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from Progress/Catastrophe
Take me back To the golden tree With branches made of objects On the leaf Where the fire meets philosophy physics meets mathematics the throne meets the clocktower On the leaf I can sing again And my songs rising up To the deepest gap between everything
from
Unattributed
The Harry Partch Ensemble, via Wikipedia, under a CC 0 License.
Listening to Harry Partch is like going on a surreal archaeological dig through history. Only this is history reinterpreted by someone who has been taking shrooms for two decades. Yet, with the emergence of microtonality in the music of King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard and Angine de Poitrine his works are more relevant today than ever.
Harry Partch was born on June 24th, 1901 to Virgil Franklin Partch, and his wife Jennie. They were missionaries to China who fled the Boxer Rebellion. His parents settled in Benson, Arizona. He was encouraged by his mother to learn music, and she taught him to read music. He was exposed to music from different cultures including Chinese (via his mother), the Yaqui people, and Spanish songs.
He began studying piano serious in 1913 after his family relocated to Albuquerque, New Mexico. He also began composing his earliest piano works (which he later destroyed). In 1919 He relocated with his mother to Los Angeles after the death of his father. In 1920 his mother was killed in a trolley accident. Partch studied music at the University of Southern California's School of Music in 1920, but left two years later being dissatisfied with the teachers.
Sometime during the 18th Century, western music settled on the tuning system known as twelve-tone equal temperament. After reading Hermann von Helmholtz's [Sensations of Tone](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SensationsofTone “Sensations of Tone”) in 1923, Partch began to feel that equal temperament had forced music to become more abstract. This abstraction was stifling the true possibilities for expression in music, so he rejected equal temperament in favor of just intonation.
This marked Partch's first step in finding a different direction for musical expression that remains the inspiration for many avant-garde and experimental musicians to this day.
Per Wikipedia's entry on Harry Partch, his career can be divided into several periods: Early Work (1919-1947), Academic Period (1947-1962), and his Late Period (1962-1974). These periods roughly correspond with the types of Partch's compositions, and his exploration of tonality.
During the first period, Partch came to reject the system of equal temperament, favoring just intonation instead. His first experiments involved creating paper coverings that indicated just intonation fingerings for violins. In 1930, he decided to break from the equal temperament tradition completely and burned all his previous 12TET (12 tone equal temperament) based compositions. He then devised a 29 tone scale, and had a viola constructed with which to perform works using this scale (the Adapted Viola).
In 1932, he gave several performances of his works in San Francisco, and won the support of a private group of individuals which allowed him to relocate to New York. The Carnegie Corporation of New York granted him the money he needed to continue his studies in England, where he met Kathleen Schlesinger. Schlesinger had been studying ancient Greek music theory, and had recreated a Kithara from an image on a Greek vase. Upon his return to the United States during the great depression, Partch would spend nine years as a transient / hobo. In 1938 constructed his own Kithara approximately twice the size of Schlesinger's and devised a new 43 tone scale. While in Chicago, Partch would design and build a 43 tone reed organ (aka the Chromelodeon).
The second period saw Partch settling into the University of Wisconsin from 1944-1947, during which he lectured, built more instruments, and finished his book Genesis of a Music. He left in 1947 due to not being able to join the permanent staff of the university, and there being a lack of space for his instruments. In 1949, he was offered the opportunity to convert a smithy into a studio by Gunnar Johansen to continue his work. During his work in the smithy, he recorded Eleven Intrusions and several other works. In 1951, he moved to Oakland, CA for health reasons, and put on a performance of his piece King Oedipus, but was unable to make a recording of it due to objections from the Yeats estate. Partch set up his studio / record label Gate 5 in 1953, and would release records via mail order. During this period Partch also started working with the University of Illinois, and was introduced to Danlee Mitchel, who would later become Partch's heir. Partch produced several performances of his works with the University's support. Partch also began what would a six film collaboration with Madeline Tourtelot. Partch left the University due hostility from the music department, despite having support from other departments and organizations.
Partch's final period saw him returning to California, and setting up studio in Petaluma. He composed And on the Seventh Day, Petals Fell in Petaluma. And, in 1969, Columbia Records released The World of Harry Partch, his first major label release. Partch's final theater was The Delusions of the Fury, produced in 1969. His final work was the soundtrack to the Betty Freeman film The Dreamer That Remains. In 1973 Partch retired. He died of a heart attack on September 3rd, 1974.
As is, hopefully apparent, Partch's work was both influential and controversial. During his life he was supported by numerous artists, such as Henry Cowell, Otto Leuning, Roy Harris, and Aaron Copeland. He also had the support of numerous foundations, including the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the League of Composers, the Fromm Foundation, John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.
Towards the end of his life, The Harry Partch Foundation was established to handle his expenses, and administer his work. His instruments. Danlee Mitchel served as the Executive Director of The Harry Partch Foundation until his death. Dean Drummond's group Newband undertook the handling of Partch's instruments and performs with them. The Sousa Archives and Center for American Music holds the Harry Partch Archive 1918-1991.
Partch was inducted into the Percussive Arts Society Hall of Fame in 1974. In 2004 U.S. Highball was selected by the Library of Congress's National Recording Preservation Board.
While the work of Harry Partch has not seen wide acknowledgment throughout Europe or Eastern Countries, there is growing interest in his work. Partch's work has established a culture where the exploration of alternate tunings for instruments has become something that is more common.
Groups like Angine de Poitrine, and King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard haven't rejected the concept of equal temperament in their instrument selection. But, they are using the concept of adding more tones to the scale in ways that are substantive, just as Partch developed whole new scales and made large scale compositions with them.
This is the way forward for music. There is an entire world of sound out there waiting to be discovered, or in some cases, rediscovered. Twelve tone equal temperament has been the primary focus of music for centuries. With the advances in synthesizers and sampling over the past several decades, artists have started exploring all sorts of new grounds.
Hopefully, we will see more substantial work done in the field of using just intonation, and other tuning systems.
If you would like to explore the music of Harry Partch, I highly recommend the four volume set: The Harry Partch Collection Vol 1, Vol 2, Vol 3, and Vol 4, along with other recordings of Partch's work on New World Records.
There is also an excellent film of Harry Partch's Studio from around 1950 available on YouTube. This lets you see all of his instruments and provides a deeper understanding of how they were designed. Partch also plays each of the instruments.
Categories: #Music Tags: #experimetnal, #microtonal, #american, #influential License: Copyright Unattributed. Licensed under Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0.
from
💚
Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil
Amen
Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!
Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!
from
💚
The apiary be Scottish run to mute Late December this hugger And seeing simply rise What time in Hearst for Will Enough of oak And seeming simpler For five octet and lane And pasture by the law Economy forever- and nines to the Moon Giving ray to God And night shall let us be- the end of war.
from
💚
Fast October
For nights of icy gray Embering the dawn This works in view Forsythia to rose and glen In best across and forward then A play in nights of conquer The near reune and justice fear In sympathy my search And all the day, ray friend The lights to and from this oar As substance would And chalk of Peter The Faber cast to El And then in her Nights’ own perfect procession Evident in truth And I to see the escarpment This will tour And make the nights unbend For simple law And tens of head The Earth could blow in May And ever jousted In Night Saints Michigan The mercy had its field And air of pesticides And adhesive in peace For chlor and pour Victory poison So to Earth and bright The Digby blues Ashore but livid asking And we were well, as young could tell And dropped our carriage out- And nights unend But perfect glow And butterfly and grid The rest to writhe Of Summer steep When to silent keep.
from
💚
We Walked Along
In peace and character These chances to Balmoral And Kennedy stopped the rain As we melded into Summer But there in bright Verses for a wave Height in place alone Drops of Victory dew And solemn then Rights to Essex water Customary then We picked our scales brief And suddenly to back The lanes of brief decay And when it rained Laurel was to comet And bitter flow A smile yesterday For all this blue And pariah dine In mortal thirst for order To end this May And work above In June we lost our flat Nights pretend The June of Orinoco And Dartmouth by the Bay Of tear and rights behind Seldom call the beacon And I saw limerence Peak to Depardieu Association freeze And barreling to bread And war, back off We cast our rod to limbs That war was then Trial and order be The solace right and view The year I saw it all.
from
EpicMind
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„Ich hatte diese Woche überhaupt keine Zeit.“ Es ist einer jener Sätze, die ich fast täglich höre oder selbst sage. Manchmal stimmt er. Oft fühlt er sich zumindest wahr an. Was aber, wenn genau dieses Gefühl täuscht? Vielleicht ist unser grösstes Problem gar nicht die fehlende Zeit – sondern wie wir sie wahrnehmen.
Die Autorin Laura Vanderkam behauptet etwas Überraschendes: Die meisten Menschen haben mehr frei verfügbare Zeit, als sie glauben. Nicht weil sie weniger arbeiten, sondern weil sie ihre Zeit falsch einschätzen.
Ein einfaches Experiment zeigt das. Wenn du während einer Woche in groben 30-Minuten-Schritten notierst, womit du deine Zeit tatsächlich verbringst, erlebst du oft eine Überraschung. Die Arbeitszeit fällt meist geringer aus, als du dachtest. Gleichzeitig tauchen Stunden auf, die scheinbar „verschwunden“ waren: hier eine Stunde am Smartphone, dort eine Stunde vor dem Fernseher, dazwischen einige Zeitfenster, die dir kaum bewusst waren. Sobald du diese Stunden schwarz auf weiss vor dir siehst, verändert sich etwas. Die Zeit wirkt plötzlich weniger knapp.
Denn genau darum geht es: nicht um Effizienz, sondern um Wahrnehmung. Wer seine Zeit sichtbar macht, nimmt sie plötzlich anders wahr. Zwischen Arbeit, Schlaf und Verpflichtungen steckt oft mehr Spielraum, als das eigene Gefühl vermuten lässt.
Genau das lässt sich gerade jetzt beobachten, mitten im Sommer. Die Tage sind lang, die Sonne geht spät unter. Nach einem heissen Arbeitstag werden die Abendstunden oft zur schönsten Zeit des Tages. Statt die Nachmittagshitze auszusitzen, lockt der Abend nach draussen: ein Buch im Garten, in der Aare schwimmen gehen, ein Apéro und gute Gespräche mit Freunden. Trotzdem behandeln viele diese Stunden wie blossen Leerlauf zwischen Feierabend und Schlafengehen.
Vielleicht verschenken wir gerade hier die wertvollste Zeit des Tages. Eine bewusst gewählte Stunde genügt. Dann fühlt sich ein Abend nicht mehr wie ein Rest des Arbeitstags an, sondern wie ein eigener Teil des Lebens. Der Unterschied liegt weniger in der Aktivität als im Entscheid, diese Zeit bewusst zu gestalten.
Seneca hat das schon vor beinahe zweitausend Jahren so gesehen: Das Leben sei nicht zu kurz – wir machten es oft dazu, weil wir unsere Zeit vergeuden. Seine Kritik galt allerdings nicht der Musse oder Erholung, sondern der Unachtsamkeit und Zerstreuung. Seine Botschaft ist aktueller denn je.
Zeitmanagement beginnt nicht mit Apps, Kalendern oder ausgefeilten Produktivitätssystemen. Es beginnt mit einer einfachen Frage: Womit verbringst du deine 168 Stunden in dieser Woche – und entspricht das dem Leben, das du eigentlich führen möchtest?
Mehr Zeit können wir nicht schaffen. Aber vielleicht sollten wir gerade jetzt, solange die Sommerabende noch lang und hell sind, die schönsten Stunden des Tages nicht achtlos verstreichen lassen.
Bildquelle Ulisse Caputo (1872–1948): Il balletto, Privatbesitz, Public Domain.
Disclaimer Teile dieses Texts wurden mit Deepl Write (Korrektorat und Lektorat) überarbeitet. Für die Recherche in den erwähnten Werken/Quellen und in meinen Notizen wurde NotebookLM von Google verwendet.
Topic #Selbstbetrachtungen | #ProductivityPorn
from 00692285
By pure chance, I recently spoke to two sober alcoholics within a short time span, each in two very different stages of recovery. When this happens I usually take it as a sign. Conversations with folks in recovery are spiritually meaningful to me in some way. The first guy I talked to was a newly sober individual. Fresh off some DUIs and dealing with a tremendous amount of shame and guilt. He told me about his weekly attendance to twelve step meetings, about the friends he’s made so far. He’s stayed sober for a few months, and has found it to be a helpful lifestyle change. Stopping drinking is often a helpful lifestyle change. When I asked if he’d started “working the steps”— AA-speak for the actual pen-to-paper execution of the twelve steps, he said no. For someone newly in recovery, sometimes stopping drinking is hard enough. To then muster up the courage to ask a sponsor to help you through the steps can seem even harder. Lots of newly sober people stop drinking and then wonder why they even have to do all this other stuff too. Unfortunately for many, relapse is likely if the actual work of recovery is not undertaken. So as a graduate of the school of recovery, I shared with him my experience. I could see the gears turning in his head as I shared my story—my failures and my successes. As he listened I saw myself ten years ago absorbing and reflecting the harsh reality of my situation: Change or die. There was an urgency to this and it was scary. I was terrified of going back, but I was also terrified of changing. The only way forward was through. In the end, no one individual has the power to get anyone sober. All we can do is share our experience in the hope that they will take something from it.
