from a weapon to surpass blaming yourself or god while knee-deep in the dead

I hate prequels. I hate them conceptually, which is to say I hate the idea of prequels as opposed to any particular prequel. there are good prequels, sure, but those are an accident, an exception to the fundamental rule that prequels are narrative poison. I’ll die on this hill. these worthless prequels… they took the Planet from you, didn’t they, Mother?

ahem.

the narrative problem with prequels is that stories are not universes. this is a bigger problem with the way we use the term “universe” in storytelling, as in the marvel cinematic universe or whatever — it implies a holism that is part of the illusion, not the reality, of stories. when the camera pans away from Captain America, he is not still around, eating a granola bar or catching up on his emails, because Captain America does not exist outside of the confines of a beginning and ending of a story being told about or including him. the answer to “when do they use the bathroom in 24” was always “this is fiction, what the fuck are you talking about jesse.”

this isn’t just semantics I’m getting at here. if stories aren’t universes, then a prequel is not simply “let’s turn the dial back to the past and see what these folks were up to” because the answer to “what were these folks up to” is “they didn’t exist.” a prequel is as much an arbitrary construction as any story is, except now its reason for existing isn’t because there’s a good story to be told but because a story was already told and some people who want money would like it to be told but longer this time, and some people who write fan wikis would like all their dots to connect.

a storyteller tells a story because the story has something interesting to say. done well, it’s not the arbitrary creation of new worlds or people — it’s theme and catharsis wrapped into narrative arcs and climaxes that reveal or emphasize or disrupt our understanding of the human condition. even the fun, silly stories do this if they’re done right; it’s what makes storytelling satisfying at a fundamental level.

prequels and cinematic universes and whatnot, made for their own sake, presuppose that the valuable parts of any given story are 1) the IP, and 2) the fan wikis. many prequels are tiresome dot-connecting exercises that only recognize the superficial iconography of their source material and none of their narrative heft; the worst ones actively undermine the original story by misunderstanding or failing to recognize the power in concision, in not saying everything, in keeping some things buried or carefully placed.

crisis core: final fantasy 7 is both tiresome and undermines its source material. great!

*

I’m biased here; final fantasy 7 hit me at exactly the right time for it to forever have a golden nostalgic glow. but also I’ve played the original game maybe a dozen times in my life and have a firm grasp on what it actually is as much as what it looks like when I remember playing it on my brand-new playstation as a 10 year old.

for a game of its era, and especially for such a shoddily translated game of its era, ff7 is remarkably good at subtext, theme, and metaphor. the entire game revolves around the perils of allowing others to define you; this is cloud’s character arc in a nutshell, but it’s also tifa’s, and barret’s, and cid’s, and red xiii’s, and so on and so on. but let’s focus on the dynamic of cloud, sephiroth, and zack for a moment, since that’s where crisis core decides to focus.

to be honest, choosing the day sephiroth went crazy as a place to expand and add context isn’t a terrible idea for an ff7 prequel, because it’s a space of tremendous thematic potential that the game uses sparingly enough to suggest there’s more to mine. there is also an aspect of telling the “true” story of what happened, since the primary way ff7 tells this history is through cloud’s false version of events, where he’s SOLDIER and zack doesn’t exist.

but let’s break this down in terms of how this story is told in OG FF7:

  1. zack is a cipher. he is the man cloud wanted to be and eventually pretends to be, and thus a symbol of of cloud’s shame and fear. he is effortlessly cool, composed, and heroic because these are the qualities cloud desperately wants and believes himself to have failed to achieve. he’s a narrative device first in this context; you barely even see him unless you spend the time to unlock the hidden cutscenes that play out his ultimate fate.

  2. sephiroth is a pathetic monster, self-absorbed and driven to madness by his refusal to accept the horror of his origins. he’s killed by cloud in a moment of miraculous selflessness and heroism on the latter’s part; the memory of this victory is, however, so caught up in cloud’s larger sense of inadequacy that he hides the details from himself. sephiroth himself, again, functions as a cipher or a lens, the dark mirror of the power cloud wishes he could possess.

both of these characters exist in the context of cloud. even the ways zack has more of an external life reflect back into cloud — zack’s relationship to aerith deeply complicates a player’s understanding of what aerith sees in cloud and how she understands him, and likewise reinforces the sadness and desperation in cloud’s attraction to her, his desire to be a version of himself that already had that relationship.

likewise sephiroth. oh, sephiroth. here’s the thing: in FF7’s “present day” storytelling, sephiroth is dead as fuck. the sephiroth that harangues cloud, manipulates him into surrendering the black materia, and confronts the gang in the Northern Cave — that’s jenova, wearing sephiroth’s face because she knows how much cloud fears him.

but sephiroth himself? his entire story is contained in the nibelheim flashbacks. he’s been led to believe his whole life that he’s a very special boy; he learns that instead he’s pretty much just the least gross of a series of science experiments; he rejects this and decides he’s god’s only son instead. this ends badly for him. again it’s meant to be a twisted mirror of cloud’s own choices and self-perception and anxieties; sephiroth’s entire psyche is built upon his self-conception as a certain hero, wanting the world to see him as above it, and when the world forcibly shatters that image, he shatters with it, going insane in order to maintain his sense of superiority. men will literally summon meteor instead of going to therapy.

incidentally, jenova/sephiroth gets the best bit of characterizing metaphor in the whole game, in the sequence of final boss battles.

  1. first you fight jenova’s “ultimate” synthesis form, an “accurate” representation of the monster that crashed into the earth, an woman’s torso made eldritch and stuck onto a malformed meteorite. this is the literal monster.

  2. then you fight “bizarro” sephiroth, an even more eldritch representation of jenova’s influence over her erstwhile progeny, a jumbled assemly of the beautiful and horrible with a version of sephiroth himself stapled onto his own head.

  3. then there’s the seraphim, “safer” sephiroth. this is ego projection epitomized. jenova’s defining characteristic is believing itself to be the rightful god and heir of the planet; sephiroth’s defining characteristic is that he believes himself to be the chosen one and a god in his own right. thus their final form is, simply, god. a chorus sings for a being of angelic perfection. his most powerful attack is the destruction of the entire fuckin’ universe.

but it’s a lie! he can summon super nova multiple times! but also jenova is not a god, just an alien asshole with a god complex, whose self-projection can be overcome by those like cloud, who are now self-assured enough to see through it.

and then at the end of all things, cloud duels with sephiroth in a black void, and if there’s been another RPG battle that’s more obviously just a dude working some stuff out in his head, I haven’t played it. this shirtless babe is the spectre of sephiroth in cloud’s mind, the vestiges of his anxiety and self-doubt, and cloud defeats him in a final sequence of masterstrokes, and he simply disappears.

the key thing to take away here is that all of these characters exist (or don’t) in service of narrative build and payoff. even cloud, the most complex character in the story and the one against whom so many of these pieces refract and make meaning, only exists inside of this story. when the lifestream impacts meteor and the world goes white, cloud disappears just like everyone else; his “life” ends when the story does.

