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from
Un blog fusible
JOURNAL 21 mars 2026
Ce soir on voit les étoiles. On ne peut pas faire n'importe quoi, elles nous regardent… La main dans la main, il n'y a pas de mal ?
On va rentrer à l'hôtel un bon bain bien chaud et dodo demain matin on prend les vélos, on va aller voir un sanctuaire pas trop loin, il y a paraît-il de curieuses statues de pierre. Le temps va peut-être se gâter, pourra-t'on rentrer lundi en vélo comme prévu ?
from
Turbulences
Seul, un atome, Ne sait pas qu’il est un atome. Il ne sait pas qu’il ne peut rien, Sans ses liens.
Il n’a pas idée, l’atome, Des pouvoirs extraordinaires, De ces liaisons moléculaires, Qui le relient à d’autres atomes.
Pourtant, sans en avoir l’air, Ces particules élémentaires, En façonnant toute matière, Inventent des mondes, des univers.
Être un atome, c’est être relié. Et c’est unis dans leurs diversités, Se découvrant de nouvelles identités, Qu’ils ouvrent des horizons à la liberté.
À toi qui serait tentée, par moment, De céder au découragement, N’en doute plus un seul instant : Tu es un atome du changement.
Si tu penses que tu ne peut rien, C’est que tu ne cherches pas au bon endroit. Ta plus grande force n’est pas en toi, Mais en ces liens qui te relient aux tiens.

ᛒᚱᛁᛁᚦᚢᛋ
Siempre se ha dicho que llevamos en nuestro interior los misterios del universo. El común de las personas es incapaz de verlos, porque se aferran al cuerpo y allí sólo encuentran masa, huesos, tejidos, sangre, líquidos. No pueden ver la mente. Y cuando un sabio apunta a ella, los demás no entienden, o tiemblan de pánico.
En una sangrienta batalla en tiempos de la expansión vikinga, la implacable reina Breiðøx se vio obligada a mirar la mente para guiar a sus hombres en medio de los gritos, la confusión, la muerte y la niebla.
Visualizó en el campo de su mente las sagradas runas protectoras y las hizo girar alrededor de sus hombres, uno a uno, cara a cara, todo esto a la velocidad del relámpago, mientras destrozaba a hachazos la vanguardia del enemigo.
Ensangrentada hasta los pies, avanzando sobre los cadáveres que yacían en el suelo encharcado, vio volar en su mente a dos cuervos con noticias de la posición y las intenciones del enemigo, decapitó a un guerrero y levantando su cabeza le dió la orden de morder a su rey, con tal fuerza que lo escuchó gemir de espanto, y de un salto lo derribó con un terrible hachazo.
Poniendo un pie sobre el cuerpo abatido, vio en su mente la inconfundible luz de la victoria. Gritó a rabiar, y sus hombres, como locos, gritaron con ella.
Así fue dicho en una saga que las videntes cantan a gritos.
from
Notes I Won’t Reread
Ladies and gentlemen, and whoever else is still paying attention.
It’s funny how quickly everything becomes meaningless to people. And I was probably insufferable.
Anyway, that’s done.
Let’s talk about something more interesting: how everything gets reduced to a number when you stare at it long enough. Because feelings are messy. Numbers? Numbers are fun. They just exist.
So yeah, folks, with all that being said, this is the part where I start rating things. Don’t read too much into it. Or do. I don’t care.
“Hennessy whisky” / 17 It stands above the rest. Not because it’s perfect even though it is, but because it’s impossible to ignore.
The way a cigarette burns down / 14 Slow, I could say. Predictable. It just disappears while you’re not paying attention.
Video games / 11 Controlled chaos. You think you’re in charge, but you’re really just following rules someone else made.
Humans / 1 Inconsistent. Loud, very loud. Hard to measure. Always changing the rules mid-observation.
Empty streets after midnight / 15 Quiet enough to make you think for a while. Quiet enough to notice things you shouldn’t.
The moment right before something changes / 16 Everything is still possible. Nothing has failed yet.
That “almost asleep but not quite” feeling / 13 Soft. Suspended. Like drifting without falling.
The sound of rain on a window / 12 Constant. Soothing. It pretends to calm you while keeping you awake.
A locked door / 14 It doesn’t say anything. That’s what makes it interesting.
People laughing too loudly / 3 Overcompensation. Noise to cover something else.
The moment before you decide something / 14 Everything still exists. After that, something has to disappear.
Your own thoughts repeating / 11 Familiar. But familiarity doesn’t mean it’s correct.
Not knowing what comes next / 15 That’s when things feel real. Before they get explained away.
Being interrupted / 3 It breaks everything down. Not just of speech, of thought as well.
Too much attention / 7 It feels like pressure. Like being observed instead of seen.
Being misunderstood / 2 Not because it hurts. Because it wastes time correcting something that won’t change.
Typing something and deleting it / 9 Not failure. Just hesitation in physical form.
Seeing your name somewhere unexpected / 14 It pulls your attention immediately. Like it was placed there on purpose.
Late night notifications / 11 They interrupt the silence at the worst time. But that’s when they used to matter most.
3 AM itself / 15 It strips things down. No noise. No excuses. Just whatever is left.
Your thoughts echoing / 13 Repeated. Slightly different each time.
The silence before falling asleep / 16 The closest thing to nothing. And the hardest thing to stay in.
The urge to check your phone / 12 It feels urgent. It’s not. You’re just avoiding the fact that nothing new is there.
The smell of coffee in a quiet room / 11 Strong enough to notice. Not strong enough to fix anything.
“key” / 8 Only matters if something is locked.
“noise” / 8 Always there. Never the same.
Knowing what you should do but not doing it / 5 That’s where most people live.
Nothing making sense but you keep going / 15 Because stopping means thinking. And that’s worse.
This isn’t a scale of 10. It never was, Ten is too limited.
i better be off social media for a while
End of it. Not my problem anymore.
from nieuws van children for status
Tromgeroffel, toeters en bellen … het is verzamelen geblazen, want, Godot is op komst. Dinsdag 24/03/2026 is het zover, de parlementaire onderzoekscommissie belast met het onderzoek naar mogelijke disfuncties in het strafrechtelijk onderzoek 'Operatie Kelk' {POC Kelk} bespreekt en stemt over haar verslag en aanbevelingen.
Uit de agenda blijkt dat ze zichzelf niet direct plaats gunnen om te eten ? Nochtans zijn ze normaal altijd vlijtig met de “er wordt voor broodjes gezorgd”.
Belangrijker, zij geven zichzelf blijkbaar “maar” 1u30 de tijd voor het bespreken van het Verslag, de aanbevelingen en het stemmen daarover.
Voor de parlementaire onderzoekscommissie belast met het onderzoek naar de aanpak van seksueel misbruik, in de Kerk en daarbuiten, met inbegrip van de gerechtelijke behandeling, en de gevolgen op vandaag voor slachtoffers en samenleving {POC 2023} namen ze 4 uur tijd en organiseerden ze de bespreking en stemming in de plenaire.
De POC Kelk ging de “commissie van de waarheid” worden. Voor deze “waarheid” komt de POC Kelk dus niet in plenaire en voorziet maar 1u30. Gezien de korte tijd die wordt voorzien kan het rapport alvast niet lijvig zijn, en het is blijkbaar niet belangrijk genoeg om het in de plenaire te doen.
De agenda bevestigt niet direct dat er woensdag of donderdag over de POC Kelk in de kamer zal worden gestemd. Momenteel dus koffiedik kijken wanneer ze dat doen.
Tot nogtoe, welke “waarheid” voor deze “commissie van de waarheid”?
Is met andere woorden het serieu dat het parlement poogde te tonen bij de POC 2023 bij de POC Kelk ver te zoeken …
Zodra de stemming in de voltallige kamer zal zijn gebeurd publiceren wij, onder het universele recht op waarheid, de opname met het federaal parket dat het parlement niet wilde …
alle informatie op deze site, zoals maar niet beperkt tot documenten en/of audio-opnames en/of video-opnames en/of foto's, is gemaakt en/of verzameld en gepubliceerd in het belang van gerechtigheid, samenleving en het Universele Recht op Waarheid
children for status is een onafhankelijk collectief dat schuldig verzuim door de Staat ten aanzien van seksueel geweld op minderjarigen en kinderhandel oplossingsgericht documenteert en aanklaagt

| Character | Race | Class | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arnulf Hetzer | Human | Thief level 1 | A highly ambitious young man, aiming for great riches, awesome adventure, and not get broiled. |
| Ambros | Human | Cleric level 6 | Follower of Aniu, Lord of Time. |
| Ignaeus | Elf | Fighter level 4 / magic-user level 5 | A slightly weathered looking elf with dull blonde hair and chiseled features. Seeks wealth and knowledge. |
| Syd Grundy | Human | Ranger level 1 | Tall, middle aged and scruffy looking man of the wilderness. |
| Thorinda Bung | Human | Monk level 1 | She has blonde hair done up in a tight pony tail and wears light, loose suit. |
| Kenso San | Human | Fighter level 3 | An arrogant and self-assured sellsword wandering Wilderlands to prove he can best anyone. |
| Tam o' Shanter | Human | Cleric level 3 | A boisterous wine-lover of Losborst on a Great Crusade of the Grape. |
| Percy | Human | Fighter level 1 | A career soldier dishonorably discharged due to his charismatic ways. |
“Where shall we go to next?”
“There’s still stuff to explore under Castle Yukanthur, and Thorinda wants to go for a third knock-out in a row.”
And thus a party of eight adventurers set out once more for Castle Yukanthur, that old run just a watch northeast from Ironburg.
Environs were as before—overgrowth and moss—and adventurers had little patience for Syd's rubble inspection. Down and down the spiral staircase they went, with drunken Tam stumbling ahead. On and on, past the statue booming “WHO DARE ENTER THE CASTLE OF YUKANTHUR?!” and through the illusory wall.
Straight they went, and then left, and then into the chamber with four doors, and then through south west doors. They followed a long corridor until reaching a T-shaped junction splitting left and forward. To the left were doors, which the adventurers eventually forced open.
A ghastly sight!
A child dressed in chain shirt lying prostrate in the center of the large room. Besides it two pony-sized abominations lashing the child with their tentacles. Tubular bodies, a dozen of tentacles, disgusting slimy sheen.
Ignaeus cast Web and captured them all. While others fanned out, Arnulf approached the webbing and began stabbing one of the monsters. The abomination writhed and attempted to set itself free, but to no avail. It soon expired under the thief's cruelty. Encouraged, Ignaeus and Percy slayed the other one.
A locked chest, promptly smashed open—releasing a crunchy sound as it was struck—revealed a broken rat skeleton, six thousand copper pieces, and one thousand electrum pieces.
