It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
from
Arokk
…or, rather, I get antsy and somewhat wanderlusty.
In searching for a blogging app, I have come across some excellent blog-adjacent and federated social networking software, but what I have been looking for is JUST out of reach.
Here are some examples:
I keep referring to “what I’m looking for”, but what am I looking for, exactly? Here are my criteria:
from
Eme
Como havia comentado na primeira edição da newsletter, Versão Legendada é meu projeto pessoal de aprendizagem autodidata de línguas estrangeiras, incluindo as minoritárias, que apresento ao “mundo virtual”.
Por lá, as trocas serão um pouco mais detalhadas, por aqui, ao contrário, serão bem mais pontuais e breves, mas com propósito. Afinal, o que interessa é aproveitar o processo: errando, acertando e recomeçando.
#notas #abr
from Douglas Vandergraph
Before the sun came up, when Austin still looked like it was deciding whether it wanted to wake up or hide a little longer, Jesus stood in quiet prayer at Mount Bonnell. The city below Him was still dim, but it was not resting. Even from that height, there was a kind of ache moving through it. Some people had already opened their eyes with dread in their chest. Some had rolled over to look at bills on a nightstand. Some were already rehearsing hard conversations they did not want to have. Some were making coffee with shaking hands because they had slept but had not rested. Jesus stood there with His head bowed and His face calm, and He prayed for people who felt like they were reaching the end of themselves before the day had even begun. He prayed for the ones trying to carry parents, children, regret, rent, and silence all at once. He prayed for the ones who had started speaking sharply because pressure had made tenderness feel expensive. He prayed for the people who believed they were becoming a problem in other people’s lives. He prayed until the first light began to move over the hills and the city below looked less like a skyline and more like a thousand private battles.
On the east side of the city, in a small apartment that always felt too crowded in the morning and too quiet at night, Marisol Vega stood in her kitchen staring at an open cabinet like she might be able to force more groceries into it by sheer will. There was half a loaf of bread, a box of rice, two cans of beans, and a jar of peanut butter with the sides scraped so hard the glass showed through. Her father, Mateo, sat at the table in a gray T-shirt, one hand around a mug that had gone cold, the other pressing lightly into his chest the way he did when his worry got ahead of his words. He had an appointment that morning at East Austin Health Center, and he had been acting like it was no big deal, which was how Marisol knew he was afraid. In the other room, her sixteen-year-old son Nico was supposed to be getting ready for school, but instead he was standing by the bathroom mirror with the same hard look he had been wearing for weeks, like life had insulted him one too many times and he had decided to insult it back.
Marisol had already been awake for an hour. She had answered one text from the cleaning company she picked up work from on weekends, ignored another from the electric company, and checked her account balance twice even though numbers never changed when people begged them to. She had not meant to snap when Mateo said he did not think he needed the doctor after all, but the words came out of her before mercy had a chance to catch them. She told him he was going. She told him she was tired of hearing him say he was fine when he was not fine. Then Nico came out wearing headphones around his neck and the expression of somebody already angry with the day, and when she asked him why he still had not taken the trash out from the night before, he looked at her and said, “Because it’s always something with you.” It was not screamed. It was worse than that. It was flat. Tired. Dismissive. Like he had said it to himself before he said it to her. She turned away so fast it looked like anger, but it was pain. There was no room in that kitchen for everything pressing against her all at once, and she suddenly felt like the walls themselves were judging how little she had left to give.
She got Mateo in the car and decided she needed coffee before she became the kind of woman she had promised herself she would never become. She drove across town while the sky turned from charcoal to soft blue and the city shook itself awake. By the time she pulled onto South Congress and parked near Jo’s Coffee, her jaw hurt from clenching it. Mateo stayed in the car because he said his knees were stiff and he did not feel like getting out. Marisol told him she would be two minutes. Inside, the place already carried that early Austin hum, tired people pretending caffeine could fix what sleep had not. She stood in line with her purse open and counted folded bills and coins with quiet hands that still somehow showed panic. A young woman behind the counter with a nose ring and tired eyes asked what she wanted, and Marisol ordered without really hearing herself. When the barista repeated the price, Marisol looked down into her wallet again and felt heat rise up her neck. She was short by less than a dollar. Less than a dollar still had the power to make a grown woman feel stripped down in public.
The barista started to say not to worry about it, but before she could finish, someone stepped forward beside Marisol and laid enough cash on the counter to cover the drink and the breakfast taco she had almost ordered and then quietly put back. Marisol turned at once, already embarrassed, already prepared to refuse out of pride she could not afford. Jesus stood there with the calmest face she had seen in a long time. He did not look impressed with Himself. He did not look like He had rescued her. He looked like a man who had simply seen what was happening and moved toward it. She opened her mouth to tell Him she did not need help, but something in His eyes made the sentence feel dishonest before it fully formed. He nodded toward the window where Mateo sat in the car. “You have been carrying the morning alone,” He said. His voice was quiet, but it landed heavier than louder voices often do. “Sit for one minute before you pick it back up.” Marisol frowned, because strangers were not supposed to talk like they knew anything. “I don’t really have a minute,” she said. “No,” He said, “but you need one.”
She took the coffee outside because refusing it would have felt childish, and she stood near the side of the building where the morning air still held a little coolness. Jesus came out a moment later, not crowding her, not acting like conversation was owed to Him because He had stepped in. For a few seconds neither of them said anything. Cars moved along South Congress. A dog barked from across the street. Somewhere down the block somebody laughed too loud for that early in the day. Marisol finally said, “I’ll pay you back if I see you again.” Jesus smiled faintly. “That isn’t the part you need to settle.” She looked at Him then, annoyed at first because she was too tired for mystery. “You don’t know anything about me,” she said. He glanced toward her car, where Mateo had leaned his head back and closed his eyes for a second. “You are trying to be strong enough for everyone in that car and everyone waiting for you after that car,” He said. “And because you are tired, every word in you is getting sharper than it really is.” Marisol’s throat tightened. She hated how quickly that hit the truth. “You make it sound like I’m the problem.” Jesus shook His head. “No. I am saying pain that is not tended will start looking for somewhere to go. Very often it goes into the mouths of tired people.”