OK anyway with all this rambling in mind let’s take a look at what crisis core decides to do with these pieces:

  1. remember how safer sephiroth’s whole “one winged angel” thing is just an extended riff/metaphor on jenova’s god complex? nah buddy, metaphors are for suckers: jenova cells give you literally one wing, like half a can of red bull. this overuse and mishandling of the “one winged angel” concept didn’t didn’t originate with crisis core, but it is definitely the dead horse this game wails on the most.

  2. wouldn’t sephiroth’s “oh shit I’m a monster? no, it’s the children who are wrong” arc be better if two other characters do it before him but more confusingly and shoddily, so that by the time he “learns the truth” it feels like he’s just been stupid or deaf the rest of the game?

  3. would you like cloud’s big sword to have an origin story? oh no, not that one, not the one it already had that made it a signifier of both his hidden failures and his hidden heroism; I mean a second, far less interesting origin story, where it was also some other other guy’s sword for a while?

  4. ff7 has professor gast and professor hojo, two guys who did experiments on ancients and jenova with very different ideas of what they were doing and why. neither is a saint, but only one is a devil. oh also I guess there was a third guy also doing the same stuff just over there where we couldn’t see him

this isn’t even getting me started on how much the invented writing and story of crisis core sucks, sucks so badly that even when it isn’t directly polluting the ground for the story to come, it’s still stupid and bad, poorly written and poorly directed, so many cutscenes full of characters blankly standing still saying nonsense that means nothing, or else doing floaty advent children sword duels that are, don’t get me wrong, cool as hell but also the emptiest calories available.

the best narrative bits in crisis core are exclusively incidental and function only in the context of having played ff7 itself and thus already being in love with its characters. in that context, I suppose it’s compelling to see young cloud pre-mako-haze, insecure and feeling like a failure but still fundamentally decent and full of the potential to be a true hero. aerith’s presence is fascinating; she’s younger enough when we see her to be not as self-aware as she is when cloud meets her, but she’s full of the same melancholy and pre-acceptance of her fate.

(baby yuffie is cute, too.)

but these aren’t stories, and they’re not telling us anything new that wasn’t already in the original story, except in the form of “X years ago, this character was over here” wiki details. and they’re not enough to make up for how crisis core fumbles, misunderstands, and kind of ruins its representation of the crucial moments from the original story.

zack himself I’m of multiple minds about. on the one hand he’s genuinely likable and compelling as the lead in crisis core. he has exactly the fundamental decency and heroism he should have, tracking well with his limited portrayal in the source material. on the other hand… so what? what does his story here amount to, that it didn’t already have before? do we learn anything about him that changes his status in the larger story as “the guy cloud wishes he was”? is there an arc here that justifies spending hours with him outside of that context?

maybe I’m just being a wet blanket here, I dunno. enjoy crisis core if you want. I didn’t hate my time with it — the combat loop is entertaining enough, the bite-sized mission structure makes my steam deck feel so much like an oversized PSP that I wanted to time travel and buy zack’s flip phone just to get back to that era — but it sucks as a narrative extension of final fantasy 7, because it exists as an expansion of intellectual property first, a “hey remember this” iconography game second, and a story that someone truly thought was worth telling in a distant last place.

oh well time to take a big sip of this coffee and play final fantasy vii rebirth, a game that’s sure not to have any similar negative effects on my psyche—

 
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from Turbulences

Que nous reste-t-il ?

Quand tout ce à quoi nous tenions, Semble aujourd’hui si fragile.

Que nous reste-t-il ?

Alors qu’à tous les horizons, S’accroissent les périls.

Mais alors que nous reste-t-il ?

Quand après le naufrage de la raison,   La vie ne tient plus qu’à un fil.

L’incertitude d’hier avait du bon, L’improbable pouvait encore surgir.

Mais inerties, emballements et effets rebonds, Font que chaque jour voit ses lendemains s’étrécir.

Quand la connaissance devient un tel fardeau, Comment résister encore à l’appel du déni ?

Comment ne pas être tenté par les faux messies, S’accrochant à leurs promesses comme à un radeau.

Alors, il nous reste quoi ?

Il nous reste des choix. Cultiver la joie, c’est déjà un combat.

Prendre soin du bien, propager la beauté, C’est déjà une manière de résister.

Faire en sorte qu’un enfant puisse rêver, C’est lui ouvrir le champ des possibles.

Et qu’importent les chances de succès, Agir par choix est une question de dignité.

 

 

 
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from Nightjar

- after Brigid Pegeen Kelly

They found her, sitting in her favorite chair, readers askew, holding Pegeen Kelly’s “Song,”  the pages dog-eared and smeared like child’s art. Others said the book had dropped to her lap, her arms raised in fear as if a night bird had startled her.

As a child, dusky dots painted the bridge of her nose. Always wanting to be held, she would feign cry and sleep, dots spread wide and dark from the salt. Games were all called beloved, as in let’s play how close will you hold me how long will you stay.

As a pullus, her dots became more faint, and she clung like a goat to the cliffs of who would have her. Are you my father? Are you my mother? Will you have me?

As an orphan, she found solace in currents and hoped a giant eye, peering from the blue, might see her heart adrift after the 99th reading

soft hands in the air as if bracing for impact a single, vibrant blue feather lodged in her heart

death by fluttering

#poetry

 
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from TRAILER PARK LIFE

The Only fans discussion at the nursing home Never will forget this moment I tried to explain to my mother two young women wanting to live at the trailer park that had a Only fans page. She kept saying explain this to me again , “they cook and exercise in the nude and people pay to watch this?” Yep. Mom they don't do porn they just exercise and cook food and watch tv naked – on camera. And they teach men that are into bass fishing how to tie lures with knots and such. “They do this nude. And people pay for this?” Yep. “Nope you do not need that going on” she said. “Imagine when you were 12 and all your playmates. Thats exactly where you boys would be.” I said, but they are really nice young ladies. “Nope, they need to find somewhere else.”

 
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from Ennui Vagaries

Photo by Bernard Hermant Photo by Bernard Hermant on Unsplash

I've started a quest for the “perfect” typewriter. I don't know what that means: I don't know what perfect is in the case of typewriters. When I find it, I will know it. There will be mistakes made along the way, but so be it.

There is something that has fascinated me already, however, in my search for a typewriter.

Originally I was thinking that an IBM Selectric I was the most likely candidate for my perfect typewriter. Why? Mainly because I've used one in the past. And for some reason I think we had one at home. My father had an inherent trust of IBM. I recall him parroting the saying, “Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM.” And, of course the other reason: they were produced during my birth year. Yeah, despite the fact that I still don't understand Birth Year Collecting, it was something that I was doing.

But there was an issue when I started thinking about it… How would I know if a specific typewriter was produced during my birth year? The IBM Selectric I was produced from 1961 to 1971 — ten years, and I wanted to find one that was almost literally smack-dab in the middle of that date range. And, if I am honest, that is probably during the peak in the models' popularity.

That's when I found a website that is incredibly helpful: The Typewriter Database. This is the kind of thing I've only seen a few times. Collectors of cars, watches, and some vintage electronics have similar databases (or books) with this kind of information in it. What this database has in it is listings for (literally) thousands of typewriters, and as much identifying information about them as possible. The most important being a list of serial numbers, and their corresponding dates of production.