Less than twenty four hours later I spoke to another guy in recovery. One who’s been sober for as long as I have—ten years. Unlike me, this fellow is still in the program. He is a regular at meetings, he has sponsees, he volunteers and he does all the things a good AA-er should do. As we talked I also saw myself in this fellow too. I immediately recognized the anxiety around recovery that a lot of longtime meeting-goers feel. The feeling of peril that undergirds their recovery. It’s the narrative that says: unless I do all these things I will slide back into my default state—a defective state of selfishness, self centeredness, and discontentedness. When one believes that your default state is a defective one and that the cure is constant adherence to a program, a new anxiety forms. It was this anxiety that made me eventually leave the program myself. About three years into diligent attendance and volunteering, I realized that I had simply replaced the God-sized hole in my soul with something else: AA.
Obviously going to meetings and practicing the program of AA is better than drinking. Indeed, the world needs good folks in recovery to be at the meetings to help newcomers. It was exactly these people who helped me. Still, if the goal of the steps is to free people from addiction, twelve step programs need to look beyond just replacing one addiction with another. The truth that a lot of longtime folks in recovery don’t want to hear is that at a certain point you have to move on. In my understanding of the early history of AA, the program was designed to help men get sober and then to go back out and live their lives. You’d come into the program, work the steps, and then go back out into the world a changed man. Over the years, as AA grew, AA became a place in which sober people could spend the rest of their lives in. Instead of working the steps and getting sober and then going back out into the world, sober people could find a new all-encompassing home to stay in. As a result of its size and ubiquity, AA can become for many, a place to stay indefinitely.
As I spoke to this fellow, I saw who I would have become if I had stayed in the program all these years. Constantly ill-at-ease, constantly holding at bay what I believed was my default state: a defective one. A state of being that needed constant attention. I was lucky that I had found a group almost ten years ago that had coalesced around a radical idea: that actually your default state is not a defective one. That the program and its steps are actually meant to return you to, and connect you to a state where your’e not self-centered and disconnected from the divine. The steps as such are intended to remove, not add, things that obfuscate your connection to your higher power. In this narrative, you are not fundamentally wretched but rather fully connected to your higher-power and fully capable of living your life free of crutches—twelve step programs included.
Our little group didn’t last long, nor was it widely attended. Partly because what we were saying was so anathema to the mainstream view of AA. Mainstream anons hold a deep suspicion of anyone who says you don’t need to be involved in the program in perpetuity to stay sober. In their view it’s only a matter of time before you relapse if you’re not involved in AA. But this view only serves to perpetuate the program, not to actually liberate the soul from the clutches of addiction. I still very much practice the principles of the twelve steps in my life and have been this whole time. Meditation and prayer and service to others is fundamental to my sobriety after all these years. It’s just that my definition of meditation and prayer, my conception of a higher power, and the way in which I serve others are not strictly within the walls of AA.
I’m acutely aware, more than most, of the nature of addiction. Not only when it takes the form of chemical addiction, but also to religious and doctrinal addiction. Some may see my Islamic practice as merely another foray into the same old thing. The distinction I want to draw is this: AA relies on the narrative that our natural state as “alcoholics” is a broken one. One that needs constant vigilance lest we relapse into a state of selfishness, self-centeredness, and discontent. Before recovery, alcoholics sooth this inherent state of discontentedness with alcohol. After recovery, we sooth it with programatic and disciplined adherence to principles. I reject the idea that I’m fundamentally broken or that without a program I will relapse. This is a narrative of fear. Islam requires programatic and disciplined adherence, no doubt, but I do it out of love for Allah and because that is what I believe Allah asks of me not out of fear of relapse. This is a narrative of love. Interestingly enough, even though my little heretical home group was decidedly not-religious, what was being discussed unknowingly was the Islamic concept of Fitrah—that the original, innate nature of every human being is one where you start whole oriented toward God, and then life—upbringing, trauma, sin, addiction, distraction, layers over that natural state and obscures it. The work of spiritual practice isn't to constantly be patching holes; it's to strip away what's covering up what was already there.
I will forever be grateful to AA and all the people in it that helped me. I will also never tell anyone to not practice the program. My dedication to the program in my early years of recovery was essential to my recovery. However I believe that AA has to also give space to people and encourage people to then go out and live their lives and move on from the program. I’m not in the business of telling people in recovery what they should do but if I were I would tell the newly sober guy to practice the program and get into it—his life depends on it. To the guy who’s been in the program for ten years, I’d tell him to move on—his life depends on it.
from
Un blog fusible
dans le noir profond se déploient toujours plus loin les étoiles qui nous ressemblent en un instant leur éclat nous échappe pour toujours
from An Open Letter
I came home from Chess club where the girl I’m talking to was there and I spent most of the day with her. I played games with friends. I learned Catan, laughed a lot and won even though I was getting bullied with the robber. I have the problem of too many friends that want to come over for my game night, and I don’t even see it as a blessing I’m that desensitized to it. For fucks sake, I am trying to be conservative with the people I invite and there are 18 people that want to come over. I am in the best physical shape of my life, I am surrounded by friends, I am healthy, I have my therapist, Work is going well, Hash is with me, and I am not struggling financially.
And I added to the playlist of songs during which I considered killing myself. And I’m right now laying in bed, trying to cry. I won the board game that I don’t care about winning, I really don’t care about winning games. And I feel like I was ganged up on for being ahead. And it stuck in my mind, I was upset about being ganged up on, and to cope I told myself that I just win, and it sucks that naturally people have to team up against that. And it’s stupid because it doesn’t matter I don’t care about winning a random game. And I wasn’t being excluded. I’m loved and I’m wanted. The girl that I thought was cute, and I was trying to approach is the one that asked me for my number today so that we could keep talking even if she uninstalled the Instagram app. She told me that she kept the app to be able to talk with me. And I’m unhappy. And I listen to these songs that resonate so much about beating soap up and having so much self loathing. And I wanna beat myself up now for being so fucking difficult. Why can’t I just be happy. There’s nothing that should hurt me. And so why does it hurt so much.
from
Iain Harper's Blog
Ever wondered how the BBC provides its radio services nationwide in the UK?
In the 1990s the principle was line-of-sight relay. Microwave signals (broadcast distribution sat in the SHF bands, roughly 2–15 GHz) travel in straight lines and formed a chain: a series of relay stations on hilltops or tall towers, each one spaced just inside the horizon of the next.

Each link in the chain did the same job. A microwave dish received the incoming beam (these looked like large white drums and are still seen here and there), the station amplified and reconditioned the signal, broadcasting on FM to the surrounding area with another microwave dish retransmitting it on a slightly different frequency to the next station down the line thus achieving national coverage from a linked network.
I’ve always been fascinated by all types of technology from AI to the radio spectrum. In the mid 90s I was just “learning the trade” as a radio engineer. I was tight with a guy who used to build our FM transmitters for us. Somehow he had managed in this pre internet age to get hold of all the frequencies for the BBC repeater network. He also was our indirect source for lots of other useful things like the mythical Fire Brigade or FB keys that gave us access to most tower block rooftops in London.
We’d been discussing the practicality of hijacking a BBC national network by drowning out the official incoming microwave signal with a more powerful one of our own, which then, by nature of the network design, would be passed on down the chain. We thought we could do this if we got close to one of the big repeaters and blasted enough power on the right frequency.
Which is how I found myself one drizzly bank holiday Sunday sat on the roof of a van parked on Truleigh Hill in Sussex pointing a microwave transmitter at the nearby mast. I can’t precisely recall what the source was but it may well have been a DAT of a classic Dreamscape mixtape.
It worked like a charm, confirmed when we rang a mate in Preston and asked him to tune to Radio 3.
Which is how in the mid 1990s Radio 3 listeners found their quiet bank holiday Sunday classical listening suddenly interrupted by half an hour of unadulterated jungle music, which I’m sure caused more than one post-prandial sherry to be spilled.
from
Jaran Flaath
Å holde oversikt over økonomien på privaten kan for mange innebære både stress og angst, eller bare være noe man ikke ønsker å forholde seg til og lar kontoene leve sitt eget liv.
Uansett hvor man står, kan den japanske metoden kakeibo være en fin måte å både få oversikt, og å bli mer bevisst på hvordan man bruker penger.
Kort forklart er kakeibo oversatt til norsk “bokføring for husholdningen”. En oversikt over alle inntekter og utgifter du har. Akkurat hvordan du velger å utforme bokføringen står du ganske fritt til, men intensjonen er oversikt og forutsigbarhet.
Hvert kjøp fører til at du må notere ned og dermed også i større grad tenke gjennom det du handler og hvorfor du handler det. Sånn sett også en god metode for å redusere forbruk.
Kakeibo gir oversikt over hvor mye du til en hver tid har tilgjengelig, og sørge for at nok er satt av til det du har av utgifter og til sparing.
Min kakeibo er basert på at vi har felles økonomi i husholdningen, hvor alle utgifter til lån, forsikring, regninger, mat går av en felles konto hvor vi hver måned setter inn et beløp med god margin for variasjoner gjennom året. Det reduserer behovet for bokføring på disse postene betraktelig, som er et viktig grep for å få bokføringen til å være overkommelig. Samtidig er også en slik økonomisk rigg med på å fjerne den kognitive belastningen av å måtte holde oversikt, følge opp og hele tiden forholde seg til den delen av økonomien, som ofte er mer eller mindre konstant gjennom året.
For å føre kakeibo kan du bruke digitale verktøy, men jeg anbefaler en liten notatbok i lomma. Både fordi det er med på å øke bevisstheten rundt det du noterer ned, men også fordi den lille notatboken vil kunne være med og bidra på andre områder (som det kommer skriverier om på et senere tidspunkt). Litt seremoni, og masse tilstedeværelse.
Mitt kakeibo-oppsett er som følger:
Ved starten av måneden når lønn tikker inn, starter jeg en ny måned. Jeg fører opp inntekter:
Andre penger som måtte komme inn i løpet av måneden fører jeg bare opp fortløpende sammen med utgifter.
Så fører jeg opp kjente utgifter:
I tillegg fører jeg opp en egen kolonne med forutsette utgifter for måneden som kommer. Eksempler kan være:
Denne kategorien er veldig fri og skal egentlig bare frita meg fra å måtte huske på disse utgiftene resten av måneden. Ved å føre dem opp har du allerede satt av pengene og slipper tenke mer på dem.
Så summeres inntekter og utgifter opp og gir deg utgangspunktet for den første uken. I tabellformat blir det som følger:
| Hva | Beløp |
|---|---|
| Inntekter | |
| Lønn | 40 000 |
| Fra juni | 5 000 |
| Sum | 45 000 |
| Utgifter | |
| Fellesutgifter | 19 000 |
| Digitale tjenester | 450 |
| Sparing | 2 000 |
| Langsiktige utgifter | 850 |
| Sum | -22 300 |
| Forutsette utgifter | |
| Frisør | 600 |
| Nye sko | 1 200 |
| Sum | -1 800 |
Ved starten av en ny uke, for eksempel på søndager, starter du en ny uke ved å legge inn en rad i tabellen med ukenummer og dato. Den første uken fører du også inn startbeløpet, men det kan du velge om du ønsker å gjøre de påfølgende ukene. Det følger jo da av siste raden i forrige ukes bokføring.
Den ukentlig bokføringen blir da slik:
| Hva | Beløp | Ny saldo |
|---|---|---|
| Uke 27: 5.-12. juli | Inn: 20 900 | |
| Apotek | -300 | 20 600 |
| Bok | -449 | 20 151 |
| Finn.no | +800 | 20 951 |
| T-skjorte | -900 | 20 051 |
| Kino | -500 | 19 551 |
Merk at den første uken i en bokføringsmåned ofte vil være kortere enn en full uke, da lønningsdagen din stort sett er mandag til fredag. Den siste uken forrige måned blir tilsvarende avkortet og det er som det skal være.
Bildet under viser et eksempel fra min kakeibo, som eksempel på hvordan det kan settes opp og føres i notatbok:

Når du drar kortet, fører du opp hva du har brukt penger på, hva det kostet og ny tilgjengelig saldo.
Noen ganger glemmer du, eller at det er automatisk trekk for parkering som du glemmer i farten. Det er helt greit. En gang i uka sjekker du innom nettbanken og fører opp det du eventuelt har glemt.
Om du skulle oppleve vegring for å sjekke saldo i nettbank, så vil det med kakeibo snart være saga blott.