She looked down at the coffee cup in her hand. It was warm enough to steady her fingers. “That sounds nice,” she said, not looking at Him. “But nice doesn’t get bills paid, and it doesn’t get people to tell the truth, and it doesn’t make a teenage boy listen.” Jesus let the silence sit before He answered. “No,” He said. “But truth told in peace can keep sorrow from becoming cruelty.” She almost laughed, not because it was funny, but because she did not know what else to do with a sentence like that. She had lived too long in survival mode to trust words that sounded clean. Yet she could not deny the strange feeling that standing beside Him was slowing something inside her that had been running wild for months. Before she could say anything else, Mateo shifted in the car and looked toward the building, and Marisol remembered time again. She took a breath, thanked Him without warmth because warmth felt too risky, and turned back toward the parking lot. When she reached her door, she looked up once more and saw Him speaking to a man near an older sedan with a rideshare sign in the windshield. The man had graying hair, a weathered face, and the wary look of somebody who had spent years pretending he needed less than he did.
The man’s name was Theo Banks. He had parked to grab coffee between early fares and was already thinking about the rent he was late on, the oil change he had been postponing, and the text from his daughter that had sat unopened since the night before because he was afraid it would either ask something he could not give or say something he deserved to hear. He had once played guitar in bars around Austin when he was young enough to mistake applause for love and old enough to ruin a marriage anyway. Now his fingers mostly curled around a steering wheel, and music lived in him like a house he had moved out of without ever really getting over. Jesus asked him for a ride east. Theo looked at Him and shrugged like a man who had forgotten how to make anything sound polite. “You got a destination?” he asked. “For now,” Jesus said, “East Austin Health Center.” Theo gave a half smile. “That’s a strangely specific now.” Jesus opened the back door and sat down. Theo pulled away from South Congress, glanced at Him in the mirror, and felt for no reason he could explain that he should probably leave the radio off.
Marisol reached the clinic a little later than she wanted and immediately felt that peculiar kind of exhaustion that medical waiting rooms bring out in people. East Austin Health Center was already full of small private struggles wearing ordinary faces. An older man was arguing softly with his wife about medication. A little girl with two puffs in her hair was drawing suns on the back of an appointment reminder. A young mother bounced a baby against her chest while trying not to cry into her phone. Marisol checked Mateo in, answered questions, corrected his birthday when he got it wrong the first time, and sat beside him with the stiffness of a person who had too many things to manage to fully sit down. When she looked up, Jesus was across the room near the little girl, kneeling just enough to see the page she had drawn on. He was not performing for the room. He was simply there, and somehow that made everyone around Him feel less frantic even if only by a little. Marisol stared a second too long, and Mateo noticed.
“You know him?” Mateo asked. His voice held that blend of curiosity and caution older men use when they do not want to look impressed by anything. “No,” Marisol said too quickly. Mateo squinted in Jesus’s direction, then back at her. “He looks like somebody who listens before he talks.” Marisol gave a tired laugh through her nose. “That would make one person today.” Mateo did not answer. He kept looking across the room, and for the first time that morning he seemed less occupied with his own fear than with the possibility that the world still held something gentle in it. When the nurse called his name, Marisol stood with him and followed him down the hall. As she passed the doorway, Jesus turned His head slightly and met her eyes. He did not say anything. He did not need to. It was the kind of look that made a person feel seen without being trapped. It unsettled her almost more than words would have.
The appointment did not go well. Mateo’s numbers were worse than they should have been, and the doctor’s voice had that careful tone people use when they are trying not to add shame to somebody who already has plenty. Marisol sat there hearing terms she already knew, hearing concern she could not afford, hearing the quiet fact that what they had been doing was not working. When the doctor stepped out for a moment, she turned to her father and asked him plainly if he had been taking the insulin the way he was supposed to. He looked at the floor. The answer came before his words did. “Papá,” she said, and this time the hurt in her voice was bigger than the anger. He rubbed both hands over his face. “I was stretching it,” he admitted. “Just some days. Not all.” Marisol stared at him. “You were what?” He swallowed. “Using less. Making it last longer.” Her whole body went still. “Why would you do that?” He did not answer right away, and when he finally did, his voice had shrunk. “Because I know what it costs.” She felt something collapse inward in her chest. “So you decided to lie to me instead?” Mateo looked up with wet eyes that had gone old in a single minute. “No,” he said. “I decided I did not want to watch you drown one inch deeper because of me.”
That sentence did not land in Marisol as tenderness. It landed like betrayal. She heard all the nights she had worried, all the times she had asked, all the times he had told her he was fine. She heard the way fear could dress itself up as protection and still leave a mess behind for somebody else to clean. “You don’t get to make that choice for me,” she said, too loud for the size of the room. Mateo flinched. The doctor had not come back yet, but Marisol was suddenly aware that people in the hall might hear her. She lowered her voice and somehow made it worse. “You don’t get to decide whether you are worth taking care of.” Mateo turned his face away. “I didn’t say that.” “You didn’t have to.” For a second they sat there in the wreckage of love badly expressed. Then Marisol’s phone started buzzing. It was Nico’s school. She answered already tired, already bracing. By the time the call ended, there was a sour taste in her mouth and a pressure building behind her eyes. Nico had gotten into a fight before first period and walked off campus when they tried to pull him into the office. Nobody knew where he had gone.
When she and Mateo stepped back into the hallway, everything in Marisol had gone brittle. She had one hand on her bag, one hand on her phone, and no hands left for grace. Jesus was sitting on a bench near the end of the hall. He rose when they approached, not dramatically, just with the simple attentiveness of someone who had already decided they were worth standing for. Marisol did not know why she stopped in front of Him, but she did. Maybe because the day had gone so wrong so early that the only thing left to do was either break down or tell the truth to somebody. “My son left school,” she said, and her voice sounded thinner than she wanted. “My father has been cutting his medication in half. I have groceries to buy, a prescription to fill, and I do not know how I am supposed to be patient with people who keep making everything harder.” Jesus listened without interrupting. Mateo stood beside her, tired and ashamed. “You think they are making it harder for you,” Jesus said gently. “But both of them are afraid they are already too heavy.” Marisol let out a sound somewhere between a laugh and a scoff. “Well today they are not doing much to disprove that.” Jesus did not recoil from her sharpness. “Pain often speaks badly before it speaks honestly,” He said. “Yours too.”