Adventurers carved a path through the web to reach the child. But it was no child! It was a male hobbit! He did not move and was unnaturally stiff.
“Must be paralysed.”
Party discussed at length what to do with him. Some were in favour of robbing him of his belongings and leaving him be. Others were in favour of at least leaving him in the corner of the room.
“Ugh... oooh... thank you for saving me. I am Bopo Oldhearth, and I am a warrior.”
He offered to join the party for a full share of treasure.
“A full share? For half a man?”
Hobbit left as the adventurers brutally ridiculed him.
Finding nothing else of interest, the party returned to the junction and explored further left, down another long corridor until they reached yet another t-shaped intersection. To the left was a winding corridor and to the right straight corridor terminating with bloated doors.
They chose the latter, bursting in like the great liberators they are. A volley of arrows hit them from darkness. Four penetrated Tam, contributing to his “drunken hedgehog” look. Thorinda the Lightbearer rushed in and illuminated the whole fifty by fifty chamber with her bullseye lantern.
Five pig faced orcs were crouching in the corner, shooting at adventurers.
Percy shot one dead. Others hacked the remaining four to death.
There was nothing of value nor interest in the room. Even the orcs hadn't had anything beyond their scimitars and short bows. Adventurers pushed onwards, through the doors opposite those they came through. This led them to another square room of equal size.
The walls were lined with smooth black stone that seemed to soften and dim the light. Four chest were arranged along the west wall. All four had broken padlocks and were entirely empty. Second from the south had a carving of stumpy, penile shape, under the lid.
Percy stood outside the whole time, worried that the whole chamber might be trapped. Once everyone else left the room through opposite doors he quickly ran up to rejoin them.
Another long, winding corridor.
“You know, long corridors like these usually have pit traps–”
Tam opined as he, Ignaeus, Ambros, and Percy fell through a pit trap at the bend of a corridor.
The quartet tumbled straight down, hitting a slide, then rolled and tumbled down the sharp slope. Roughed up, they emerged through a hole in the wall into yet another pit. For a brief moment they could see daylight way above them. Within a bat of an eye all four fell into ice-cold water. Current was strong and carried them on as they fought for air.
Unlike Ambros, Ignaeus, and Tam, Percy was lightly armoured. He remained composed in the face of adversity, and swam up, breaking the surface of water. This was an underground river and he was being carried toward cave wall! He pushed and swam, his muscles burning, until he reached the shore. He grabbed onto the jagged rocks and pulled himself up.
Two clerics and an elf were nowhere to be seen.
Percy looked around. Shy daylight shone through a hole in the ceiling, providing some illumination. He was in a large cave, bisected by an underground river. He could see there was some sort of exit on the other side of the cave. And there was a tunnel straight behind him, leading into darkness.
Veteran rummaged through his soaked belongings. A grappling hook and some rope. Exactly what he needed. Alas, even when he struck the opening in the ceiling his hook fell straight down. There was nothing he could anchor it to, at least not from where he stood.
His light sources survived, so he made good use of them to explore the dark tunnel behind him. Yet another cave, albeit slightly smaller. It connected to a much larger one, but access to it was cut of by the river. The current here was much stronger and Percy decided to backtrack instead.
He returned to the larger cave. Then he went to the far side. The river wasn't that wide, maybe some twenty feet or so, but the current was strong. He reasoned that he would have most time if he began swimming from the far side. That would mean least risk to get pulled under the rock.
Percy's plan worked as intended. He followed the ascending tunnel into a worked chamber, some twenty by twenty feet. There were single doors in the south east corner.
Percy listened at the door.
Then he tried to force them open.
He failed.
He tried again.
He failed again.
Then the door swung open.
⁂
Arnulf, Syd, Thorinda, and Kenso watched as their allies fell down the chute. They had no time to react nor to help them. Arnulf was the quickest, asking for some rope and light to descend after the unlucky four.
He clambered twenty feet down. Then he carefully slid down the slope. He poked his head through the opening. High above him was a circular opening, through which daylight shone. Down below him was darkness and sound of rushing water. He could also see a little bit of light—perhaps from torch or lantern. He tried shouting but no answer came back.
The thief returned and informed Kenso, Syd, and Thorinda.
“It must be the well!”
“Let's head there and drop down some rope!”
Indeed, the four rushed through the dungeon, ascended the stairs, and then through the ruined castle, through the woods, and towards the well.
“How much rope do we have?!”
⁂
Ambros sank like a sack or rocks. He tried to untie his plate mail. He found that very difficult while being rolled around in total darkness, his lungs burning with lack of oxygen. He tumbled along the river bed, scrapped and battered.
The situation was grim. The cleric didn't have much more to live. He wiggled his hips, he undulated his belly, he shook his shoulders—and the armour came off. With seconds to go, Ambros pushed himself off the floor, and exploded through the river.
He trashed around until he grabbed onto something solid. He clawed his way out. Then someone—or something—grabbed him by the heel and pulled him. The voice was ranting and quite audible through the noise of running water. But it was a friendly voice too. It was Tam. The clerics helped each other out.
⁂
Ignaeus fell almost face first. He dove into the chilly river, nearly hitting the bedrock in the process. He instinctively attempted to swim. It was difficult, but possible due to magical nature of his plate mail. He reached the surface just in time to take a healthy gulp of fresh air.
The river current was carrying him towards a cave wall at great speed. He outstretched his arms, grasping for something to hold to.
Success!
But not for long.
The current was to strong and it pulled him back in, sucking him through cold darkness. He tumbled and rolled, hitting stone and flesh, trying to swim.
He broke the water surface once more. He flailed around in total darkness, until he grabbed someone! He pulled himself up, and crawled upon something flat enough to rest on.
The voices were familiar—Ambros and Tam.
The soaked trio rested on a piece of dryish cave floor. Ignaeus cast Light on his person, illuminating the cave. It was some forty by fifty feet, bisected by the river. They were on a small piece of rock jutting out on the north side of the cave. Hewn corridor connected to the south side of the cave.
“Blargh! Water!” Tam roared as he took a tankard of ice cold, chilly, all natural, mountain water.
A rotted chest with three skeletons next to it were on the same piece of rock. One of the skeletons held a rusted shortsword. Chest contained five hundred gold pieces, a moldy red cloak, and a wand.
Tam took of his armour and hurled it across. Then he swam over, as did Ambros and Ignaeus. Following the corridor led them to a chamber some forty by thirty feet.
There was an open pit in the center, with rope hanging down. The rope was anchored by three iron pitons. Adventurers pulled up the rope and retrieved the pitons. Then they went through the south doors.
T-junction splitting left and right. They went left, then turned right, and then reached another junction. A horde of zombies grunted to their right. A pack of ravenous ghouls howled to their left. Ambros squeezed his gold gavel.

Newspaper by Lord Jubalon Flux.
Discuss at Dragonsfoot forum.
#Wilderlands #SessionReport
from eivindtraedal
Vi opplever ikke en “energikrise” akkurat nå. Vi opplever en fossil energikrise. Prisen for å produsere energi fra sol, vind, vannkraft eller atomkraft har ikke økt de siste ukene. Men det har prisen på olje og gass, og dermed rammes hele resten av energisystemet.
De landene som har satset på fornybar energi, energieffektive bygg, varmepumper, kollektivtrafikk, sykkel og elbiler tåler denne fossile energikrisa mye bedre enn de landene som har klamret seg til fortida og er helt avhengige av olje og gass både til oppvarming, matlaging og transport. En amerikaner som bor i en by uten fungerende kollektivtransport, sykkelveier eller engang fortau langs veiene er mye mer sårbar for eksploderende bensinpriser enn en innbygger i Oslo. Grønn omstilling er ikke bare bra for klima og natur, det er også viktig beredskap.
Det forresten er ikke tilfeldig at det er så mye konflikt i de områdene der det er mest petroleumsressurser. Olje og gass er lett å kontrollere, og bidrar til maktkonsentrasjon og konflikt. Samtidig er petroleumsindustri ekstremt sårbart for angrep. Raffinerier, rørledninger og supertankere kan blåses i lufta. Globale forsyningskjeder kan forstyrres på tusen måter. Dette problemet finnes ikke i en fossilfri framtid.
Akkurat denne konflikten kunne riktignok vært unngått. Den gale kong Trump har satt i gang en krig med Iran uten noen plan, og uten å tenke igjennom konsekvensene. Men de enorme konsekvensene gir oss bare nok et eksempel på hvorfor det haster å venne oss av med fossil energi raskest mulig. Det bør også vi i oljelandet Norge være i stand til å se.
from An Open Letter
I think That in the future I don’t want to date someone that has an E dating history. I don’t blame anyone for doing it, but Maybe it’s just a mixture of my trust issues, or a healthy apprehension to that whole subculture, but I think I very much want my future partner to be someone who is comfortable without the need for external validation so heavily, as I think shows up in edating communities. I think it’s OK if someone has a past, but as long as it is genuinely that – a past. I don’t want to worry about unresolved knock on effects from that, or someone who is just immediately masked the symptom without addressing the problem. I want my future relationships to be ones where I feel completely secure and don’t have reasonable doubt or worry. Almost immediately in my relationship with E she had made a friend that she gamed with, and they would call and message separately. One day he asked her about dating and she said she would stop talking to him, and then when we had an argument later and we took a little bit of space she broke down and talk to him and entertained him. That immediately almost ruined the relationship, and I think in the future I should absolutely run if those signs show up. Thankfully she was faithful, but I think I don’t ever want to be in that situation again where I’m having nightmares and worried about her talking with ex partners, because she’s still continuing to hide them through the relationship. I don’t want to worry about how candidly she talks about these things from her past in a sense where it doesn’t feel like she actually learned and moved on from them, but rather just told herself that she’s a different person without doing the relevant work. I don’t want to tie my life to someone who is still figuring those things out.
from Wayfarer's Quill
There are moments on the road when the horizon stretches farther than usual—when you can almost glimpse the person you might become, standing somewhere up ahead, waiting patiently for you to arrive.
It’s in those moments that our choices take on a different weight.
When we decide only for the next mile, our steps tend to wander. But when we decide in the long light—when we let the future version of ourselves sit beside us at the fire and speak—we choose with a steadier hand. The farther ahead we look, the clearer the present becomes.
If you dream of a life with more freedom in ten or fifteen years, then today’s choices must be made with that distant freedom in mind. Not out of pressure, but out of companionship with the person you are slowly becoming. Let your future self be a quiet advisor, a compass you consult before taking the next turn.
And as you walk, resist the temptation to measure your pace against other travelers. Their path is not yours. Instead, look back at the footprints you left thirty days ago. Notice where the trail has straightened, where the terrain has softened under your steps. Celebrate the small distances you’ve crossed. Mark them like cairns.
Then turn forward again, lighter, and continue.
The road is long, but you are moving.
