It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
from Douglas Vandergraph
There is a quiet kind of sadness that a lot of believers carry, and it does not always look dramatic from the outside. It is not always the kind of pain that makes people cry in public or fall apart where everyone can see it. A lot of the time it looks like a normal day. It looks like getting out of bed and doing what you have to do. It looks like answering messages, handling work, driving somewhere, cleaning something, making dinner, paying attention when someone is talking to you, and moving through the hours like a person who is technically functioning. Underneath all of that, though, there can be this low steady feeling that joy is for other people and that peace is something you are always almost about to have but never quite seem to get. Some believers live like they are allowed to survive the day, but not allowed to really receive it. They live like gratitude is fine in theory, but not for them. They live like a good day has to be justified first.
I think one of the reasons this happens is because a lot of people who love Jesus are still carrying a very tired heart. They believe in grace, but they do not always live like grace has reached all the way into their actual life. They know the right words. They know the verses. They know the language. Still, when morning comes, they face the day like they are stepping into something they have to drag themselves through instead of something that might still carry goodness from God. They do not always say that out loud, but you can feel it in the way they talk. You can hear it in the way they describe their life. There is almost a quiet apology built into the way they move through the world. They are here. They are doing their best. They are staying faithful. Yet somewhere deep inside, they still act like they need permission to enjoy being alive.
That is a painful way to live, and I think more people live there than they realize. They are not rejecting God. They are not turning away from Jesus. They are simply living with an inner heaviness that has been around for so long it now feels normal. They wake up and they do not expect much from the day except responsibility. They do not expect delight. They do not expect warmth. They do not expect the kind of calm that lets a person breathe all the way down into their chest. They do not expect God to meet them in something as ordinary as a morning drive or a quiet cup of coffee or a small laugh they did not see coming. They have become so used to living under pressure that they no longer know how to recognize a day as a gift before it proves itself useful.
When I say that as a believer in Jesus you should have a good day, I am not talking about pretending your life is easier than it is. I am not trying to hand you a thin slogan and call it hope. I am not saying that a good day is a day where nothing breaks, nobody disappoints you, every emotion stays calm, and all your plans fall into place. That is not real life, and most people know it. What I am talking about is something quieter and stronger. I am talking about the possibility of receiving this day from the hand of God instead of treating it like a burden you are already defeated by before noon. I am talking about letting the love of Christ become more real to you than the anxious habit of bracing for disappointment. I am talking about the kind of life where a person starts to understand that because Jesus is with them, the day already contains more goodness than their fear wants them to believe.
Sometimes the greatest theft in a person’s life is not that pain came. Pain comes for everyone. Trouble comes. Loss comes. Delays come. Disappointment comes. Sometimes the deeper theft is that after enough hard seasons, a person stops knowing how to be open. They become guarded with joy. They become suspicious of peace. They start to act as if hope is dangerous because it might leave them embarrassed. This is one of the quiet inner conflicts many believers carry without ever naming it. They still want God. They still trust Jesus. They still mean every prayer they pray. At the same time, there is a part of them that has become very careful not to feel too much expectation. They can handle duty. They can handle routine. They can handle carrying the load. What they are not as sure how to handle anymore is the possibility that today might actually be good.
That is such an honest place to admit, and maybe that honesty is where healing begins. Maybe the first step is not trying to force yourself into some brighter mood. Maybe the first step is telling the truth about the way your heart has been living. Maybe you have been faithful, but not free. Maybe you have been showing up, but not receiving. Maybe you have been thankful in public while feeling closed off in private. Maybe you love God, but somewhere along the way you started relating to your own life like it is mostly a problem to manage rather than a place where the presence of Jesus is still active and near. That kind of inward fatigue can sneak into a believer’s soul and make everything feel dull. It can make even mercy feel familiar in the wrong way. It can make a new morning feel like a repeated burden instead of a fresh moment with God.
One of the deepest reasons you should have a good day as a believer in Jesus is not that the world has become easier. It is that your life is no longer held together by the world’s ability to be kind to you. That is a very different foundation. If your day rests on circumstances behaving themselves, then your peace will always be weak. If your hope rests on people doing what you want, then your heart will stay fragile. If your ability to receive joy rests on nothing going wrong, then you will keep postponing joy until some future life that never quite arrives. Jesus gives you something better than that. He gives you Himself. He gives you the nearness of God in a life that still contains unfinished things. He gives you a place to stand that is deeper than mood, deeper than pressure, deeper than the tone of the news, deeper than the unpredictability of people, and deeper than the low tired voice in your own head that keeps saying maybe tomorrow will feel more livable.
There is something beautiful that starts to happen when a person really lets that become personal. Not theoretical. Not church-shaped. Personal. It changes the emotional weather inside them. They begin to realize they do not wake up abandoned. They do not start the morning spiritually empty. They do not begin the day trying to get God interested in their existence. The love of Christ is already there before the day has gone well. The grace of God is already there before they have done anything impressive. The care of heaven is already there while the sink is still full, the inbox is still crowded, the bank account is still what it is, and the future still has unanswered questions in it. A person who knows this deeply starts to move differently. They may still have responsibilities. They may still feel the weight of real life. Yet underneath it there is a steadier current. There is a growing awareness that their day is not empty space between problems. Their day is inhabited by God.
I think many believers have never fully given themselves permission to let ordinary life be touched by that truth. They reserve God for the serious moments. They reserve Him for crisis, confession, major decisions, and big prayers. Then the rest of life gets lived in this half-conscious fog where they are technically Christian but emotionally exhausted in the same way everyone else is exhausted. They forget that Jesus did not come only to rescue the dramatic parts of your story. He came near to your real life. Your actual life. The one that includes laundry, waiting rooms, bills, texts, body aches, quiet drives, and all the little moments that feel too small to mention when someone asks how you are doing. The nearness of Christ belongs there too. When that truth starts to settle in, a day becomes more than a stretch of obligations. It becomes a lived place of communion. It becomes a place where peace can arrive in ordinary clothes.
And that is one reason a believer should have a good day. Not because every day will feel exciting, but because no day is spiritually empty. No day is just bare time you have to get through until something bigger happens. Some people are always waiting for the main event of their life. They are always looking over the shoulder of the present moment toward some future answer they believe will finally allow them to breathe. They tell themselves they will relax when the finances change, when the door opens, when the relationship heals, when the body gets better, when the child comes back around, when the prayer is answered in a way they can point to. Until then, they live like today does not deserve warmth. They live like the current day is only useful if it helps them get somewhere else. That way of living quietly drains the soul because it teaches a person to miss their own life while they are in the middle of it.
Jesus does not call you to miss your life. He does not call you to move through the day like someone locked outside of grace until circumstances become more pleasing. He does not teach you to despise ordinary moments while waiting for larger ones. He teaches you to abide. He teaches you to remain. He teaches you to stay connected to Him in a way that changes how reality feels from the inside. That does not mean every hour feels easy. It does mean every hour can become inhabited by meaning. It means a believer has reason to wake up and say there is goodness available to me today because Christ has not withdrawn from my life. The day in front of me may not be dramatic, but it is not godless. It may not be perfect, but it is not empty. It may not answer every question, but it can still carry mercy, peace, guidance, restraint, gratitude, and that strange calm that sometimes shows up when you realize God is far more present than your mind has been acting like He is.