So, for example, if I wanted an IBM Selectric I from 1963 (not my birth year), I would look for serial numbers in the range 4086101–4115100. If I wanted an IBM Model C Executive from 1967 (also not my birth year — lol) I'd look for serial numbers in the range of 2301101–2312580.

So, the hunt goes on. I'm not even certain that I want an IBM typewriter at this point. There are a lot of typewriters that catching my eye, but none of the ones that I am seeing are from my birth year. But again, I have to wonder if going with something from my birth year is even the right thing for me to do?

One thing I've noticed is this; price is definitely linked to (a) condition, and (b) the seller. One model that caught my eye has a very wide range of prices. The one, in particular, that I noticed comes from a seller that services typewriters, and seems to only sell ones that are in pristine condition. Of course, this comes at a price, typically more than double the average asking price for the model. Is it worth it? I think it would — especially to have a typewriter that is in top working condition.

But, then again, I don't know that I want to pay what is being asked for it. In particular, this is a portable manual typewriter. It's not a model I would likely use much, if at all. I would be just buying it because it is aesthetically pleasing.

Well, it doesn't matter yet. I am still going to keep hunting for a typewriter. Whether I get a birth-year model or not is still something I need to figure out. And, honestly, whether I plan to use it is another question altogether. I think that is what I am waiting for my mind to settle on: is this something I am actually going to want to use, or is it just for decoration? Once I have answered that question, then I will be able to nail down what I want to get.


Categories: #Essays Tags: #typewriter, #collecting, #shopping, #research, #eyecandy, #aesthetics License: Copyright Unattributed. Licensed under Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0.

 
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from The Marshall Review

I was educated in a school founded eight centuries ago, given its Royal Charter by Elizabeth I, and governed, in spirit. and often in daily practice, by Oxford and Cambridge dons. It was the kind of place where language arrived not as a living medium but as a set of obligations. You did not “learn English”; you inherited it. You spelled organize with a Z because that was the proper, etymological form. You cast your sentences in the passive because it was dignified. And in sixth form classrooms, you spoke a kind of Middle English that had never quite admitted the existence of the twentieth century.

It was a beautiful education in many ways. But it left me with the sense that language was something to be obeyed rather than understood.

I’ve spent years unlearning that stance. Not rejecting it, there is value in precision, in etymology, in the long continuity of English thought. But loosening its grip. A writer cannot live by rules alone. A writer must live by judgement.

This is why my style sheet has begun to change. It is no longer a ledger of prohibitions inherited from Hart, Butcher, the ghost of some medieval grammarian, or the Elizabethan drive for a language fit to govern by. It is becoming a record of decisions: small, careful, reader‑facing choices about how thought should appear on the page.

The shift is simple to describe and difficult to practise. I’ve begun to prefer relation before interruption. If secondary material has a clear logical connection – cause, concession, condition, definition – I try to express it through syntax rather than punctuation. Let the reader feel the continuity of thought. Use parenthesis only when the mind genuinely steps aside.

This tendency has changed how I see the page. A style sheet is no longer a set of instructions; it is a companion in editorial judgement. It asks: what does the reader need at this moment? How do I help them enter, follow, trust, and remain with the essay? And how do I make my thinking visible without making it burdensome?

In a way, the work feels like reclaiming the language I was given; not rejecting its history, but choosing its future. Not Middle English in a sixth form classroom, but a living English shaped by the needs of the reader and the movement of thought.

I’ve written a short note about this evolution on write.as here in my essayist’s notebook: esy.ie https://go.marshall.ie/style-sheet-essay-notes

 
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from AnOublietteofThought

I am remiss to starve your smile enchanted when it dilapidates upon the ruins of precognitive exposure. The splash of sunken tip is a scar upon our spiral, and every gasp of spare entwine deepens the row in our parting. Maladaptive hunger strays in waste where donor once caved in blissful pull, and the cerulean dance bartering heaven with heart has become an unstable misnomer. Cruel is this lethargy burying what is within what may never see. Even more cruel is the cusp on which we're sliced. Night after night, in spite of life's light, we descend the harrowing all. For what? Brief purchase? A vandalized awe in possibility? Could it be that our unquenchable thirst for what is an insipid truth at best has addicted us to treasonous beat? Could it be we are wrong to thirst immortale?

Written July 15, 2026. © 2026 AnOublietteofThought.

 
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from Things Left Unsaid

I'm sorry I abandoned you babe. It's going be different this time. I promise. I used to be mayor of Mississauga. One day I decided that I wanted to be premier of Ontario instead so I just stopped going into city hall. Like, whatever, right. Who needs a mayor? I failed so badly at provincial politics that the only way I knew what was going on at their meetings was from bootleg recording devices. I have nothing better to do right now, so I decided to try and get my silly old job as mayor back. I just need something to do while I sort out what I really want to do. I believe that everyone who isn't me has the IQ of sloths and the attention span of fruit flies, so it shouldn't be too difficult. Me and my people will get A.I. to figure out what people want. Then we can use that information to fabricate half truths about my opponents, and lofty goals, so I have things to say at my loyalist gatherings and press conferences. I'll ride the Liberal wave that is sweeping the nation right back into my old office. I'll be a celebrity!

 
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from An Essayist's Notebook

Yes. That feels like the right stance. It's a whisper to myself. And it changes the nature of the style sheet. It means the style sheet will refuse to be a list of prohibitions. And become a record of editorial judgement.

Not: Always use X. Never use Y. – But: When this kind of problem arises, here is how I understand the reader’s need, the sentence’s work, and the available marks. That is a much richer, and a much larger, task.

But it is also exactly the right task for an essayist. I’d frame my stance like this:

Editorial stance I take Hart and Butcher not as authorities for the imposition of arbitrary rules, but as companions in judgement. Their value is to encourage care: to think critically, practically, and supportively about the reader’s relationship with my words. The aim of style is not correctness for its own sake, but the best presentation of thought to a reader.

Where a question of punctuation, typography, spelling, structure, citation, or layout arises, the governing question is: what will help the reader enter, follow, trust, and remain with the essay? That gives us the governing principle. Then each style-sheet entry can follow a common pattern:

Style-sheet entry pattern 1: Function: What is this element trying to do? 2: Reader relation: What does the reader need at this moment 3: Available forms: What marks, constructions, or layout choices are available? 4: Preferred tendency: What does my house style usually prefer? 5: Exceptions / judgement: When should that tendency be overridden? 6: Examples: One or two sentences showing the difference.

So for the current issue dangling in my the thoughts, the heading is not “En dash” or “brackets”. It is probably: Parenthetic movement. And within it I should distinguish: • subordination, when the relation between ideas should be explicit; • commas, when the aside is light and integrated; • round brackets, when the material is cooler or off-stage; • spaced en dashes, when the essayist’s thinking voice visibly turns aside; • recasting, when the sentence has become overburdened.

The emerging rule might be: Prefer relation before interruption. If the secondary material has a clear logical relation to the main clause – cause, concession, condition, time, purpose, definition – express that relation through syntax, often by subordination. Use parenthesis where the secondary material performs a genuine aside, qualification, hesitation, self-correction, or tonal adjustment.