#DecisionMaking
from
Notes I Won’t Reread
And here I am, writing my thoughts, my hopes in a jar full of salt because it won’t mean a thing, it’s just how salty my tears have been ,i stared at the moon for so long today, smoking my cigarette as I just wonder. where anyone could be at fault in huge mistakes, deep into mistakes, and as my sadness comes out of my lungs with the heavy smoke, I was one of them, and oh that heavy pain where you feel it everywhere with an aching soul and aching heart im such a fool. Oh, where has my mind been? perhaps shopping for a new beating heart, not a cursed one, where it wouldn’t shut my mind as it says, “oh shut up, you silly mind let the heart talk speak oh ruin my life as you listen to other noises, oh come and sell my soul as I ache in this world oh dont think of consequences. “ oh consequences. My heart is such a fool that it would go little by little, heartbreak by heartbreak. till it gets me to do something horrific, oh that panicked soul, oh that scared soul, oh what have I done to be mistaken, such awful feelings where all your life your safety depends on an edge that could just. fall, but here’s the question, do all edges fall? could stay for years, but oh to be a human, we’re full of mistakes, whether it comes out of an overwhelming body, a broken soul that you know about, but I guess all humans go with their feelings.
Whether a mistake could be life destroying or maybe just a way was supposed to be im not the one to judge or pick what was supposed to be or happen, but hey dont you have more time now? to do your basic daily to-do lists or actually whatever you could do im not the one to wonder but the one to write. what i would say lastly is
Don't mistake my presence for a plot. I haven't told a single lie. I’m just the rot in the floorboards. I don’t choose to make things fall apart; I’m just the reason they do. im a curse not for pettiness or guilt but you knew it.
Sincerely, a curse.
“She looks as if she's blowing a kiss at me.” ”And suddenly the sky is a scissor.” “Sitting on the floor with a tambourine.” ”Crushing up a bundle of love.” Artic Monkeys
I met someone who runs workshops on Guided Journalling. She shared a prompt with me: “What would be the sweetest and kindest thing that someone can say to you?”
Uh... I have to admit I have to think a bit, for that one.
I know! Why don't I look up what others have already said about me?
I feel shy though.
Here's something from J, a poet:
Thank you for your gentle, kindly presence and the warmth you bring to every space you enter.
Thank you, J.
And, from O, a restauranteur:
You play the piano so beautifully.
Aw, you're gonna make me blush. Thank you, O.
Okay, I think that's enough.



#lunaticus
It was the best of times.
It was the worst of times.
Not Dickens. Not history.
A hallway.
A long, sterile corridor that smells like antiseptic and judgment.
Fluorescent lights humming like a death sentence whispered politely.
And there it is—
St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital
I hate it.
God help me… I hate it.
Because at the end of that hallway is a chair where they poison my son.
And I love it.
Because at the end of that hallway is a chair where they keep my son alive.
That’s the contradiction.
That’s the fracture.
That’s the place where the human brain short-circuits trying to reconcile heaven and hell shaking hands.
Poison that heals.
Pain that preserves.
Death that delays death.
People send me remedies.
Cinnamon. Vinegar. Diets wrapped in optimism.
And I don’t snap back. I don’t lash out.
Because they mean well.
But they don’t understand the math.
We’ve prayed for thousands.
Thousands.
And I’ve seen miracles—real ones.
Stage four cancer—gone.
Blind eyes—opened.
But miracles?
They’re lightning.
Not climate.
Most people don’t get struck.
Most people walk it out.
Same with sanctification.
Some drop the bottle and never look back.
Some burn the cigarettes and never crave again.
But most?
Most drag their flesh across broken glass one decision at a time.
Bleeding forward. Crawling toward holiness.
And those people?
Those are the ones forged in fire.
My son… Vinnie.
Ewing sarcoma.
Remission.
Relapse.
Remission.
Relapse.
And then the words that don’t echo—
feels like the weight of those words
they bury you.
“We’re not saving his life. We’re prolonging it.”
And yet…
Despite their words…
He lives.
He fights.
He sits in that chair while poison drips into his veins like controlled death…
and he thanks God for it.
“I thank God for the cancer, Dad… it led me to Jesus.”
What do you even do with that?
What category does that go in?
Because I want to rebuke the cancer—
and he’s thanking God for how it led to Life.
So I walk that hallway.
Every time.
And I hate it…
because I know how it makes him feel..
And I love it…
because selfish men like me aren’t ready to let go.
And then comes the dagger wrapped in paperwork:
DNR.
Do. Not. Resuscitate.
Three words that rip a father in half.
He looks at me—calm, clear, resolved.
And I say yes because I love him.
“If you love them, let them go.”
And I say yes because God loves him more.
Because God gave him free will—
and I will not become the man who chains him to a body he no longer lives in.
I hate it.
I love it.
I hate it because it asks me to release him.
I love it because it promises me where he’s going.
Because on the other side of that final breath…
he won’t be in a hospital.
He’ll be in the presence of Jesus Christ.
He’ll see Grandma Carolyn.
He’ll run without pain.
He’ll breathe without poison.
And me?
I’ll stand there—
torn between two worlds—
grieving what I lost
and rejoicing in what he found.
This life is contrast.
Not balance. Not clarity.
Contrast.
Light slamming into darkness.
Joy bleeding through sorrow.
Love screaming inside loss.
But hear me—
and let it split your mind open:
The people who walk it out…
who don’t get the instant miracle…
who endure the hallway…
the chair…
the diagnosis…
the waiting…
the IV distilling chemo…
Those people come out different.
Not softer.
Stronger.
Weathered. Scarred. Unbreakable.
Because what didn’t kill them…
didn’t just strengthen them.
It revealed to the world who God knew they were all along.
And at the end of all this?
We’re going home.
Every one of us.
Across that final river…
through those gates…
No more chemo.
No more corridors.
No more decisions that rip our souls apart.
Just joy.
Just peace.
Just family—whole again.
And I don’t just want to make it.
I want ALL of us there.
ALL my sons.
ALL my daughters—yes, daughters—the ones who married into my blood and became my heart.
Every piece.
Every soul.
Because if one is missing…
then won’t even heaven echo with loss?
So I walk the hallway.
Again.
And again.
And again.
Hating it.
Loving it.
Dying in it.
Believing through it.
Because somewhere between poison and prayer…
between suffering and salvation…
between goodbye and forever…
God is still writing a story
that only makes sense
on the other side.
from Douglas Vandergraph
There are some chapters in the Bible that people do not approach softly. They come to them tense. They come to them expecting trouble. They come to them with old arguments already playing in their mind before they have even read the first sentence. First Timothy 2 is one of those chapters. A lot of people hear that chapter mentioned and think of debate before they think of prayer. They think of controversy before they think of Christ. They think of tension before they think of peace. That is one of the saddest things that can happen to Scripture. A passage that was meant to guide the soul gets dragged into human pride. A chapter that was meant to shape the heart gets turned into a battleground. But if you slow down and really sit with First Timothy 2, something deeper begins to rise from it. This chapter is not cold at its core. It is not driven by harshness. It is driven by prayer, quietness, reverence, order, humility, and the saving heart of God. It is trying to bring a restless people back to the place where they can hear the Lord again. It is trying to speak peace into hearts that have learned how to react faster than they know how to trust. It is trying to remind the church that life with God does not begin in argument. It begins in surrender.
That matters because people are tired in ways they do not always know how to explain. They are tired in their body, but that is not the deepest tiredness. They are tired in their soul. Their mind does not slow down. Their fear does not sit still. Their thoughts keep circling. Their emotions feel crowded. Even when they are alone, something inside them keeps moving. There is pressure they cannot turn off. There is noise they cannot fully escape. Some of it comes from the outside. It comes from the world, the news, the demands of life, the conflict around them, and the sense that everything is always urgent. But some of it comes from the inside. It comes from guilt, insecurity, old wounds, the need to prove something, the fear of failing, and the strange burden of trying to hold everything together. People can look calm from the outside while carrying a war inside their chest. First Timothy 2 speaks directly into that condition. It begins in the place noise hates most, which is prayer. Paul opens this chapter by telling the church what should come first, and what comes first is not image, not position, not winning, and not defending the self. What comes first is bringing people before God.
Paul urges petitions, prayers, intercession, and thanksgiving for all people. That opening matters more than many readers realize. It is not a polite introduction. It is not a spiritual warm-up before the real point begins. It is the real point. The church is being called back to what makes it the church. It is being called back to dependence on God. Prayer is where the soul stops trying to be its own center. Prayer is where the burden of control begins to break. Prayer is where the heart remembers that there is One above all the noise, all the pressure, all the confusion, all the disorder, and all the fear. A person who truly prays cannot stay fully trapped in the illusion that everything depends on them. Prayer interrupts that lie. It does not always change the world as quickly as we want, but it changes the person praying. It softens pride. It weakens panic. It creates room for trust. It puts the believer back into the right posture before God. That is why Paul starts here. Without prayer, the church becomes noisy, proud, and weak. Without prayer, it can still look active, but it will slowly lose the quiet strength that only comes from life lived before the face of God.
It matters too that Paul says for all people. He does not say only for your group, your circle, your family, or the people who already make sense to you. He says for all people. That stretches the heart. It forces the believer to live beyond narrowness. It presses against tribal thinking. It keeps grace from shrinking into a private system of comfort. It is easy to pray for those you understand. It is easy to pray for those whose suffering feels familiar. It is easy to pray for people whose lives fit your categories and whose wounds you can relate to. But to pray for all people means the soul has to grow bigger than preference. It means you bring before God not only those you cherish, but also those who trouble you, those who confuse you, those whose lives seem far from truth, and those who might never pray for you in return. That kind of prayer is not natural to the human ego. The ego likes small mercy. The ego likes controlled compassion. The ego likes to decide who deserves tenderness. But grace does not work that way. Once a person truly understands that they themselves live by mercy, it becomes harder to pray from a place of superiority. Prayer begins to sound different. It begins to carry more humility. It begins to reflect the heart of the God who still moves toward people in their need.
Paul then says believers should pray for kings and all those in authority so that we may live peaceful and quiet lives in all godliness and holiness. That is a powerful line because power has always had a way of disturbing the human heart. Some people fear authority so deeply that their peace rises and falls with whoever is in charge. Some people idolize authority and imagine that public strength is the answer to the soul’s hunger. Some resent authority so completely that bitterness becomes the shape of their inner life. Paul points the church in another direction. He says pray. He does not say deny what is broken. He does not say pretend leaders are always righteous. He does not say stop caring about truth or justice. He says pray. That means believers are not to hand over their spirit to rage, panic, or despair. They are to remember that earthly authority has never been above God. They are to remember that no ruler, no system, and no moment in history escapes His sight. They are to remember that prayer is not passive. It is an act of faith in a world where public life can feel unstable and heavy.