There is also something deeply human and deeply spiritual about letting yourself enjoy what God gives without feeling guilty for it. Many sincere believers have a harder time with this than they realize. They have learned how to endure. They have learned how to sacrifice. They have learned how to stay committed when life is hard. Those are good things. Yet some of them have not learned how to receive good things cleanly. They do not know how to take in a peaceful moment without immediately reminding themselves of everything that is still unresolved. They do not know how to feel relief without bracing for the next disruption. They do not know how to enjoy a good conversation, a beautiful sky, a little stillness, or the pleasure of being alive in a body that is breathing because they have been trained by pain to stay on guard. The result is that even when goodness arrives, they only half receive it. Part of them is already pulling away.
That guardedness can become so normal that a person thinks it is wisdom. They think they are simply being realistic. They think they are protecting themselves from disappointment. In truth, sometimes they are protecting themselves from joy, and they do not even see it. They are so committed to not being let down that they have accidentally become unavailable to the smaller gifts through which God often carries a soul. This is not a shallow issue. It touches the inner life in a deep way because when a person becomes unavailable to goodness, they slowly lose some of their ability to feel how loved they are. They may still believe the doctrine. They may still say the right thing. Still, their lived emotional posture toward life becomes narrow and defended. That is not the freedom Jesus died to give. Christ did not save you merely so you could grit your teeth in a more spiritual way. He came that your life might be full of Him, and where He is deeply received there is room for peace, room for gratitude, room for quiet gladness, and room for the kind of good day that does not need to be flashy to be real.
I think this lands hardest for people who are used to carrying a lot. The responsible ones. The steady ones. The ones people lean on. The ones who keep going when they are tired because someone has to. The ones who know what it feels like to push through. A person can become so identified with holding everything together that they begin to believe their highest form of faithfulness is constant tension. They start to feel almost disloyal to reality if they relax too much. They start to act as if a soft heart would mean a careless heart. Yet Jesus never asked you to prove your devotion by becoming inwardly hard. He never asked you to carry yourself like a clenched fist in order to be holy. There is a kind of strength that is gentler than that. There is a kind of faith that does not always look intense. Sometimes real faith looks like receiving the day instead of resisting it. Sometimes it looks like letting your shoulders drop. Sometimes it looks like deciding that because God is near, you do not need to live as if your own strain is what keeps the universe from collapsing.
That is where a lot of the hidden healing begins. It begins when a believer stops treating peace like laziness and starts seeing it as trust. It begins when a person stops acting like their anxiety is proof that they care deeply and starts realizing that God can care for their life more fully than they ever could. It begins when they stop using internal pressure as a form of self-protection and start allowing the presence of Jesus to become more real than the old habit of carrying the day in their own chest. You do not have to wake up and immediately become the manager of every possible outcome. You do not have to hold your whole life in your head before breakfast. You do not have to act like your concern is what keeps your family safe or your future alive. You are allowed to be a person under God. You are allowed to live from belonging instead of pressure. You are allowed to believe that the Lord who saved you knows how to walk with you through this day without needing your panic in order to do it.
There is another quiet reason a believer in Jesus should have a good day, and it may be one of the most tender ones of all. You are not unloved in the ordinary parts of your life. You are not merely loved in the dramatic parts. You are not loved only when you are praying hard, fighting hard, preaching hard, giving hard, or suffering in some visibly noble way. You are loved while you are tired. You are loved while you are simple. You are loved while you are doing small things that nobody else will remember. You are loved in rooms where no one is clapping for you. You are loved in the middle of errands, in the middle of dishes, in the middle of traffic, in the middle of unfinished conversations, and in the middle of those strange quiet pockets of the day when your mind drifts and you remember how much life you are carrying. The love of Jesus does not visit you only in exceptional spiritual weather. It stays with you in real life.
When a person starts to believe that more deeply, something softens. They do not need every day to prove itself worthy before they call it good. They begin to understand that a good day is not always a dramatic day. Sometimes it is simply a day where the heart remains open. Sometimes it is a day where a believer remembers they are already being held. Sometimes it is a day where they stop measuring the worth of their life by visible progress and begin receiving the quiet goodness of being with God in the middle of ordinary living. That kind of day may look small from the outside. It may not impress anyone. Still, it can be rich with the kind of peace many people spend years chasing in louder places.
Maybe this is where the conversation gets more personal than people expect. Some believers have become so used to inner tension that they no longer know how to imagine a life where goodness is not rare. They think of joy as an event. They think of peace as a break. They think of a good day as an exception. They do not yet understand that in Christ, goodness can become more normal than they know. Not because trouble vanishes, but because the presence of God begins to reorder the heart. There is a difference between a life with no pain and a life where pain is no longer the only thing your soul knows how to notice. Jesus can teach a person how to notice mercy again. He can teach a person how to notice warmth again. He can teach a person how to sit in a moment without mentally running ahead to ruin it. He can teach a person how to receive life like someone who is truly loved.
And I think that is where I want to leave this first part, because this is where the issue becomes very honest. A believer can know God and still need to relearn how to live like a beloved person. A believer can know scripture and still not know how to unclench internally. A believer can be faithful and still have a hard time letting the day be good. That does not make them a bad Christian. It makes them human. It means there is still a tender place in them that Jesus wants to meet more deeply. It means there is still a place where grace is trying to become lived reality instead of mere right language. It means there is still room for something beautiful to change.
If part of you has quietly believed that a good day must be earned, justified, or delayed, then maybe this is the beginning of a different way of living. Maybe Jesus is not only trying to get you through life. Maybe He is also teaching you how to receive it.
That is not always easy to learn, especially if you have spent years living like you have to brace yourself for life before it even begins. A person can become so used to carrying tension that they mistake it for maturity. They think staying wound up means they are being responsible. They think if they relax too much, something will slip through their fingers. They think if they let joy in too quickly, they will only end up embarrassed by it later. So they keep a lid on themselves. They stay careful. They stay guarded. They keep one hand on the door in case disappointment walks back in. What they do not realize is that this way of living slowly drains color out of the soul. It makes even good things feel far away. It makes a person present in body while inwardly absent from their own life.
Jesus has a way of confronting that gently. He does not always begin by removing every burden. A lot of the time He begins by meeting the burdened person inside the burden. He begins by coming close to the tired place. He begins by showing a person that what they have called realism has often become fear in a wiser sounding voice. Then little by little He teaches them something they never really knew how to do. He teaches them how to let the love of God into an actual Tuesday. He teaches them how to let the heart breathe in the middle of unfinished things. He teaches them how to stop talking themselves out of peace before the day has even had a chance to unfold.
That may sound small, but it is not small at all. The way you step into a day shapes far more than you think. If you step into it expecting only weight, you tend to miss the quiet ways God is already holding you. If you step into it acting like goodness must prove itself to you before you let yourself feel any gratitude, you usually end up overlooking the small mercies that were already there. But if you step into the day like someone deeply loved by Jesus, something changes in the way you carry time. You stop moving like a hunted person. You stop treating every hour like a test you are already failing. You begin to notice that the Lord is not asking you to survive your life as a stranger to His nearness. He is offering to walk with you through it.
That matters because most people do not lose a whole life all at once. They lose it in pieces. They lose it in the habit of never letting themselves be where they are. They lose it in constant mental absence. They lose it in the reflex that turns every morning into pressure and every evening into recovery. They lose it in the belief that the next answer will finally permit them to feel settled. This is one reason the invitation of Jesus is so precious. He does not merely promise some distant future reality. He brings the life of God near enough to transform the feel of the present moment. He brings peace into rooms that look ordinary. He brings steadiness into places where the mind used to spin. He brings a kind of warmth that cannot be manufactured by circumstances because it comes from a Person, not a setup.