Minimum én gang i uken tar du også et blikk over forbruket ditt den siste tiden. Hva brukte du pengene dine på? Var det kjøp du kanskje kunne stått over?
Kakeibo skal ikke være et verktøy for å påføre skam. Den er din, og på linje med journaling anbefaler jeg at du holder den privat (med mindre du nettopp skal skrive en bloggpost om kakeibo). Bruk oppføringene som en påminnelse, som en mulighet for refleksjon rundt eget forbruk. Det skal fremdeles være lov til å gå på shopping og gjøre et kjøp bare fordi du har lyst der og da, men nå ser du både at du har råd, og hvilken påvirkning det får på budsjettet ditt.
Som all fysisk notatføring kan du tilpasse det akkurat slik du ønsker. Om du er glad i farger og gjøre noe ekstra ut av din kakeibo, så står du fritt til å gjøre det. Selv er min ganske grå og kjedelig og det synes jeg passer ganske bra til innholdet.
Om jeg bruker kakeibo akkurat slik det opprinnelig var ment, det vet jeg ikke, men jeg har funnet et system som fungerer for meg – og kan være til inspirasjon for deg. Akkurat hvordan din kakeibo blir seende ut og fungerer, det bestemmer du selv.
Målet må være å få en oversiktlig økonomi, mer gjennomtenkt pengebruk og at du skal kunne slippe kontrollen litt i det daglige. Du skal slippe tenke over om du har nok igjen til det som måtte komme i slutten av måneden.
Det å spare og ha en buffer er kanskje det viktigste grepet for økonomisk trygghet og ro i hverdagen, men jeg vil påstå du er mye bedre rustet til å oppnå det med kakeibo.
Start i dag, forsøk det et halvt år. Ja, du må prøve det over en lengre periode for at vanen skal sette seg. Effekten derimot, den vil være mye mer umiddelbar og merkes allerede etter noen dager eller uker.
Gi det et forsøk og gi meg gjerne tilbakemelding på hvordan din kakeibo fungerer.
from Out of Office
I continue to feel tired and sick. I can’t tell if it is depression or if I am actually still sick. It has been almost two weeks now since feeling fatigued, congested, short of breath and unmotivated. A lot has happened too so my body may just be taking its sweet time to recover.
I hope I hear something soon. I still have a lot left to do on my “unemployment to do list”, but I am anxiously awaiting my next opportunity at a steady paycheck. Financially, I am still okay but this is not sustainable long-term, or even in the near term. I will have to consider other options.
I have always been curious about starting my own business. I do not know what the process is, how much I have to have figured out before I start, or what the business would even be. I suppose this would be the time to think it through. Maybe I can start on this next week and research where to even start.
This is a late night entry, so in an effort to somewhat keep up a routine I will sign off now.
Thank you for your message. I am currently out of office with no set return date. I will get back to you when the time is right.
from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter 1: The Question That Finds the Hidden Room
The question usually comes at the wrong time. You are standing near the kitchen counter with your phone in your hand, half reading a message you do not know how to answer, half listening to the hum of the refrigerator, and someone looks at you long enough to notice that your smile is not carrying the same strength it usually carries. They ask, “Are you doing okay?” and for one second, something in you wants to tell the truth. That is the quiet doorway behind the Are You Doing Okay faith-based YouTube message, because the question is not really about manners. It is about the hidden room inside a person where the real answer has been waiting.
Most of us know how to answer quickly. We say we are fine because it keeps life moving. We say we are good because the kids need dinner, the bills still need to be paid, the car still needs gas, and tomorrow is not going to slow down just because today was heavy. We have learned how to nod, keep working, keep serving, keep showing up, and keep smiling. But there is a different kind of honesty in a deeper Christian encouragement article about bringing your honest heart to Jesus, because faith does not begin with pretending. Faith begins when the real person finally stands before the real Savior.
There are days when “I’m okay” is not a lie, but it is not the whole truth either. It is the sentence we use when the longer answer would take too much energy. It is what we say when we are afraid that if we open the door even a little, the whole room might flood. Maybe the truth is that you are tired in a way sleep has not fixed. Maybe you are worried about someone you love. Maybe you are carrying guilt from something you cannot undo, or pressure from something you cannot control. Maybe you love God and still feel worn down. Maybe you believe Jesus is Lord and still wonder why your heart feels so crowded.
That is where this article needs to begin, because that is where many people actually live. Not in a perfect spiritual place. Not in a clean, bright room where every prayer feels strong and every Bible verse immediately settles the heart. Many people live with Jesus while also carrying tension in their shoulders, questions in their minds, and old fears that wake up at the worst times. They go through the day doing what has to be done, and then when the house gets quiet, they realize they have been holding their breath for hours.
There is a kind of loneliness that does not come from being physically alone. You can be surrounded by family, coworkers, church people, neighbors, and online noise, and still feel unseen. You can have people who love you and still not know how to explain what is happening inside. Sometimes the hardest part is not that nobody cares. The hardest part is that you do not know how to translate your heart into words that make sense. So you stay quiet. You say you are okay. You keep the peace. You do not want to become a burden. You do not want to sound dramatic. You do not want anyone to think your faith is weak.
But Jesus never taught us that honesty is the enemy of faith. He showed us something better. He met people in the truth of their condition. He did not wait for them to sound impressive. He did not demand that they organize their pain before they came near. When blind Bartimaeus cried out beside the road, Jesus stopped. When a woman who had suffered for years reached for the edge of His garment, Jesus noticed. When Peter fell apart under fear and denied Him, Jesus did not treat failure as the end of the story. When Mary and Martha were grieving at the tomb of Lazarus, Jesus did not stand at a distance and give cold explanations. He came near enough to weep.
That matters more than we sometimes realize. The Son of God did not walk through human sorrow like it was beneath Him. He entered the ordinary places where people hurt. Roads, wells, tables, boats, gravesides, crowded streets, lonely conversations, private shame, public desperation. Jesus did not only preach to crowds. He saw the individual person inside the crowd. He saw the person everyone else had reduced to a problem, a reputation, a sickness, a mistake, or an interruption. He saw the soul.
So when the question comes to you, “Are you doing okay?” maybe the first thing to remember is that Jesus already knows the answer beneath your answer. You do not have to explain yourself perfectly to Him. You do not have to make your struggle sound more spiritual than it feels. You can bring Him the sentence you barely know how to say. “Lord, I am not doing okay.” That may be the most honest prayer you have prayed in a long time.
Some people feel guilty even saying that. They think it sounds ungrateful. They look around and can name ten reasons they should be thankful, and they are thankful, but thankfulness does not erase exhaustion. Gratitude is real, but so is grief. Faith is real, but so is pressure. You can love your family and still feel overwhelmed by the weight of caring for them. You can appreciate your job and still feel drained by what it demands. You can believe God is good and still feel confused about what He is allowing. The human heart is not a simple machine. It can hold worship and worry in the same day. It can whisper praise in the morning and cry in the car before sunset.
That is why Jesus is so merciful with people. He knows what we are made of. He knows that we are dust. He knows the difference between rebellion and weariness. He knows the person who is running from Him, and He knows the person who is crawling toward Him with the last strength they have. When He says, “Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest,” He is not speaking to people who have already mastered peace. He is speaking to people who are carrying more than they were created to carry alone.
Think about that word, come. It is simple, but it is deeply kind. Jesus does not say, “Perform for Me.” He does not say, “Impress Me.” He does not say, “Prove you are strong enough to deserve My help.” He says, “Come.” Come with the tired mind. Come with the tight chest. Come with the unfinished prayer. Come with the fear you keep trying to talk yourself out of. Come with the part of you that still believes and the part of you that is struggling to breathe under the weight of life.
A person can sit at the edge of a bed at night and have no beautiful words left. The room can be dark, the phone can be face down, the whole house can finally be quiet, and all that person can say is, “Jesus, help me.” That prayer may feel small, but it is not small to Him. It is honest. It is direct. It is the heart reaching for the Savior. Sometimes that is where peace begins, not with a grand emotional moment, but with a tired person finally stopping long enough to admit that they need help.
The world often rewards the appearance of being okay. It praises the person who never stops, never complains, never slows down, never admits weakness. But the kingdom of God is not built on pretending. Jesus said the poor in spirit are blessed. That does not sound like the language of image management. It sounds like the language of people who know they need mercy. It sounds like people who have stopped trying to look full when their souls are empty. It sounds like people who are finally ready to receive what only God can give.
Being honest with Jesus does not mean you give up. It does not mean you sink into every feeling as if every feeling tells the truth. It does not mean you stop obeying, stop praying, stop forgiving, stop working, or stop loving. It means you stop carrying a false version of yourself into the presence of God. You stop speaking to Him like someone who has to protect a reputation. You let Him see what He already sees, and in doing that, you allow grace to touch the place you have been hiding.
That hidden place might be fear. It might be regret. It might be resentment you do not want to admit. It might be disappointment with God that you have tried to bury under religious phrases. It might be the sadness that comes after a long season of doing the right thing and not seeing the result you hoped for. It might be the quiet anger of being dependable for everyone while wondering who notices you. Whatever it is, Jesus is not shocked by it. He is not fragile. He does not need you to make your heart look cleaner before you open it.
The lesson of Jesus in this question is not only that He cares when we are not okay. It is also that He invites us to stop lying to ourselves about what strength really is. Strength is not always the ability to say, “Nothing bothers me.” Sometimes strength is the courage to tell the Lord, “This is bothering me deeply, and I need You here.” Strength is not always silence. Sometimes strength is prayer. Strength is not always a straight back and a fixed smile. Sometimes strength is a humbled heart reaching for the hand of Christ.
There is a reason people cried out to Jesus. They believed He could do something with the truth. They believed He could heal what others avoided, forgive what others condemned, restore what others thought was ruined, and notice what others passed by. The same Jesus is not less compassionate now. He has not grown distant from human pain. He has not become impatient with tired souls. He is still the Shepherd who knows how to find the one who is wandering. He is still the Savior who knows how to lift the person who cannot lift themselves.
So maybe the next time someone asks, “Are you doing okay?” you do not have to give everyone the full answer. Not every person is safe with the tender parts of your life. But you can let the question send you to Jesus. You can let it become a small bell inside your soul, reminding you to stop, breathe, and tell Him the truth. You can step away for a moment, even if it is only in your car before walking into the house, and say, “Lord, You know what is really going on in me. Meet me here.”
He will.
Maybe not with the answer you expected. Maybe not by fixing every circumstance immediately. Maybe not by making the road easy by morning. But He will meet you with His presence, and that presence changes what the weight does to you. The burden may still be real, but it is no longer being carried in the same kind of loneliness. The fear may still speak, but it is no longer the only voice in the room. The tears may still come, but they fall in the presence of a Savior who understands them.
To be loved by Jesus is not to be excused from every hard day. It is to be held through them. It is to discover that the question you were afraid to answer can become the place where prayer begins. It is to learn that you do not have to be okay to be close to Him. You can be tired and close. You can be uncertain and close. You can be grieving and close. You can be healing and close. The door is not opened by pretending. The door is opened by coming.
And if all you can bring Him today is the quiet answer, “No, Lord, I am not okay,” bring that. Bring the real answer. Bring the tired answer. Bring the answer you would not know how to explain to anyone else. Jesus is gentle enough for the truth, strong enough for the weight, and near enough to hear even the prayer you can barely say.
Chapter 2: When Strong People Finally Tell the Truth
A person can sit in a parked car for ten minutes after work and not know why they are still sitting there. The keys are out of the ignition. The house is only a few streets away. There are people inside who need them, or at least expect them to walk in as the same steady person they were yesterday. But their hands stay on the steering wheel for a moment longer, because the car has become the only quiet room they have had all day. The phone is glowing in the cup holder. There are messages waiting. There is dinner to think about. There may be a bill on the counter, a child who needs help, a spouse who needs attention, a parent who needs a call, or a problem at work that followed them home without permission. And in that small silence, the person finally feels what they were too busy to feel earlier.
That is where many strong people live. They are not trying to be fake. They are trying to survive their responsibilities. They have learned that people depend on them, so they keep moving even when their hearts are tired. They answer the call. They make the appointment. They fix the problem. They remember the date on the calendar. They calm everybody else down. Then, when someone asks if they are doing okay, they almost feel confused by the question, because they have not had enough space to ask themselves.
There is a particular kind of weariness that comes from always being the dependable one. It is not laziness. It is not self-pity. It is the strain of carrying your own weight while also making sure other people do not drop theirs. You can be grateful for the people in your life and still feel worn out by what love requires. You can love your family and still need a quiet place to breathe. You can be faithful and still feel stretched thin. You can trust God and still admit, “Lord, I am tired of being needed by everyone while feeling unknown inside my own heart.”