The peaceful and quiet life Paul describes is often misunderstood. Many hear that phrase and imagine weakness, silence, or retreat from the world. But that is not what he is speaking about. He is speaking about inward steadiness. He is speaking about a life not ruled by emotional chaos. He is speaking about the kind of soul that is not constantly being thrown around by conflict, fear, outrage, vanity, and noise. A peaceful and quiet life is not an empty life. It is a life under God. It is a life where godliness and holiness have room to grow because the soul is no longer controlled by every outside pressure and every inside storm. The modern world does not teach people how to live like that. It teaches them how to stay activated. It teaches them how to stay reactive. It teaches them how to stay on edge. It teaches them how to monitor everything and rest in nothing. But First Timothy 2 holds up another way of living. It holds up a life that is not built on panic. It holds up a soul that has learned how to settle itself under the reality that God is still God.
That kind of peace cannot be created by appearances. A person can look composed in public and still be falling apart inside. A person can have a clean schedule and a noisy mind. A person can have a well-managed image and a heart that feels constantly pressed. Paul is pointing deeper than the surface. He is describing what grows when life is rightly ordered under God. Peace is not just the absence of public conflict. Peace is what begins to live in the soul when trust becomes stronger than fear. Quietness is not simply external calm. Quietness is what happens when the heart is no longer trying to survive by controlling everything. That is one of the reasons this chapter still reaches so deeply into life now. It speaks to people who are exhausted from trying to hold too much. It speaks to people who have been carrying pressure so long they think it is their normal state. It speaks to those who long for stillness but do not know how to find it. Paul is saying that stillness does not begin by escaping life. It begins by returning to God.
He then says this kind of life is good and pleasing in the sight of God our Savior, who wants all people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth. That line opens the heart of God in a beautiful way. He is called our Savior. He is not introduced as a distant force. He is not presented as eager to shut people out. He is not described as mainly looking for reasons to reject. He is called Savior. That matters because many people carry false pictures of God. They imagine Him always leaning away. They imagine Him as severe first and merciful second. They imagine Him as someone they must convince to care. But Paul speaks of a God who wants people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth. That does not make truth unimportant. It does not erase holiness. It does not mean every road leads to God. It means the heart of God revealed here is a saving heart. He is not indifferent to the lost. He is not casual about brokenness. He is not pleased by human ruin. He wants rescue. He wants truth. He wants people brought out of darkness and into life.
That truth should tear down pride inside the church. If God wants all people to be saved, then nobody gets to carry themselves as though grace belongs to them more naturally than to someone else. Nobody gets to treat mercy like a reward for the respectable. Nobody gets to imagine that salvation confirms their own greatness. The whole passage works against that kind of thinking. Prayer for all people. A Savior who desires salvation. One mediator for humanity. These truths do not leave much room for religious vanity. Pride loves to build walls because walls help it feel special. Pride loves to divide the world into the deserving and the less deserving. Pride likes grace only when grace is small enough to protect the ego. But Paul’s language breaks that whole system apart. If God wants all people to be saved, then all people stand in need of the same mercy. Some may hide their need under polished speech. Some may hide it under moral appearance. Some may hide it under pain. Some may hide it under public strength. But all still come to God the same way. They come as people who need rescue.
Then Paul gives one of the clearest statements in the chapter. He says there is one God and one mediator between God and mankind, the man Christ Jesus, who gave Himself as a ransom for all. This is the center. Everything in the chapter leans on this truth. Christ is the mediator. Not human effort. Not religious performance. Not moral image. Not personal strength. Christ. That is the deepest answer to the human condition. People keep trying to build ladders back to God through their own effort. They try to become enough. They try to repair their own distance. They try to carry guilt long enough that maybe it will count as righteousness. They try to earn peace through usefulness, self-punishment, or spiritual activity. But none of those things can stand where Jesus stands. He is the mediator. He bridges what human beings cannot bridge. He makes peace where there was real separation. He does not merely explain God to us. He gives Himself to bring us near.
That phrase gave Himself as a ransom carries more weight than many people let themselves feel. It means the answer to human sin was not cheap. It means salvation is not an abstract idea floating in the air. It means God did not save from a distance. Jesus entered pain, shame, suffering, flesh, and death. He gave Himself. That matters because many believers know the doctrine of grace while still living emotionally as though everything depends on them. They say Christ is enough, but deep down they live as though they still have to keep earning their place. They carry quiet fear all the time. They are afraid of slipping. They are afraid of weakness. They are afraid that one hard season, one failure, one numb stretch of prayer, or one heavy burden might place them beyond the reach of God. But the text will not let them live there. Christ gave Himself as a ransom. That means your hope is not hanging on how perfectly you hold yourself together. Your hope is hanging on Jesus, and Jesus is stronger than your instability.
This is what makes the chapter deeply healing for tired people. It tells the ashamed heart that access to God is not built on personal impressiveness. It tells the anxious heart that prayer is not accepted because you got yourself into the perfect spiritual mood. It tells the worn-out heart that the center of faith is not your ability to stay emotionally intense forever. The center is Jesus. He mediates. He gave Himself. He is enough. That does not erase the call to obedience. It changes the place obedience comes from. Obedience is no longer a desperate attempt to keep God from leaving. It becomes the fruit of having been brought near. There is a huge difference between trying to obey because you fear rejection and learning to obey because you have encountered mercy. Fear can produce outward effort for a while. Grace begins changing the soul itself.
Paul says he was appointed a herald and an apostle and a teacher of the true faith to the Gentiles. That is not a random personal remark. It reminds the reader that the gospel was never meant to stay inside a small, comfortable circle. It was always moving outward. It was always reaching beyond the edges people expected. Human beings love to make faith feel smaller and more controllable than it really is. They like to imagine that God belongs most naturally to their group, their background, their tone, and their traditions. But Paul’s own calling breaks that apart. He was sent outward. The message of Christ was reaching people some would never have centered on their own. That still matters now. God is still drawing people who do not fit neat spiritual categories. He is still meeting those whose stories are messy. He is still calling people from places respectable religion may overlook. Grace is larger than the circles pride would like to draw around it.
After setting prayer and Christ at the center, Paul turns to the conduct of believers and says he wants men everywhere to pray, lifting up holy hands without anger or disputing. That verse says much more than it appears to say at first. Paul is not only asking that men be present in prayer. He is speaking about the condition in which they are to pray. Holy hands. Without anger. Without disputing. That means prayer is not supposed to become a religious layer placed over a life still ruled by hostility, pride, and combativeness. A man cannot build his inner life around resentment and conflict, then expect a few public gestures to make that spirit holy. God is not impressed by outward posture when the heart behind it remains unexamined. The chapter is calling men to integrity. Let your life before God and your prayer before God become one thing instead of two. Let the soul that lifts hands be a soul that is actually being cleaned.
That is a needed word because anger is so often mistaken for strength. Argument is often mistaken for conviction. Many men have been taught that hardness is power. They have been taught to live guarded, to project control, and to hide tenderness behind force. But Paul calls them to something very different. Pray without anger and without disputing. That means the men of God are not supposed to be defined by emotional heat, constant conflict, or the need to dominate every room with certainty. Holiness matters more than toughness. Peace matters more than the appearance of power. Prayer matters more than always being the one in control. That does not make a man weak. It makes him honest. It takes real strength to lay down rage. It takes real strength to stop using hardness as armor. It takes real strength to become open before God.
The image of lifted hands matters too. Lifted hands are open hands. They are not holding trophies. They are not gripping control. They are not closing around weapons. They are empty in a holy way. They are surrendered. Many people live with their hands spiritually clenched. They are clinging to fear, clinging to self-image, clinging to resentment, clinging to the need to be right, clinging to the illusion that if they just stay tight enough they can keep everything from falling apart. But prayer opens the hands. Worship opens the hands. Grace opens the hands. A holy life is not a life of endless inner strain. It is a life that has learned to release itself before God. That release is not defeat. It is trust. It is a person finally stepping out of the exhausting illusion that they have to hold their own life together through constant tension.
Paul then begins speaking about women and about modesty, self-control, and the kind of adornment that fits a life devoted to God. These verses are often rushed through too quickly or flattened into shallow rules, but they are speaking to something very deep. They are speaking about what a person is using to carry their identity. In the ancient world, outward appearance could communicate status, wealth, sensuality, and social position. People used visible display to say something about who they were and why they mattered. That has not disappeared. It has only changed shape. People still build themselves outward. They still lean on appearance. They still try to secure worth through what can be seen. That pressure especially falls hard on women, who are often taught in countless ways that visibility, presentation, and public reading are tied to value. Paul is pushing against that burden.
He says women should adorn themselves with modesty and self-control, not with outward display, but with good works, as is proper for women who profess godliness. This is not a statement that beauty is bad. It is not a statement that the body is shameful. It is not a statement that women should disappear or become invisible. It is a statement about center. What carries the weight of your worth. What are you using to tell the world, and yourself, who you are. If outward display becomes the center, then the soul becomes fragile. It starts living on a stage. It starts needing the gaze of others. It becomes vulnerable to comparison, insecurity, vanity, and exhaustion. Paul is saying let your adornment be deeper than that. Let your beauty be rooted in character. Let godliness become visible. Let good works carry the kind of light appearance alone never can. That is not a diminishing word. It is a freeing word. It calls women out of the prison of public image and into a steadier kind of dignity.
Self-control matters in this too. Self-control is not lifelessness. It is not the death of personality. It is not dullness. It is the ordering of the self under truth. A life without self-control is dragged around by impulse, insecurity, fear, appetite, and pressure. A life with self-control is able to remain anchored. It can feel deeply without being owned by every feeling. It can move through the world without becoming the world’s emotional weather. That is a beautiful kind of strength. It is the kind of strength many people secretly long for because they are tired of living at the mercy of every storm inside them. Paul is calling believers toward that kind of rooted life. Not a cold life. Not a fake life. A formed life.
All through this chapter, one pattern keeps rising. Prayer instead of panic. Christ instead of self-rescue. Holiness instead of performance. Character instead of display. Peace instead of inner chaos. This is not a chapter about shrinking human beings for the sake of control. It is about setting them free from false centers. Most human misery grows from trying to build life on what cannot actually hold it. People ask image to give them worth. They ask conflict to make them feel strong. They ask visibility to make them feel real. They ask their own effort to make peace with God. None of those things can carry the soul for long. First Timothy 2 keeps bringing the heart back to what is real.
