violence laid out the texture of the harm as it actually falls. The “Make It Real” study by Tattle Civic Tech and the RATI Foundation found that of the women reporting deepfake and AI-manipulated sexual imagery to the RATI helpline, around ninety-two per cent were ordinary women, not public figures. Roughly one in ten calls to the helpline now involved synthetic sexual content. These are not people whose faces sell products. They have no commercial value to lose in the sense the law recognises, which means that under the right of publicity, the dominant Western tool, they have suffered no cognisable injury at all. They have lost something, obviously. The law simply does not have a word for it.
The asymmetry runs right down to the speed of redress. Platforms, the reporting in this space repeatedly notes, tend to move quickly when a celebrity or a brand complains, because a celebrity or a brand can summon lawyers, press attention and the threat of expensive litigation. The ordinary user encounters opacity, delay and indifference. The same image, the same violation, produces a thirty-six-hour court-ordered takedown for the famous and an unanswered support ticket for everyone else. The question that the feminist legal scholarship keeps returning to is the one the whole field has to answer: whose image is worth protecting, who can afford to defend their personality in court, and how do you extend dignity-based protection to people who suffer social rather than economic harm.
This is the heart of the matter. The injury inflicted by AI replication is, for most victims, a dignitary injury, not a commercial one. It is the injury of being made to appear to say or do something you did not, of having the most intimate facts of your embodiment, your face and your voice, seized and operated by a stranger. The law of celebrity cannot see this injury, because it was built to measure a different thing entirely. A framework for ordinary people would have to begin by naming the harm correctly.
The encouraging news is that legislators across several jurisdictions have begun, haltingly and incompatibly, to grope towards something better. The discouraging news is that the legal analysis Harris Sliwoski published in April 2026, written by Elijah Hartman, is exactly right when it argues that the global rules are already here and they do not agree. Its summary of the position is almost a slogan: the rules are already here, they just do not agree with each other yet. One synthetic output, the firm notes, can trigger multiple legal theories in multiple countries at once. For anyone trying to assert a right, that incoherence is itself a barrier.
Consider the range. The European Union's AI Act takes a transparency approach: Article 50, whose obligations come into force on 2 August 2026, requires that deepfakes be disclosed as artificially generated, with carve-outs for artistic and satirical work. This tells you that content is synthetic, but it does nothing to give you a right over your own likeness within that content. The EU's General Data Protection Regulation does more, treating biometric data, including facial images and voice prints processed to identify a person, as a special category requiring explicit consent under Article 9. In principle this is powerful. In practice it is hedged with the requirement that the data be processed specifically to identify an individual, and it lives inside a data-protection regime that ordinary people find slow and forbidding to invoke.
The United States has moved on the narrowest and most urgent front. The TAKE IT DOWN Act, signed in May 2025, criminalises the publication of non-consensual intimate imagery, including AI-generated “digital forgeries”, and requires covered platforms to remove flagged material within forty-eight hours. The notice-and-removal regime came into effect on 19 May 2026, the date by which covered platforms were required to have the process in place, and the Federal Trade Commission has begun enforcing it, with Chairman Andrew Ferguson sending compliance letters to platforms and civil penalties that can reach $53,088 per violation. This is real protection for real people, and it matters. But it is confined to intimate imagery. It does nothing for the cloned voice used in a scam, the face inserted into a fake endorsement, or the likeness scraped to train a model. The proposed federal NO FAKES Act would go further, establishing the first federal right against unauthorised digital replicas of a person's voice or visual likeness, with statutory damages and a post-mortem right lasting up to seventy years. A revised version was reintroduced in the Senate in May 2026 as S. 4591, led by Senator Chris Coons and backed by around thirteen bipartisan co-sponsors, adding a counter-notice procedure to challenge removals and exemptions for libraries, archives and research institutions; the bill remains pending. It has gathered an unusual coalition of support from SAG-AFTRA to Disney to OpenAI. It has also drawn fire from the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression as a threat to free expression, and from the publicity-rights scholar Jennifer Rothman, who warns that even the revised bill risks people losing control of their own digital selves through the licences they sign. The earlier DEEPFAKES Accountability Act, which would have mandated watermarking and provenance disclosure, stalled and has not been reintroduced in the current Congress.