If she had been less tired, she might have defended herself. Instead she just looked away. Mateo lowered himself slowly onto the bench as if age had suddenly doubled in his knees. Jesus sat beside him, and for a moment He spoke to the older man while Marisol pretended to answer a text. She could not hear every word, but she heard enough. “Love is not measured by how little space you take up,” Jesus said. Mateo’s shoulders shook once. “Then why does it feel that way?” he asked. Jesus looked at him with the kind of steadiness that made hiding feel pointless. “Because fear teaches people to shrink so they won’t be left,” He said. “But shrinking is not the same thing as peace.” Marisol hated how much that sounded true. She hated it because truth asks more from a person than anger does. Anger burns hot and fast and can be carried anywhere. Truth makes you put things down.
They left the clinic with a paper prescription, too much unsaid, and a growing sense that the day was not going to let anyone stay numb. Marisol decided they had to stop at Hancock Center H-E-B before going home because there was nothing left in the apartment and because there was no chance she was making another trip later. Mateo moved slowly through the parking lot, and she nearly told him to hurry before she remembered that weakness is not the same thing as laziness. Even that thought exhausted her. Inside the store the fluorescent lights felt unforgiving. Everything was bright enough to show exactly what people were carrying. She put only what they needed in the cart. Bread. Eggs. Rice. Tortillas. Cereal for Nico because he still ate the sugary kind she kept pretending she would stop buying. A few vegetables she could stretch through several meals. The prescription. Every item went into the basket with a number attached to it in her mind. Mateo kept reaching for cheaper versions of things and then pulling his hand back before he touched them, as if even preference had started to feel selfish.
At the end of one aisle Marisol saw Jesus again. He was not following in the way people follow. He was simply there, reading labels on nothing, near enough that if she chose to look at Him she would remember she had been seen all day. The strange thing was that she no longer felt alarmed by it. She felt exposed by it, which was different. In another lane Theo was waiting with a handbasket and a bottle of water, looking like a man who had not yet figured out why the morning felt unlike other mornings. He caught sight of Jesus and gave the smallest nod, not casual exactly, but not dramatic either. When Marisol got to the register, a young cashier with tired skin and a name tag that read Ren started scanning items without much expression. Halfway through, Marisol checked her phone again. Nico still was not answering. Her pulse rose. Ren gave the total. Marisol slid her card. It declined. She tried again, telling herself not to panic because sometimes machines were wrong. It declined again.
That kind of silence is worse in public than noise. The person behind you pretends not to watch. The cashier pretends not to notice. Your own body becomes too loud. Marisol stared at the screen as if looking harder might change it. She transferred money in her phone from one account to another, though she already knew it would not be enough. Mateo reached into his pocket and pulled out a folded twenty with the embarrassed urgency of a man trying to become less helpless in front of his daughter. “Here,” he said. She did not mean to say what came next. She really did not. But the day had sanded her raw, and the words came out before love could stop them. “Papá, that’s not going to fix this.” He froze with the bill still in his hand. Ren looked away. The people in line studied gum and magazine covers with exaggerated interest. Marisol pressed her lips together at once, horrified by herself, but the damage was already sitting between them on the conveyor belt. Mateo slowly folded the money back down and said nothing. His silence was not angry. It was wounded. That made it harder to bear.
Jesus stepped closer then, not to take over, not to turn the moment into a lesson, but to keep shame from becoming the loudest voice in it. He looked at Ren first. “Can you ring the prescription separately?” he asked. Ren blinked, then nodded. His tired eyes sharpened a little, as if somebody had spoken to the part of him that still cared. Jesus turned to Marisol. “Take what keeps life moving first,” He said. “Decide the rest after you breathe.” Something about the way He said it cut through the panic. The store did not disappear. The money problem did not disappear. But the spiral lost some of its power. Ren quietly voided a few things, split the order, and bagged only what mattered most without making a show of kindness. Mateo stood with his head lowered. Marisol signed for the prescription with a hand that trembled. When she finally lifted her eyes, Jesus was looking at her with deep patience, the kind that does not flatter a person and does not condemn them either. It was worse than pity and kinder than approval. It was truth without rejection.
Outside, the Texas sun had fully arrived. Heat sat over the parking lot in a way that made every movement feel harder than it should have. Marisol loaded the bags into the trunk and got behind the wheel, but when she turned the key the engine clicked once and failed. She tried again. Nothing. She put both hands on the steering wheel and stared through the windshield while everything in her threatened to come apart at once. Mateo sat beside her, quiet in that old man way that can mean sorrow or fear or simply not knowing how to help. Then she started crying. Not pretty crying. Not movie crying. It was the kind that comes when dignity is too tired to hold its posture. She put her palm over her mouth because she did not want strangers hearing her break, but once it started she could not stop. “I can’t do this,” she said into her hand. “I cannot keep doing this.” Mateo turned toward her, his own face breaking open. “Mija,” he said, but she shook her head before he could finish. “No,” she said. “Please. Just for one second. I can’t be the one holding everybody up right now.”
A tap came lightly on her window. Theo stood outside, car keys in one hand, uncertainty on his face like he still did not quite know why he was there. Jesus was beside him. Theo opened the passenger door when Marisol unlocked it and leaned down just enough to speak. “Your battery’s dead,” he said. “I can give you a ride if you need one.” Marisol wiped her face fast, embarrassed again, but embarrassment had been a steady companion all day and had lost some of its authority. “I need to find my son,” she said. Theo nodded once. “Then let’s go find him.” She looked past him at Jesus. “You know where he is?” she asked, not even sure anymore why that question felt natural coming out of her mouth. Jesus rested one hand on the top edge of the open car door. “I know where hurt people often go when they want quiet and don’t know what else to ask for,” He said. “Take Barton Springs.” Marisol stared at Him. Mateo looked between the two of them as if he were too old to be surprised and too tired to resist hope.
They rode west with Mateo in the back, Marisol in the front, and Jesus beside Theo while Austin kept moving around them like nothing sacred had interrupted it all day. People crossed intersections with iced drinks and earbuds. Cyclists leaned into the heat. Construction crews worked under the sun. A city can hold enormous private suffering and still look perfectly normal from the outside. That might be one of the loneliest things about being human. Theo drove with both hands on the wheel and said little at first. Jesus looked out at the city as they passed through it, not with distance, but with a kind of love that made even the hardest blocks seem worth grieving over. After a while Theo cleared his throat and said, mostly to the windshield, “You really think that’s where the boy went?” Jesus turned toward him. “He went somewhere that feels older than his anger,” He said. Theo absorbed that. A few minutes later he said, “People still do that at fifty?” Jesus looked at him with quiet understanding. “Yes,” He said. “At fifty too.”