Jesus understands that more deeply than we sometimes allow ourselves to believe. We often picture Him only as calm, strong, and untouched by pressure. He was sinless, yes. He was Lord, yes. He carried authority no one else carried. But the Gospels do not show us a distant Savior pretending human pain was nothing. They show us Jesus withdrawing to pray. They show us Jesus tired by the journey. They show us Jesus grieved by unbelief, moved by compassion, and pressed by the weight of what stood before Him. In the garden of Gethsemane, He did not speak like someone acting above sorrow. He told His disciples that His soul was deeply sorrowful, even to death.
That moment matters because Jesus did not hide the heaviness of the hour behind religious language. He did not look at His closest friends and say, “Everything is fine,” when everything was not fine. He brought the truth of the moment into prayer. He fell on His face before the Father. He asked if the cup could pass from Him. Yet in the same prayer, He surrendered: “Not as I will, but as You will.” That is not weakness. That is holy honesty. That is trust without pretending. That is the Son showing us that obedience does not always feel light, and surrender does not always come without tears.
Somebody needs that picture of Jesus because they have been confusing faith with emotional silence. They think that if they admit the pressure is heavy, they are failing God. They think that if they say, “I am scared,” they have somehow betrayed their trust in Him. They think that if tears come, it must mean they are not praying correctly. But Jesus prayed honestly in the garden. He did not sin by telling the truth about the weight. He brought the weight to the Father and surrendered there.
That changes how we understand the question, “Are you doing okay?” The question is not asking whether you have perfect peace every minute. It is not asking whether you have mastered every emotion. It is not asking whether you can keep a spiritual smile on your face while your soul is under pressure. The better question may be, “Have you brought the real weight to God, or have you only brought Him the acceptable version?”
There is a difference. The acceptable version says, “Lord, bless my family, help me tomorrow, thank You for today,” and those are good prayers. But the real version may need to say, “Lord, I am angry that this is still happening. I am afraid I cannot keep doing this. I feel unseen. I do not want to become bitter. I need You to help me before my heart hardens.” That kind of prayer can feel uncomfortable at first, especially if you were taught to approach God only with polished words. But the Father is not fooled by polished words, and He is not frightened by honest ones.
A tired mother folding laundry after everyone else has gone to sleep may not have the energy for a long prayer. She may look at the small shirts, the towels, the clothes that will be dirty again in two days, and feel a strange mix of love and exhaustion. She does not hate her life. She does not hate her family. She is simply tired of being the place where so many needs land. A father checking the bank account before payday may feel the same quiet pressure. He may close the app quickly, not because the numbers changed, but because staring at them longer will not make peace appear. These are not dramatic moments to the outside world, but they are real places where faith is tested.
Jesus meets people there, not only in church services and not only in public victories. He meets the parent by the dryer. He meets the worker in the parking lot. He meets the person staring at the bank app. He meets the caregiver who sits in a doctor’s office waiting room with a clipboard full of forms and a heart full of fear. He meets the person who smiles through a family gathering because explaining the truth would take too long. He meets the one who keeps saying, “I’m okay,” while silently wondering how long they can keep carrying this much.
The lesson is not that we should unload every feeling onto every person. Wisdom still matters. Some people have not earned access to the tender parts of your life. But Jesus has. If anyone can be trusted with the unedited truth, it is Him. He knows how to hold your confession without using it against you. He knows how to correct you without humiliating you. He knows how to comfort you without lying to you. He knows how to strengthen you without shaming you for needing strength.
This is one of the quiet miracles of following Christ. He does not only save us from sin in a distant, theological sense. He also teaches us how to live truthfully before God in the middle of ordinary pressure. He saves us from the false self we build to survive. He saves us from the constant performance of being fine. He saves us from believing that being loved means being useful every second. He saves us from turning strength into a prison.
Many people are exhausted because they have mistaken being needed for being known. They are surrounded by people who depend on what they do, but they are starving for someone to see who they are. Jesus sees both. He sees the service and the soul underneath it. He sees the dishes and the disappointment. He sees the hours you worked and the way your heart sank when no one noticed. He sees the private sacrifice. He sees the hidden resentment you are ashamed of. He sees the prayer you almost prayed but swallowed because you did not want to sound ungrateful.
And because He sees, you can stop trying to prove the pain is valid before you bring it to Him. You do not have to build a case. You do not have to convince Him that you have a reason to be tired. You can come as you are and let His presence tell the truth about your life. In His presence, you are not only the worker, the parent, the provider, the helper, the strong one, the problem solver, or the person everyone calls when something breaks. You are His. You are a soul He loves. You are not valuable only because you are useful.
That truth can take time to sink in. A person who has spent years measuring their worth by how much they can handle may not know how to rest without feeling guilty. They may sit down for five minutes and immediately think of everything left undone. They may pray and feel distracted by the list of responsibilities waiting on the other side of amen. But Jesus does not invite the weary into shame. He invites them into rest. Rest is not always a vacation. Sometimes rest is the moment your soul remembers, “I am not holding the whole world together. God is.”
That does not mean you abandon your responsibilities. It means you stop worshiping them. It means you do the next faithful thing without pretending you are the savior of everyone around you. There is only one Savior, and His name is Jesus. When you forget that, love becomes fear, service becomes identity, and responsibility becomes a heavy throne you were never meant to sit on. But when Jesus returns to the center, you can love people without believing their whole life depends on your perfection.
This is where humility becomes a relief. We often think humility means thinking less of ourselves, but sometimes humility means admitting we are not God. We cannot control every outcome. We cannot fix every person. We cannot prevent every disappointment. We cannot carry every burden without breaking something inside. We can be faithful. We can be present. We can obey. We can love. But we cannot replace the Lord.
The dependable person may need that lesson most of all. Not because they are proud in an obvious way, but because they have quietly accepted a weight too large for human shoulders. They have learned to live as if everything will collapse if they stop. Jesus does not condemn them for caring. He simply calls them back to the truth. “Come to Me.” Not come to more pressure. Not come to another performance. Come to Me, and I will give you rest.
So maybe the honest answer is not, “Yes, I am okay.” Maybe it is, “I am tired, but I am coming to Jesus.” Maybe it is, “I feel pressure, but I am not carrying it alone tonight.” Maybe it is, “I do not know how everything will work out, but I know who is with me.” That kind of answer does not make life instantly easy, but it puts the soul back on solid ground.
The car door still has to open. The person still has to walk into the house. The laundry may still be waiting. The bill may still be on the counter. The conversation may still need to happen. But something can shift before the next step. A tired person can breathe and tell the Lord the truth. They can stop gripping the steering wheel like it is the edge of the world. They can whisper, “Jesus, I need You to walk in there with me.” And the grace of God can meet them before anything outside changes.
That is often how Jesus strengthens us. Not always by removing the responsibility, but by reminding us we are not alone inside it. Not always by changing the room before we enter it, but by changing the fear we carry into the room. Not always by giving us ten years of answers, but by giving us mercy for the next ten minutes. And sometimes, ten minutes with Jesus is exactly enough to take the next faithful step.
Chapter 3: The Prayer You Almost Did Not Say
The waiting room has a sound of its own. A television mounted in the corner says words no one is really hearing. Someone turns a page in an old magazine. A child swings his feet under a chair. A nurse opens a door and calls a name that is not yours. You glance down at the forms on the clipboard, then back at the hallway, then at your phone, even though nothing new has happened. You are waiting for an answer you cannot control. It may be a test result, a doctor’s opinion, a conversation after the appointment, or just the next piece of information that will tell you whether life is about to stay the same or become much harder.
In a place like that, “Are you doing okay?” can feel almost impossible to answer. Your body is in the chair, but your mind is already walking down ten different roads. You are thinking about what might happen. You are thinking about the people who would be affected. You are thinking about what you should have done sooner, what you should have noticed, what you should have prayed more faithfully, what you should have changed. Fear does not always scream. Sometimes it sits quietly beside you, wearing ordinary clothes, whispering possibilities into your ear while everyone else keeps acting normal.
Many people pray in waiting rooms, but not always with words. Sometimes the prayer is a hand pressed against the forehead. Sometimes it is a deep breath before the door opens. Sometimes it is staring at the floor and saying inside your heart, “Please, Lord.” That may be all. No long sentence. No beautiful language. No confident spiritual speech. Just a tired soul reaching toward God before the news comes.
That kind of prayer matters. It matters because it is real. It matters because Jesus never taught us that prayer had to be impressive before it could be heard. He warned against praying for appearance, against using empty words to sound spiritual, against performing faith so other people would admire it. He kept bringing people back to the Father, back to trust, back to the secret place where the heart stands uncovered before God.
Some of the most important prayers in a person’s life are not spoken loudly. They happen in the middle of a workday when someone closes an office door and sits at the desk with their head in their hands. They happen in the hallway outside a child’s bedroom after a hard conversation. They happen in the grocery store parking lot when the total on the receipt is higher than expected and the bank account is already thin. They happen when a message has not been answered, when an apology has not been made, when the person you love is drifting, when the future feels like a fog.
The question is not whether the prayer sounds strong. The question is whether it is turned toward Jesus.
There is a story in the Gospels that has always felt deeply human to me. A father brings his son to Jesus because the boy is suffering and the father is desperate. This man is not strolling toward Jesus with calm religious confidence. He is a parent who has watched someone he loves suffer for too long. He has probably tried whatever could be tried. He has probably carried hope and disappointment in the same hands for years. When Jesus tells him that all things are possible for one who believes, the father cries out, “I believe; help my unbelief.”
That sentence is one of the most honest prayers in Scripture. It does not pretend. It does not try to clean up the contradiction. It admits both things at once. I believe. Help the part of me that is struggling to believe. That is not a polished religious answer. That is a human being standing in front of Jesus with a divided heart, and Jesus does not turn him away.
A lot of us live closer to that father than we want to admit. We believe, but we also shake. We trust God, but we still check the phone again. We know the Bible says not to fear, but fear still shows up in the body. We have seen God be faithful before, but the new situation still feels frightening. We want to be brave, but we are tired of being tested. We want to surrender, but our hands keep closing around the thing we are afraid to lose.
That is not a reason to hide from Jesus. That is the very reason to come to Him.
The prayer you almost did not say may be the prayer that finally lets grace into the room. Maybe you almost did not say it because it sounded too small. Maybe you almost did not say it because you were embarrassed by how little strength you had. Maybe you almost did not say it because part of you wondered if God was tired of hearing the same concern again. But a child does not stop being a child because they need their father repeatedly. Need does not cancel relationship. Need reveals it.
Jesus taught us to call God Father. That means prayer is not only a transaction where we ask for things and wait to see if heaven approves the request. Prayer is communion. It is coming home to the One who knows us. It is the place where fear is brought into the presence of love, where confusion is brought into the presence of wisdom, where weakness is brought into the presence of strength. We may not always leave with the answer we wanted, but we do not leave untouched when we truly come.
Think about a man lying awake at two in the morning while his wife sleeps beside him. He is not scrolling because he is bored. He is scrolling because stillness feels dangerous. The news is bad. The family issue is unresolved. The mistake at work might become bigger by morning. He turns the brightness down so he does not wake anyone, but what he really wants is for his own mind to quiet down. He has prayed about this before, so he hesitates to pray again. He feels foolish saying the same thing. Yet the same fear keeps returning, so the same heart needs to return to Jesus.
There is no shame in returning. Jesus told His disciples to keep asking, to keep seeking, to keep knocking. Persistence in prayer is not annoying to God. It is often how trust is formed in us. A person may pray about the same burden for months, not because God did not hear the first time, but because the heart keeps needing to place the burden back into His hands. We are not machines. We do not release fear once and then never feel it again. Sometimes surrender is something we practice each morning before the day begins and each night when the darkness gives fear more room to talk.
This is where many people misunderstand peace. They think peace means they will never feel the concern again. But peace is not always the absence of a trembling moment. Peace can be the presence of Jesus in that moment. Peace can be the ability to say, “Lord, this still scares me, but I am not facing it without You.” Peace can be the small steadiness that comes when nothing outside has changed yet, but something inside remembers who is holding the story.
When Jesus slept in the boat during the storm, the disciples were not imagining the wind. The waves were real. The water was real. Their fear came from an actual danger. Yet Jesus was there with them. That story does not teach us that believers never experience storms. It teaches us that the presence of Jesus changes the meaning of the storm. The disciples thought His stillness meant He did not care. “Teacher, do You not care that we are perishing?” That question sounds like many private prayers. “Lord, do You not care that I am scared? Do You not care that this is happening? Do You not care that I feel like I am going under?”
Jesus did care. He rose, spoke to the wind and the sea, and there was calm. But before we rush to the calm, we should notice that the disciples brought Him their terrified question. It was not a perfect prayer. It was not gentle. It came from panic. Still, they brought it to Him. They turned toward Jesus in the storm, and that is still the right direction.
You may not always like the way your prayer sounds when life is heavy. It may come out with tears. It may come out with confusion. It may come out as one sentence whispered over and over. But if it is turned toward Jesus, it is moving toward help. Do not let shame silence the prayer that pain is trying to teach you to pray.