At the state level, Tennessee's ELVIS Act, effective from July 2024, expanded the state's right of publicity to cover voice explicitly, protecting an individual's voice “regardless of whether the sound contains the actual voice or a simulation”, and, notably, going after the tools: it prohibits distributing software whose primary purpose is the unauthorised production of a particular person's voice or likeness. California's AB 1836 and AB 2602, in force from January 2025, protect performers living and dead against unconsented digital replicas and void the contract clauses that studios use to extract replica rights from actors who lack representation. These are meaningful, but the clue is in the names. The ELVIS Act is for recording artists. The Californian statutes are for performers. They extend the law of celebrity slightly downwards rather than building a floor under everyone.
The most radical and the most instructive experiment comes from Copenhagen. In June 2025 the Danish government unveiled a proposed amendment to its Copyright Act that would do something none of the other frameworks attempt: give every individual, not merely performers and not merely the famous, a copyright-style entitlement over their own body, facial features and voice. The proposal remains unadopted, but it is advancing: the amended draft bill was notified to the European Commission under the Technical Regulation Information System procedure on 31 October 2025, and parliamentary adoption is expected during 2026, with the protection set to last for fifty years after the death of the person imitated. Denmark also promoted the approach during its presidency of the Council of the European Union in the second half of 2025.
The mechanism is elegant precisely because it borrows the architecture of copyright, a body of law that already knows how to handle takedown notices, platform liability and compensation without requiring proof of commercial loss. Under the Danish proposal, a person whose likeness is reproduced by AI without consent could issue a takedown notice, claim compensation even in the absence of any reputational or financial harm, and trigger liability for platforms that fail to act. Parody and satire are carved out. The protection extends to all persons, which is the entire point. It treats your face not as a brand you have to have built, but as something you own by virtue of having a face.
The Danish bet is worth sitting with, because it answers the central design question more directly than anything else on the table. By decoupling the right from commercial value, it makes the protection universal. The cleaner whose face is deepfaked has exactly the same claim as the film star, because neither of them has to prove the face was worth money. There are objections, of course. Copyright is a clumsy and sometimes dangerous instrument; treating likeness as property has been criticised, including by Rothman in the American context, as a step that can be used against individuals as readily as for them, since property can be signed away. And a national copyright tweak runs straight into the borderless reality that Harris Sliwoski describes, where a deepfake hosted in one jurisdiction harms a person in another under a third country's law. But as a statement of principle, that everyone owns their own features, the Danish proposal is the closest any government has come to the thing the moment actually requires.
So strip away the celebrity theatre and the jurisdictional noise, and ask the question the whole situation poses. If the only protection currently available is the law of celebrity, what would a framework of identity rights for ordinary people actually need to contain? The evidence assembled across these jurisdictions points to five non-negotiable components.
The first is a right grounded in personhood rather than commerce. Every existing tool that works for celebrities fails ordinary people at the same point: it asks for proof of market value or financial loss. A framework for everyone must invert this, recognising that the core injury of having your face or voice replicated is dignitary, an assault on your control over your own identity, and is suffered identically by the famous and the unknown. The Danish model and the dignity-based reasoning emerging from Indian courts both point this way. The harm must be defined as the unconsented use of a person's likeness, voice or biometric identity, full stop, with compensation available regardless of whether a single pound was lost. Anything less re-creates the celebrity gate under a new name.
The second is a low-friction, fast removal mechanism that does not depend on lawyers. The reason the TAKE IT DOWN Act and the Danish proposal matter is that they contemplate a notice-and-takedown system an ordinary person can actually operate, with statutory deadlines, here forty-eight hours, and platform liability for non-compliance. The lived asymmetry documented in the deepfake-abuse research is not primarily about what the law says; it is about whether a victim without a legal team can make anything happen. A real framework must make the removal route as accessible as reporting a stolen card, with enforcement, through a body such as the Federal Trade Commission or a national data-protection authority, that does not require the victim to fund the fight.