That's the foundation of my style sheet: not a rule about punctuation, but a guiding statement about thought becoming readable.

An aside; And you will never see me write “top-anything”. Not top musician. Not top lawyer. Not even top idiot. If I think something is worth saying, I should be able to say what it is, not where it sits in an imaginary league table. __________________________

Perhaps I have already written the opening paragraph:

This style sheet is not a list of rules. It is a record of editorial judgements made in service of a reader. Every convention discussed here exists for a single purpose: to help thought become readable. Where questions of punctuation, typography, spelling, structure, citation, or layout arise, the governing question is always the same: what will help the reader enter, follow, trust, and remain with the essay?

This now feels to me like the moment the project acquires its own voice. Not Hart. Not Butcher. Not institutional publishing. But David Marshall's account of how thought should appear on the page.

 
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from An Open Letter

We decided to go to a waterpark for our first date this Saturday! This heat wave is killer and so I’m super excited for it. I also noticed that I find myself getting more and more enamored with her, and it feels more and more right.

 
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from PlantLab.ai | Blog

One uploaded photo of two cannabis plants going into PlantLab and coming out as a results array with one diagnosis object and bounding box per plant

The short version

PlantLab can now analyze more than one plant in a single uploaded photo. Instead of forcing the whole image into one diagnosis, the API finds the separable plants, diagnoses each one on its own, and returns a results[] array with one entry per plant.

This is a breaking API change. The response schema is now 3.0.0. Fields like is_healthy, growth_stage, conditions, pests, and reliability_score moved out of the top level and into results[]. Image-level fields such as is_cannabis and cannabis_confidence stay top-level.

If your code already treats a diagnosis as “the answer for this plant,” the migration is simple: iterate results[]. Single-plant photos still return exactly one result.


Why this had to change

Most plant diagnosis tools assume one photo equals one plant.

That is convenient for an API contract. It is not how people take grow-room photos.

Growers send canopy shots. They send side-by-side plants from the same tray. They send one wide image because it is faster than taking six separate photos. Sometimes one plant is healthy and the plant beside it is showing early deficiency. Sometimes the left side of a tent is getting different airflow or light intensity than the right side.

The old PlantLab response could only represent one diagnosis. If the image contained three plants, the model still had to answer as if it were looking at one object. That creates two bad outcomes.

First, the answer can become a blend. A healthy plant and a deficient plant in the same frame can collapse into a single diagnosis that is not quite true for either plant.

Second, the UI has no place to show location. Even when the model found the right problem, it could not say “this plant, in this part of the image.” For automation and history, that is a real limitation. A diagnosis without a region is hard to compare over time.

The fix was not another confidence field. It was a different shape of response.


What changes for growers

When the photo contains one plant, the experience should feel the same. PlantLab returns one diagnosis, with a full-image bounding box:

"results": [
  {
    "bbox": { "x0": 0, "y0": 0, "x1": 1, "y1": 1, "normalized": true },
    "is_healthy": false,
    "growth_stage": "flowering",
    "conditions": [
      { "class_id": "magnesium_deficiency", "confidence": 0.85 }
    ],
    "reliability_score": 0.87
  }
]

When the photo contains multiple separable plants, PlantLab returns multiple entries. Each entry has its own normalized bounding box and its own diagnosis fields:

{
  "schema_version": "3.0.0",
  "success": true,
  "is_cannabis": true,
  "cannabis_confidence": 0.99,
  "results": [
    {
      "bbox": { "x0": 0.06, "y0": 0.12, "x1": 0.45, "y1": 0.92, "normalized": true },
      "is_healthy": true,
      "health_confidence": 0.91,
      "growth_stage": "vegetative"
    },
    {
      "bbox": { "x0": 0.52, "y0": 0.10, "x1": 0.93, "y1": 0.95, "normalized": true },
      "is_healthy": false,
      "health_confidence": 0.88,
      "growth_stage": "vegetative",
      "conditions": [
        { "class_id": "nitrogen_deficiency", "confidence": 0.80 }
      ],
      "reliability_score": 0.83
    }
  ]
}

The boxes are normalized x0, y0, x1, y1 coordinates in the original image. They are designed for overlays, history views, and automation clients that need to keep a result tied to the plant it came from.

The original uploaded image stays the canonical image. PlantLab does not store a separate cropped image for each plant as the primary record. The boxes are metadata attached to the original frame.


Why the response is an array, not plant_1, plant_2, plant_3

Arrays are boring. That is why they are the right answer.

A grow tent can have one plant today and four plants next week. A user can upload a single close-up, then a wide tray shot, then a photo where the plants overlap too much to split safely. The API should not need new field names for each case.

With results[], the contract is stable:

  • len(results) == 1: use it like the old response.
  • len(results) > 1: show a plant selector or iterate through every result.
  • Each result carries its own bbox.

This also makes the API easier for automation systems. If you are feeding PlantLab into Home Assistant, Node-RED, a dashboard, or a cultivation controller, each plant result is a normal object. You can pick the first plant for backward-compatible behavior, show a plant count, or build a UI that lets the user choose which plant they care about.

The PlantLab Home Assistant integration has already been updated for this shape. Version 0.7.0 reads schema 3.0.0, keeps the existing sensors pointed at the primary plant (results[0]), and adds sensor.plantlab_plant_count so automations can tell when the last frame held more than one plant.


What changed for API consumers

Before schema 3.0.0, diagnosis fields were top-level:

{
  "schema_version": "2.1.0",
  "success": true,
  "is_cannabis": true,
  "cannabis_confidence": 0.99,
  "is_healthy": false,
  "growth_stage": "flowering",
  "conditions": [
    { "class_id": "magnesium_deficiency", "confidence": 0.85 }
  ],
  "reliability_score": 0.91
}

In schema 3.0.0, those diagnosis fields live inside results[]:

{
  "schema_version": "3.0.0",
  "success": true,
  "is_cannabis": true,
  "cannabis_confidence": 0.99,
  "results": [
    {
      "bbox": { "x0": 0, "y0": 0, "x1": 1, "y1": 1, "normalized": true },
      "is_healthy": false,
      "growth_stage": "flowering",
      "conditions": [
        { "class_id": "magnesium_deficiency", "confidence": 0.85 }
      ],
      "reliability_score": 0.91
    }
  ]
}

Migration pattern:

const primaryPlant = response.results?.[0]

if (primaryPlant?.is_healthy === false) {
  for (const condition of primaryPlant.conditions ?? []) {
    console.log(condition.class_id, condition.confidence)
  }
}

If your integration displays only one diagnosis, start with results[0]. That gives you a safe primary-plant path while you add richer multi-plant UI later.

If your integration can display multiple plants, iterate the array and draw each bbox over the original image.

If you use the official Home Assistant integration, update to v0.7.0. It is rollout-friendly: the updated integration understands the new results[] response, but it also falls back to the old flat fields when talking to a pre-3.0.0 API. That means you can update Home Assistant before the API flips without breaking existing sensors. Older integration versions should be upgraded before you depend on schema 3.0.0.