There are people who have stopped praying honestly because they are afraid of disappointment. They prayed before and did not get the answer they wanted. They asked for healing, and the illness continued. They asked for a relationship to be restored, and it remained broken. They asked for a door to open, and it stayed shut. After a while, they still believe in God, but they start protecting themselves from hope. Their prayers become careful. Smaller. Safer. Less honest. They do not want to feel the pain of asking again.
If that is you, Jesus is not angry at the wounded place in you. He knows what disappointment can do to a human heart. He knows how hope deferred can make the soul tired. But He also knows that a protected heart can become a lonely heart. When we stop bringing our real desires and fears to God, we do not become stronger. We become more isolated inside. Prayer is not a promise that we will control the outcome. Prayer is the way we stay close to the One who loves us through the outcome.
That closeness is not a small thing. It may be the very thing that keeps bitterness from taking root. It may be what keeps a person soft after a hard season. It may be what keeps someone from deciding that God is distant simply because life is painful. Jesus never promised His followers a life without trouble. He did promise presence, help, mercy, and a peace the world cannot give. Those promises do not remove every waiting room, but they change who we are while we sit there.
So say the prayer you almost did not say. Say it in the car. Say it at the sink. Say it before the appointment. Say it after the argument. Say it when you feel calm, and say it when you do not. Tell Jesus the truth without dressing it up. “I believe; help my unbelief.” “I am afraid; stay near me.” “I am angry; do not let my heart harden.” “I am tired; teach me how to rest.” “I do not know what happens next; hold me while I wait.”
There is no magic in pretending. There is no holiness in hiding from the Savior. The holy thing may be the honest thing. The faithful thing may be opening your hands again, even if they shook while opening. The brave thing may be whispering the prayer with no guarantee except the character of God.
Eventually, the nurse may call your name. The phone may ring. The child may open the bedroom door. The meeting may begin. The answer may come, or the waiting may continue. But before the next moment arrives, you can turn toward Jesus. You can let Him meet you before the outcome does. You can let Him remind you that you are not alone in the chair, not alone in the hallway, not alone in the dark, not alone in the storm.
And sometimes, when someone asks, “Are you doing okay?” the most truthful answer is not a simple yes or no. Sometimes the answer is, “I am praying again.” That may not sound like much to the world, but in the life of faith, it can mean everything. It means the door is still open. It means the heart is still reaching. It means fear has not had the final word. It means Jesus is still the place you run when life becomes too much to carry in silence.
Chapter 4: When the Answer Needs a Witness
The phone can feel heavier after a message goes unanswered. You set it down on the table, tell yourself you are not going to check again, then pick it up two minutes later because the silence has started to feel like an answer. Maybe it was a message to someone you love. Maybe it was an apology that took courage to send. Maybe it was a simple question that should not have been hard to answer. Now the screen is dark, the room is quiet, and your mind is doing what tired minds often do. It is filling in the blanks with fear.
This is one of the places where people often say they are okay when they are not. Relationship pain is hard to explain because it can sound small from the outside. It is only a message. It is only a tone of voice. It is only a quiet dinner. It is only someone pulling away little by little. But inside, it can feel like a door closing slowly in your face. You try to act normal. You wash a plate that is already clean. You move a stack of papers from one side of the table to the other. You tell yourself not to be sensitive, but the truth is that something hurts.
Jesus cares about that kind of hurt too. We sometimes bring Him the big emergencies, but keep the smaller wounds to ourselves because we think they are not important enough for prayer. Yet so much of human life happens in those smaller places. A look. A silence. A distance. A conversation that changed something. A friendship that does not feel the same. A child who used to talk but now gives short answers. A marriage where both people are in the same house but not always in the same heart. These things may not look dramatic, but they can wear a person down.
The question, “Are you doing okay?” becomes especially tender here because sometimes the honest answer is connected to another person. You may not be okay because someone disappointed you. You may not be okay because you hurt someone and do not know how to repair it. You may not be okay because you feel rejected, misunderstood, dismissed, or taken for granted. And when the pain involves people, we often do not know what to do with it. We either swallow it until resentment grows, or we spill it in ways that make more damage.
Jesus gives us another way. He teaches us to bring the truth into the light without turning the truth into a weapon. He teaches us to seek peace without pretending there is no wound. He teaches us to forgive without calling evil good. He teaches us to love without surrendering our soul to chaos. He teaches us to speak honestly, but not cruelly. He teaches us to carry mercy, but not denial.
That is not easy. Anyone who has tried to live like Jesus inside real relationships knows how hard it can be. It is easy to talk about forgiveness until the person who hurt you keeps acting like nothing happened. It is easy to talk about patience until the same issue returns for the fifth time. It is easy to talk about kindness until you feel ignored. The teachings of Jesus are beautiful, but they are not decorative. They are meant to be lived in kitchens, text messages, family rooms, workplaces, church hallways, and quiet bedrooms where people are deciding what kind of person they will become after being hurt.
One of the most moving things about Jesus is that He did not avoid difficult conversations. He was gentle, but He was not vague. He was merciful, but He was not false. With the woman at the well, He spoke directly about the truth of her life, yet He did it in a way that opened a door instead of crushing her under shame. With Peter after the resurrection, He asked the question that needed to be asked. “Do you love Me?” Not because He wanted to humiliate Peter, but because Peter needed restoration in the very place where he had failed.
That is how love works when it is shaped by Jesus. It does not pretend everything is fine just to avoid discomfort. It also does not use honesty as an excuse to punish. It brings what is broken into the presence of grace. It makes room for truth and healing to stand together.
Sometimes, though, we need another human being to help us tell the truth. Not every detail belongs in public. Not every person is safe. But isolation can make pain louder. When you keep everything inside, your own thoughts become the only voice in the room, and they are not always gentle or accurate. Fear exaggerates. Shame accuses. Anger rehearses. Loneliness tells you nobody would understand. A trusted person can sometimes help you breathe again by simply sitting with you and not rushing to fix what hurts.
This is part of how God often cares for us. He sends a friend who listens without turning the conversation back to themselves. He sends someone who says, “That sounds heavy,” and means it. He sends a mature believer who does not shame you for struggling, but also does not let you drown in bitterness. He sends a person who can pray with you when your own words feel stuck. The presence of another faithful person does not replace Jesus. It can become one of the ways Jesus reminds you that you are not alone.
There is a reason the body of Christ is called a body. A hand cannot pretend it does not need the rest of the body. An eye cannot carry what a shoulder was made to bear. We were not designed to follow Jesus as disconnected souls proving how strong we are by never needing anyone. The early believers carried one another’s burdens, prayed for one another, confessed to one another, encouraged one another, and corrected one another. That does not mean everybody had access to everything. It means faith was never meant to become a private performance of being okay.
A man may sit across from an old friend at a diner early in the morning, stirring coffee he has barely touched, trying to find the courage to say what is really happening at home. He may begin with jokes. He may talk about work. He may mention the weather. Then there is a pause, and the truth finally slips out. “I do not know how to fix this.” That sentence may be the first honest thing he has said in weeks. The friend may not have a perfect answer. He may not know how to solve the marriage, heal the fear, change the child, or fix the money. But he can listen. He can pray. He can remind him, “You do not have to carry this by yourself.”
That kind of moment can be holy. Not loud. Not impressive. Just two people at a table, with coffee getting cold, and Jesus near enough to the truth that neither person has to pretend. Sometimes healing begins there. Sometimes wisdom begins there. Sometimes repentance begins there. Sometimes courage begins there.
Still, we have to be careful. There is a difference between seeking godly support and feeding a wound. If we only talk to people who help us stay angry, we may feel understood but never healed. If we only share in a way that makes us look innocent and everyone else look guilty, we may receive sympathy without receiving truth. Jesus does not invite us into dishonest comfort. He invites us into grace that can actually change us. A faithful witness helps us face the whole truth, including the part that may belong to us.
That is hard, but it is freeing. Sometimes we are not okay because someone hurt us. Sometimes we are not okay because we have been avoiding responsibility. Sometimes both are true at the same time. We can be wounded and still need correction. We can be mistreated and still need to guard our tongue. We can be disappointed and still need to forgive. We can be right about what happened and still wrong in the way bitterness has started to shape us.
Jesus loves us too much to leave us trapped in the version of the story that protects our pride but poisons our peace. He knows how to comfort the wounded, and He knows how to confront the self-protective heart. Both are mercy. Comfort without truth can leave us stuck. Truth without comfort can leave us crushed. Jesus brings both with perfect wisdom.
When someone asks, “Are you doing okay?” and the answer is tangled up in relationship pain, it may help to ask a quieter question before God. “Lord, what is the truth here?” Not just, “How do I feel?” Feelings matter, but they are not the whole story. Not just, “What did they do?” That matters too, but it may not be the only thing Jesus wants to show you. The prayer becomes, “Lord, show me what is wounded, show me what is sinful, show me what is wise, and show me what love looks like now.”
That kind of prayer can slow down a reaction before it becomes a regret. It can keep a message in drafts until anger loses its sharpest edge. It can help someone apologize without adding three excuses. It can help someone set a boundary without hatred. It can help someone forgive without pretending trust is instantly rebuilt. It can help someone wait before speaking, or finally speak after too much silence. Jesus does not only care that we survive the pain. He cares who we become in it.
Maybe you are not doing okay because of a conversation you keep replaying. Maybe you wish you had said less. Maybe you wish you had said more. Maybe you are waiting for someone to notice what they did. Maybe you are tired of always being the one who reaches out first. Maybe you feel foolish for caring as much as you do. Bring that to Jesus before you let it make you hard. Bring it to Him before you turn it into a story where nobody can be trusted. Bring it to Him before you decide that protecting yourself means closing your heart to everyone.
Jesus was betrayed, denied, misunderstood, rejected, and abandoned. He knows relationship pain from the inside. Yet He did not let human failure turn Him away from love. He did not become cruel because people were cruel. He did not become false because people lied. He did not stop obeying the Father because people failed Him. That does not make our pain small. It gives us a Savior who can lead us through it without letting it destroy us.
So if the honest answer is, “No, I am not okay because this relationship hurts,” let that answer become prayer instead of poison. Tell Jesus the truth. Ask Him for wisdom. Find one trustworthy person if the burden needs a witness. Do not hand your heart to people who will mishandle it, but do not lock it away so tightly that no grace can reach it through the body of Christ.
The unanswered message may still be unanswered tonight. The conversation may still be difficult tomorrow. The person may not respond the way you hope. But you can be different before the situation is different. You can choose honesty without cruelty, courage without pride, mercy without pretending, and prayer before reaction. You can let Jesus stand between your wound and your response.
And when the phone is quiet on the table, when the room feels too still, when your mind starts writing painful stories in the silence, you can pause. You can breathe. You can say, “Lord, do not let this make me someone I do not want to become. Help me answer this pain with You.” That prayer may not change the screen immediately, but it can change the soul holding the phone.
Chapter 5: The Small Mercy of the Next Step
Morning can be harder than night in a different way. At night, at least there is permission to be tired. The lights are low, the house grows quiet, and the world feels like it has finally stopped asking things from you. But morning has a way of starting before your heart is ready. The alarm goes off. The room is still dim. For a few seconds, you do not remember everything. Then it returns. The conversation. The appointment. The pressure. The thing you hoped sleep would soften. You reach for the phone, see the time, and realize life is asking you to stand up again.
That is where many people need Jesus most. Not only in the crisis itself, but in the morning after. Not only when the bad news comes, but when the dishes still need to be done after the bad news. Not only when the prayer is emotional, but when obedience looks ordinary. Getting dressed. Making breakfast. Driving to work. Answering the email. Caring for the person who still needs care. Choosing not to snap at someone who did not cause the pain. Taking the next step when your soul would rather stay under the blanket and disappear for a while.
There is a quiet mercy in the next step. We often want God to show us the whole road before we move. We want to know how the story ends, how long the pressure will last, whether the person will change, whether the money will be enough, whether the diagnosis will be manageable, whether the loneliness will lift, whether the regret will stop talking so loudly. But many times, Jesus does not give us the whole road at once. He gives us enough light for the next faithful step.
That can frustrate us because we want control disguised as clarity. We say we just want to know what to do, and sometimes that is true. But underneath, we may also want the guarantee that nothing will hurt, nothing will fail, and nothing will require more trust than we feel ready to give. Jesus does guide us, but He does not always remove the need for trust. He often leads like a Shepherd, not like a map spread out on a table. The sheep do not know every turn of the path. They know the voice.
That is not a small difference. A map lets you feel in control. A voice requires relationship. Jesus said His sheep hear His voice. That means the Christian life is not merely a plan we master. It is a life of following the One who sees farther than we do. When you are not okay, you may not have enough strength to solve the next year, but you may have enough grace to obey for the next hour. You may not know how to heal the whole relationship, but you may know the next honest sentence. You may not know how to rebuild the whole life, but you may know you need to pray before you react, rest before you collapse, apologize before pride hardens, or ask for help before isolation deepens.