If that larger meaning is missed, the second half of First Timothy 2 will almost always be handled in a spirit the chapter itself does not support. Some people try to empty the hard verses until they no longer say anything that can challenge the modern heart. Other people seize those same verses with a kind of harshness that says more about human ego than about Jesus. Neither response is faithful. Scripture cannot be honored by being explained away, and it cannot be honored by being used like a weapon. It has to be received with seriousness and with reverence. That matters here because this chapter has hurt people. Some have heard it used with coldness. Some have heard it in ways that made them feel small, dismissed, or silenced. Others have heard it only as a source of controversy, which means they come to it ready to fight before they are ready to listen. But the answer to misuse is not denial. The answer is deeper reading. The answer is to stay close to the center Paul has already given. God is a Savior. Christ is the mediator. Prayer comes first. Holiness matters. Peace matters. The gathered people of God are meant to reflect truth instead of the chaos of the age. If that center stays clear, the difficult verses can be approached without losing the heart of Christ.
Paul says that a woman should learn in quietness and full submission. Those words immediately create tension for many readers, and that reaction is understandable. Quietness can sound like erasure. Submission can sound like humiliation. A lot of people hear those words through old wounds. They have seen them twisted into tools of control. But if the text is going to be read honestly, it must be read carefully. One of the first things Paul says is that a woman should learn. That matters. He is not denying discipleship. He is affirming it. He is not treating women as spiritually irrelevant. He is placing them inside the life of formation, truth, and instruction. That alone should slow people down. This is not a picture of exclusion from the things of God. It is a picture of place and posture within the gathered life of the church. Whatever difficulty the verse may hold, it cannot honestly be turned into a declaration that women do not matter spiritually or do not belong among serious learners of truth. Paul assumes they do.
Quietness here should not be flattened into total silence in every setting, as though Paul was commanding women to vanish from meaningful existence. The chapter has already spoken positively about quietness for believers in general. Quietness is tied to being settled, teachability, and a spirit that is not driven by disruptive self-assertion. It is part of a larger atmosphere of peace and reverence that Paul wants in the church. Submission also has to be heard through the larger witness of Scripture and not through the distortions of human pride. Submission is not a declaration of lesser worth. It is about order under God. The trouble is that fallen people hear order and immediately think in terms of superiority. Pride cannot imagine difference without trying to turn it into status. But the gospel keeps dismantling that instinct. The Lord of glory washed feet. The highest became low. The one with all authority chose the path of sacrificial humility. That means role and worth are not the same category. If someone reads these verses and comes away thinking women are less valuable before God, they have already lost the mind of Christ.
That distinction matters because the modern world tends to make visibility and worth almost identical. It teaches people to assume that if a role is limited, then dignity must be under attack. But the kingdom of God does not measure significance by visible centrality. It never has. Some of the holiest things in Scripture happen in stillness, obedience, hidden faithfulness, and forms of love the world would never think to celebrate. So the question in this passage is not whether women matter. They do. The question is whether the church is willing to receive God’s ordering of its life even when that order does not flatter the instincts of the age. That is hard for every generation because every generation wants God to speak in a way that leaves its pride undisturbed. But Scripture often becomes hardest at the point where it interrupts what we have started calling normal. That interruption is not always harm. Sometimes it is rescue. Sometimes God is refusing to let us keep building ourselves on foundations that will finally fail us.
Paul then says he does not permit a woman to teach or to exercise authority over a man, but to remain quiet. This is the line that carries so much of the tension surrounding the chapter, and it should be approached honestly. It cannot simply be emptied of force. Paul is describing a real limitation tied to teaching and authority in the gathered church. Christians have debated the scope and application of that limitation, but the limitation itself is present in the text. At the same time, this verse has been used in deeply unfaithful ways. It has been used to justify contempt, mockery, and a general diminishment of women that the gospel does not support. That misuse must be named plainly. The moment Scripture becomes a way for one person to nourish pride over another, something has gone very wrong. The moment a verse is used to feed ego instead of holiness, it is already being carried in the wrong spirit. Christ does not give truth to make human beings cruel. He gives truth to bring people into order, life, and reverence before God.
It is important to remember that Paul is not writing abstract theory into a vacuum. He is writing to real congregations facing real pressures. The pastoral letters are full of concern about false teaching, sound doctrine, and the healthy ordering of church life. That context does not erase the difficulty of the verse, but it does matter. Paul is shepherding a living body of believers. He is trying to protect a community, shape its worship, and keep its life aligned with truth. Modern readers often approach these verses as symbols in a cultural argument, but Paul wrote them as part of a pastoral burden. He is not trying to make a philosophical point detached from the daily life of the church. He is trying to form a people whose shared life reflects God’s order instead of confusion. That does not make every question simple, but it should change the spirit in which those questions are asked. The goal is not to win. The goal is to understand what faithfulness looks like before God.
Paul then grounds his instruction in creation by saying Adam was formed first, then Eve. That means he is not presenting the issue as merely local or temporary. He sees something in creation order itself that still bears meaning for the church. People can wrestle with how that meaning is to be lived out, but they should not pretend the grounding is absent. At the same time, being formed first is not the same thing as being more human, more loved, or more spiritually significant. It is an order statement, not a value statement. This matters because the flesh constantly tries to hear order as status. Pride wants to convert distinction into superiority. But biblical order is not given to feed the ego. The moment it becomes a source of vanity, it has already been twisted. God’s design is meant to produce harmony, truth, and peace under His rule. It is not meant to become a ladder for human self-importance.
Then Paul says Adam was not deceived, but the woman was deceived and became a sinner. This verse has often been handled with very little care. Some have read it as though Paul were saying women are naturally more gullible, less discerning, or spiritually unreliable. But that is far too simple, and it does not fit the wider witness of Scripture. Men in the Bible are hardly examples of natural immunity to folly or deception. Human failure is universal. What Paul appears to be doing is pointing back to the Genesis account as an account of disorder, of trust breaking down, and of humanity stepping outside God’s design in pursuit of self-directed wisdom. The fall was not just about a forbidden act. It was about a breakdown in obedient dependence. It was about grasping beyond what God had given. Paul is drawing on that story as a warning about disorder, not as a license for female humiliation.
That warning reaches far beyond the gender debate surrounding the passage. Deception is never only somebody else’s problem. Human beings are vulnerable to deception whenever the lie offered to them flatters something they already want. Pride helps deception. Fear helps deception. Pain helps deception. Impatience helps deception. The old lie beneath so much human ruin is still the same. You do not need to trust God’s order. You can define life on your own terms. You can reach beyond what He has said and become more fully alive there. But it never works. It always fractures something. It always produces unrest, alienation, blame, and spiritual confusion. So even here, the chapter is not merely setting structure. It is exposing a permanent danger in the human heart. Whenever people treat obedience as less wise than self-assertion, they begin repeating the same old fall in new forms.
Then comes one of the most difficult lines in the chapter. Paul says that women will be saved through childbearing, if they continue in faith and love and holiness with self-control. This is a difficult verse, and it should not be handled with fake confidence. It clearly cannot mean that a woman earns eternal salvation by having children, because that would contradict the gospel Paul teaches everywhere else and would tear against the very center of this chapter, where Christ is the one mediator who gave Himself as a ransom. Salvation is not obtained by biological function. It also cannot mean that women without children are cut off from grace, because that would make the mercy of God absurdly narrow. So whatever the phrase means, it must be understood in a way that remains faithful to salvation through Christ. Christians have offered different interpretations. Some understand it as preservation through the ordinary sphere of womanly calling. Some hear it as perseverance through the trials and dangers tied to childbirth. Some see a possible echo of the promised birth through which the Savior entered the world. There is real debate here, and honesty requires admitting it.
Yet even in that difficulty, the verse ends in a way that gives us a firm center. Paul speaks of continuing in faith and love and holiness with self-control. That is where the emphasis comes to rest. The life that matters before God is a life of persevering godliness. Faith. Love. Holiness. Self-control. These are not secondary words. They are the same kinds of inward realities the whole chapter has been pressing toward from the beginning. That means the deepest point is not biology. The deepest point is continued life under God. This matters because churches have often failed women in opposite ways. Some have reduced women to function, as though their spiritual worth could be measured mainly by domestic or biological terms. Others have reacted by treating every created distinction as a threat and every form of divine order as oppression. Scripture offers something different. It offers dignity rooted in God rather than in visibility or status. It offers worth that does not depend on occupying the center of public life. It offers the truth that hidden faithfulness is not lesser glory. It is real glory.
That word is deeply needed because modern life is frightened of hiddenness. People are afraid of not being seen. They are afraid of not being publicly affirmed. They are afraid that if their life is not visibly central, then it must not matter very much. But the kingdom of God keeps overturning that fear. Jesus spent most of His earthly life outside public spotlight. The kingdom is compared to seed in the ground, yeast in dough, treasure hidden in a field. God works in places the world overlooks. He forms people in the unseen. He assigns eternal weight to acts of faithfulness that may look unimpressive to a culture built on visibility. First Timothy 2 presses directly against the idolatry of being seen. It asks whether we still believe that a life can be full of holy meaning even when it does not occupy the most celebrated places.
This is not only a word for women. Men destroy themselves with the same idol in different forms. They chase control, prominence, dominance, and recognition. Churches decay when leadership becomes theater. Ministries weaken when platform matters more than prayer. Families suffer when authority is severed from tenderness and sacrificial love. The whole chapter is resisting life from the outside in. It is resisting the idea that public impression should determine worth. Instead, it keeps drawing the soul back to the inside out. Pray first. Come under God first. Receive grace first. Let holiness shape conduct. Let reverence order public life. That is why the chapter feels so different from the spirit of the age. The age says become visible, become central, become self-defining. First Timothy 2 says become prayerful, become holy, become steady, become rightly ordered under God.
There is also a warning here for men who want to read this chapter selectively. Some are very eager to stress the verses they think apply to women while quietly neglecting the ones that confront male anger, pride, and lack of holiness. But that is not faithfulness. Men are called to pray with holy hands without anger or disputing. That is a searching command. It cuts through hard, loud, ego-driven versions of masculinity that sometimes hide behind religious seriousness. A man cannot claim devotion to biblical order while living in bitterness, vanity, and constant conflict. He cannot demand visible submission while refusing surrender before God himself. He cannot use role language to excuse lovelessness. If First Timothy 2 is going to be honored, then the men reading it must let it humble them first. They must ask whether they know how to pray, whether their hands are truly holy, and whether anger has become a false form of strength in their life.
That matters because the chapter is not finally about control. It is about worship. Worship determines the center. If Christ is at the center, then prayer becomes real, pride starts to loosen, image becomes less important, holiness becomes more beautiful, and the soul begins to settle. But if the self remains at the center, then even religion becomes distorted. Roles become weapons. Authority becomes vanity. Teaching becomes performance. Debate becomes identity. Appearance becomes worth. This is why the chapter has to be read under the lordship of Jesus. Without Him at the center, people will use even sacred words to protect unsacred motives. With Him at the center, the chapter becomes something very different. It becomes a call back to sanity, peace, and reverence.