Why I made it breaking

I considered keeping the old top-level fields for one release and adding results[] beside them. That sounds friendlier until the two disagree.

Imagine an image with two plants:

  • Plant A is healthy.
  • Plant B has a deficiency.

What should the old top-level is_healthy say? If it says false, the healthy plant is wrong. If it says true, the deficient plant is wrong. If it tries to summarize the whole image, it stops being the same field that integrators already rely on.

Keeping both contracts would make the API easier to call and harder to trust. I would rather force one clear migration than leave stale fields around for months.

So the schema version bumped to 3.0.0. Consumers must read results[].


What PlantLab does when the image is messy

Multi-plant analysis is only useful when the plants can be separated cleanly enough to diagnose.

Dense canopy shots are hard. Touching plants, heavy overlap, blur, and poor lighting can make a crop ambiguous. Splitting too aggressively is worse than under-splitting, because an over-split can create contradictory diagnoses from pieces of the same plant.

PlantLab uses a conservative policy:

  • If the image looks like one plant, return one result.
  • If the plants are separable, return one result per plant.
  • If the scene is too dense or ambiguous, prefer one safer result over several questionable crops.
  • Cap the number of plant crops so latency stays bounded.

That last part matters. A multi-plant image first finds the separable plants, then diagnoses each one. Latency scales with the plants you actually sent, so a busy tray costs more than a single close-up, but it stays bounded.

The point is not to pretend every canopy photo is solvable. The point is to make the output honest about the structure of the image.


What this unlocks

For growers, this makes wide shots more useful. You can upload a photo of a tray and see which plant the diagnosis belongs to.

For paid history, bounding boxes make comparison over time more meaningful. A diagnosis can be stored with the region it came from instead of being attached only to the original image.

For automation, the response is finally shaped like the thing it describes. A controller can loop over plants, display per-plant state, or decide to alert only when any plant crosses a threshold.

For accuracy, this removes a bad compromise. A single answer for a mixed tray was always a blend – one plant's problem averaged against the plant next to it that was fine. One result per plant means each diagnosis is about one plant, not a committee vote across the whole frame.

This is the main reason I was willing to break the schema. The old response was simpler, but it encoded the wrong assumption.


Migration checklist

If you maintain a PlantLab client, check these paths:

  • Replace reads of top-level is_healthy, health_confidence, growth_stage, conditions, pests, mulders_hypotheses, reasoning fields, and reliability_score with reads from results[].
  • Keep reading top-level is_cannabis and cannabis_confidence.
  • Treat results[0] as the primary plant if you need backward-compatible behavior.
  • Use len(results) as the plant count.
  • Draw result.bbox over the original uploaded image if your UI supports overlays.
  • Treat {x0:0, y0:0, x1:1, y1:1} as the whole-image fallback box.
  • If you use Home Assistant, update plantlab-ai/home-assistant-plantlab to v0.7.0. Existing diagnosis sensors continue to show the primary plant, and the new sensor.plantlab_plant_count exposes len(results).

The full OpenAPI schema is available in the PlantLab docs at plantlab.ai/docs.


PlantLab is free to try at plantlab.ai. Three diagnoses a day, structured JSON responses, and API docs built for automation clients.


FAQ

Does every upload now return multiple plants?

No. Single-plant images return one result. Ambiguous dense canopy images may also return one result if splitting would be unsafe.

Did the old fields disappear?

Yes. Per-plant diagnosis fields moved into results[] in schema 3.0.0. Top-level is_cannabis and cannabis_confidence remain image-level fields.

How do I get the plant count?

Use response.results.length.

Are the bounding boxes pixel coordinates?

No. They are normalized coordinates from 0 to 1, relative to the original image. Multiply by image width and height when drawing overlays.

What should older clients do?

Read results[0] first. That restores the old “one diagnosis” behavior while keeping your code compatible with multi-plant uploads.

Is the Home Assistant integration ready?

Yes. The official Home Assistant integration is updated in v0.7.0. It reads schema 3.0.0, surfaces the primary plant through the existing sensors, adds sensor.plantlab_plant_count, and still tolerates pre-3.0.0 flat API responses during rollout.

 
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Anonymous

For most visitors, the front yard and driveway are the very first things they see when they pull up to a house. That makes them a bigger part of a home's overall impression than homeowners sometimes realize. A thoughtfully designed entry area doesn't just look better from the street; it can also make the property easier to move through and use day to day.

A lot of homeowners kick off these projects by talking to a front yard landscaper who understands how layout, grading, and design decisions all work together. Pairing landscaping updates with driveway work lets the whole entry area come together as one connected space instead of a handful of disconnected pieces. Done thoughtfully, this kind of project can reshape how a home looks while making it more functional for years to come.

Designing a Front Yard That Ties Into the Driveway

Good front yard design draws a clear visual line between the house, the driveway, and the walkway to the door. When plants, hardscape, and pathways are balanced against each other, the whole space reads as intentional rather than accidental.

A few things worth thinking through:

Choosing plants that match the home's architectural style Laying out a clear path between the driveway and the front door Framing the driveway with greenery instead of leaving it bare Balancing hardscape and planted areas so neither one overwhelms the other Good design naturally leads the eye and visitors toward the front door, while keeping the whole space feeling organized.

What a Front Yard Landscaper Actually Plans For

Before any work starts, an experienced front yard landscaper looks at a handful of site-specific factors. The slope of the yard, how water moves across it, and the overall layout all shape what design will actually work. That planning process typically covers:

Checking the grading across the property

Laying out access points that make the home easier to reach Making sure the landscaping and the driveway work together, not against each other

Choosing materials that fit the home's architecture

Getting this planning right up front keeps the final layout both practical to live with and visually appealing from the curb.

Softening the Driveway With Smart Landscaping Choices

The driveway itself plays a bigger role in the entry area's overall look than most people give it credit for.

Landscaping around its edges can take the hard, flat surface and tie it visually into the rest of the yard.

Popular ways to do this include:

  • Plantings that border and frame the driveway
  • Decorative stone or paver accents along the edges
  • Landscape islands built into larger driveways

Ground cover that softens the transition between hardscape and lawn Handled well, these details fold the driveway into the yard's overall design instead of leaving it looking like a separate slab of concrete.

The Curb Appeal Payoff of a Front Yard and Driveway Refresh

How a front yard looks has an outsized effect on how a home is perceived from the street. A clean, well-kept entry makes a strong first impression and puts the home's architecture in a better light.

These updates tend to improve curb appeal by:

  • Bringing balance to the overall landscape layout
  • Replacing a cracked or outdated driveway
  • Adding coordinated plantings and walkways
  • Cleaning up the path leading to the front door

Real estate research consistently points to curb appeal as one of the first things buyers and visitors notice about a property, which is part of why these upgrades matter beyond simple aesthetics.

Laying Out a Front Yard That Actually Works for the Home

A front yard project that holds together starts with a plan, not a shopping list of individual features. Every element needs to work with the others, not around them.