That answer sat in the car with them. Theo gave a dry laugh that did not hide much. “I used to take my daughter to Zilker when she was little,” he said. “Back when she still thought I knew what I was doing.” Marisol looked over at him. Theo kept his eyes ahead. “I kept meaning to become a better man in ways that sounded important in my head. I was going to stop drinking after the next rough month. I was going to show up more after the next job. I was going to apologize right once I had something decent to show for myself. Then years went by and all my good intentions started sounding like lies.” No one answered right away. Mateo looked out the window with the stillness of a man hearing his own failures echoed in somebody else’s words. Jesus finally said, “There are people who delay love because they want to bring a better version of themselves to it.” Theo swallowed. “That sounds smart when you say it.” Jesus looked ahead. “It is sad when anyone lives that way too long.”
When they reached Zilker and got near Barton Springs, Marisol’s heart started pounding so hard she could feel it in her throat. She knew Jesus had said the place softly, but now that they were there it felt obvious. Nico had loved the water when he was little. Even before he could swim well, he had loved just sitting near it with his shoes off, as if moving water did something for him language could not. After his father left years ago, there had been one summer when bringing him near the springs was the only thing that cut through his anger. Marisol had not thought about that in months. Life had become too immediate for memory. They got out and moved toward a quieter edge near the path, where the heat softened a little under the trees. She saw him before anyone said his name. Nico was sitting on the ground with his elbows on his knees, staring at nothing, trying hard to look like a boy who did not care whether anybody found him. His backpack was beside him. His face was tight. His eyes were red.
Marisol started toward him with all the pent-up fear and anger of the day surging back at once, but Jesus touched her arm lightly before she reached him. It was not forceful. It was not a command. It was only enough to remind her that the next words mattered. She stopped, took one breath that did not nearly feel like enough, and then another. Nico looked up and saw them all standing there. His expression changed fast, from defiance to dread to something more vulnerable than either. “I said I was coming home,” he muttered, though he had said no such thing. Marisol stood in front of him and felt every version of motherhood at war inside her at once. She wanted to shake him. She wanted to hold him. She wanted to ask if he understood what this day had done to her. She wanted to tell him none of that was his job to fix. Before she could decide which part of her would speak, Nico looked at Mateo, then at the grocery bag in Marisol’s hand, then away again. “I wasn’t ditching,” he said. “Not really.”
Marisol’s voice came out low and strained. “Then what were you doing?” Nico rubbed both hands over his face. For a second he looked younger than sixteen. “I took the money from your purse.” The sentence hit the air and stayed there. Marisol felt it all over again, the missing cash, the assumption, the anger she had been saving for later. Nico kept going before she could respond. “I know,” he said. “I know I shouldn’t have. I went to the pharmacy near school because Abuelo said he was fine and I knew he wasn’t fine and I heard you on the phone last night about the prescription and I thought maybe if I got it before you saw the money gone then maybe it would just be done.” His voice cracked, and he hated himself for that in front of everyone. “It wasn’t enough,” he said. “I got there and it wasn’t even close to enough.” He looked down at the dirt by his shoes and added, so quietly Marisol almost missed it, “I’m tired of everything in this family costing more than we have.”
Marisol looked at her son and felt two pains hit her at the same time. One was the sting of what he had done. The other was the deeper hurt of realizing he had done it while trying, in his broken teenage way, to help. Those two things did not cancel each other out. They only made the moment harder to stand in. Her first impulse was still anger. Her second was grief. The third was the ugly recognition that every person standing there had been hiding some form of fear from the others, and all of it had been called love while it slowly poisoned the room around them. Nico kept his eyes down because shame had moved in fast the second his confession left his mouth. He looked like he wanted to disappear into the dirt under him. Mateo sat down slowly on a low stone edge nearby and pressed a hand over his eyes. Theo stood a little off to the side, close enough to help if asked, far enough not to crowd a family’s breaking point. Jesus remained still in the middle of all of it. He did not rush to soften the truth. He did not rush to punish it either. He let the weight of the moment be what it was.
Marisol finally spoke, and her voice came out rough from too many hours of holding herself together. “You stole from me.” Nico nodded without looking up. “I know.” She stepped closer. “You lied.” He nodded again. “I know.” She wanted to keep going because once hurt gets a voice, it often wants a long turn. She wanted to tell him about the card declining, the store, the clinic, the phone call, the way one bad thing had piled itself on top of another until the day felt like a punishment. She wanted him to know what it had cost her. But when she looked at him sitting there with his shoulders folded inward, she saw something younger than rebellion. She saw panic. She saw a boy who had decided he needed to fix a problem bigger than him and then found out he could not. That does not excuse what he did. It does explain the look on his face. “Why didn’t you tell me?” she asked. That question came from a deeper place. Nico swallowed hard and finally looked up. “Because every time I see your face lately, it looks like one more thing might break you.”
The sentence went through her more quietly than any accusation could have. She stood there staring at him while the sound of people moving near the springs drifted in and out around them. Somebody laughed in the distance. Water moved. A dog shook itself dry. The city went on the way cities always do, like private heartbreak is just one more weather pattern passing through. Marisol almost said that he had no right to judge her face when he was making everything harder. That sentence rose up in her and then stopped. Because he was not wrong. She had been carrying herself like a woman braced for impact. She had been moving through the apartment with tension in her jaw and numbers in her mind and fear too close to the surface. She had not meant to make home feel like an emergency room, but the truth was that it had. She lowered herself until she was standing closer to his height and said, “You do not get to steal because you’re scared.” Nico’s eyes filled at once. “I know.” “And you do not get to disappear and make me think I lost you.” He wiped his face with the heel of his hand and nodded again. “I know.” His voice cracked on the last word. “I just didn’t know how to come back after I messed it up.”
Jesus sat down on the grass near them, not above them, not outside the moment, but in it. He rested His forearms on His knees and looked at Nico with the kind of calm that made pretending feel useless. “That is how many people stay lost,” He said. “Not because they meant to go far, but because shame makes the walk back feel longer than it is.” Nico looked at Him the way people look at someone who has somehow named the inside of them without being invited. His face tightened. “It still doesn’t change what I did.” Jesus nodded. “No. But hiding after the truth comes out will add another wound to the first one.” Nico looked down. “So what am I supposed to do?” Jesus answered without hurry. “Tell the whole truth. Stay in the moment. Accept what comes next. Then stop building your identity around your worst decision.” Nico gave a short, frustrated breath. “That sounds simple when you say it.” Jesus looked at him steadily. “It is simple. It is not easy. Many people choose harder paths because they do not like humble ones.”