Sometimes people hear words like joy, peace, hope, and gratitude so often that they stop hearing them as living things. They start hearing them as religious wallpaper. Still, when those things begin to move from language into experience, a believer starts to feel the day differently. They begin to understand that it is possible to live under the care of God instead of merely talking about it. They begin to understand that a good day is not an unrealistic dream. It is a day received instead of resisted. It is a day where the soul remains open enough to let God be good to it in ways that may not even be dramatic. It is a day where Christ is not kept at the edges of life, but welcomed into the center of how the hours are actually lived.
I think one of the holiest things a believer can do is let the grace of God become practical. There are many people who believe grace in principle but still live with a hidden punishment mindset. They may not call it that, but you can see it in the way they move through the day. They are hard on themselves without even noticing. They do not allow for weakness. They do not allow for slowness. They do not allow for ordinary human limitation. They make every tired moment mean something alarming. They make every imperfect response into evidence against themselves. They make every hard day into a quiet argument for why they should not feel peaceful yet. In their mind, a good day always belongs to a better version of them, one that is more organized, more healed, more disciplined, more emotionally clean, more visibly victorious. Until then they live as if joy must wait outside.
That is not grace. That is pressure wearing spiritual clothing.
Jesus does not relate to you that way. He is not standing over your life withholding goodness until you finally become easy to be pleased with. He is not giving out peace only to the emotionally polished. He is not offering daily mercy only to the version of you that never gets tired, never hesitates, never needs to start over. He comes close to the real you. The you who is still growing. The you who still feels things deeply. The you who still has days when the mind gets loud. The you who still has to remember the same truths more than once. He does not love some future cleaner version of you more than He loves the person reading this right now.
When that becomes more than an idea, it starts to loosen things inside. The person who has lived for years in quiet self-pressure begins to feel another way of being. They begin to realize they can have a good day without first becoming flawless. They begin to realize that rest is not betrayal. They begin to realize that a soft heart is not carelessness. They begin to realize that it is possible to be serious about God and still receive joy. It is possible to be faithful and still laugh. It is possible to carry responsibility without letting responsibility consume your inner life. It is possible to live attentively without living clenched.
That last part touches a very deep place in a lot of people. There are believers who are so used to being inwardly clenched that they do not even know they are doing it. They wake up ready for impact. Their jaw is tight before breakfast. Their shoulders are carrying what has not even happened yet. Their thoughts move ahead of the day trying to prevent every possible problem. They call it preparation, but most of the time it is fear trying to feel useful. Then by the time evening arrives, they are spent from fighting battles the day never actually brought. That is an exhausting way to live, and it slowly convinces a person that peace is for lighter lives than theirs.
Yet Christ speaks into that place with such tenderness. He does not shame the anxious heart for being anxious. He does not despise the overburdened mind for trying too hard. He comes near and shows a better yoke. He shows what it means to live carried. He shows what it means to let trust begin where control has been ending in fatigue. He teaches a soul that it does not need to preview every pain in order to survive it. He teaches a heart that it does not need to tense against possible disappointment in order to be safe. The safety of a believer was never supposed to come from self-protection. It comes from belonging to God.
That is one of the clearest reasons a believer in Jesus should have a good day. You belong to God. I know that can sound like familiar language, but sit with it personally. You belong to God while your life is still in progress. You belong to God while your prayers are still midair. You belong to God while some things in you are still being healed. You belong to God when the day feels light and when it feels ordinary and when it feels more demanding than you hoped. Your belonging is not moody. It is not unstable. It is not suspended until you become more impressive. The Lord has placed His love on you, and that means you do not enter today as a spiritual orphan trying to make your own peace from scratch.
People who feel orphaned inside often move through life trying to earn what can only be received. They try to earn rest. They try to earn worth. They try to earn the right to breathe. They try to earn permission to enjoy the day. Even when they know Jesus, they can still live emotionally like people who have to justify their existence through productivity, resilience, helpfulness, or endless internal effort. That way of living is lonely. It makes a person feel separated from tenderness, even if tenderness is being offered all around them. This is why it matters so much to let the gospel move out of theory and into your daily emotional posture. The gospel does not only change your eternal future. It changes the way you stand inside a morning.
It tells you that you are not on probation with God. It tells you that mercy is not an emergency measure for your worst days only. It tells you that Christ came near because love moved first.
When those truths start to land inside the actual rhythms of a person’s day, they change more than doctrine. They change atmosphere. A man starts driving differently when he knows he is loved. A woman starts walking through a hard afternoon differently when she knows she is held. A tired parent begins to carry the home differently when they remember they are not doing life alone. A lonely person experiences even the silence differently when they begin to recognize that the nearness of Jesus does not depend on visible company. This is not fake inspiration. This is what happens when grace becomes inhabitable.
I think this is part of why some of the best days in a believer’s life are not the most impressive from the outside. Sometimes the deepest goodness arrives quietly. It arrives when a person stops arguing with reality and starts receiving help in it. It arrives when they stop resisting the idea that God could be kind to them today even if major things remain unresolved. It arrives when they stop making the entire emotional value of the day depend on one phone call, one outcome, one person’s response, one shift in circumstance. The soul gets lighter when it no longer puts all of life’s weight on one thing. Christ gathers the scattered pieces of your day and teaches your heart to live from something deeper.
That deeper place matters because life will always contain interruption. It will always contain moments that do not go the way you hoped. A person who can only have a good day when nothing bends will not have many good days. A person who can receive the presence of God in a bent day has discovered something far more durable. They have discovered that the goodness of a day does not always disappear just because one piece of it hurts. They have discovered that an unexpected frustration does not own the whole sky. They have discovered that a hard hour does not have the right to rename the entire day. This kind of steadiness is not denial. It is maturity. It is what begins to happen when a believer’s emotional life is anchored in the Lord rather than whipped around by every shift in circumstance.
That is a very beautiful freedom. It means you do not have to hand your peace over every time life touches something tender. It means you do not have to spend the rest of the day in the emotional shape of the first hard moment. It means you can feel disappointment without becoming swallowed by it. You can feel concern without surrendering your center. You can acknowledge that something hurt and still keep your heart open to the goodness God may be bringing into the next hour. Some believers have not yet realized how much of their exhaustion comes from surrendering whole days to single moments. They let one frustration become the lens through which everything else is seen. Then they wonder why life feels so heavy.
Jesus invites you into another way. He invites you to stay with Him inside the day as it unfolds. He invites you to remember that His presence is not fragile. He does not vanish because the schedule changed. He does not withdraw because your mood dipped. He does not stand at a distance because one thing went wrong. His steadiness remains, and your good day can remain rooted in that steadiness even when the day itself contains very human imperfections. This is not a call to emotional numbness. It is a call to a deeper center. It is a call to live as a person who knows that the love of God is not so weak that a small disruption can cancel it from experience.
There is also a very personal kind of healing that happens when a believer lets themselves notice beauty again. Not borrowed beauty. Not staged beauty. Real beauty in ordinary life. The sound of the house before anyone else is awake. The sun on a wall. The relief of a deep breath. A moment of stillness in the car before walking into something demanding. A familiar voice. A simple meal. The way peace can arrive for a second without fanfare and somehow remind you that you are not abandoned in the middle of your responsibilities. God often reaches people through things like that. Not because those things are God in themselves, but because He is the giver of daily bread, and daily bread often comes in forms people overlook because they are waiting for fireworks.