A woman may stand in her bathroom in the morning with both hands on the sink, looking at her own face in the mirror like she is trying to recognize herself. Her eyes are tired. The day already feels crowded. She does not feel brave. She does not feel inspired. She does not feel like the kind of person who will handle everything beautifully. But she can whisper, “Jesus, give me enough mercy for today.” Then she can wash her face, put one foot in front of the other, and begin. That may not look like victory to anyone watching. But heaven sees the faith in a tired person choosing to keep walking with God.
We need to recover the sacredness of small obedience. Not every faithful act looks dramatic. Sometimes faith is answering softly when your nerves are on edge. Sometimes faith is eating something because you have been caring for everyone else and forgot your own body is not made of steel. Sometimes faith is putting the phone down before you send the message written from anger. Sometimes faith is opening the Bible for five minutes, not because you feel spiritual, but because you know your heart needs a voice stronger than fear. Sometimes faith is going to sleep instead of trying to solve tomorrow with a tired mind.
Jesus honors small beginnings. He compared the kingdom of God to a mustard seed. He fed thousands through a small offering of loaves and fish. He noticed a widow’s small gift. He spoke of little children as examples of the kingdom. We tend to admire what is large, visible, and impressive, but Jesus often draws our attention to what is humble, hidden, and surrendered. The next faithful step may look small, but if it is taken with Him, it matters.
When someone asks, “Are you doing okay?” you may want to answer based on the entire size of your situation. You look at the whole weight and think, “No, I am not okay, because I cannot carry all of this.” But what if the question becomes gentler when you bring it into the presence of Jesus? Not, “Can I carry this whole season by myself?” but, “Can I receive grace for this moment?” Not, “Do I know how everything will be fixed?” but, “Can I trust Him enough to do the next right thing?” That is often where peace begins to become practical.
The danger in hard seasons is that we start living in imagined tomorrows while abandoning the mercy available today. We suffer the appointment before it happens. We replay the argument before the person comes home. We spend money in our mind that has not even been demanded yet. We imagine rejection, failure, loss, and disappointment until our bodies respond as if all of it has already occurred. Jesus understood this human tendency when He told us not to worry about tomorrow, because tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.
That is not a cold command. It is a compassionate rescue. Jesus is not mocking worried people. He is telling us the truth about our limits. We were not created to carry today’s responsibilities and tomorrow’s imagined disasters at the same time. God gives daily bread, not lifetime bread stacked in the pantry of our understanding. He gives mercy that is new every morning, not because yesterday did not matter, but because today needs its own supply.
There is relief in admitting that. You do not have to be strong for every possible future right now. You do not have to answer every question today. You do not have to feel peace about every unknown before you can obey in the present moment. You can take the next step with Jesus and let the next step after that wait its turn.
This does not mean ignoring wisdom or refusing to plan. A person of faith can make the appointment, create the budget, have the conversation, ask for counsel, prepare for the possibility, and still refuse to let fear become lord of the heart. Planning is not the same as panic. Responsibility is not the same as control. Jesus does not call us to be careless. He calls us to be free from the illusion that worry is what keeps life from falling apart.
Worry often feels useful because it is active. It gives the mind something to do. It lets us rehearse pain as if rehearsal could prevent it. But worry cannot heal the body, change the heart, pay the bill, restore the relationship, or add one hour to life. Jesus said that. He told us to look at the birds, to consider the lilies, to remember the Father’s care. He was not asking us to deny reality. He was asking us to notice a greater reality. The Father knows what we need.
A person who is not okay may need to say that sentence slowly. The Father knows what I need. Not the crowd. Not the person who misunderstood me. Not the fear that keeps making predictions. The Father. The One Jesus taught me to trust. The One who sees in secret. The One who feeds birds and clothes flowers and numbers hairs and receives tired prayers. The Father knows.
That truth does not always erase emotion immediately. You may still feel the pressure in your chest. You may still need to cry. You may still need to rest. You may still need to talk with someone wise. But truth gives your emotions a place to stand that is stronger than the moment. It reminds you that your fear is not the final authority. Your exhaustion is not the final authority. Your circumstances are not the final authority. Jesus is Lord, even here.
So the next step becomes an act of trust. You wash the cup. You answer the message with patience. You go to the appointment. You sit with your child. You tell the truth kindly. You close the laptop. You open the Bible. You take the walk around the block. You ask someone to pray. You forgive again. You set the boundary. You begin the work. You do the small thing that love requires, not because you feel okay, but because Jesus is with you in the not-okay place.
There will be days when the next step feels almost too small to matter. Do it anyway with Him. The enemy of your soul would love to convince you that if you cannot fix everything, there is no point in doing anything. But Jesus often builds restoration through small obediences repeated in grace. One honest prayer. One humble apology. One quiet act of service. One decision not to return cruelty for cruelty. One morning of getting up again. One evening of placing the burden back in God’s hands.
Over time, those small steps become a path. You may look back and realize that Jesus was strengthening you in ways you did not notice while it was happening. He was teaching you to breathe again. Teaching you to listen. Teaching you to release what was never yours to carry. Teaching you to receive love without earning it. Teaching you that you are not abandoned just because life is hard.
Maybe today you cannot honestly say, “I am okay.” But maybe you can say, “I know my next step.” Maybe your next step is prayer. Maybe it is rest. Maybe it is confession. Maybe it is calling the doctor, asking forgiveness, paying the one bill you can pay, getting outside for ten minutes, reading one psalm, or simply refusing to speak to yourself with cruelty. Do not despise the small step. Bring it to Jesus. Take it with Jesus. Let it be enough for today.
The morning may still feel heavy when your feet touch the floor. The questions may still be there. The situation may not be neatly solved. But you can stand in the dim light of an ordinary day and ask for daily bread. You can trust that the Lord who carried you through the night is not leaving you at sunrise. You can walk into the day with less certainty than you wanted and more grace than you realized.
And when your heart asks, “How am I supposed to do all of this?” you do not have to answer with a full plan. You can answer with a name. Jesus. Then you can take the next step.
Chapter 6: The Savior Who Stays When the Answer Is Still No
The house has a different feeling after everyone has gone to bed. The daytime noise has stopped. The lights are off in the rooms where people were talking, eating, arguing, laughing, asking questions, and needing things. A lamp may still be on in the corner. A cup may sit beside the sink. A blanket may be folded badly on the couch. The phone may be quiet for the first time all day. And in that stillness, the question returns without anyone asking it out loud. “Am I doing okay?”
Sometimes the honest answer is still no. Not because you have no faith. Not because you did not pray. Not because you failed to read the right verse or say the right words. Sometimes the answer is no because life is still heavy, the wound is still tender, the road is still uncertain, and the thing you are carrying did not disappear by sunset. There are nights when a person has done the next right thing all day and still sits down tired. There are nights when obedience has not yet turned into relief. There are nights when trusting Jesus looks less like smiling and more like refusing to walk away.
We need a faith strong enough for that kind of night. Not a loud faith that has to pretend every question is settled. Not a shallow faith that only works when circumstances improve quickly. Not a faith that shames people for being human. We need the kind of faith Jesus gives, the kind that can sit with Him in the truth and say, “Lord, I am still here. I am still hurting, but I am still here.”
There is something deeply holy about staying with Jesus when the situation is not yet okay. Anyone can speak confidently when the answer has already come. Anyone can praise after the door opens, the healing arrives, the relationship softens, the money appears, or the fear lifts. But there is a different kind of trust that is formed in the middle, when nothing looks finished and the soul has to decide whether God is still good before the evidence feels complete.
That is not easy. We should not speak about it as if it is easy. There are people reading this who know what it means to keep praying while nothing seems to move. They know what it means to forgive and still feel pain. They know what it means to be patient and still feel forgotten. They know what it means to show up for others while privately wondering if anyone sees them. They know what it means to ask, “Are you doing okay?” to someone else while silently hoping someone will ask them and stay long enough to hear the answer.
Jesus stays.
That may be the simplest and strongest truth in this whole article. Jesus stays. When the crowd leaves, He stays. When the excitement fades, He stays. When the prayer is not pretty, He stays. When your strength is low, He stays. When you cannot explain yourself well, He stays. When you are disappointed, confused, embarrassed, tired, or afraid, He does not become less faithful.
The cross proves that. Jesus did not love us from a safe distance. He entered the full weight of human sin, suffering, rejection, and death. He did not turn away when love became costly. He did not abandon the Father’s will when the road became painful. He endured. He gave Himself. He carried what we could not carry so we could be brought back to God. The One who stayed on the cross for sinners will not walk away from a tired child who is trying to come home.
That is why the question, “Are you doing okay?” cannot be answered only by looking at circumstances. If the question means, “Is everything fixed?” the answer may be no. If it means, “Does nothing hurt anymore?” the answer may be no. If it means, “Do you understand everything God is doing?” the answer may also be no. But if the question reaches deeper and asks, “Are you alone?” the answer in Christ is no. You are not alone. Not now. Not here. Not in this room. Not in this season. Not in the part of the story that still does not make sense.
A person can sit at the kitchen table late at night with a Bible open and not know where to read. They may turn to the Psalms because the Psalms know how to speak when the heart is not neat. There is praise there, but there is also complaint. There is trust there, but there are also questions. There are tears, enemies, waiting, fear, guilt, loneliness, and hope. The Psalms do not sound like people pretending. They sound like people bringing their whole lives before God and discovering that He is still worthy of trust.
That is a gift to us. It gives permission to be honest without becoming hopeless. It teaches us that lament is not unbelief. It is grief turned toward God. It is pain that still believes Someone is listening. It is the wounded heart refusing to make silence its final home. When you tell Jesus the truth about your not-okay place, you are not stepping away from faith. You may be stepping deeper into it.
But honesty with Jesus should slowly make us more whole, not more trapped. There is a difference between telling God the truth and building a home inside despair. Jesus receives the tired soul, but He does not leave that soul without hope. He comforts, but He also calls. He listens, but He also leads. He lets us say, “I am not okay,” and then He gently teaches us to add, “but I am not without help.”
That small addition matters. It keeps pain from becoming identity. It reminds us that the hardest sentence is not the only sentence. Yes, I am tired, but Jesus is near. Yes, I am afraid, but Jesus is Lord. Yes, I am waiting, but Jesus is faithful. Yes, I am grieving, but Jesus is the resurrection and the life. Yes, I failed, but Jesus restores. Yes, I do not know what tomorrow holds, but Jesus will be there before I arrive.
This is not empty optimism. Empty optimism says, “Everything is fine,” when it is not. Christian hope says, “Everything is not fine, but Christ is risen.” That is different. The resurrection does not deny the cross. It answers it. The empty tomb does not pretend Friday was painless. It declares that pain, sin, death, betrayal, injustice, and darkness do not get the final word. Jesus does.
So maybe the final lesson is this: being okay is not always the goal we think it is. Sometimes we are desperate to feel okay because we think peace means the absence of struggle. But Jesus offers something deeper than the appearance of okay. He offers reconciliation with God. He offers forgiveness of sin. He offers His presence in suffering. He offers strength for obedience. He offers rest for the weary. He offers hope that reaches beyond the grave. He offers a life rooted in Him, not in the daily condition of our emotions.
That means you can have a hard day without losing your foundation. You can have tears without losing your faith. You can have questions without losing your Savior. You can have a heavy season without becoming a hopeless person. In Jesus, the truth about your struggle is real, but it is not ultimate. The truth about His love is greater.
There may be someone who needs to stop right here and breathe. Not rush. Not perform. Not turn this into another thing to fix. Just breathe and let the truth settle. You do not have to be okay before Jesus loves you. You do not have to be impressive before He receives you. You do not have to explain everything perfectly before He understands. You do not have to carry the full weight of tomorrow tonight.
You can pray simply. “Jesus, I am not okay, but I am Yours.” That is a strong prayer. It places your condition inside your belonging. It does not deny the pain, but it refuses to let pain define the whole story. I am not okay, but I am Yours. I am tired, but I am Yours. I am waiting, but I am Yours. I am healing, but I am Yours. I am weak, but I am Yours. And because I am Yours, I am not abandoned.
The lamp may still be on. The cup may still be by the sink. The situation may still need attention in the morning. But before you stand up from the chair, before you turn off the light, before you carry yourself into another night of not having every answer, let this truth meet you gently. Jesus is not asking you to pretend. He is inviting you to come. He is not disgusted by your need. He is near to the brokenhearted. He is not waiting for the polished version of you. He is calling the real one.
And if tomorrow someone asks, “Are you doing okay?” maybe you will still not have a simple answer. Maybe you will say, “I am getting through it.” Maybe you will say, “I could use prayer.” Maybe you will only nod because the moment is not safe for the whole truth. But deep inside, where Jesus has met you, there can be a steadier answer forming. “Everything is not fixed, but I am not alone. Everything is not easy, but I am being held. Everything is not clear, but Christ is with me.”