The third is coverage of the full range of misuse, not just its most lurid corner. Intimate-image laws are essential but partial. A genuine identity right has to reach the cloned voice used to defraud an elderly relative, the synthetic endorsement that puts words in your mouth, the face swapped into political disinformation, and the likeness ingested to train a model. The ELVIS Act's instinct to regulate the tools, the software whose purpose is unauthorised replication, and GDPR's treatment of biometric data as a special category point towards a framework that governs the whole pipeline from training data to output, rather than chasing individual videos after the fact.
The fourth is consent that cannot be quietly stripped away. The danger that Rothman identifies in the property-based approach, and the abuse that California's AB 2602 was written to stop, is the same danger: that a universal right becomes worthless the moment people are made to sign it away as a condition of employment, of using a platform, or of uploading a photograph. A framework must treat identity consent as specific, informed, revocable and resistant to blanket waivers buried in terms of service. A right you surrender by clicking “I agree” is not a right ordinary people can keep.
The fifth is cross-border enforceability, because identity harm does not respect borders and synthetic media least of all. The fragmentation that Harris Sliwoski catalogues, the EU labelling, the American criminal statutes, the Chinese provider rules, the Brazilian electoral resolutions, is not a transitional inconvenience that will resolve itself. It is a structural problem that a single national law, however enlightened, cannot solve alone. A workable framework needs interoperable standards, mutual recognition of takedown orders, and obligations on the global platforms that host this content, so that a person in one country can compel removal of material generated and stored in another. Without this, even the best domestic right becomes a notice shouted into a jurisdiction that cannot hear it.
There is a temptation to read the Swift and McConaughey filings as good news, a sign that the system is responding. It is more accurate to read them as a diagnosis. When the most powerful people in the culture, advised by the most expensive lawyers, conclude that the best available protection for their own faces is to misuse trademark law, the message is not that the system works. The message is that the system has no front door, and they have been reduced to climbing through a side window that happens to have a federal lock on it.
Ordinary people do not have that window. They do not have a sound mark, a litigation fund, or a commercial profile that turns a violation into a quantifiable loss. What they have, increasingly, is the experience of discovering their voice in a scam, their face in a video they never made, or their likeness folded silently into a training set, and then finding that there is no specific law to invoke, no clean right to removal, and no obvious route to compensation. The right of publicity will not help them, because they are not publicity. The trademark gambit will not help them, because they are not brands. The intimate-image statutes will help only if the harm happens to take that particular form.
The components of a better settlement are not mysterious, and they are not even especially novel. They are visible, in pieces, scattered across the very jurisdictions whose incoherence currently frustrates everyone: personhood-based harm from the Danish proposal and the Indian dignity cases, fast statutory takedown from the American intimate-image regime, tool-level and biometric regulation from Tennessee and the GDPR, anti-waiver consent from California, and the unrealised promise of cross-border coordination that nobody has yet built. The task is not to invent these ideas. It is to assemble them into a single right that attaches to a person because they are a person, and not because they are worth money.
The deepest lesson of the celebrity trademark wave is that we have, for seventy years, been protecting the self through the proxy of the brand, and that the proxy has finally broken. A face was always more than a logo. A voice was always more than a jingle. The arrival of machines that can manufacture both, cheaply, at scale, and for anyone, has simply made the inadequacy impossible to ignore. The choice now is whether the right to one's own face and voice remains, as it has always quietly been, a privilege of the famous, or becomes what it should have been all along: a feature of being human, available to the nurse and the teenager and the pensioner on exactly the same terms as the pop star. The law of celebrity will not get us there. It was never meant to. Building something that will is the unfinished work of this decade.