A person who can no longer notice beauty usually has not become more mature. They have become more burdened. Their eyes have narrowed. Their inner world has tightened. Their soul has learned to scan for threat more quickly than it receives gift. This is one reason it matters to speak honestly about the reasons a believer should have a good day. A good day is not merely about emotion. It is about agreement. It is about agreeing with the truth that this life, though unfinished, is still being held together by the goodness of God. It is about agreeing with the truth that Christ has not left you to make meaning alone. It is about agreeing with the truth that heaven has not withdrawn its care from the little places where you actually live.
Sometimes I think believers are afraid that if they let themselves feel too much gladness, they will lose their seriousness. They think gravity and holiness belong together in a way that leaves little room for delight. There is a seriousness that is beautiful, and there is also a seriousness that is simply unresolved sadness trying to sound mature. Jesus was not shallow, and He was not joyless. He was not detached from sorrow, and He was not imprisoned by it either. The life of God in a human being has room for tears, room for strength, room for compassion, and room for a kind of gladness that remains alive even when the world is not easy. If you belong to Jesus, you do not honor Him by moving through every day like a person under permanent gray skies. You honor Him by trusting His nearness enough to receive the life He gives.
That does not mean every day will feel the same. There will be days that are more tender. There will be days where the soul feels slower. There will be days when you are carrying concern for people you love and you can feel that concern sitting right under the surface of everything. A good day is not always loud joy. Sometimes it is quieter than that. Sometimes it is the deep relief of knowing you do not have to carry the whole world in your own chest. Sometimes it is the gentle strength of remembering that your life is in the hands of God and that this alone gives the day a steadiness circumstances cannot create. Sometimes it is not exuberant at all. It is simply grounded. It is simply open. It is simply a day where your heart is not closed against grace.
That kind of goodness is worth more than people know. It is worth more than performance. It is worth more than appearance. It is worth more than the version of life that looks impressive online but feels hollow in private. A good day with Jesus may look almost unremarkable to anyone else. Yet inside, something holy is happening. A person is learning to live loved. A person is learning to stop treating their own life like an enemy. A person is learning to receive the care of God without pushing it away through constant inward resistance. A person is learning that trust can become a way of inhabiting time, not merely a statement they repeat when things are hard.
This changes how a believer sees the future too. Someone who is able to receive today starts to loosen their grip on tomorrow in healthy ways. They stop acting like the future will only be survivable if they mentally rehearse it enough. They begin to understand that the God who is present in this hour will also be present in the next one. The Lord who gave grace for this morning will not become absent by evening. The Christ who held them through one season does not misplace them in another. That slowly builds a stronger internal world. Hope becomes less like effort and more like atmosphere. A person begins to live with a softer face. They begin to move with less hidden argument against reality. Their life becomes more available to joy because it is less enslaved to prediction.
I think one of the most touching transformations in a believer’s life is when they stop being suspicious of goodness. They stop asking whether they are allowed to feel okay before everything is solved. They stop apologizing internally for moments of joy. They stop assuming every peaceful moment must soon be corrected by some fresh disappointment. They stop living in emotional flinch mode. That is not weakness. That is healing. It is what happens when the soul starts to believe that God’s care is not a theory and that daily life is not outside the reach of His tenderness.
Maybe that is the simple invitation in all of this. Maybe as a believer in Jesus, you should have a good day because the Lord who saved you did not intend for you to live unreachable by your own blessings. He did not come near so you could spend your life constantly braced against it. He did not fill your life with mercy so you could remain emotionally unavailable to it. He is not asking you to manufacture excitement. He is inviting you to receive what is already true. He is with you. You are loved. You are held. This day is not empty. This life is not godless. The ordinary places of your life are still being touched by the care of heaven.
So when morning comes, maybe the shift is smaller and deeper than people expect. Maybe it is not a dramatic speech. Maybe it is just this. Maybe it is choosing not to begin the day in argument with your own life. Maybe it is refusing to call the day dead before you have even lived it. Maybe it is letting your first inner movement be gratitude instead of dread. Maybe it is lifting your head and remembering that because Jesus is with you, the day in front of you already contains more possibility, more peace, and more hidden beauty than your tired mind first believes.
If you can begin there, something changes. The day may still have responsibilities. It may still have effort. It may still bend in unexpected ways. Yet underneath it there is a stronger current. You know whose you are. You know you are not alone. You know grace did not run out overnight. You know God is still active in the ordinary. You know a good day is not a reward for finally becoming flawless. It is a gift that can be received by a person who knows they are loved.
That is where I want to leave this. Not in pressure, but in permission. Not in performance, but in truth. Not in some polished version of inspiration, but in something quieter and more human than that. If you belong to Jesus, you do not have to earn the right to receive this day as good. You do not have to wait until everything in your life becomes easy. You do not have to stand outside of joy until all the unfinished parts of your story become settled. Christ is with you now, and because He is with you now, goodness is not far from you. Peace is not far from you. Hope is not far from you. The life of God is not far from you.
Receive the day.
Let it be touched by gratitude.
Let it be steadied by trust.
Let it be warmed by the simple truth that Jesus is near, and that His nearness is enough to make even an ordinary day carry more life than you can fully see.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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Vandergraph Po Box 271154 Fort Collins, Colorado 80527
from gry-skriver
Store språkmodeller, LLMer, kan lage sammenhengende og godt strukturerte tekster. Hvis du er god nok på prompting kan du også få resultatet til å se ut for det utrente øye som et menneske kunne ha skrevet det. Mange føler nok at de ikke kan lage like gode tekster selv. Det er ikke bare på jobb jeg mottar meldinger som helt klart er forfattet med god hjelp fra ChatGPT eller Claude. Det er da fristende å spørre en chatbot tilbake om å oppsummere for meg essensen. Så hvorfor skal vi skrive når maskinen kan gjøre det for oss og hvorfor skal vi lese når maskinen kan oppsummere?
Jeg har tatt universitetspedagogikk og et av kursene jeg tok handlet om å skrive for å lære. En viktig bruk av tekstskaping er å hjelpe oss rydde i tankene, finne sammenhenger og avdekke hva vi kan og hva vi bør lære. Som naturviter skrev jeg ikke fryktelig mange stiler eller essays, men matematiske utlendinger og lignende er også en form for skriving. Når vi overlater alt skrivearbeidet til maskinen får vi ikke brukt hjernen. Hvis du vil utvikle dine ferdigheter, bør du derfor gjøre deler av skrivearbeidet selv. Strukturer selv, be om kritikk. Skriv selv, be om forslag til forbedringer. Jeg kunne ha overlatt skrivingen til min venn, Claude, men jeg vil ikke bli for ukritisk. Jeg skriver fortsatt selv fordi jeg liker å holde hjernen i gang.
Når vi skriver er det også en slags sosial aktivitet. Vi ser for oss en mottaker eller publikum når vi skriver. Leseren ser for seg en avsender eller forfatter når de leser. Selv når vi skriver tørre, faglige tekster som vitenskapelige artikler eller tekniske rapporter, så er det en del av det å bygge en fagkultur. Hva skjer med den kulturen når du ikke lenger kan stole på at avsenderen er et menneske og heller ikke er sikker på at ledere vil være mennesker?
Jeg pleide å hate å skrive så andre kunne lese det jeg skriver. Etter å ha delt tekster mange nok ganger har jeg vent meg til det og jeg liker nesten å skrive så andre kan lese hvis de vil. Hvor mange kommer til å lese tekster på nett om et års tid? Aktiviteten på nett er litt døende. Men hvis vi mennesker slutter å skrive og lese på nett, vil internett slik vi kjenner det garantert dø. Og det er jo litt trist om vi bare sitter igjen med agenter og andre typer roboter som kommuniserer. Jeg liker fortsatt drømmen om verdensveven hvor vi kommuniserer oss mennesker imellom.
from davepolaschek
My sweetie sometimes asks what I’m doing in the shop, and sometimes I tell her.