That is enough to keep walking.
Not because you are strong every minute, but because He is faithful every minute. Not because the road is light, but because the Shepherd is near. Not because the answer is always yes, but because even when the answer is still no, the Savior remains.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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SmarterArticles

Somewhere in the Horn of Africa, a machine is trying to guess where you will go next.
It does not know your name. It has never visited your village. It cannot tell you whether the rains will fail again, only that the historical pattern, the commodity prices, the conflict-event logs and the climate anomalies it has ingested suggest that a certain number of people in your region will move within the next month. The model produces a figure. The figure becomes a dashboard. The dashboard informs a contingency plan. And somewhere down that chain, a decision gets made about whether food, shelter and protection arrive before you do, or long after.
This is not a thought experiment. Since 2017, the United Nations refugee agency UNHCR has run a predictive analytics platform called Project Jetson, a machine-learning system designed to forecast forced displacement in Somalia roughly a month in advance across eighteen regions. It pulls together data on conflict, fatalities, wages, commodity prices, climate anomalies and historical movement, and it turns that mixture into an early-warning signal that humanitarian planners can act on. The promise is seductive and genuinely humane: anticipate the wave before it breaks, and you can save lives instead of merely counting them afterwards.
But there is a quieter question buried inside the dashboard, and it is the question that now haunts an entire field. If an algorithm is deciding, even partially, who gets help and when, who taught it what help looks like? And whose idea of a life worth protecting did it learn from?
In the spring of 2026, a group of researchers writing in the Nature-published journal Humanities and Social Sciences Communications tried to answer that question head-on. Their comment, titled “Artificial intelligence and climate migration equity” and published on 28 March, lands as a warning shot. The datasets that underpin the AI tools used to predict migration flows, screen asylum applications and direct humanitarian resources, the authors argue, are systematically tilted towards the interests and information sources of wealthier nations. The communities facing the sharpest edge of climate disruption, those across the Global South, are the least represented in the training data and the most exposed to the consequences of what those systems decide. The piece, authored by Lawrence A. Palinkas, Mustafa F. Özbilgin, Miriam Aczel, Nathalie Ortar, Claire Monteleoni, Sarab Sethi, Eric Rice, Bistra Dilkina and Michàlle Mor Barak, does not read like a manifesto against technology. Several of its authors build AI systems for a living. It reads like a field issuing a correction to itself before the correction becomes an inquest.
To understand why the stakes are so high, you have to start with the numbers, and the numbers are staggering.
A 2024 review published in npj Climate Action projected that roughly 143 million people across the Global South could face displacement by 2050. The distribution is brutally uneven: around 86 million in sub-Saharan Africa, 40 million across South Asia and the Pacific, and 17 million in Latin America and the Caribbean. These are the regions that contributed least to the emissions driving the crisis and stand to lose the most from it. The same review noted that a one-degree-Celsius rise in temperature correlates with a 1.9 per cent increase in global migration, and catalogued the immediate triggers in granular detail. The 2022 floods in Pakistan alone affected 33 million people and displaced 2.1 million. Flash floods in Bangladesh's Haor wetlands affected 4.2 million residents.
The review was also unsparing about the moral geometry of the crisis. Sub-Saharan Africa, it noted, faces severe droughts and water scarcity despite contributing a negligible share of global greenhouse-gas emissions. Pacific island states confront sea-level rise that threatens habitability itself. Latin America contends with glacial melt and mega-droughts, South Asia with extreme flooding and temperatures that are beginning to break the agricultural systems on which hundreds of millions of people depend. The displacement these stressors produce, the authors stressed, rarely follows a clean line from disaster to departure. It moves through indirect pathways shaped by institutions, politics and economics, which is precisely the kind of messy, context-dependent causation that data-hungry models struggle to capture.
These are not abstractions waiting somewhere in the future. They are people already moving, already navigating borders, already standing in registration queues, already waiting for an aid distribution that may or may not arrive. And increasingly, the systems that mediate those moments are algorithmic.
That is the collision at the heart of this story. Tens of millions of the world's most climate-vulnerable people are encountering institutions that have begun, quietly and with the best of intentions, to outsource fragments of judgement to software. The software is fast, scalable and tireless. It is also, by the account of the researchers now scrutinising it, built on a foundation that was never designed to see them clearly.
The technical term for the problem is unglamorous: representativeness. The lived reality is anything but.
Machine-learning systems learn the world from the data they are shown. If the data over-represents some places, languages, infrastructures and institutions while under-representing others, the resulting model does not merely have gaps. It has a worldview, and that worldview reflects whoever generated the most data and held the most power to label it. The Humanities and Social Sciences Communications authors put it plainly: lower-income regions remain underrepresented in AI-driven planning models, and without careful design, AI systems can reproduce structural inequities rather than redress them.
Consider what generating high-quality data actually requires. Dense networks of sensors. Reliable electricity. Broadband connectivity. Administrative systems that record births, deaths, incomes, harvests and movements in machine-readable form. Research budgets that fund the painstaking work of collection, cleaning and labelling. These are precisely the assets concentrated in wealthier nations and scarce in the regions where climate displacement is most acute. The result is a perverse asymmetry. The places generating the cleanest, richest, most abundant data are often the places experiencing the least climate disruption, while the places experiencing the most disruption generate the thinnest, patchiest data trails.
This imbalance is not confined to operational systems. A separate study in the same journal, examining the global landscape of migration research itself, found that knowledge production is profoundly unequal, with some countries and subregions remaining systematically underrepresented despite hosting significant migrant populations. African countries, Central Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean were singled out as persistently understudied. If the scholarship that informs migration policy is itself skewed, then the data pipelines feeding operational AI inherit that skew at birth. The bias does not begin in the model. It begins in the entire apparatus of who gets studied, by whom, and with whose money.
When a model trained predominantly on rich-world data is deployed to make decisions about the Global South, the mismatch is not a rounding error. It is structural. A flood-risk model calibrated on well-instrumented river basins in the Global North may misjudge the hydrology of a river that has never been gauged. A migration-prediction model that has learned the signatures of movement from contexts with formal labour markets and documented residency may be blind to the informal economies and undocumented mobility that define displacement across much of the Global South. The model is not lying. It is doing exactly what it was trained to do. The problem is what it was trained on.
This is the deeper meaning of the equity warning. It is not simply that some communities are missing from a spreadsheet. It is that the absence becomes encoded, automated and scaled, and then sold back to those same communities as objective insight.
If the geography of data exclusion is stark, the demography of it is starker still, and it cuts along a fault line that has been ignored for so long it now reads as design.
In February 2026, Columbia Climate School published an analysis by Pavi Selvakumar, a postdoctoral research scientist focused on the integration of AI and climate justice, and Marco Tedesco, a research professor at Columbia's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and adjunct scientist at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies. Their argument was uncomfortable and precise: women, who make up a disproportionate share of climate-displaced populations and shoulder the heaviest burden of climate adaptation at the community level, are almost entirely absent from the data and governance structures shaping the AI tools now being deployed for climate migration management.
The supporting figures are difficult to read as anything other than an indictment. An analysis of 133 AI systems found that 44.2 per cent exhibited gender bias, and 25.7 per cent exhibited both gender and racial bias. The digital exclusion that feeds those biases is measurable too. There is a 21 per cent gender gap in global internet access, and in the least developed countries that gap widens to 52 per cent. The UN projects that 341 million women will lack electricity by 2030. Women globally spend an estimated 200 million hours every day collecting water. Even under conditions of equal access, the analysis noted, adoption of generative AI tools runs 20 to 25 per cent lower among women.
Stack those numbers and a feedback loop comes into focus. Women are less connected, so they generate less data. They generate less data, so they are less visible to systems that learn from data. They are less visible to those systems, so the decisions those systems inform overlook their needs. And because women are over-represented among the climate-displaced, the oversight compounds at exactly the point of greatest vulnerability. The exclusion is not a single missing variable; it is a self-reinforcing cycle, and each turn of the cycle makes the next harder to see and correct.
Selvakumar and Tedesco offer a concrete illustration of what this means on the ground. A disaster-response model built without women's input, they argue, might prioritise asset recovery while overlooking concerns that fall disproportionately on women: prolonged heat exposure, the safety and sanitation conditions of evacuation shelters, the continuity of medication during displacement, the loss of informal income. None of these are edge cases. They are central to whether displacement is survivable. They are also precisely the things a model trained on infrastructure and assets, rather than on the texture of women's daily survival, will never think to optimise for.
The authors push the analysis further, arguing that intersecting factors of class, race, caste, migration status, geography and age compound the distortion, so that AI-driven climate governance ends up aligning technological power with existing social privilege and reinforcing the very inequalities it claims to address. Their prescription is a feminist approach to AI governance, one that refuses to treat any of this as incidental and instead asks the foundational questions: who produces the data, whose labour is recognised, who bears the environmental costs, and who actually participates in deciding any of it. Without those steps, they conclude bluntly, there can be no climate justice.
It would be easy to treat all of this as speculative, a warning about machines that have not yet been built. They have been built. They are running now.
The clearest examples come from the humanitarian sector itself, where the intentions are unambiguously good and the equity questions are therefore at their most instructive. The World Food Programme operates HungerMap LIVE, an AI-based platform that tracks and predicts food security in near real time across more than 95 countries, combining weather, population, conflict, hazard, nutrition and macroeconomic data to forecast conditions 30 to 90 days ahead. The WFP's Optimus tool helps decide which supplies go where, based on factors such as location and population size, and the organisation has reported serving 20 per cent more people on the same budget as a result. Its SKAI project, developed with Google Research, uses computer vision to compare satellite imagery before and after disasters and assess damage within 24 hours.
The underlying prediction engines have grown formidable. The Humanities and Social Sciences Communications authors point to Google DeepMind's GenCast, a system that applies graph neural networks to meteorological data to produce weather forecasts that outperform established physics-based models, the kind of capability that turns a vague sense of “the rains might fail” into a probabilistic warning a planner can budget against. They note that machine-learning models such as long short-term memory networks are being used to predict disease outbreaks in the aftermath of floods, when stagnant water and disrupted sanitation can turn displacement camps into vectors for cholera and other waterborne illness. The authors map five dimensions across which these tools could, in principle, support more equitable interventions for climate migrants: disaster preparedness and response, health disparities, community sustainability, resettlement, and child development. Read in isolation, the list is almost utopian, a vision of anticipatory humanitarianism in which suffering is forecast and forestalled rather than merely tallied. The catch, the one the authors return to insistently, is that every one of those five dimensions depends on data, and the data is exactly where the equity problem lives.
On the migration side, the IOM-Microsoft collaboration that the authors cite is a textbook case of the promise. In Ethiopia, the partnership analysed satellite imagery, population data, cropland maps and IOM office locations to identify communities at risk of flooding, and concluded that 700,000 people and 1.5 per cent of the country's croplands were exposed. In the south-east near Somalia, it found that 9 per cent of the population along the Shabelle River sat in flood-prone areas, against a national average of 0.5 per cent. That is genuinely actionable intelligence, the kind that lets an agency pre-position resources where they will matter most.
Then there is the other face of algorithmic migration governance, the one less interested in helping people move than in deciding whether they may. The European Union's forthcoming European Travel Information and Authorisation System, ETIAS, will profile visa-exempt travellers using a screening-rules algorithm that cross-checks personal data against security databases to generate predictive risk scores. Legal scholars have warned that this amounts to a new form of what they call “algorithmic discretion,” an instrument of differential exclusion that could fall hardest on certain groups of travellers. The EU's earlier iBorderCtrl pilot, which attempted to detect deception through facial recognition and the measurement of micro-expressions described as “biomarkers of deceit,” drew sustained criticism for relying on racialised assumptions and for the thin scientific basis of emotion-recognition technology applied to individual behaviour.
The point of laying these side by side is not to flatten them into a single villain. A flood-risk map that pre-positions aid and a border algorithm that assigns a suspicion score are doing very different moral work. But they share a lineage. Both translate messy, contested human realities into scores and categories. Both operate with limited transparency and uneven safeguards. And both, when their training data reflects the priorities of wealthier states and well-instrumented institutions, risk encoding a hierarchy of whose movement counts as a logistics problem to be solved and whose counts as a threat to be screened.
There is also a structural reason the humanitarian and the border systems keep appearing in the same breath, and it is worth naming. Both rely on the same scarce raw material: information about people who are, almost by definition, hard to count. A displaced person may have crossed a border without documents, may have no fixed address, may speak a language poorly served by the natural-language tools doing the processing, may have every reason to distrust the institution collecting their data. The systems built to help them and the systems built to screen them are drinking from the same shallow, muddy well. When the well is shallow, the system fills the gaps with assumptions, and assumptions, in machine learning, are just biases that have not yet been measured.
Here is where the WIRED-era faith in optimisation meets its hardest test, because the systems are not failing on their own terms. They are succeeding.