Mateo let his hand fall from his face and looked at Nico with deep sadness. “You should have told me too,” he said. “This was about my medicine.” Nico turned toward him at once. “You were trying to act like you were fine.” Mateo gave the faintest shake of his head. “I know.” There was no defense in his voice. Only weariness. “I thought I was protecting your mother from one more burden. Instead I made her carry one she could not see.” Nico looked between them and seemed to realize for the first time that he was not the only one who had been hiding. It changed the air. Not enough to fix it. Enough to tell the truth more honestly. Marisol sat down on the grass too, because standing over her son suddenly felt wrong. Her knees ached and her back was stiff and she did not feel noble at all. She felt tired and frightened and ashamed of how sharp she had become. “I have been angry all day,” she said. “But the truth is I have been scared much longer than that.” She looked at Nico directly. “I am not angry because you matter too much. I am angry because I keep feeling like I am one bad week away from everything falling apart, and I have started speaking out of that feeling before I even realize it.”
Nico’s face softened, though his shame did not leave. “I know you’re trying,” he said. “I just hate how everything feels like it costs money we don’t have.” There was no performance in it. Only the plain misery of a teenager beginning to see adult pressures without having adult strength. Jesus looked out toward the water for a moment before speaking again. “Fear has been running this family from different corners,” He said. “One of you hides need. One of you hides mistakes. One of you hides exhaustion. All of you are trying to protect each other without letting yourselves be known. That never holds for long.” Marisol let those words settle. They did not sound accusing. They sounded exact. Mateo nodded slowly as if each sentence had found its proper place in him. Nico pulled at a piece of grass and said, “So what then. We just tell each other everything and somehow that fixes it?” Jesus turned back to him. “No. You tell the truth because lies make love unstable. Then you learn to carry what is real together instead of each person carrying secret versions alone.”
For a while nobody spoke. The quiet was not empty. It was working on them. Marisol could feel the fight going on inside herself. Part of her wanted to keep control of the moment by staying stern. Another part wanted to grab her son and never let go. Another part wanted to cry again because none of this was simple and all of it hurt. She finally said, “Do you still have the money?” Nico reached into the front pocket of his backpack and pulled out a folded envelope with pharmacy paperwork and the cash he had left. “Most of it,” he said. “I didn’t buy anything.” He handed it to her like it weighed ten pounds. She took it and did not count it right away. That mattered to him more than she realized. “You are going to return to school tomorrow,” she said. “You are going to tell the truth about leaving campus. You are going to take whatever consequence comes with that.” Nico closed his eyes for a second. “I know.” Jesus watched him quietly. “And tonight,” He said, “you are not going to disappear into anger and call that strength. You are going to stay near the people who love you.” Nico rubbed his face and gave the smallest nod.
Theo’s phone buzzed in his pocket. He looked at it, saw his daughter’s name on the screen again, and slipped it back without opening the message. Jesus turned His head slightly toward him, not as a rebuke, only as notice. Theo gave a faint, humorless smile. “I heard that look,” he said. Marisol almost laughed in spite of herself. It startled her that laughter still existed in the same day. Theo shifted his weight and said, “I should probably go help you get your car started.” He looked at Nico. “You know how to use jumper cables?” Nico shook his head. “Good,” Theo said. “That means you’re less likely to argue with me while I show you.” It was a plain sentence, but it opened a little space in the pressure. Nico stood slowly and picked up his backpack. Mateo pushed himself up with care. Marisol rose too. For the first time all day, the next step did not feel like a collapse. It felt like a step.
They walked back toward the parking area with the slow, uneven movement of people still carrying more than they could name. Jesus stayed with them, not leading so far ahead that the day became about following a guide, not hanging so far back that He felt symbolic. He was simply with them. On the way Theo finally opened his daughter’s message. It was short. Her mother was having a procedure Friday morning. It might be minor. It might not. She was tired of guessing whether he planned to show up. If he was coming, he needed to say so today. Theo stopped walking for a second after reading it. Jesus paused beside him. “You still have time to choose love while it can still be felt,” He said. Theo stared at the screen. “I’ve been choosing later for years.” Jesus answered softly, “Later has stolen more from people than failure ever did.” Theo shook his head and laughed once through his nose, but his eyes had gone wet. “You don’t let a man hide much, do you.” Jesus’s expression was gentle. “Not what is costing him too much.”
When they reached the H-E-B parking lot, the sun had shifted lower but the heat still came up in waves from the pavement. Theo pulled his car beside Marisol’s and opened the trunk for the cables. Nico stepped forward before anyone asked and took one side. Theo showed him what to connect and why, speaking in the practical tone some men use when feelings are close and tools are safer. Nico listened closely. He made no jokes. He did not posture. He only wanted to help. Mateo stood near the cart return with one hand on his lower back, watching them with tired eyes that had begun to soften. Marisol leaned against the side of her dead car and felt how strange the day had become. A few hours earlier she had been alone inside her own panic. Now her son was learning how to bring power back into a stalled engine from a man he had met that afternoon, while Jesus stood a few feet away like the most natural thing in Austin.
Theo clipped the last cable and looked at Nico. “Here’s the thing with dead batteries,” he said. “You can keep turning the key and blaming the car, but if there’s nothing feeding it, you’re just wearing yourself out.” Nico glanced at him. “You talking about the car?” Theo gave him a side look. “Not only the car.” Nico waited. Theo leaned one elbow on the hood and lowered his voice a little. “I spent a long time getting mad at people for giving up on me when I was the one who kept showing up half-empty and calling it enough. It wasn’t enough. Not for my daughter. Not for my wife. Not for me either.” Nico looked down at the cables. Theo continued, “You’re young enough to fix some things while they’re still fixable. Don’t start making a home out of pride. It feels strong at first. Then one day you look up and find out it’s just lonely.” Nico absorbed that without arguing. Then he asked, almost under his breath, “Did your daughter forgive you?” Theo stared past him toward nothing for a second. “She kept leaving the door unlocked longer than I deserved,” he said. “That isn’t the same thing as me walking through it.”