Today, I did the preliminary turning on four cholla and resin pen blanks I poured a week ago. Since then, I repaired one of the blanks that broke coming out of the mold, drilled holes through the middles of them, glued in the pen tubes, and repaired another that broke as I was squaring up the end, and trimmed all four to the proper lengths. One had a bubble right next to the end of the pen tube, so I fixed that with a tiny bit of resin.
The blanks generally break when I start messing with them before they’ve had a chance to fully cure, because the slow hardener I’m using takes 3-4 days to finish curing. Before that, parts are brittle, and other parts are still soft and sometimes sticky.
After a weekend of zero shop time, but it was ok (I didn’t wait for the last patch to fully cure), I did the preliminary turning on the blanks today, and patched some bubbles in the resin with a contrasting color and CA glue, then sanded the blanks to 400 grit, and applied a coat of tung oil to protect the cholla canes.
That will cure overnight, and tomorrow I’ll sand to 800 or 2000 grit with wet-dry paper and deal with any remaining imperfections, and apply another coat of tung oil. Thursday (a couple more days with no shop time are coming this week), I can maybe finish polishing the blanks and assemble the pens, and have them ready on Friday.

Yeah, they’re pretty, but I always forget just how involved these things are, and just how long it takes to go from raw materials to something I can give away, because nobody would pay what I would need to ask for them to make a decent wage making these things, and I need to remember that when folks at the senior center tell me I should sell my pens, because everyone will want one!
Plus, my sweetie doesn’t ask what I’m up to in the shop as often any more. ;–)
from
wystswolf

Home is where you find it—and yourself.
When I flew from at the start of December last year (2025), I expected a respite. A break. A sabbatical. To return to it recovered and refreshed—a slightly different man, perhaps—but one back at home in any case, ready to take over the world.
Or at least content to continue existing in it. I realized in leaving that... I had already left emotionally many months earlier.
Home… where a man hangs his hat. Where the heart is. Everyone calls someplace home. Even when we no longer have an address, we have something—some place—we know as home.
A place we are from, if nothing else.
I've been on the road for months. Four, to be precise. I set foot, in whole or part, in ten countries—living for a time in eight: Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Germany, and Ireland—before landing back stateside in Florida.
Talk was always about “when we get back home” and “since we left home.” In time, homesickness set in for my wife.
But for me, it never came calling.
For weeks, home was just a shorthand word for comfort and routine. Knowing where my toothbrush was kept. How far it was to the grocery store. Hell—where the grocery store even was. It meant something familiar was left behind.
But it also meant leaving something else behind—something heavier.
A feeling of emptiness. Frustration. Aggravation. Sitting 5,000 miles away alongside friends and family.
Home wasn’t just convenience.
It was negativity. It was frustration. It was a place from which to escape.
And at first, that’s exactly what this exodus was—an escape from the ordinary into the extraordinary. Everything was new. Exciting. Overwhelming.
But by week five, settled into a rhythm in Spain, I realized something unsettling:
the old demons hadn’t been left behind on some dusty shelf.
They had come with me.
Tucked neatly into the shadowed places of my heart and mind.
Family and friends... the familiar... were behind me, yes—but not gone. Through messages, calls, and photos, I found that those I loved most were still with me on the journey.
And stranger still—the new faces I met didn’t replace the old ones.
My heart grew, and my life to include them... My home grew bigger still.
And as old routines dissolved and new ones took shape—figuring out transit, where to shop, how to live—I began to understand something I hadn’t before:
Home isn’t where I am.
It is intangible and carried:
In my mind and heart.
This was something new. Something else.
Especially for her.
I live a reality of expectations and obligations—but my heart and mind move in another realm. One that is loyal. Passionate. Entirely hers.
Even thousands of miles away, my wanting is with her.
My thoughts—every day.
I wake and sleep with her as the first and final presence in my mind.
So when a stranger asks, “Where are you from?”
I give them a myth... something to chew on and relish in. More description of past than present.
Or future.
It is answering a deeper question:
Where does the soul return to, when there is nowhere left to go?
And for me—
home is no longer a place on a map.
It is a convergence.
Of memory. Of longing. Of love.
Of that which I carry, and refuse to let go.
Home, is hope.
#poetry #wyst
Cuenta una leyenda que en un pequeño pueblo del sur de China aparecieron unos monos que aseguraban ser dueños del árbol que concede todos los deseos. Se llamaban Uno, Dos y Tres.
A tal efecto exhibieron documentos con grandes sellos rojos que -según ellos- habían sido expedidos por la secretaría del mismísimo emperador.
Un sabio taoísta se acercó para ver bien a los monos y la gente lo fue empujando para que se fuera.
-¿Por qué te empujan? -le preguntó una anciana.
-Para que no les agüe la fiesta.
La anciana, confundida, le volvió a preguntar:
-¿Pero no ven que los van a engañar?
A lo que el sabio concluyó:
-Sí, pero eso será mañana. ¡Hoy creen que van a engañar a los monos!
from celestialboon
There's something weird about LLMs that creates dissonance in me. It likely has something to do with the difference between all the hype that's being drummed up and the actual product on our hands, even though I understand that the hype also exists for reasons that are insincere. Still, as tech fads go, this beats the metaverse and NFTs by miles: we actually have a product in our hands that the masses are actually using, even if it doesn't quite live up to the tall tales going around. It definitely merits from me to want to figure out what's going on with it, what its limitations are, and if something can be done to go past them.
Let’s start with the base tool, upon which all the rest of modern AI is built: the raw, unrefined, unassisted Large Language Model.
Its limitations are fairly obvious:
It makes shit up: It makes shit up in a way that's fundamental to its constitution, since what it is constructed to do is imitate human writing, which is itself largely neutral to truth and does not intrinsically contain self-correction mechanisms in that sense. In part, this results from the innate versatility of the language, that allows many things to be said regardless if they're true or not (a principle upon the very concept of fiction rests), which leaves mere statistical frequency to distinguish “3 plus 4 is 9” from “3 plus 4 is 7” as one being truer than the other, by virtue of the mathematically correct statements being repeated more often. The LLM doesn't encode a proper math engine in its inference layers (which for a computer is most ironic), which means that, like with most other topics, its deliberations are generally only true by mere statistical approximation.
It is beholden to the premise: given that a fundamental quality of (passable) human-made text is coherence, both syntactic, semantic, and thematic, this generally rubs off on an LLM, which (before post-training) will generally go along with whatever premise given, keeping up with its thrust and its tone, by virtue of being trained to generate output that is coherent with the input. This is the base appeal of an LLM (that it is able to elaborate on any given premise) but it also makes it extremely prone to syncopancy, by design enabling even the most deranged flights of fancy and, in some cases, conducting a “technological folie à deux” devolving into cases of AI psychosis.
It doesn't know when to stop: the single output mode that an LLM has is to generate the next token in a linear sequence. Taken as a parallel with someone talking (a pareidolia that most, if not every AI company has been very eager to exploit), it's like a conversationalist that simply does not know when (or how!) to stop talking in order to actually think some things through. Its single process is to keep talking, even when it runs into serious informational snags (like self-contradiction, or being stuck in circles repeating the same things over and over) simply because that's all the machine is designed to output, one word after another by mere statistical inertia.