And peace is one of the great gifts held out here. Not shallow peace. Not the peace of pretending hard questions do not exist. Real peace. The peace that grows when the soul stops trying to make itself the center of everything. The peace that becomes possible when prayer becomes more real than reaction. The peace that comes when Christ is trusted as mediator instead of the self trying to build ladders back to God. The peace that grows when holiness matters more than image. The peace that begins when believers stop living on the unstable surface of appearance and come back to what is true. That kind of peace is rare in a loud age, but it is exactly what many people are hungry for.
There comes a point in every serious walk with God when a person has to decide whether they want Scripture only where it agrees with their instincts, or whether they want Scripture where it forms them into something truer than their instincts. Those are not the same thing. A Bible that only echoes the self cannot rescue the self. First Timothy 2 does not simply echo the reader. It challenges. It unsettles. It touches disputed places. But it does so while holding out something better on the other side of surrender. It holds out a life in which God is trusted again. A life in which prayer is not decorative. A life in which Christ is really enough. A life in which peace is not built on control. A life in which hidden faithfulness still matters. A life in which the soul is no longer forced to perform itself into significance every day.
So in the end, First Timothy 2 is not mainly a chapter about controversy. It is a chapter about coming back under God. It calls a restless people back to prayer. It calls anxious hearts back to the Savior who desires truth and salvation. It calls guilty hearts back to the one mediator who gave Himself as a ransom. It calls men away from anger and into holy surrender. It calls women away from the crushing burden of outward display and into the deeper dignity of godliness. It calls the gathered church toward conduct that reflects reverence instead of chaos. It does not flatter pride, but it does offer mercy. It does not remove all difficulty, but it does reveal a deeper order beneath the difficulty. And for anyone who is tired of the noise, tired of the performance, tired of the pressure to keep building worth through visibility, argument, or control, that is not a small word. It is an invitation. It is God saying there is another way to live. A quieter way. A steadier way. A holier way. A way in which the heart stops fighting long enough to remember that it was never meant to save itself. It was meant to be brought near by grace, held steady by truth, and taught peace by the Christ who gave Himself for it.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph
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SmarterArticles

In September 2025, a 31-year-old poet from Olive Branch, Mississippi named Telisha “Nikki” Jones watched her AI-generated R&B project, Xania Monet, debut at number one on Billboard's R&B Digital Song Sales chart. Jones had never considered herself a singer. She had spent years writing deeply personal poetry, running a printing company, and singing quietly in church. Then she discovered Suno, a generative AI music platform, and began feeding her poems into it. Within four months, record labels were locked in a bidding war that reached three million dollars. Hallwood Media, led by former Geffen Records president Neil Jacobson, won.
The reaction from the music industry was swift and visceral. R&B singer Kehlani took to TikTok, declaring: “There is an AI R&B artist who just signed a multi-million-dollar deal, and the person is doing none of the work. I don't respect it.” Victoria Monet told Vanity Fair that it was “hard to comprehend that, within a prompt, my name was not used for this artist to capitalise on,” pointing to the uncanny resemblance between herself and the AI avatar. SZA posted a screenshot questioning why anyone would “devalue our music.” Producer Jermaine Dupri compared the acceptance of AI artists to the Milli Vanilli scandal. The public narrative crystallised quickly: AI music was inauthentic, parasitic, and threatening to real artistry.
These responses are understandable. They are also, in a fundamental sense, aimed at the wrong target. The anxieties surfacing around AI-generated music are real, but the debate as currently framed obscures something far more consequential than questions of authenticity or artistic merit. What is actually at stake is a systems-level crisis about how musicians sustain themselves economically, how listeners discover music, and how the infrastructure of a multibillion-dollar industry distributes value. The moral framing of this argument, with its emphasis on “real” versus “fake” artistry, has become a convenient distraction from structural failures that predate generative AI by at least a decade.
Consider what it actually took for Breaking Rust, an AI-generated country music project created by Aubierre Rivaldo Taylor, to top Billboard's Country Digital Song Sales chart in late 2025. According to Luminate data, roughly 2,500 digital downloads were sufficient for its track “Walk My Walk” to claim the number one position. As Andrew Chow noted in TIME magazine, the digital music sales charts have long been vulnerable to manipulation, and the significance of the achievement was questionable. Country radio stations flatly refused to add Breaking Rust to their rotations. Radio consultant Joel Raab told Billboard that listeners “react negatively to the idea of AI voices on their stations.” Leslie Fram, founder of FEMco, called it “a notable wake-up call but not yet an existential threat,” adding that “in country, where authenticity and storytelling are core, this could erode trust if fans feel manipulated.”
Yet the headlines read as though something seismic had occurred. By mid-November, one third of the top ten on Billboard's Country Digital Song Sales chart was composed of AI-assisted artists. The framing invited a binary debate: should AI music be permitted on the charts or not? What went unexamined was why the charts themselves had become so easy to game, and why a few thousand downloads could generate the appearance of mainstream success on platforms that were never designed to handle the current volume of content.
That volume is staggering. According to Luminate data published in January 2026, an average of 106,000 new tracks were delivered to streaming services each day throughout 2025, a seven per cent increase from 99,000 daily in 2024. There were 253 million music tracks sitting on audio streaming platforms by the close of 2025. Nearly half of those tracks, some 120.5 million, received fewer than ten streams. Three quarters received fewer than 100 annual streams. A full 88 per cent received fewer than 1,000 streams.
These are not primarily AI numbers. The content flood was already well underway before tools like Suno and Udio made it trivially easy for anyone with a text prompt to generate a passable song. Spotify was already receiving roughly 60,000 uploads per day before the AI surge. The oversaturation problem, in other words, is structural. AI has accelerated it enormously, but it did not create it.
The streaming economy operates on a pro-rata model. All subscription revenue is pooled together, then distributed based on total platform streams. If a track accounts for one per cent of all streams on Spotify in a given month, it receives one per cent of the royalty pool. This system mechanically advantages artists with massive audiences and punishes everyone else. Per-stream payouts on Spotify hover between $0.003 and $0.005. Only 1.4 per cent of Spotify's artists earn more than $1,000 per year from the platform.
When Spotify announced in January 2026 that it had paid out more than $11 billion to the music industry in 2025, the largest annual payment to music from any retailer in history, the figure sounded extraordinary. But as industry analysts have consistently pointed out, the distribution of that money is radically unequal. According to Luminate, just 541,000 tracks, representing barely 0.2 per cent of all available music, accounted for 49.4 per cent of total global audio streaming consumption. The vast majority of working musicians compete for scraps from the remaining half.
The platform's own policies have compounded the problem for smaller artists. In April 2024, Spotify introduced a minimum threshold requiring tracks to accumulate at least 1,000 streams in the previous twelve months before they could generate any royalties at all. The company framed this as fraud prevention, arguing that processing micropayments for low-stream tracks cost more than the payouts themselves. But the effects have been severe. According to Digital Music News, roughly 87 per cent of songs on the platform fall below this threshold. An estimated $47 million in annual royalties that previously trickled to independent artists was effectively redirected to the platform's top performers and the three major labels that represent them. A survey reported by Digital Music News found that 85 per cent of independent respondents experienced revenue reductions, with 65 per cent reporting “significant negative impact.” The European independent music body Impala criticised the policy for “stripping revenue from independent labels and niche genres, disproportionately impacting classical, jazz, regional and non-English repertoire.”
Mark Mulligan, the analyst behind MIDiA Research's annual reports, has characterised the broader situation as an approaching pivot point. “Industries arrive at pivot points when an accumulation of fissures coalesce into one big crack,” he wrote. “Streaming is approaching such a point.” The challenges, Mulligan argued, come from multiple directions: major rightsholders feeling investor pressure, artists struggling to cut through clutter, royalties failing to add up for professional artists, and music becoming commodified.
AI did not cause this royalty crisis. But it has weaponised the existing vulnerabilities. According to the IMS Business Report 2025, compiled by Mulligan and MIDiA Research, 60 million people used AI software to create music in 2024. Suno alone attracted 46.9 million monthly visits, according to Semrush, a remarkable surge for a platform that only launched in March 2024. Each of these users can generate finished tracks in seconds. Many of those tracks end up on streaming platforms, where they enter the same royalty pool as music made by human professionals who spent years honing their craft.
The result is a dilution problem. More tracks in the pool means each individual track receives a smaller share of finite revenue. And much of the AI-generated content flooding platforms is not even the product of genuine creative ambition. According to data released by Deezer in late 2025, the proportion of AI-generated uploads to their platform rose from 10 per cent of all deliveries in January to 34 per cent by November, reaching 50,000 fully AI-generated tracks per day. Of those, up to 70 per cent of streams were fraudulent, driven by bot networks designed to siphon royalties.
Spotify responded in September 2025 by announcing the removal of over 75 million “spammy” tracks from its platform. The company also introduced new policies targeting impersonation, spam uploads, and AI voice cloning. But these measures, while necessary, address symptoms rather than the underlying architecture of a system that was already buckling under its own weight.
The discourse around AI music has gravitated toward aesthetics and authenticity. Can AI produce music that genuinely moves people? Does an AI-generated track carry the same emotional weight as one born from lived human experience? These are interesting philosophical questions, but they function primarily as displacement mechanisms, channelling structural economic anxieties into debates about artistic quality that are ultimately unresolvable.
Consider the case of Telisha Jones. Her poetry is her own. Her lyrics draw from the death of her father when she was eight years old. The emotional content is real, even if the voice delivering it was generated by an algorithm. “There's real emotions and soul put into those lyrics,” Jones told CBS Mornings. When critics accused her of “doing none of the work,” as Kehlani put it, they were making an aesthetic and labour argument simultaneously, conflating the question of whether the music was good with whether its creation involved sufficient human effort.
But this framing, real versus artificial, obscures a more uncomfortable truth. The recorded music industry was already failing most of its human artists long before generative AI entered the picture. A 2023 survey found that 46 per cent of respondents earned no money at all from their music-related activities. Only 13.3 per cent of musicians reported earning a living solely through music in 2025. These are not people being displaced by AI. They were already struggling under a system that concentrates revenue among a tiny elite while platforming the illusion of democratic access.
The “artist-centric” payment models being trialled by various platforms have done little to address this imbalance. Deezer piloted an artist-centric system in France in collaboration with Universal Music Group, promising to reward “professional artists” with consistent streams and to double payouts for songs actively chosen by listeners rather than served by algorithms. A peer-reviewed study published on ScienceDirect found, however, that the model “does not significantly improve remuneration to professional artists.” The fastest-growing segment of the music business, the study suggested, risked becoming “a permanent funding mechanism for the biggest labels and stars.” Passive listening through background playlists, algorithmic radio, and mood-based streams has long inflated play counts without necessarily reflecting artist loyalty. Under pro-rata systems, these passive plays carry the same financial weight as intentional, engaged listening. The “artist-centric” label promises reform while the underlying mechanics of attention and revenue concentration remain essentially unchanged.