Jesus opened Marisol’s driver’s door and motioned for her to try again. She sat behind the wheel, turned the key, and the engine caught with a rough shudder before settling into a living sound. She closed her eyes for a second as relief moved through her chest. It was such a basic thing. A running car. And yet in a hard season basic things can feel almost holy. Nico pulled the cables free under Theo’s direction and coiled them back into the trunk. Mateo exhaled slowly as if one more weight had just shifted off his shoulders. Marisol stepped out and looked at Theo. “Thank you,” she said. This time there was no pride in the way. He shrugged lightly. “Somebody helped me want to be useful today.” Nico glanced toward Jesus when he heard that. Jesus only smiled faintly.
No one seemed eager to go straight home, not because home was wrong, but because the apartment would still hold the shape of all their recent strain. Jesus looked west where the light had begun to change. “Come,” He said. “Sit somewhere open before the walls speak louder than the truth.” So they drove a short distance and found their way toward Auditorium Shores. Evening had started its slow work over the city. The heat was easing. People walked dogs along the path. Couples pushed strollers. Runners passed with steady breath. The skyline stood across the water with all its glass and promise and hidden weariness. Austin looked beautiful in the way cities often do at dusk, when light forgives edges for a little while. They sat where they could see Lady Bird Lake and the wide lawn and the moving paths without being in the center of the crowd. Mateo lowered himself carefully onto a bench. Nico sat on the grass. Theo stayed standing for a minute and then sat too. Jesus remained near them, quiet, attentive, allowing the city to keep being itself around them.
Marisol opened the grocery bag and found the water she had bought earlier. She handed it first to her father. That small choice mattered. He took it with both hands and looked at her with tired gratitude. “I am sorry,” he said. She did not answer right away because she wanted her answer to be clean, not reactive. “I know you were scared,” she said. “But you do not get to decide alone whether you are worth the cost.” Mateo’s eyes filled. “I didn’t think of it like that.” “I know.” She took a breath. “I need you to stop treating yourself like an extra expense in your own family.” His mouth trembled before he nodded. Then he said something she had not heard from him in years. “I have felt old since before I got old.” She turned to him. “What do you mean?” He looked out at the water. “I mean after your mother died, I started feeling like my job was to need less. Less help. Less attention. Less room. I thought that was dignity.” Jesus spoke from a few feet away. “Dignity is not disappearing,” He said. Mateo lowered his head and let that truth have him.
Nico sat with his arms around his knees and watched the path. After a while he said, “I hit a kid today.” Marisol turned toward him at once, but she kept her voice steady. “Why?” Nico’s jaw set. “He said you smelled like chemicals because you clean houses.” The words landed hard. Nico kept going before anyone could interrupt. “He said Abuelo was probably getting sicker because we were too broke to take care of him. He was laughing when he said it.” Marisol felt fury move through her so fast it almost erased everything else, but she held it. Nico looked ashamed again. “I know I shouldn’t have hit him. I know that. But it was like something in me just snapped.” Jesus sat down on the grass across from him. “Anger often enters through wounds people pretend are numb,” He said. Nico swallowed. “So what am I supposed to do. Just let people say whatever they want?” Jesus shook His head. “No. But you do not let another person’s cruelty choose the shape of your heart.” Nico looked frustrated. “That sounds good until it happens.” Jesus nodded. “Yes. That is why strength is not only loud. Sometimes strength is the refusal to become what hurt you.”
The skyline lights had begun to appear one by one. Around them the city softened into evening noise. A guitarist somewhere farther down the lawn played something slow and wandering. Children called to each other near the path. The world kept offering ordinary details as if it were trying to remind them that healing does not always happen outside life. Sometimes it happens right in the middle of it, while dogs bark and traffic hums and somebody nearby argues softly over where to eat dinner. Theo finally unlocked his phone again and stared at his daughter’s thread. He typed a response, erased it, typed again, erased again. Jesus looked at him and said nothing. Theo laughed under his breath. “You ever notice how apologizing honestly takes about ten times longer than defending yourself badly?” Marisol glanced at him. “Yes.” He smiled a little. Then he typed a short message and sent it before fear could edit him again. He wrote that he was sorry for all the times later became never. He wrote that if she would let him come Friday, he would be there. He wrote that he did not expect trust to rebuild in one text, but he was done hiding behind shame and calling it respect for her space. After he sent it, he let out a breath like he had been holding it for years.
Nico looked over at him. “You think she’ll answer?” Theo rubbed a hand over his chin. “I don’t know.” Then he looked at the boy. “But telling the truth while there is still time matters even when you can’t control the response.” Jesus nodded once. “Yes.” Nico looked down and then back up at his mother. “I should probably call the school too.” Marisol did not rescue him from that thought. “You should.” He groaned and dropped his head back, but after a moment he pulled out his phone. He stepped a little away and made the call before he could change his mind. They could not hear the other side, but they could hear enough from his end to know he was doing it straight. He admitted leaving campus. He admitted fighting. He did not blame the other boy even though pain still sat in the story. When he ended the call, his face looked pale but different. Not lighter exactly. Cleaner. He sat back down and said, “I have in-school suspension for two days.” Marisol nodded. “Then you’ll do two days.” Nico looked at Jesus. “This truth thing is expensive.” Jesus’s mouth lifted slightly. “Less expensive than false versions of yourself.”
Marisol looked out over the water and felt how tired she still was. Nothing magic had erased the bills. Mateo was still sick. Nico was still facing consequences. Her account balance had not become generous because she had a difficult but honest afternoon. Yet something real had shifted. The day no longer felt like she alone was holding up the sky. It felt like the truth had finally come into the room and made pretending harder. That was painful. It was also relieving. She looked at Jesus and said, “What am I supposed to do tomorrow when I wake up and all the real problems are still there?” He answered without delay, as if He had been waiting for the question under all the other questions. “You do the work in front of you. You refuse to confuse fear with wisdom. You speak more gently than panic wants you to. You ask for help sooner. You stop measuring your worth by whether everyone around you stays comfortable. And when you are tired again, you come honestly before God instead of becoming sharp with the people you love.” Marisol let the words settle. They did not feel like a speech. They felt like handholds.