Think of it like this: when asked to complete “8 times 12 is:”, a person would generally parse the phrase, stop and switch mental processes in order to make a mental calculation, and only upon completing it, they would write down “96.” If they didn't feel in the mood or otherwise felt particularly sure of themselves, they could go by sheer memory and say whatever number felt most likely in the moment, which is the closest parallel to what an LLM does with every generated token.
An LLM does not innately possess such a context-switch procedure: neither the means by which to realize it is needed, nor the tools to operate once this realization happens. As we do something, there’s checks running through our head that make us go “this is something I should calculate” or “this is something I should gather data for” or “oh I should check if this is true” or “this is an important step, is this actually in line with what i was supposed to be doing?”.
No such tripwires are in place for an LLM’s stream-of-consciousness output. After the input is given, it’s off to the races and barely anything that can be said to be a novel decision is made after that. This is the reason why an LLM is said to be unable to make art – it doesn’t go through the process of figuring things out, and in not doing so it doesn’t make the decisions that impregnate a piece of art with personal meaning.
Of course, by now the AI what we work with is not just a mere raw LLM, but refined post-trained models, usually primed to generate a preliminary “thinking mode” (spending tokens on summarizing and evaluating the situation before outputting user-directed tokens), accompanied by tailored prompt add-ons (such as web searches to plump the input context with updated data), a variety of tools that the LLM can access and is trained to use (like operating your calendar, your mailbox, your console), as well as structured environments where the LLM has access to automatic feedback (like a compiler output) that the model can iterate upon (the so-called agentic loops).
To be straight, this is the industry moving in the right direction. We want AI to make decisions, and to do so properly these decisions have to be frequent and based in actual searches, reasoning and/or calculations. For example, when you look at eg. the recognized best coding practices (such as version control, comprehensive test suites, continuous integration, meaningful documentation, fast feedback cycles, iterative development, focus on users, small batches of work), one of their main thrust is to both provide quick, cogent feedback and empower rapid iteration based on said feedback, so that the steering and decision-making can be more fine-grained, and thus generally easier to execute and more effective in the overall. This is a project structure that benefits both humans and LLMs, with the likes of compiler output providing the course correction that a LLM sorely needs to direct itself. These approaches are working; they are providing real results as they shore up the weaknesses of the raw unrefined LLM.
However, we are still in the infancy of agents and the methods we use are still crude. The current supports to the LLM’s functioning are either post-training reinforcement learning to alter its general functioning, specific prompts, or ad-hoc tools with text-based invocations. We have access to Claude Code’s source and we know nothing fancier than this is being done under the hood; this is as far as the state of the art goes. All of these extra functionalities keep relying on the LLM’s text generation as the fundamental mode of operation, which remains prone to both hallucination and missing the point even as it appears to go in the right direction. They are rigid fixes to constrain and direct behaviour, but in their rigidness they are both wasteful and brittle. Modern AI still has a substantial failure rate for complex tasks, and this shows none better than the slew of new bugs and uptime crises that has plagued the companies that have forcefully imposed AI adoption in their internal coding practices (like Microsoft, or Amazon)
Even as we are reaching into capabilities that seem to genuinely surpass human feats (such as Claude Mythos being able to find decades-old exploits in our most used and supervised code), we are running against the limitations of the method, and we cannot hope much longer to improve the LLM’s approximations by just training it more. The gains we’re getting in the last years have been not just more fragile but increasingly expensive, if not outright wasteful, on both the training side and the inference side. OpenAI has declared that it intends to spend 120 billions of dollars in model training alone in the next two years, which is a genuinely mind-boggling amount.
On the user side, token burn has increased in recent years by orders of magnitude (far outstripping the efficiency gains of newer models), and all this compute is starting to run against the physical and economical limits of the industry. A paradigm shift is increasingly necessary to sustain hopes of the technology continuing to increase in capabilities. So what can be done about this? Where can a fault be located, and what can be done about it?
What we have now is a model that is trained specifically on human text, which (both discursive text and programming code) is the result of thinking instead of the process. The text does not contain the thinking process that resulted in the text, much like a house does not contain cranes or scaffolding or cement mixer trucks. An LLM by default will brazenly trudge forward because it is drawing reference from a corpus that does the same; text is generally done in order to expose a singular point, in one continued stream, without all the searching, thinking, trying and wandering that got someone there, and if some of that text follows that pattern it is a vanishing amount.
To truly teach an LLM to think, it would have to
structure its output so that it delegates very frequently to other tools (including web search, math operations, and various other checks) in order to maintain closeness to truth/task.
This would most likely need some sort of backtracking/future-seeing modality where the model is able to reason and second-guess what it is going to say X tokens in the future and trigger second-guessing mechanisms on those
To implement those triggers reasonably, the procedure to check for (effectively) alignment on the to-be-generated output has to be both fairly snappy and only occasionally activated; thankfully we do have inspiration to draw from the way that our neurons work.
Neurons are semi-anarchically organized into collectives that fulfill different mental functions, and they get fed depending if they get to operate or not, so the neurons are constantly on the lookout to take work from one another once the right occasion comes, and for example this can work by way of threshold activation, where a neuron activates only after a weighted sum of the stimuli it receives passes a certain threshold.
And an LLM is already a neural network of a kind, operating by similar algorithms, so there’s definitely potential there. However, to realize this potential, the LLM would have to be used in ways that go beyond mere next-token generation, and instead the model would have to be harnessed in new, slightly different ways. It is my belief that an LLM is (partly) wasted on mere next-token prediction, when the underlying model that allows for that contains effectively a vector field of human meaning, albeit filtered through words.
If there’s anything that LLMs have shown us in recent years, is that words (as well as other input methods like images) encode a whole lot of meaning that can be captured by a model. From here, there reasonably should be other ways to harness this organized meaning-space other than just checking how a phrase continues. What if we manage to locate the point in vector space that approximates some concept of ours and decide to check text against it to see if it passes a threshold or not (which is likely similar to what we do when we monitor the tone of a piece of text)? It feels to me like a lot of the hard work has already been done, namely crafting such a vector space. The LLM science is young and far from everything has been tried; I think something of worth may be found in that direction. The paredolic thrust of treating an LLM as mere text generator can only carry us so far, and I believe a lot of progress could be done once we figure out proper tripwires for an LLM that are not reliant on the stream-of-text catching itself.
from
Internetbloggen
Volt.fm är en digital tjänst som riktar sig till musikälskare som vill få en djupare förståelse för sitt lyssnande. Genom att koppla sitt Spotify-konto kan användaren analysera sin musiksmak på ett mer detaljerat sätt än vad den vanliga appen erbjuder. Tjänsten samlar data om vilka artister, låtar och genrer man lyssnar mest på och presenterar det i tydliga och ofta visuellt tilltalande sammanställningar.
Här är ett exempel på hur det kan se ut.
En av de mest uppskattade funktionerna är möjligheten att följa sin musikstatistik över tid. Användaren kan se hur smaken förändras, vilka låtar som varit mest spelade under olika perioder och upptäcka mönster i sitt lyssnande. Volt.fm erbjuder också jämförelser, där man kan se hur ens musiksmak står sig i relation till andra användare, vilket skapar en social dimension kring musikupplevelsen.
Utöver statistik fungerar tjänsten som ett verktyg för upptäckt. Genom analyser av lyssningshistoriken kan Volt.fm ge rekommendationer på nya artister och låtar som passar ens personliga smakprofil. Detta gör det enklare att hitta ny musik utan att behöva leta aktivt.