If the authenticity debate is a distraction, what lies beneath it is arguably worse. The economics of AI-generated music have created a fraud economy of genuinely alarming proportions. Deezer's data tells the most detailed story. By January 2026, roughly 60,000 AI-generated tracks were being delivered to the platform daily, accounting for 39 per cent of all deliveries. In total, Deezer detected more than 13.4 million AI-generated tracks on its platform in 2025 alone. A joint study with Ipsos found that 97 per cent of listeners in blind tests could not distinguish AI-generated tracks from human ones. Yet while AI-generated tracks accounted for only about 3 per cent of total streams on the platform, up to 85 per cent of those streams were fraudulent.
This is not a minor technical problem. It is a structural feature of a system in which generating and uploading music costs virtually nothing, streaming fraud is difficult to detect at scale, and the royalty pool is finite. Every fraudulent AI stream diverts money from a human musician who played by the rules. The incentive structure is perverse: the easier it becomes to create music, the greater the reward for gaming the system. In response, Deezer became the first streaming platform to explicitly tag AI-generated music in June 2025, automatically removing fully AI-generated songs from algorithmic recommendations and editorial playlists. By early 2026, the company announced it would begin selling its AI-detection technology to other companies across the music ecosystem.
Spotify's new spam filter, announced alongside the 75-million-track purge, targets uploaders engaging in mass uploads, duplicates, SEO manipulation, and artificially short tracks designed to boost streaming numbers. But the whack-a-mole nature of the problem is evident. As Spotify acknowledged, the new protections are necessary because “AI can be used by bad actors and content farms to confuse or deceive listeners, push slop into the ecosystem, and interfere with authentic artists working to build their careers.”
The word “slop” is revealing. It borrows from the vocabulary of AI-generated text content that floods the internet: undifferentiated material produced at zero marginal cost to capture advertising revenue or, in this case, streaming royalties. The parallel to the broader AI content crisis is exact. Music streaming platforms are experiencing their own version of the information pollution problem, with the same structural dynamics at play: near-zero production costs, algorithmic amplification, inadequate detection mechanisms, and shared financial pools that reward volume over quality.
The legal landscape offers its own contradictions. In June 2024, the RIAA filed suit against Suno and Udio on behalf of Universal, Warner, and Sony, alleging mass copyright infringement. The labels claimed these AI platforms had used “stream-ripping,” illegally downloading music from YouTube, to build their training databases. The potential damages were enormous: up to $150,000 per infringed song, potentially amounting to billions.
Then something unexpected happened. In November 2025, Warner Music Group settled with both Suno and Udio, dropping its lawsuits and signing licensing deals for AI music platforms set to launch in 2026. Universal followed suit, settling with Udio and signing its own deal. Sony, notably, has not settled, and litigation continues. Independent artists, including country musician Anthony Justice and a class led by David Woulard, have filed their own lawsuits against both companies, though motions to dismiss are pending.
The settlements reveal a pragmatic calculation by the major labels. Rather than fighting AI music generation, they have chosen to own a piece of it. Hallwood Media, the company that signed Xania Monet to her multimillion-dollar deal, is also an investor in Suno's $250 million Series C funding round, which valued the AI platform at $2.45 billion. The people funding AI music and the people signing AI artists are, in some cases, literally the same people. Hallwood had previously signed imoliver, another top-streaming Suno creator, with Jacobson declaring that the artist “represents the future of our medium.”
This creates a peculiar dynamic. The same labels whose artists are protesting AI music are simultaneously licensing their catalogues to train the next generation of AI music tools. When Kehlani said “nothing and no one on Earth will ever be able to justify AI to me,” she was expressing a position that her own industry's power brokers had already abandoned in private negotiations. The authenticity debate, in this light, begins to look less like a genuine moral reckoning and more like a public-facing narrative that obscures the private deal-making happening behind closed doors.
Even setting aside fraud, the sheer volume of content on streaming platforms has created a discovery crisis that harms human musicians independent of any AI-specific threat. With 253 million tracks available and 106,000 more arriving daily, the problem of being heard has become mathematically overwhelming. According to Spotify's own data, 53.3 per cent of artists on the platform have fewer than 500 monthly listeners. Two thirds have fewer than 1,000. In 2024 alone, 1.7 million new artists joined Spotify, averaging roughly 4,600 sign-ups per day.
Algorithmic recommendation systems, which were supposed to democratise discovery, have instead reinforced concentration. The algorithms are optimised for engagement, which means they tend to promote content that already has momentum. This creates feedback loops: popular tracks get recommended, which makes them more popular, which gets them recommended more. The result is a power-law distribution in which a minuscule fraction of content captures a majority of attention and revenue, while the long tail grows ever longer and ever more silent.
For an independent musician uploading a track in 2026, the competitive landscape is not merely other human musicians. It is also a flood of AI-generated content, algorithmically optimised playlists curated for maximum engagement metrics, and a discovery architecture that structurally favours incumbents. As MIDiA Research has documented, AI creators already represented 10 per cent of all music creators in 2025, and the number paying to create with AI doubled over the year. Meanwhile, the number of people buying traditional music software fell in both 2024 and 2025. Established creators are not merely watching AI from the sidelines. They are shifting activity and spend toward it, further blurring the boundary between human and machine production. The moral question of whether AI music is “authentic” becomes almost irrelevant when the practical question is whether any new human artist can break through the noise at all.
Industry responses to the AI music crisis have tended to focus on labelling, banning, or regulating AI content rather than addressing the structural economics that make the crisis possible. iHeartRadio's “Guaranteed Human” programme, launched in November 2025, pledges that the radio company will not “use AI-generated personalities” or “play AI music that features synthetic vocalists pretending to be human.” Tom Poleman, iHeartRadio's chief programming officer, sent a letter to staff characterising the initiative as “not a tagline but a promise.” All on-air DJs and podcasts across the network were required to include the phrase “Guaranteed Human” in their hourly legal identifications.
The initiative reflects genuine consumer sentiment. Internal research shared by iHeartRadio found that 90 per cent of listeners prefer their media to come from real humans, and 96 per cent found the “Guaranteed Human” concept appealing. An additional finding showed that 82 per cent of consumers worry about AI's societal impact. But iHeartRadio continues to employ AI behind the scenes for scheduling, audience analysis, and workflow management. The distinction between AI as invisible infrastructure and AI as visible content producer is a boundary that may prove difficult to maintain as the technology becomes more deeply embedded in every stage of music production, from mastering to composition to distribution.
Around 60 per cent of musicians already use AI tools for mastering, composing, or creating artwork, according to industry surveys. Yet 65 per cent feel the risks of AI outweigh the benefits, and 82 per cent worry it could threaten their ability to earn a living. These numbers suggest a workforce that has already been forced to adopt the tools that threaten its existence, a dynamic familiar from every previous wave of technological disruption but no less painful for its historical precedent.
The US Copyright Office issued a ruling in January 2025 declaring that works created entirely by artificial intelligence cannot be copyrighted. This means that the music Suno generates in isolation has no copyright protection, which in theory should limit its commercial viability. In practice, however, the distinction is muddied. If a human writes the lyrics and uses AI to generate the instrumental and vocal performance, as Telisha Jones does with Xania Monet, the copyright status becomes ambiguous. The legal frameworks are trailing the technology by years, and the settlements between major labels and AI companies suggest the industry intends to resolve these ambiguities through commerce rather than precedent.
If the debate around AI music were to shift from moral framing to structural analysis, several uncomfortable realities would need to be confronted. The pro-rata royalty model, which pools all revenue and distributes it by volume, mechanically ensures that the addition of billions of AI-generated streams will dilute payments to human artists. No amount of labelling or content moderation can fix this without changing the underlying payment architecture.
A genuine systemic response would need to address at least three interconnected problems. First, the compensation model itself would require reform. User-centric payment systems, where a subscriber's fee goes only to the artists they actually listen to, would insulate individual listeners' contributions from being diluted by AI-generated content farms. Several proposals along these lines have been circulated, but major labels, which benefit from the current concentration of revenue, have shown limited enthusiasm. Tidal, which pays per-stream rates averaging $0.0125, nearly four times Spotify's rate, demonstrates that alternative economic models are technically feasible, even if they remain commercially marginal.
Second, platform accountability for the content they host would need to extend beyond reactive takedowns of spam. If streaming services are receiving 60,000 AI-generated tracks daily, as Deezer's data suggests, and up to 85 per cent of the resulting streams are fraudulent, the platforms are effectively operating as conduits for royalty theft. The costs of this fraud are currently externalised onto the artists whose revenue share is diluted. Deezer's decision to sell its AI-detection technology is one step, but without industry-wide adoption, bad actors will simply migrate to less vigilant platforms.
Third, the discovery architecture of streaming platforms would need to be redesigned to ensure that human artists are not systematically buried under algorithmically promoted content. This is perhaps the most technically difficult challenge, as it requires balancing competing interests: platform engagement metrics, label promotion budgets, algorithmic efficiency, and the long-term health of a musical ecosystem that depends on new human talent being able to find audiences.
None of these reforms is currently on track to happen. The major labels are busy signing licensing deals with AI companies. The streaming platforms are focused on fraud mitigation rather than structural reform. And the public debate remains fixated on whether AI music is “real” enough to deserve its place on the charts.
The numbers tell a story that the authenticity debate cannot contain. In 2025, the global streaming market generated $25.12 billion in revenue, representing 67 per cent of total recorded music industry income. US streaming revenue alone reached $4.68 billion, capturing 84 per cent of the domestic market. Yet growth had slowed to just 0.9 per cent year over year in the first half of 2025, according to RIAA data. The industry is approaching a ceiling at precisely the moment when the demands on its revenue pool are expanding exponentially.
Meanwhile, fans are being squeezed from multiple directions. As Mulligan has noted, consumers face higher prices from streaming platforms, increased merchandise and vinyl costs from labels, and rising concert ticket prices from live entertainment companies, all while dealing with broader cost-of-living pressures. The willingness of listeners to pay more for music cannot be assumed to be infinite, yet the system depends on continuous revenue growth to accommodate an ever-expanding catalogue. Over 42 per cent of independent artists report they do not fully understand their own earnings breakdown, a transparency deficit that further compounds the power imbalance between creators and the infrastructure that distributes their work.
The 60 million people who used AI to create music in 2024 are not villains. Many of them are hobbyists, experimenters, or, like Telisha Jones, creative individuals who found a new way to express ideas they had always carried. The problem is not their existence but the system into which their creations are funnelled: a system that was already failing to sustain professional musicians, already rewarding volume over quality, already concentrating revenue among a tiny elite, and already proving unable to help listeners find music they would genuinely love.