Worth keeping in mind:

  1. Placing landscaping so it frames the house rather than hides it

  2. Designing a driveway that's actually easy to use

  3. Building walkways that guide guests naturally to the door

  4. Pairing the landscape plan with outdoor lighting

When these pieces are planned together rather than added one at a time, the entry area functions as a single, cohesive outdoor space.

Choosing Driveway Materials That Hold Up Over Time

The material a driveway is built from affects both how it looks and how well it holds up under daily use. Picking something durable now saves headaches later.

Options homeowners commonly choose from:

  • Concrete is built for long-term wear
  • Decorative pavers that offer more design flexibility
  • Stone finishes that tie in with the surrounding landscape
  • Reinforced surfaces built to handle heavier daily traffic

The right material lets a driveway hold its own structurally while still looking like it belongs with the rest of the property.

Landscaping That Plays Well With Your Driveway

The right plants can take a driveway from purely functional to something that actually adds texture and color to the front of the house.

A few ideas homeowners lean on:

Shrubs planted along the driveway's edge, flower beds framing the entry path Low ground cover tucked around hardscape areas Trees positioned for shade and visual structure

These touches soften what would otherwise be a lot of hard, flat surface, and the front yard ends up feeling more welcoming as a result.

Walkways That Guide Guests to Your Door

The path from the driveway to the front door does more work than people give it credit for. A well-planned walkway can make the whole front yard feel more connected and easier to navigate.

Walkway options worth considering:

  • Paver paths linking the driveway to the entry
  • Decorative stone for a more distinctive look
  • Wider paths that improve accessibility
  • Curved layouts that add some architectural personality

Whatever the style, the goal is the same: a clear, inviting route to the front door.

Lighting That Adds Safety and Curb Appeal After Dark

Outdoor lighting isn't just about looks, it also makes a front yard safer to use once the sun goes down. Placed thoughtfully, it can highlight the features that make a home stand out.

Common lighting choices include:

  1. Pathway lights along the walkway

  2. Accent lighting on key landscaping features

  3. Driveway lighting that improves visibility at night

  4. Fixtures that highlight the entry itself

Good lighting means homeowners still get to enjoy their front yard well after dark, without sacrificing safety.

Low-Maintenance Landscaping and Hardscape That Holds Up

Not every homeowner wants a yard that demands constant upkeep. Choosing the right plants and hardscape materials up front can mean a lot less maintenance down the road.

Low-maintenance choices often include:

Drought-tolerant plants suited to the local climate. Southern California's regional water agencies offer guidance and incentives for exactly this kind of landscaping

Decorative gravel or stone as ground cover Artificial turf or paver surfaces that hold up to wear Hardscape borders that cut down on the lawn area to maintain

These choices keep a front yard looking sharp without adding to a homeowner's weekend to-do list.

How These Upgrades Can Add to a Home's Value

A well-planned driveway or front yard project doesn't just look better; it can genuinely change how a property is perceived by prospective buyers, who often read the entry area as a signal of how well the rest of the home has been maintained.

Ready to improve how your front yard or driveway looks and functions?

We Pro Builders, can help make that happen. As an experienced outdoor remodeling contractor in Southern California, we bring thoughtful design and solid craftsmanship to every front yard and driveway project, and we can pair it with pavers, concrete, artificial turf, or a full backyard remodel if you're planning to update more than just the entry.

Call us at (818) 455-1826.

 
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from Littoral

il est parti vers dix-sept heures rien de grave là-dedans

ma poitrine s’est serrée pareil sous la clavicule

j’ai checké mon cell une fois deux fois trois fois avant même de me rendre compte que je vérifiais

rien n’est arrivé pour vrai c’est ça que j’arrive pas à expliquer à mes mains

avant j’appelais ça de la prudence

là je respire et c’est tout

je compte l’expire plus long que l’inspire et j’attends que mon corps croie ce que ma tête sait déjà

 
Lire la suite...

from Douglas Vandergraph | Quiet Christian Reflection

An intimate account of faith, work, and what it means to speak into an empty search box

There is a moment after I publish an article when the room becomes unusually quiet.

The words are no longer waiting for me to improve them. The title is no longer a draft. The page has an address, a date, and a place in the archive. I can open it and read it like anyone else. For a few seconds, the work feels complete. Then comes the question I cannot answer from inside the editor: will anyone who needs these words ever find them?

The full facts and competing technical explanations are preserved in the canonical “Does Google Hate Jesus?” investigation. The article immediately before this one, the Ghost examination of why this may not be about Jesus at all, deliberately challenged the campaign’s most dramatic interpretation. This is not another technical case file. This is the quieter truth underneath it.

I kept publishing.

Google kept returning silence.

I do not mean that every search produced an empty page. I do not mean no one ever visited anything I wrote. I do not mean Google removed the Gospel from the internet. I mean that I built a large, public collection of Gospel and New Testament writing on Blogger, and much of it became extraordinarily difficult to discover through the search engine most people use.

Bing appeared to find at least some of the same material.

Google often did not.

That difference is where the investigation began. The silence is where this article begins.

I Was Never Writing to a Search Engine

I learned the language of search because I wanted people to find the work. I learned about titles, descriptions, links, sitemaps, indexing, headings, canonical URLs, archives, and platform structure. Those things matter when public writing depends on systems that decide what becomes discoverable.

But I was never really writing to a crawler.

I was writing to the person awake at two in the morning because fear has convinced him that morning will not help.

I was writing to the woman who has heard John 3:16 all her life but still wonders whether God could love her after what she has done.

I was writing to the man who promised he would remain strong, failed under pressure, and now reads Peter’s denial as though it were his own biography.

I was writing to the person standing beside a grave, trying to believe that Luke 24 is more than a beautiful story told to make death less frightening.

I was writing to people who do not know my name.

That matters. The person I imagined was not already subscribed to my work. He did not know the address of my Blogger site. She did not know there was a Master Index. They would begin with a question, not with me.

Search was supposed to connect the question to the page.

When that connection fails, the article remains public but the intended reader may never know it exists. That is the strange loneliness of digital publishing. You can place something in front of the whole world and still have almost no path leading the world toward it.

The Page Was There

One reason this problem took time to understand is that nothing looked missing.

The article opened normally.

The title appeared.

The date appeared.

The paragraphs were there.

The links worked.

The post joined the public archive.

From the publisher’s side, it felt like a finished act. Blogger had accepted the article and made it available. I could copy the URL into a message, and another person could open it.

The problem only appeared when I stopped behaving like the publisher and tried to behave like a stranger.

A stranger would not have the direct URL.

A stranger would not browse months of archived posts.

A stranger would not know the exact naming system of the project.

A stranger would search.

That is where “published” and “available” separated.

The page existed in the literal sense. It did not always exist in the practical sense that matters to discovery. It was like placing a book in a public building without adding it to the catalog. A person who knew the room, shelf, and exact position could retrieve it. Everyone else could walk past the building without knowing the book was inside.

That distinction is technical, but living with it is personal.

Four Pages I Keep Returning To

The campaign uses four representative Blogger articles—one from Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John—because a large problem needs specific pages that people can inspect.

I return to those pages for another reason. They remind me that this was never merely a project about producing URLs.