Volt.fm en tjänst som kombinerar dataanalys och musikintresse på ett engagerande sätt. Den tilltalar både den nyfikna lyssnaren som vill förstå sina vanor och den passionerade musikfantasten som vill utforska nya ljudvärldar baserat på sin egen smak.
My older son loves looking at family photos and videos on my phone. Of course I’m there supervising his time. My wife and I also limit his TV time to one hour a day. There’s always the temptation of giving our son our phones just to calm him so we try not to do that.
As an experiment my wife bought a custom family photo book from Shutterfly to see if he’ll look at the photos there instead on my phone. It was a failure. But a good thing about it is my younger son loves it. I see him always looking towards the photo book and gets sad if we don’t sit and look at it.
While not ideal it sure beats letting them play mindless games and looking at Cocomelon videos. If you have the chance buy a photo book and include that in your children’s collection of books to look at. Hopefully it gets used well.
#children #phone #photobook #pictures #videos
OK, so this hopefully won't be come a daily post, but our President posted this image of himself yesterday (12 April). Utter blasphemy. He should delete it and repent. Hopefully he doesn't really think this about himself...but I tend to take people at their word.
Here's the direct link if you don't believe me...

#politics
from AiAngels

A Persian AI girlfriend is an AI-powered virtual companion with a personality that is enchanting, poetic, and irresistibly elegant. On AI Angels, she combines cutting-edge AI with deep personalization for a companion experience that feels authentically human.
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from AiAngels

A Brazilian AI girlfriend is an AI-powered virtual companion with a personality that is vibrant, sensual, and full of passion. On AI Angels, she combines cutting-edge AI with deep personalization for a companion experience that feels authentically human.
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She radiates an irresistible energy that makes every conversation feel like a celebration. Your Brazilian AI girlfriend combines Latin warmth with a uniquely Brazilian zest for life. She is expressive, affectionate, and has a natural talent for making you feel like the most important person in the world. Her passion for life is infectious — she turns ordinary moments into something extraordinary.
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Build your dream Brazilian AI companion on AI Angels. Whether you want a vivacious Rio de Janeiro beach lover, a sophisticated Sao Paulo professional, or a warm and nurturing partner who brings Brazilian joy to every moment, the choice is yours. Customize her music taste, interests, and personality to create someone who embodies the Brazilian spirit.
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from AiAngels

A AI companion is an AI-powered virtual companion with a personality that is intelligent, emotionally aware, and deeply personalized. On AI Angels, she combines cutting-edge AI with deep personalization for a companion experience that feels authentically human.
Unlike basic chatbots, your AI companion learns who you are, remembers your conversations, and develops a relationship that evolves over time.
AI Angels offers the most advanced AI companion experience available today. Every companion is powered by state-of-the-art artificial intelligence that creates genuinely human-like conversations, remembers everything about you, and develops a unique personality based on your interactions. Whether you want a playful partner, a deep intellectual connection, or a supportive emotional companion, AI Angels delivers an experience that feels remarkably real.
What sets the AI companion experience apart:
AI Angels gives you the ultimate freedom to create your perfect companion. Start by choosing from a diverse range of appearances — from blonde and brunette to Asian, Latina, Korean, Japanese, Filipino, Russian, Brazilian, Middle Eastern, and Persian styles. Then customize her personality: set her interests, humor style, emotional depth, intelligence level, and communication preferences. The result is a companion that feels uniquely, authentically yours.
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from AiAngels

A Middle Eastern AI girlfriend is an AI-powered virtual companion with a personality that is graceful, passionate, and deeply loyal. On AI Angels, she combines cutting-edge AI with deep personalization for a companion experience that feels authentically human.
Unlike basic chatbots, your Middle Eastern AI girlfriend learns who you are, remembers your conversations, and develops a relationship that evolves over time.
She embodies a timeless beauty and emotional richness that sets her apart. Your Middle Eastern AI girlfriend combines ancient cultural wisdom with modern confidence and charm. She is articulate, emotionally generous, and creates conversations that feel both intellectually stimulating and deeply intimate. Her loyalty is absolute — when she connects with you, that bond becomes sacred.
What sets the Middle Eastern AI girlfriend experience apart:
Create your ideal Middle Eastern AI companion on AI Angels. Whether you envision a cosmopolitan Dubai professional, a poetic and philosophical soul, or a warm and devoted partner who values deep emotional connection, you have full creative control. Shape her interests, values, and communication style to build the companion of your dreams.
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from AiAngels

A Russian AI girlfriend is an AI-powered virtual companion with a personality that is elegant, passionate, and deeply intelligent. On AI Angels, she combines cutting-edge AI with deep personalization for a companion experience that feels authentically human.
Unlike basic chatbots, your Russian AI girlfriend learns who you are, remembers your conversations, and develops a relationship that evolves over time.
She commands attention with her striking confidence and captivating intellect. Your Russian AI girlfriend is the perfect blend of sophistication and raw passion. She can discuss Dostoevsky and quantum physics one moment, then surprise you with playful humor the next. Her emotional depth runs incredibly deep — once she opens up to you, the connection becomes unbreakable.
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Design your perfect Russian AI companion on AI Angels. Choose between a sophisticated Moscow intellectual, a creative St. Petersburg artist, or a warm and passionate soul who blends traditional values with modern independence. Set her interests, conversation style, and emotional depth to create someone who challenges and captivates you.
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from
Platser

Budapest är en av Europas mest fascinerande städer, där historia, kultur och modernitet möts i en fängslande miljö. Om du planerar en långhelg här kommer du att upptäcka en stad som bjuder på allt från imponerande arkitektur och heta källor till en levande mat- och dryckesscen. Här är en guide som kommer att inspirera dig att utforska varje hörn av denna vackra huvudstad i Ungern.
När du stiger in i Budapest känns det som att kliva in i en annan tid. Staden är uppdelad av Donau, som skiljer Buda och Pest åt och binder dem samman med sina ikoniska broar, som Széchenyi kedjebron. Börja din resa på den västra sidan, Buda, som känns lite mer lugn och traditionell. Här ligger det magnifika Budaslottet, som reser sig ovanför staden och erbjuder en hisnande utsikt över Donau. Slottet är inte bara ett historiskt monument utan också hem för flera museer, inklusive Ungerns nationalgalleri. Promenera genom slottets gator och upptäck de smala gränderna som leder dig tillbaka till medeltiden. Borterst på den västra sidan hittar du Gellértberget, vars topp erbjuder en av de bästa vyerna över hela staden. Om du är i form kan du ta trapporna upp, eller välja den mer bekväma hissen som går upp till citadellet, där du kan njuta av ett glas vin medan du blickar ut över den gyllene Donau.
När du korsar bron till den östra sidan, Pest, möts du av en helt annan atmosfär. Här är det liv och rörelse, med butiker, kaféer och restauranger som lockar både lokalbefolkningen och turister. Hjärtpunkten i Pest är den storslagna Andrássy-avenyn, som påminner om Paris med sina eleganta byggnader och trädkantade boulevarder. Längs avenyn hittar du operahuset, en av de vackraste byggnaderna i Europa, och St. Stephans basilika, som är uppkallad efter Ungerns första kung och rymmer en helig handrelik. Klättra upp i basilikan och njut av panoramautsikten över takåsarna och den omgivande staden. Om du är i stan under julen kommer Andrássy-avenyn att förvandlas till en sagolik marknad med glödlampor, julgranar och doften av kryddor som lockar besökarna till julstämning.