Serving 20 per cent more people on the same budget is a real achievement. Forecasting displacement a month ahead is a real capability. Identifying 700,000 people at flood risk is a real and useful insight. The machinery of humanitarian AI is, by the metrics it was built to maximise, working. And that is precisely the problem the equity literature is circling. A system optimised for efficiency will faithfully optimise for efficiency, which means it will reward whatever the data tells it produces the most measurable benefit per unit of cost. If the data systematically under-counts women, informal workers, undocumented movers and unmonitored regions, then the most “efficient” allocation will quietly route resources away from exactly those groups, not out of malice, but out of arithmetic.
This is the discrimination-in-effect problem, and it is far more insidious than discrimination by intent. No engineer needs to harbour a bias for the outcome to be biased. The bias is upstream, baked into what was measured and what was ignored, and the optimiser simply carries it downstream at scale and at speed. A human caseworker who overlooks a displaced woman's need for medication continuity makes one error. A model that has learned to overlook it makes that error a million times, consistently, and calls it a result. Worse, it launders the error through the appearance of objectivity. A number on a dashboard carries an authority that a harried official's hunch never could, even when the number is wrong, and the harder a decision is to contest, the more that borrowed authority matters.
The temptation, when confronted with this, is to reach for a technical fix: better data, debiasing algorithms, fairness constraints. Those tools matter, and the researchers calling for them are not naive about their value. But the deeper argument running through both the Humanities and Social Sciences Communications comment and the Columbia analysis is that the problem is not fundamentally technical. It is about power. It is about who gets to define what the system is optimising for in the first place, and a debiasing routine applied after the fact cannot answer a question that was never asked at the design stage. You can tune a model to allocate resources more evenly across the groups it can see. You cannot tune it to care about the groups it cannot see, because to the model they simply do not exist.
There is a word that recurs in the equity literature, and it is the word that turns a technical critique into a moral one: consent.
The communities whose lives are increasingly mediated by these systems were not, by and large, asked. They did not participate in defining the problem. They did not contribute the knowledge that shaped the models. They were not consulted on what counts as a good outcome. They cannot, in most cases, see the systems that sort them, let alone contest the results. The Humanities and Social Sciences Communications authors name this directly when they call for co-design and co-ownership of the AI design process with climate migration stakeholders, including vulnerable and affected communities. The phrase “co-ownership” is doing heavy lifting there. It is a long way from the standard humanitarian-tech posture, in which affected populations are sources of data and recipients of services but rarely architects of the systems that govern them.
This is where the field's intellectual borrowing becomes telling. The authors ground their governance recommendations in human-centred design, community engagement, data feminism and decolonial theory. That is a deliberate set of references. Data feminism insists that data is never neutral and that the question of who is counted is inseparable from who holds power. Decolonial theory insists that knowledge produced about a place by outsiders, however well-intentioned, can reproduce the extractive relationships of empire under a new technical vocabulary. To invoke both in the context of AI for climate migration is to say, in effect, that the field risks building a digital infrastructure of governance over the Global South that mirrors the analogue injustices that came before it.
The consent problem also exposes the limits of the “AI for good” framing that surrounds much of this work. Intentions are genuinely good. The IOM, the WFP and UNHCR are not malign actors; they are organisations trying to do an impossibly hard job with finite resources, and AI offers them real leverage. But good intentions are not the same as legitimate authority, and a system can be both well-meaning and illegitimate if it governs people who had no say in its creation and no recourse against its errors. The history of development is littered with interventions that were generous in spirit and disastrous in effect precisely because the people they were meant to help were treated as beneficiaries rather than authors. Algorithmic humanitarianism risks repeating that pattern at the speed and scale of software.
This is the question the whole debate has been circling, and it is the one with the least satisfying answer, because accountability in algorithmic systems is engineered to be diffuse.
Consider the chain. A government or agency decides to deploy a system. A private technology company builds it. The training data comes from a patchwork of sources, some public, some proprietary, collected by still other parties under still other conditions. The model is integrated into a workflow alongside human decision-makers who may or may not understand how it works and may or may not be free to override it. When the outcome is discriminatory in effect, every link in that chain can plausibly point to another. The agency says it relied on the vendor's tool in good faith. The vendor says it built to specification using available data. The data providers say they collected what they could. The caseworker says the system flagged the case. Responsibility evaporates into the gaps between institutions.
That diffusion is sharpened by a particular feature of the partnerships now driving this work. When a UN agency teams up with one of the world's largest technology companies, the resulting system sits across a public-private boundary that complicates every line of accountability. The humanitarian body brings the mandate, the field presence and the moral authority; the corporation brings the compute, the models and, often, the proprietary infrastructure on which the whole thing runs. Each can credibly disclaim responsibility for the other's domain. And the displaced person standing at the receiving end of the system has a relationship with neither. They cannot file a complaint with a cloud platform. They frequently cannot even learn that an algorithm was involved in the decision that shaped their fate.
The Humanities and Social Sciences Communications authors are clear that aspiration is not enough to fix this. They call for enforceable mechanisms rather than aspirational principles alone, and they enumerate them: mandatory algorithmic auditing, transparency requirements for public-sector AI procurement, clear appeal and redress mechanisms for affected populations, and participatory oversight that allows displaced communities to contest AI-supported decisions. Each of those is a deliberate attempt to nail responsibility to a specific actor at a specific point in the chain. An audit requirement makes someone accountable for testing the system. A procurement-transparency rule makes the purchasing institution accountable for what it buys. A redress mechanism gives the affected person a named door to knock on. Participatory oversight puts the governed in the room where the system is judged.
What unites these proposals is a refusal to accept that algorithmic decisions are uniquely ungovernable. They are not. The diffusion of responsibility is a choice, embedded in how these systems are procured and deployed, and it can be reversed by a different set of choices. The reason it so often is not reversed is that doing so is slower, costlier and less efficient, and we are back, once again, at the efficiency trap. Accountability is friction, and friction is precisely what these systems were sold as eliminating.
There is a final twist that the Humanities and Social Sciences Communications authors are careful not to let slide, and it sharpens the whole picture into something close to absurdity.
The AI being deployed to manage the consequences of climate change has a climate cost of its own. The authors cite an estimate that a single training run for a large language model can emit as much carbon as five cars over their entire lifetimes. Their recommendation is to favour energy-efficient algorithms and hardware, and to recognise that task-specific AI models built for targeted climate applications are generally far more energy-efficient than sprawling general-purpose foundation models. This is not a peripheral concern. It speaks directly to the equity argument, because the carbon burden of training and running these systems lands, like the carbon burden of everything else, disproportionately on the regions least responsible for emissions and least equipped to adapt.
So the spiral is complete. Wealthy institutions build carbon-intensive AI, trained on data that over-represents wealthy contexts, to manage the displacement of people in poor regions who are being displaced in part by the emissions that wealthy contexts produced, using systems those people did not consent to and cannot contest. Stated baldly, it sounds like a parody of itself. Stated in the measured prose of a peer-reviewed comment, it sounds like a field finally looking squarely at what it has been building. The choice between a lean, task-specific model and a vast foundation model is not, on this reading, merely an engineering preference. It is an equity decision, because the energy the larger model burns is borrowed against the same future the displaced are already paying for.
It would be a failure of nerve to end on the diagnosis alone, because the researchers raising these alarms are not arguing for abandonment. They are arguing for a different way of building. And when you assemble their prescriptions, a fairly concrete blueprint emerges.
It would start with the data. The Humanities and Social Sciences Communications authors call explicitly for public-private-academic collaboratives to collect and integrate high-resolution, localised, open-access datasets tailored to address existing disparities. The word “open-access” matters as much as “high-resolution.” Data locked inside a single vendor's proprietary system cannot be audited by the communities it describes, and data that only describes well-instrumented regions cannot correct the asymmetry. Closing the representativeness gap is not glamorous work. It is the slow, expensive, unfashionable labour of measuring the places and people that current systems do not see, and doing it in partnership with them rather than about them.
It would require gender to move from afterthought to architecture. Selvakumar and Tedesco's prescriptions are specific: investment in women's digital and green skills, data infrastructure that accounts for the informal care economy, enforceable environmental accountability across AI supply chains, and women in leadership positions within the climate and technology institutions that build these tools. The throughline is that you cannot debias a system into seeing what it was never built to look for. Gender has to be present at the design stage, in the room, in the data schema, in the definition of what a good outcome is.
It would demand that co-design and co-ownership become operational realities rather than slogans. That means displaced communities helping to define the problem, contributing the local knowledge that no satellite can capture, and retaining a stake in the systems that govern them. It means treating consent as an ongoing relationship rather than a box ticked once. There is a hard-headed argument for this beyond the ethical one: a model that incorporates local knowledge is simply a better model. The herder who knows which floodplain becomes impassable first, the midwife who knows which shelters women will refuse to enter, the community elder who knows the routes people actually take when they flee, all of them hold information no satellite captures and no commodity-price index encodes. Excluding them is not only unjust. It is bad engineering.
And it would require the enforceable accountability mechanisms to actually be enforced: audits with teeth, procurement rules with consequences, redress channels that real people can use, and oversight bodies in which the governed have genuine standing. None of this is technically impossible. All of it is institutionally inconvenient, which is a different and more honest kind of obstacle.
The authors of the Humanities and Social Sciences Communications comment are unsentimental about the ceiling on all of this. AI alone, they write, cannot be expected to achieve climate migration equity. What it might do, if it is aligned with human-centred values and global justice, is help shift climate mobility policy away from perpetual crisis response and towards something more like resilience-building. That is a modest claim, and its modesty is the point. The danger has never been that AI will do too little for climate migrants. The danger is that it will do a great deal, efficiently and at scale, on terms set entirely by those who already hold the power, and that the people it sorts will discover too late that the system optimising their fate was never taught to see them at all.
The machine in the Horn of Africa is still running. It is still guessing where the next wave of people will go. The question the field is now forcing itself to confront is not whether the guess is accurate. It is whether the people being guessed about will ever have a say in the guessing, and who answers for it when the guess goes wrong. Those are not engineering questions. They are questions about justice, dressed in the language of code, and they will not be optimised away.
Palinkas, L. A., Özbilgin, M. F., Aczel, M., Ortar, N., Monteleoni, C., Sethi, S., Rice, E., Dilkina, B., & Mor Barak, M. (2026). “Artificial intelligence and climate migration equity.” Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Volume 13, Article 374. Published 28 March 2026. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41599-026-07087-1
Selvakumar, P., & Tedesco, M. (2026). “How Can AI Address Climate Justice When Women's Voices Are Silenced?” State of the Planet, Columbia Climate School. Published 27 February 2026. https://news.climate.columbia.edu/2026/02/27/how-can-ai-address-climate-justice-when-womens-voices-are-silenced/
Almulhim, A. I., Nagle Alverio, G., Sharifi, A., Shaw, R., Huq, S., et al. (2024). “Climate-induced migration in the Global South: an in depth analysis.” npj Climate Action. Published 14 June 2024. https://www.nature.com/articles/s44168-024-00133-1
“Prioritizing global equity in migration research.” Humanities and Social Sciences Communications. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41599-025-06308-3
UNHCR Innovation Service. “Project Jetson.” United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. https://www.unhcr.org/innovation/project-jetson/
UN Global Pulse. “Using Artificial Intelligence to Model Displacement in Somalia.” https://www.unglobalpulse.org/project/using-artificial-intelligence-to-model-displacement-in-somalia/
World Food Programme. “HungerMap LIVE.” https://hungermap.wfp.org/
WFP Innovation. “SKAI.” World Food Programme Innovation Accelerator. https://innovation.wfp.org/project/SKAI
International Organization for Migration. “IOM and Microsoft Collaborate to Address Climate-Driven Displacement.” https://www.iom.int/news/iom-and-microsoft-collaborate-address-climate-driven-displacement
IOM Environmental Migration Portal. “Vulnerable Communities in Ethiopia at Risk of Flooding.” November 2024. https://environmentalmigration.iom.int/sites/g/files/tmzbdl1411/files/documents/2024-11/vulnerable-communities-ethiopia-communities-at-risk-of-flooding-final.pdf
European Parliamentary Research Service. “Artificial intelligence in asylum procedures in the EU.” 2025. https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/BRIE/2025/775861/EPRS_BRI(2025)775861_EN.pdf
Hertie School Centre for Fundamental Rights. “Algorithmic Risk in EU Migration and Asylum Governance.” https://www.hertie-school.org/en/news/detail/content/algorithmic-risk-in-eu-migration-asylum-governance-reconciling-the-eu-ai-act-and-the-council-of-europe-framework-convention
Brill. “Rule of Law Challenges of 'Algorithmic Discretion' & Automation in EU Border Control.” European Journal of Migration and Law, Volume 25, Issue 3 (2023). https://brill.com/view/journals/emil/25/3/article-p249_1.xml?language=en

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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