The Matthew 5 article, “When Jesus Sat Down and Heaven Stood Up,” is about the kind of life Jesus described when He spoke of mercy, humility, peacemaking, reconciliation, integrity, and a righteousness deeper than public appearance.

The Mark 14 article, “The Night Love Learned the Cost of Staying,” is about promises made before fear arrives and what happens when courage fails at the moment it is needed most.

The Luke 24 article, “The Morning That Changed the World,” begins with people walking through grief while resurrection is already true, even though they cannot yet recognize the One walking beside them.

The John 3 article, “A Midnight Conversation That Changed Eternity,” is about a respected man who comes to Jesus in darkness because some questions become honest only after reputation is no longer watching.

A technical specialist can examine the title elements, headings, mobile versions, internal links, repeated template material, canonicals, and crawl history.

I want that examination.

But when I look at those pages, I also remember the people inside them.

Nicodemus did not come to Jesus as a search query. Peter was not a keyword. The grieving disciples on the road to Emmaus were not an audience segment. The Beatitudes were not written to satisfy an algorithm.

The pages are evidence in this campaign, but the messages inside them are why the evidence matters.

The Number That Changed the Feeling

On May 8, 2026, I recorded a report in my private Google Search Console account showing 637 discovered URLs and zero indexed URLs for the Blogger property.

That is a dated publisher observation. It is not a current total. It is not a public report that readers can independently open. It does not explain Google’s reasons. It does not prove that Christian content caused the outcome.

It still changed the way the problem felt.

Before that report, I could tell myself that indexing was slow. Maybe Google had not discovered the pages. Maybe the site was simply new. Maybe patience would solve everything.

The word “discovered” removed part of that comfort.

The system appeared to know that hundreds of URLs existed.

The indexed total shown to me was still zero.

There may be a technical explanation that makes the result less dramatic than it appeared. Discovery does not mean every URL was crawled. The report may have reflected a backlog. The pages may have been grouped with other versions. The platform may have created confusing signals. The site may have grown more quickly than Google wanted to process it.

I understand those possibilities.

What I did not have was an answer.

A number can become heavy when it summarizes months of effort without explaining what happened to any of it. Six hundred thirty-seven was not simply a count. It represented articles, chapters, late nights, revisions, links, publishing routines, and the belief that a large public library would eventually create many doors through which readers could enter.

Zero felt like all of those doors opening into the same locked hallway.

I Asked Whether Google Hated Jesus Because Silence Needed a Name

I knew the headline would make people uncomfortable.

It makes me uncomfortable too.

“Does Google Hate Jesus?” sounds like an accusation even when it ends with a question mark. It can be used carelessly. It can invite people to reach a religious-discrimination verdict before examining a single page. It can cause technical specialists to assume the entire campaign is emotionally driven.

I chose it because quiet descriptions of indexing problems disappear.

A small publisher can say, “My Blogger URLs are discovered but not indexed,” and receive the same familiar answers: submit a sitemap, request indexing, write helpful content, wait longer, build authority.

Those suggestions are not always wrong. They become insufficient when they are repeated without contact with the actual pages.

The provocative title says: stop for a moment. Look at the discrepancy. Look at the library. Look at Bing and Google. Look at the platform. Tell me what is happening.

The question mark says something equally important: I do not know the answer.

I have not proven that Google hates Jesus.

I have not proven that Google hates Christians.

I have not proven that a human being intentionally buried Gospel content.

I have not proven that the religious subject caused the index outcome.

The headline is not my conclusion.

It is my refusal to let the problem remain nameless and unnoticed.

The Part of the Story That May Be Mine

There is a version of this campaign in which I am entirely right and the system is entirely wrong.

That version is emotionally attractive.

It is also unlikely to be complete.

I published at a remarkable pace. The Blogger archive grew quickly. The larger New Testament project spread related subjects across WordPress, Blogger, Google Sites, Medium, Ghost, Write.as, Substack, Tumblr, LinkedIn, YouTube, and other channels.

I did that because different platforms reach different people and support different kinds of writing.

Search systems may see something else.

They may see repeated subjects.

They may see familiar structures.

They may see signatures, links, calls to action, and patterns that appear on hundreds of pages.

They may see several articles about the same chapter and decide that only one version is needed.

They may see titles that are too long.

They may see an archive that grew faster than its hierarchy.

They may see a theme that adds more repeated material than I realize.

They may see publication volume and interpret it through systems built to identify low-value scale.

My intent does not automatically correct those signals.

That is difficult to admit because I know the work was not created as empty filler. I know the effort behind it. I know the purpose. But a search engine does not evaluate my private sincerity. It evaluates the public result.

If the problem is partly mine, I want to know.

Not because I enjoy being corrected.

Because a precise correction would be an answer.

The Part That May Belong to Blogger

I also chose Blogger because publishing there felt straightforward.

Write the article.

Add the title.

Insert the links.

Press Publish.

The platform handles the rest.

That simplicity is one of Blogger’s strengths. It is also why publishers may not realize how much of the final page they do not control.

The theme can shape headings.

Blogger can create mobile forms of URLs.

Archive pages, labels, feeds, scripts, structured data, and platform-generated elements can surround the article.

A public page can look healthy to me while presenting a more complicated document to a crawler.

I tried several H1-related fixes after Bing Site Scan reported structural concerns. They did not produce the broad improvement I hoped for.

That does not mean the theme is innocent. It means one visible warning may not explain the whole problem.

The answer may live in the interaction between the site’s scale, the template, mobile rendering, internal linking, canonical selection, and Google’s own thresholds.

That is why I am preserving the Blogger property while this investigation continues.

I do not want to keep changing the evidence until no one can tell what the original condition was.

The Part That May Belong to Google

Google does not promise to index every public page.

I understand that.

The web is enormous. Search engines must choose what to crawl, process, store, and serve. Some pages are duplicates. Some are low quality. Some are inaccessible. Some add little beyond what is already available.

Still, discretion is not explanation.

“Indexing is not guaranteed” tells me that Google can say no.

It does not tell me why the system appeared to say no at such scale.

“Create helpful content” is a principle.

It is not a diagnosis.

“Wait” is sometimes reasonable.

It becomes less useful as months pass and the pattern remains.

An independent publisher does not need Google to reveal every ranking secret. He does need enough information to distinguish a technical defect from a quality decision, a canonical issue from a crawl backlog, or a platform problem from a content problem.

When the available categories describe what happened without clarifying what should change, troubleshooting becomes a form of guessing.

That opacity is not evidence of hatred.

It is still a problem.

Bing Did Not Solve the Problem

It would be easy to make Bing the hero.

Bing found Jesus. Google did not.

That is an effective sentence. It is not a complete one.

Bing appears to have found and indexed at least some Blogger content that Google left difficult to locate. That comparison matters because it suggests the pages are not universally unreachable.

But Bing’s decision does not automatically prove the page deserves inclusion everywhere. Bing may have different crawl priorities, quality thresholds, storage choices, or ways of interpreting Blogger.

Bing is valuable here because it gives the investigation a comparison.

The same public page can receive different treatment.

Why?

That question is more useful than choosing a hero and villain.

If Bing is more permissive, say so.