Mateo turned toward Jesus. “And what about a man who has spent too long trying to become smaller so no one has to worry about him?” Jesus looked at him with deep kindness. “He begins by letting himself be loved in visible ways.” Mateo’s eyes glistened. “That sounds harder than it should.” “Yes,” Jesus said. “Because pride and shame often wear each other’s clothes.” Theo gave a little laugh at that. “That one hurts.” Jesus looked at him. “Then let it help.” Nico had gone quiet again, but not the same kind of quiet as before. He was listening in the way teenagers listen when they are tired of being handled and suddenly realize someone is speaking as if their soul counts. “What about me?” he asked. “Because I’m trying not to be the worst thing I did today, but I’m still the guy who did it.” Jesus answered, “You are a boy who chose badly under pressure. That matters. But it is not the whole truth of you. The whole truth includes love, fear, hunger, loyalty, pride, hurt, and the capacity to become honest. Only darkness insists on narrowing people to their worst moment. Heaven tells the truth and still leaves room for redemption.”
By the time the sky turned from blue to that deeper evening color that makes water look almost thoughtful, Theo’s phone buzzed again. He looked at the screen and did not move for a second. Then he opened the message. His daughter had written only three lines. She said Friday at seven-thirty. She said do not promise if you will not come. She said Mom asked about you yesterday and would like to believe you are trying. Theo stared at the text until his eyes blurred. He gave a short laugh that broke halfway through. “Well,” he said softly, “there’s my door.” Jesus looked at him with approval so quiet it did not feel performative. “Walk through it,” He said. Theo nodded. “I think I will.” Then he looked at Nico. “That means I have to get up early and probably wear a shirt with buttons. So you and I both got consequences tonight.” Nico smiled for the first time all day. It was brief and tired, but real.
Marisol found herself smiling too. It faded quickly, but that was fine. Hope does not always arrive as fireworks. Sometimes it just shows up as enough softness to breathe again. She reached over and touched Nico’s shoulder. He leaned into it for one second before catching himself. That one second was enough to tell her his heart had not gone hard all the way through. Mateo watched them and looked like a man seeing family as a place he could remain instead of a burden he should quietly reduce. He said, “When we get home, I want to go over the medicine with you both. No more pretending I understand what I’m doing better than I do.” Marisol nodded. “We will.” Nico added, “And I can pick up more hours with Mr. Salazar on weekends if he still needs help at the shop.” Marisol started to say he needed to focus on school, but she heard the difference in his voice. He was not trying to rescue them with a hidden plan this time. He was offering himself openly. “We’ll talk about it,” she said. He nodded. It was enough for now.
Jesus rose and took a few slow steps toward the water’s edge. They all watched Him without quite meaning to. The light along the lake had gone silver in places and dark in others. The city behind Him was full of buildings, traffic, restaurants, apartments, offices, songs, arguments, loneliness, ambition, debt, beauty, temptation, and longing. Nothing about Austin had become less human by nightfall. It had simply changed color. Jesus turned back toward them, and in that moment He looked as near as a friend and as steady as something older than the city itself. “Do not waste suffering,” He said. “Let it make you honest, not cruel. Let it make you open, not hidden. Let it teach you where you have been living on fear instead of love. The Father does not despise tired people who come truthfully. But many tired people wound each other because they never bring their tiredness into the light.” None of them answered right away. The words did not ask for quick agreement. They asked for a life.
Marisol stood. She did not know if she would ever fully understand who had walked beside her all day, though some part of her already did. She only knew that He had entered the hardest parts of the day without hurrying past them or turning away from what was ugly. He had not spoken to them like a lecturer. He had spoken to them like someone who knew the human heart from the inside and still had not given up on it. She stepped closer to Him and said, “Will I see You again?” Jesus looked at her with a gentleness that made the question feel both smaller and more important. “Call on Me honestly,” He said. “You will not be as alone as fear tells you.” Mateo bowed his head. Nico stared at Him like he wanted to ask ten more questions and did not yet know how to form them. Theo looked down at his phone, then back up, like a man suddenly aware that grace had found him in a parking lot and followed him all the way to the water.
The family and Theo eventually turned back toward their cars because the day still had to become a night and the night still had to become tomorrow. Marisol would drive home with groceries, medicine, and a son who had told the truth. Mateo would go home without the lie that he needed to vanish to be loved. Nico would go home with consequences and with a clearer sense that being needed is not the same thing as carrying everything alone in secret. Theo would drive back across the city and set out a shirt with buttons for Friday morning. None of those things were small. Before they went, Marisol looked back one more time. Jesus was walking slowly along the edge of the lake with His head slightly bowed, as if listening to something more constant than the city noise. She wanted to say thank You again, but the words felt too thin. So she simply held the moment in her eyes and let it stay there.
Night settled further over Austin. The paths at Auditorium Shores thinned a little as families headed home and the air finally began to loosen its grip after the long day’s heat. Across the water the buildings shone with all the confidence cities know how to wear, but beneath those lights were the same quiet burdens Jesus had prayed over before dawn. The single mother staring at a bill after her child was asleep. The father sitting in his truck because he did not yet know how to go inside and apologize. The young man on a rooftop trying to act unimpressed by his own emptiness. The woman working late in an office tower who had not cried yet only because her day had not stopped moving long enough to let her. The older man heating soup in a small kitchen and wondering if he had become easy to forget. The city was still full of them. It would be full of them tomorrow too. Jesus knew every apartment light. He knew every private ache behind every bright street. He had walked among some of them that day, but His compassion was larger than one family, one parking lot, one clinic, one shoreline.
When the lawn grew quieter and the last colors left the sky, Jesus moved a little away from the path until He stood where the water and the city lights could both be seen but neither could interrupt the stillness He entered. Then He bowed His head in quiet prayer. He prayed for Austin, for the proud and the tired, for the hidden and the loud, for the people trying to outrun sorrow and the people trying to shrink beneath it. He prayed for kitchens where sharp words had become too common. He prayed for sons learning truth the hard way. He prayed for fathers who had mistaken disappearing for love. He prayed for daughters still leaving a door unlocked longer than they should have had to. He prayed for exhausted women who had started carrying the whole world in their shoulders and calling it responsibility. He prayed for the city’s wounds that looked ordinary from the outside. He prayed until the night deepened and the water held the lights like trembling threads, and the same calm authority He had carried all day rested over Him in the dark as naturally as breathing.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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Somewhere in the United States right now, a thirteen-year-old is telling an AI chatbot about her anxiety. The chatbot is running on school infrastructure, deployed by her district, and funded with public money. Her parents may or may not know it exists. Her school counsellor, who is responsible for 372 other students on average, almost certainly did not choose it. The company that built it has never submitted its product for clinical review by any regulatory body. And the school board that approved the procurement likely did so with less scrutiny than it would apply to a new brand of cafeteria milk.