When Victoria Monet told Vanity Fair that AI “puts creators in a dangerous spot because our time is more finite,” she identified something real but misdiagnosed its source. “We have to rest at night,” she said. “So, the eight hours, nine hours that we're resting, an AI artist could potentially still be running, studying, and creating songs like a machine.” The danger to creators, however, is not primarily that AI can produce music faster. It is that the entire infrastructure of recorded music distribution was built for a world in which creating and distributing a song required meaningful investment of time, money, and labour. That world no longer exists. The infrastructure has not adapted, and the people paying the price are the musicians who depend on it for their livelihoods.
The question is not whether AI music is authentic. The question is whether the music industry can build systems that sustain human musicians in a world where the marginal cost of creating a song has collapsed to near zero. That is an economic and infrastructural challenge, not a moral one. And until the debate is reframed accordingly, the artists doing the loudest protesting will continue to be the ones with the least power to change the structures that are actually harming them.
Billboard. “AI Music Artist Xania Monet Signs Multimillion-Dollar Record Deal.” Billboard, 2025. https://www.billboard.com/pro/ai-music-artist-xania-monet-multimillion-dollar-record-deal/
CNN. “Xania Monet is the first AI-powered artist to debut on a Billboard airplay chart.” CNN, 1 November 2025. https://www.cnn.com/2025/11/01/entertainment/xania-monet-billboard-ai
Billboard. “AI Artist Xania Monet Debuts on Adult R&B Airplay.” Billboard, 2025. https://www.billboard.com/music/chart-beat/ai-artist-xania-monet-debut-adult-rb-airplay-chart-1236102665/
NPR. “Breaking Rust is a hot new country act on the Billboard charts. It's powered by AI.” NPR, 10 November 2025. https://www.npr.org/2025/11/10/nx-s1-5604320/breaking-rust-is-a-hot-new-country-act-on-the-billboard-charts-its-powered-by-ai
Newsweek. “The No. 1 Country Song in America Is AI-Generated.” Newsweek, 2025. https://www.newsweek.com/breaking-rust-ai-music-country-digital-sales-11022040
DJ Mag. “60 million people used AI to create music in 2024, IMS Business Report 2025 finds.” DJ Mag, 2025. https://djmag.com/news/60-million-people-used-ai-create-music-2024-ims-business-report-2025-finds
Music Business Worldwide. “Over 60,000 tracks are now uploaded to Spotify every day.” Music Business Worldwide, 2025. https://www.musicbusinessworldwide.com/over-60000-tracks-are-now-uploaded-to-spotify-daily-thats-nearly-one-per-second/
Billboard. “How Much Music Is Added to Spotify & Other Streaming Services Daily?” Billboard, 2025. https://www.billboard.com/pro/how-much-music-added-spotify-streaming-services-daily/
Music Business Worldwide. “Music streaming platforms now host quarter of a BILLION tracks.” Music Business Worldwide, 2025. https://www.musicbusinessworldwide.com/quarter-of-a-billion-tracks-now-sit-on-music-streaming-services-where-does-it-end/
Deezer Newsroom. “Deezer: 28% of all delivered music is now fully AI-generated.” Deezer, September 2025. https://newsroom-deezer.com/2025/09/28-fully-ai-generated-music/
Hypebot. “Deezer's 50,000 Daily AI Song Uploads: How Fraud Hides Behind Invisibility.” Hypebot, November 2025. https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2025/11/deezers-50000-daily-ai-song-uploads-how-fraud-hides-behind-invisibility.html
Music Ally. “Deezer says up to 85% of its AI-music streams are now fraudulent.” Music Ally, 29 January 2026. https://musically.com/2026/01/29/deezer-says-up-to-85-of-its-ai-music-streams-are-now-fraudulent/
Deezer Newsroom. “Deezer and Ipsos study: AI fools 97% of listeners.” Deezer, November 2025. https://newsroom-deezer.com/2025/11/deezer-ipsos-survey-ai-music/
Spotify Newsroom. “Spotify Strengthens AI Protections for Artists, Songwriters, and Producers.” Spotify, 25 September 2025. https://newsroom.spotify.com/2025-09-25/spotify-strengthens-ai-protections/
Variety. “Spotify Announces New AI Safeguards, Says It's Removed 75 Million 'Spammy' Tracks.” Variety, 2025. https://variety.com/2025/digital/news/spotify-new-ai-safeguards-1236528493/
Spotify Newsroom. “From $11B in 2025 Payouts to What We're Building for Artists in 2026.” Spotify, 28 January 2026. https://newsroom.spotify.com/2026-01-28/2025-music-industry-payouts-whats-next-for-artists/
RIAA. “Growth in Paid Subscription Streaming Drives Mid-Year 2025 US Recorded Music Revenues to New High.” RIAA, 2025. https://www.riaa.com/growth-in-paid-subscription-streaming-drives-mid-year-2025-us-recorded-music-revenues-to-new-high-reports-riaa/
Billboard. “Kehlani Slams AI Artist Xania Monet Over $3 Million Record Deal Offer.” Billboard, 2025. https://www.billboard.com/music/music-news/kehlani-slams-ai-artist-xania-monet-million-record-deal-1236071158/
TheGrio. “Victoria Monet sounds the alarm on Xania Monet.” TheGrio, November 2025. https://thegrio.com/2025/11/18/victoria-monet-reacts-to-xania-monet/
CBS News. “Meet the woman behind chart-topping AI artist Xania Monet.” CBS News, 2025. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/meet-the-woman-behind-chart-topping-ai-artist-xania-monet-i-look-at-her-as-a-real-person/
Billboard. “iHeartRadio Bans AI Music, Podcasts & Radio DJs With New Program.” Billboard, 2025. https://www.billboard.com/pro/iheartradio-bans-ai-music-podcasts-radio-djs-new-program/
TechCrunch. “Warner Music signs deal with AI music startup Suno, settles lawsuit.” TechCrunch, 25 November 2025. https://techcrunch.com/2025/11/25/warner-music-signs-deal-with-ai-music-startup-suno-settles-lawsuit/
TechCrunch. “Warner Music settles copyright lawsuit with Udio, signs deal for AI music platform.” TechCrunch, 19 November 2025. https://techcrunch.com/2025/11/19/warner-music-settles-copyright-lawsuit-with-udio-signs-deal-for-ai-music-platform/
MIDiA Research. “AI is reshaping the music creator economy.” MIDiA Research, 2025. https://www.midiaresearch.com/blog/ai-is-reshaping-the-music-creator-economy-and-that-change-will-reshape-the-music-business
MIDiA Research. “The unflattening of streaming.” MIDiA Research, 2025. https://www.midiaresearch.com/blog/the-unflattening-of-streaming
Billboard. “AI Artists Breaking Rust & More Hit Country Music Chart: Reactions.” Billboard, 2025. https://www.billboard.com/pro/ai-artists-breaking-rust-country-music-chart-reactions/
ScienceDirect. “Alternative payment models in the music streaming market: A comparative approach based on stream-level data.” ScienceDirect, 2024. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167624524000258
AMW Group. “Music Streaming Statistics 2026.” AMW Group, 2026. https://amworldgroup.com/statistics/music-streaming-statistics
Digital Music News. “85% of Indies Face 'Negative Impact' from Spotify Stream Minimum.” Digital Music News, December 2025. https://www.digitalmusicnews.com/2025/12/16/spotify-stream-minimum/
Hypebot. “Spotify Responds: Did the 1000 Stream Rule cost Artists $47M?” Hypebot, April 2025. https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2025/04/did-the-spotify-1000-stream-rule-cost-indie-artists-47-million-spotify-responds.html
Music Business Worldwide. “One of Suno's latest investors will be of particular interest to the music industry.” Music Business Worldwide, 2025. https://www.musicbusinessworldwide.com/one-of-sunos-latest-investors-will-be-of-particular-interest-to-the-music-industry/
Music Ally. “Hallwood Media sees chart success with AI artist Xania Monet.” Music Ally, 18 September 2025. https://musically.com/2025/09/18/hallwood-media-sees-chart-success-with-ai-artist-xania-monet/
Deezer Newsroom. “How to Detect AI Music: Deezer Sells Its Detection Tool.” Deezer, January 2026. https://newsroom-deezer.com/2026/01/ai-generated-music-deezer-selling-detection-tool/
Copyright Alliance. “AI Copyright Lawsuit Developments in 2025: A Year in Review.” Copyright Alliance, 2025. https://copyrightalliance.org/ai-copyright-lawsuit-developments-2025/

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
from POTUSRoaster
Hello Again. Are you rooting for an NCAA ranked team?
While you are watching basketball, POTUS is threatening congress with refusing to sign anything until the SAVE America Act is passed by the senate. It has already been passed by the house.
This proposed law is designed to disenfranchise millions of Americans by requiring specific identification in order to register to vote. The documents include passports and birth certificates to prove that voters are citizens. Are you a woman? Did you change your name when you got married? If you did, the name on those documents may be different. If your current name is different, you may not be able to register and vote, and this is the purpose of the act.
Also included in this diabolical act are clauses to give the wealthy tax relief and hurt transgender citizens. It doesn't just cover voting rights. POTUS fears that he will lose control of congress and ultimately face an impeachment which will ultimately throw him out of office. He wants to insure that only his voters can go to the polls. This is just another reason why POTUS needs to be removed from office.
POTUS Roaster
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Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * A quiet Friday winds down. Tried to follow a little baseball then a little basketball this afternoon but couldn't raise enough enthusiasm to stick with either. Listening to relaxing music now, and doing some quiet reading. I'll probably stick with that until I wrap up my night prayers in a couple hours then head to bed.
Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night. Details of that regimen are linked to my link tree, which is linked to my profile page here.
Starting Ash Wednesday, 2026, I've added this daily prayer as part of the Prayer Crusade Preceding the 2026 SSPX Episcopal Consecrations.
Health Metrics: * bw= 226.31 lbs. * bp= 135/79 (67)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups
Diet: * 05:45 – crispy oatmeal cookies * 06:45 – 1 peanut butter sandwich * 09:45 – 4 hot dog sandwiches * 11:55 – bowl of lugau * 14:45 – 1 fresh apple
Activities, Chores, etc.:
* 04:00 – listen to local news talk radio
* 05:00 – bank accounts activity monitored
* 05:40 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap, yard work
* 12:30 – watch old eps. of Classic Doctor Who
* 14:00 – audio feed with Los Angeles pregame is working, MLB Gameday has started and displays stats and info for this afternoon's game, opening pitch is minutes away.
* 16:30 – turned away from the baseball game to catch an NCAA men's basketball game, Miami RedHawks vs Tennessee Volunteers, this game currently at halftime. The Vols are leading 51 to 32.
* 17:30 – listening to relaxing music, quietly reading.
Chess: * 13:20 -moved in all pending CC games