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
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Notes I Won’t Reread
It’s three in the morning, and I have absolutely nothing to do. I wasn’t even planning on writing tonight, but after spending the last hour walking around the house for no reason, and opening the fridge as if food was going to magically start dancing to cheer me up, staring out the window, and checking my phone every five minutes even though I already know there’s nothing interesting on it, I ended up here. I don’t have a story to tell, and I didn’t get a deep realization moment, and nothing happened today that’s worth writing about. I’ve already said what happened, absolutely nothing. Im just bored. That’s the entire reason this exists now. At this point, I’d almost ruin someone’s life just to make the next ten minutes interesting. Almost. That sounds like too much paperwork, and besides, my housemate keeps making sure I can’t even be bored in peace. I don’t know how one person manages to make everything about himself. He’ll hear me complain about something completely unrelated, and somehow he’ll decide im attacking him personally. Some people spend years trying to be the center of attention, and he manages it just by existing in the same room. I don’t mind being alone. I actually enjoy it. I know people love pretending that’s a sad sentence, “Oh, what a tragedy.” It’s really not that complicated or sad. I just don’t enjoy people that much, and actually, I don’t enjoy people at all. There’s a difference. Being alone has never bothered me, if anything, it’s peaceful. nobody talking just to fill the room with noise, and nobody is asking questions that don’t matter. Nobody’s expecting me to react to stories I’ve already forgotten halfway through hearing them. I like being alone and disappearing because I want to, not because im lonely. People confuse those two things all the time. Humans, on the other hand, seem physically incapable of existing without dragging each other around like a disease. They always need someone to text, to call, to sit with, to complain to, to drag out for coffee so they can spend seven hours vomiting meaningless noise at each other and calling it conversation. Then they wonder why they're fucking exhausted all the time. Maybe stop collecting people like they're some kind of pathetic little hobby. You don't need an audience every hour of the day, but oh, I guess, most of them would rather choke on their own boredom than sit still for five minutes. I don't know why silence scares people so much. It's probably because it leaves them alone with the fact that they're unbearable.
The only company I actually don’t get tired of is the woman in the navy dress, which is probably the closest thing I have to proof that human company is unbearable, except for hers. She exists in my dreams, but she does exist in real life too (though she won’t talk to me in any way, and that’s as far as im going to talk about it.). She still manages to be better company than most people I’ve met while existing for a few hours at a time. She doesn’t ask pointless questions. She doesn’t turn everything into an argument. She doesn’t find reasons to be offended over things that have absolutely nothing to do with her. She just exists, and somehow that’s enough. If I had to choose between spending an entire day around humans or one more of her dreams, I’d sleep for years without thinking twice. Actually, without thinking at all. I don’t know how I ended up talking about any of this. This note started because I was bored. Then it became a complaint about my housemate, etc. I never have a destination when I write, I just keep following whatever thoughts decide to speak the loudest until I run out of things to complain about, which hasn’t happened yet. But anyway, Im still bored, and writing this somehow managed to waste a few minutes. That’s probably the most productive thing I’ve done all night.
Sincerely, Ahmed
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Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * Have been enjoying an exciting Game this afternoon. A's caught fire in the top of the 9th inning and know lead the Giants 9 to 6.
Spent an hour with my lawnmower out front this morning and improved the look of this place quite a bit. More remains to be done, of course. Thing about yard work, it's never completely done.
MLB Game has just ended. A's held their lead and won 9 to 6.
Time for me to catch up the Thursday prayers now, and plan for an early bedtime.
Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night.
Health Metrics: * bw= 237.99 lbs. * bp= 136/80 (78)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups, BP breathing exercises, pilates
Diet: * 05:55 – 1 banana, 1 pb&j sandwich * 08:10 – 2 big steak-filled breakfast tacos * 12:00 – beef patties, mushroom gravy, mashed potatoes
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 03:30 – listen to local news talk radio * 04:10 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 04:30 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap * 09:30 to 10:30 – yard work, 1 hour pushing the lawn mower over the front yard * 13:30 – now listening to The Glenn Beck Program on 650 KSTE, Broadcast Home for the Athletics in Sacramento, ahead of this afternoon's MLB Game between the Athletics and the San Francisco Giants.
Chess: * 16:00 – moved in all pending CC games
from DAY ZERO
new album drop…. song titles are so relevant right now

from DrFox

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Roscoe's Quick Notes

My MLB Game of Choice this afternoon has the Oakland Athletics playing the San Francisco Giants. The game's start time is scheduled for 2:45 PM CDT. I'm listening now to the Athletic's Pregame Show on 650 KSTE, Broadcast Home for the Athletics in Sacremento, and I'll stay here for the radio-call of the game.
As I usually do, I'll follow the score and live stats as the game develops in real time via MLB's Gameday Service.
And the adventure continues.