If Google is selecting another canonical, show it.

If Bing can process the theme more clearly, explain the difference.

If Google sees too much similarity across the network, identify the clusters.

If the public results do not match the private tools, separate the two.

I am not looking for someone to praise Bing.

I am looking for someone to explain the divergence.

What Silence Does to a Writer

When a person receives a clear rejection, he can respond to it.

The editor says the opening is weak.

The reader says the article is confusing.

The specialist says the canonical points to the wrong page.

The system reports that crawling is blocked.

Each answer may hurt, but each answer creates a next step.

Silence does something different.

Silence invites the writer to supply his own explanation.

Maybe the work is worthless.

Maybe the system is unfair.

Maybe the subject is unwanted.

Maybe the platform is broken.

Maybe everyone else understands something he missed.

Maybe publishing another article will help.

Maybe publishing another hundred will help.

Unexplained silence can make determination and panic look almost identical.

That is why this campaign matters to me beyond the indexing numbers. I want to replace imagined explanations with a real one.

The answer may tell me to change.

It may tell me to wait.

It may tell me to restructure.

It may tell me Blogger is the wrong home for this scale of library.

It may tell me that Google’s systems made a decision I cannot reverse.

Any of those would be more honest than endless guessing.

I Do Not Want Sympathy More Than Truth

I understand why people may feel sympathy for an independent Christian creator whose work is difficult to find.

I appreciate kindness.

But sympathy is not what I need most.

I need someone to inspect the pages and tell me what the evidence supports.

I need the person who understands Blogger themes to examine what the template generates.

I need the technical SEO professional who can compare declared and selected canonicals.

I need the search specialist who can distinguish a crawl-priority problem from a quality-selection problem.

I need other Blogger publishers to say whether they see similar conditions in unrelated subjects.

I need journalists to describe the case accurately without turning uncertainty into persecution theater.

I need Christian readers to care about the truth more than they care about winning an argument against Google.

If the problem is mine, tell me.

If the problem is Blogger, show me.

If the problem is how Google evaluates this kind of large, interconnected library, explain the observable signals.

Do not protect my feelings.

Do not protect Google from fair questions.

Protect the truth.

The Unseen Reader Still Matters

There is a person I may never meet who is the reason I continue to care about this.

I do not know the person’s age, city, history, or exact problem.

I only know the moment.

Something has happened, and the person is searching.

Not casually.

Not academically.

The search is carrying fear, shame, grief, anger, confusion, or hope.

The person types words into a box because the box feels safer than asking someone face to face.

Maybe the query is about forgiveness.

Maybe it is about death.

Maybe it is about whether Jesus can still want someone who has failed repeatedly.

Maybe it is about what “born again” really means.

Maybe it is about why God feels absent.

I cannot claim my article would be the best result.

I only want the work to have a fair chance to be encountered.

That is what search visibility means to me when the dashboards and technical language are removed. It is not merely traffic.

It is the possibility of meeting a person at the moment the question becomes urgent.

I Keep Publishing, but I Am Listening Differently

The campaign is not an excuse to ignore what the systems may be telling me.

If I keep publishing exactly the same way while refusing every possible criticism, then this is not an investigation. It is stubbornness wearing the language of principle.

I am still committed to the library.

I am also listening differently.

I am watching for patterns of repetition.

I am thinking more carefully about each platform’s distinct purpose.

I am taking title length and structure seriously without pretending one H1 warning explains everything.

I am preserving the Blogger site so controlled tests remain possible.

I am asking whether internal organization has kept pace with the library’s growth.

I am leaving room for the possibility that some articles should be revised, consolidated, or differentiated more clearly.

Listening does not mean accepting vague dismissal.

It means becoming correctable.

The Gospel Does Not Need an Algorithm, but the Reader Uses One

I have said this throughout the campaign because it keeps both pride and despair in their proper place:

The Gospel does not depend on Google to remain true.

Jesus does not become more real because an article ranks.

The resurrection does not become less real because a page is absent from a search result.

A search engine is not a spiritual authority.

But the reader uses one.

That is the tension.

The message is not dependent on the tool.

Distribution is still affected by the tool.

I can trust God without pretending the pathway is functioning properly. I can believe one reader matters without using that belief as an excuse to stop caring about the other readers who cannot find the work. I can refuse to worship visibility while still practicing responsible stewardship.

Faith does not require me to call a broken path whole.

What I Am Asking For

I am not asking readers to conclude that Google hates Jesus.

I am asking them to leave the question open long enough for evidence.

I am not asking Google to index every page because I demand it.

I am asking specialists to explain why a large public Blogger library could be discovered at scale and still show so little index inclusion in the historical report I recorded.

I am not asking anyone to assume Bing is correct.

I am asking why Bing and Google appear to make different decisions about at least some of the same pages.

I am not asking for generic advice.

I am asking for a test.

Choose the four Gospel URLs.

Compare the same pages.

Examine the mobile rendering.

Identify the canonicals.

Measure the repeated content.

Review the internal links.

Compare crawl information.

Change one variable.

Predict the result.

Then tell me what happened.

That is all I have wanted from the beginning: not an accusation, not an excuse, but an answer.

The Silence Is Not the End

I kept publishing.

Google kept returning silence.

That sentence sounds final, but it is not.

The pages remain public.

The Blogger library remains intact.

The WordPress pillar preserves the evidence.

The campaign now moves through different platforms, each approaching the problem from a different angle.

The next article will not repeat this one. Substack will turn outward as an open letter to search engineers, Blogger publishers, journalists, Christian media, and everyone whose public work has become difficult to find.

This Write.as article has a smaller purpose.

It tells the truth about the room after Publish.

The screen is still glowing.

The page is live.

The work has left my hands.

Somewhere, the reader I imagined is asking the question.

Between us is a system I do not fully understand.

I do not know whether the obstruction is mine, Blogger’s, Google’s, or a combination of all three. I do not know whether the Christian subject matters to the outcome. I do not know whether the final explanation will be dramatic or ordinary.

I know only that silence is not an explanation.

So I will keep the question mark.

I will keep the evidence public.

I will remain willing to be corrected.

I will not turn uncertainty into a false accusation.

I will not pretend that a severe and repeated pattern deserves no scrutiny.

And I will not confuse being difficult to find with having nothing worth finding.

Your friend,

Douglas Vandergraph

Explore the complete Douglas Vandergraph Master Index: https://douglasvandergraph.com/douglas-vandergraph-master-index/

Watch Douglas Vandergraph’s faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph

 
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from Dallineation

Wait for the Lord; be strong and let your heart take courage; wait for the Lord!

Psalm 27:14 (NRSVCE)


Though I wander in darkness I wait for the Lord

Though my heart is broken I wait for the Lord

Though I feel betrayed I wait for the Lord

Though I drown in confusion I wait for the Lord

Though my prayers feel unheard I wait for the Lord

Though He is silent I wait for the Lord

In my sorrow I wait for the Lord

In my pain I wait for the Lord

In my fear I wait for the Lord

In my doubt I wait for the Lord

In my Gethsemane I wait for the Lord

#100DaysToOffload (No. 162) #faith #poetry

 
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