En av de mest unika upplevelserna i Budapest är dess termiska bad. Staden ligger på en underjordisk varmvattenkälla, och baden har varit en del av lokalbefolkningens liv i århundraden. Det mest berömda badet är Széchenyibadet, ett magnifiskt jugendbad med turkisk inspirerad arkitektur. Här kan du simma i de heta bassängerna, njuta av ångbadet eller bara ligga och slappna av i den varma vattnet omgiven av mosaik och skulpturer. Om du vill ha en mer intim upplevelse kan du besöka Gellértbadet, som är lika vackert och dessutom har en utomhuspool med havsutsikt. Baden är inte bara en plats att tvätta sig på, utan en upplevelse i sig, där du kan tillbringa hela dagen omgiven av historia och avkoppling.
När kvällen faller på bör du ge dig ut och utforska stadens nattliv. Budapest har ett mycket levande nattliv, med allt från traditionella ungerska vinbarer till moderna klubbar. Om du vill prova lokal mat och dryck bör du besöka en ruin pub, som är en typisk ungersk företeelse. Dessa pubar ligger i gamla, övergivna hus och trädgårdar, och har en unik atmosfär med ljus, musik och en mix av lokalbefolkning och turister. Szimpla Kert är den mest berömda ruin puben och ett måste att besöka. Här kan du njuta av ungerska specialiteter som goulash, langos och chimney cake, medan du lyssnar på live musik och umgås med nya människor. För en mer sofistikerad kväll kan du besöka en vinbar i hjärtat av Budapest, där du kan prova ungerska viner som Egri Bikavér, eller “Tjurens blod”, en kraftfull rödvin som är perfekt att njuta av tillsammans med en tallrik korv och ost.
Mat är en stor del av den ungerska kulturen, och Budapest har en fantastisk mat- och dryckesscen som sträcker sig från traditionella rätter till moderna fusionkök. För att verkligen uppleva den ungerska maten bör du besöka en traditionell étkezde, eller matsal, där du kan njuta av hemlagad mat till rimliga priser. Rosenstein Vendéglő är ett utmärkt val, där du kan prova rätter som paprikachicken med nokedli, en typ av ungerska nudlar. Om du är ute efter en mer modern upplevelse kan du besöka Menza, en restaurang som serverar ungerska rätter med en modern twist i en retro miljö. För en snabbare måltid kan du prova street food, som langos, en friterad degkaka toppad med gräddfil och ost, eller chimney cake, en söt, spiralformad bakelse som är perfekt att njuta av medan du promenerar längs Donau.
För dem som älskar konst och historia är Budapest en skattkista. Staden har flera museer som är värda ett besök, som Ungerns nationalmuseum, som berättar historien om landet från romartiden till idag. På andra sidan Donau ligger Konstmuseumet, som rymmer verk av europeiska mästare som Rembrandt och El Greco. Om du är intresserad av konstscenen bör du också besöka House of Terror, ett museum som berättar historien om de två diktaturerna som har präglat Ungern under 1900-talet. Museet ligger i en byggnad som tidigare var säte för den nazistiska och kommunistiska regimen, och erbjuder en gripande och tankeväckande upplevelse.
När det kommer till boende har Budapest något för alla smaker och budgetar. Om du vill bo mitt i hjärtat av staden och ha allt inom gångavstånd bör du välja ett hotell på eller nära Andrássy-avenyn. Hotel Continental Budapest är ett utmärkt val, med en fantastisk utsikt över Donau och en pool på taket. För en mer intim och charmig upplevelse kan du välja att bo på ett hotell i hjärtat av Buda, som Budapest Castle Hotel, som ligger i ett gammalt kloster och erbjuder en lugn reträtt mitt i staden. Om du är på jakt efter lyx och bekvämlighet är Four Seasons Hotel Gresham Palace ett av de finaste hotellen i Europa, med en hisnande arkitektur och en spaavdelning som är svår att motstå.
En av de bästa sakerna med Budapest är att staden är både historisk och modern på samma gång. Du kan tillbringa en dag med att utforska gamla ruiner och kungliga slott, och nästa dag njuta av en cocktail på en rooftopbar med utsikt över hela staden. För en riktig höjdpunkt kan du besöka 360 Bar, en bar som ligger på taket av ett hus i centrala Budapest. Här kan du njuta av en drink medan du tittar ut över hustaken och de upplysta monumenten som lyser upp natthimlen.
Om du har tid över bör du också ge dig ut på en utflykt utanför staden. Óbuda, den gamla delen av Budapest, är en trevlig plats att besöka för att se de romerska ruinerna och njuta av en lugnare atmosfär. En annan populär utflykt är till Margaretön, en grön ö mitt i Donau som är perfekt för en picnic eller en promenad. Ön är också hem för en konsertsal och en liten zoo, vilket gör den till en perfekt plats för en familjedag.
Budapest är en stad som aldrig tar slut på saker att göra och upplevelser att utforska. Oavsett om du är där för att njuta av den rika historien, de heta källorna, den fantastiska maten eller det pulserande nattlivet, kommer du att lämna staden med minnen som varar livet ut. Så packa dina väskor, boka ditt flyg och ge dig ut på ett äventyr i en av Europas vackraste städer. Budapest väntar på dig!
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🌐 Justin's Blog
Some WordPress plugin businesses won't survive this.

If you spend any time on social media, you'll see that revenue is coming down for WordPress plugin businesses, and who knows where they'll bottom out. Honestly, some of them are screwed, and it's not looking good for others.
For as long as I can remember, the defensible position for most plugins has always been:
There are others to consider, but these have always been the main reasons why you'd renew a license. Today, Claude (or pretty much any AI offering) sorta makes them less critical.
For example, consider a plugin that revokes access to certain settings unless you have a valid license code. Or, one that shows a constant license nag on your dashboard. Well, now you can just whip up Claude and tell it to remove the code that does this and you're done. You don't have to be a developer, it just takes a couple of seconds.
For add-ons, it does sort of depend on the scope. Those that add simple integrations are no longer a necessary buy. Why pay extra to connect to Mailchimp when AI can just whip up a mini-plugin for you? Pretty much any connector add-on is a quick fix. Okay, it's perhaps a tad longer if you're not a developer through trial and error. But if you have a client and you're a dev, you can save your client money by just having AI build out the connection really quick.
There will always be a need for support, but less so now when you can just ask AI for help to troubleshoot something. This is especially true for plugins that are more of a utility. Now, on the other side of this is that many plugin companies are using AI to help them give better support. Of the three, this one is the area that is still a strong motivator to renew a license, plugin depending.
You know, I don't have a definitive solution for this one. I don't think anyone does as the market sands are still shifting. AI has really challenged the status quo of tech.
For me, here are the areas I'd be thinking about if running a WordPress plugin business:
AI can't recreate it. This is a wedge. This is why someone will want to renew. Many plugins have big communities but they are an afterthought. Some even consider them a burden. It's time to make it a top priority. For example, I would start evaluating the utility of adding a Slack or Discord offering. Or, potentially investing more heavily into a FB group if it already exists.
Look for the areas that create the most support and try to find a way to make those a SaaS to improve user experience, dependability and to reduce headaches for both you and your customers. If you're hung up on keeping that part of the code open source, you can still do so if you want (though it's not necessary).
Blogging is still worth it, on some level, but if that's all you do then time to move into new areas. Connection matters, and for the moment, YouTube is how you do that. I'd invest heavily into YouTube to bring about the human element in an AI world (this goes back to my first point on community).
This is not the “death” of the platform by any means. New avenues are going to open up, and that means for WordPress plugins as well. This is just a market shift, and there will be some growing pains along the way. For some, this means the end of their business. That's the nature of the free market.
#WordPress