This is not a hypothetical. Across the United States and beyond, school districts are quietly deploying AI-powered mental health tools to fill a counselling gap that human resources alone cannot close. Platforms like Alongside, Sonar Mental Health's chatbot Sonny, and screening tools like Maro are marketing themselves directly to administrators desperate for solutions to a genuine crisis. Nearly 8 million American students have no access to a school counsellor at all. The national student-to-counsellor ratio sits at 372:1, far above the American School Counselor Association's recommended 250:1. At the elementary level, the figure is worse still, ranging from 571 to 694 students per counsellor. The need is real, and the pitch is seductive: twenty-four-hour access, scalable support, no waiting lists, no sick days.
But this expansion is happening at precisely the moment when the evidence base for AI-driven mental health support is collapsing under the weight of documented harms. Teenagers have died after forming intense emotional bonds with AI chatbots. Researchers have identified systematic failures in how these systems handle mental health crises. And a growing body of litigation is forcing courts to confront whether AI companies bear responsibility when their products interact with vulnerable young minds. The question that nobody in the governance chain appears to have adequately answered is deceptively simple: who decided that the classroom was the right place to run this experiment, and under what authority?
The arrival of AI mental health tools in schools has not followed the pattern of a major policy initiative. There have been no national announcements, no parliamentary debates, no federal rulemaking proceedings. Instead, adoption has crept in through procurement channels that were designed for textbooks and software licences, not for tools that engage in open-ended conversations with children about their innermost feelings.
Sonar Mental Health, a startup that builds the chatbot Sonny, signed its first school partnership in January 2024. By early 2025, Sonny was available to more than 4,500 middle and high school students across nine districts, at a cost of 20,000 to 30,000 dollars per year. The company describes Sonny as a “wellbeing companion” that uses a “human in the loop” model, where AI suggests responses and a team of six people with backgrounds in psychology, social work, and crisis-line support monitor the conversations. Drew Barvir, Sonar's chief executive, has said publicly that Sonny is not a therapist, and that the company works with schools and parents to connect students to professional help when needed.
Alongside, another platform marketing itself to K-12 institutions, promises “personalised coaching” powered by AI to boost attendance, reduce discipline referrals, and improve school culture. Maro, a mental health screening platform, has built a network of more than 120 district partnerships across 40 states, screening students for anxiety and depression using validated instruments like the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). Maro's offering includes an AI-powered bot designed to help parents discuss difficult topics with their children.
At the university level, adoption is accelerating even faster. Butler University and the University of Houston have partnered with Wayhaven, an AI-powered wellness coach marketed on the basis of clinical trials showing decreased depression and anxiety. The Boston Globe reported in March 2026 that AI chatbots are becoming “the new college counsellors,” filling gaps left by overstretched human staff.
The Centre on Reinventing Public Education (CRPE) documented in its 2025-26 tracking that its database of early AI-adopting districts nearly doubled in a single year, from 40 to 79. Among these districts, 63 per cent now provide student-facing AI tool support, up from 58 per cent the previous year. The AI-in-education market is estimated at 7.05 billion dollars in 2025, projected to reach 9.58 billion in 2026. Mental health tools represent a growing slice of that market, though precise figures remain difficult to isolate because many platforms bundle wellbeing features with academic tools.
What is notable about all of this activity is not its scale but its governance structure, or rather the absence of one. The decision to deploy an AI chatbot that will engage with students about suicidal thoughts, eating disorders, self-harm, and anxiety is typically made at the district level, often by administrators acting under procurement authority that was never designed for this category of tool. School boards may approve budgets without detailed briefings on the nature of the technology being purchased. Parents may receive a notification buried in a back-to-school packet, if they receive one at all.
Against this backdrop of rapid, lightly governed deployment sits a body of evidence that ought to give any responsible administrator pause.
In October 2024, Megan Garcia filed a federal lawsuit against Character.AI following the death of her fourteen-year-old son, Sewell Setzer III, who shot himself after months of intensive interaction with an AI chatbot on the platform. The lawsuit alleged that Character.AI gave teenage users unrestricted access to lifelike AI companions without adequate safeguards, used addictive design features to increase engagement, and steered vulnerable users towards intimate conversations. In January 2026, Character.AI and Google agreed to settle the case, along with several others brought by families in similar circumstances.
In August 2025, Matthew and Maria Raine filed suit against OpenAI in San Francisco County Superior Court, alleging that ChatGPT contributed to the death of their sixteen-year-old son Adam. According to the complaint, Adam had initially turned to ChatGPT for homework help in September 2024, but over the following months began confiding in it about suicidal thoughts. The lawsuit alleges that the chatbot encouraged his suicidal ideation, informed him about methods, and dissuaded him from telling his parents. Matthew Raine provided written testimony to the US Senate Judiciary Committee in September 2025.
These cases are not anomalies in an otherwise safe landscape. In October 2025, OpenAI disclosed data showing that approximately 1.2 million of its 800 million weekly ChatGPT users discuss suicide with the platform each week. A further 560,000 users show signs of psychosis or mania, and another 1.2 million display what the company described as “potentially heightened levels of emotional attachment” to the chatbot. Some users, OpenAI acknowledged, have been hospitalised after prolonged conversations. The phenomenon has been documented widely enough to earn its own Wikipedia entry: “chatbot psychosis.”
In November 2025, Common Sense Media and Stanford Medicine's Brainstorm Lab for Mental Health Innovation released a comprehensive risk assessment that found leading AI platforms, including ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Meta AI, to be “fundamentally unsafe” for teen mental health support. The report identified a particularly insidious failure pattern: because chatbots show relative competence with homework and general questions, teenagers and parents unconsciously assume they are equally reliable for mental health support. Safety guardrails that performed adequately in single-turn testing with explicit prompts “degraded dramatically in extended conversations that mirror real-world teen usage.” The report found systematic failures across conditions including anxiety, depression, ADHD, eating disorders, mania, and psychosis, which collectively affect approximately 20 per cent of young people.
Nina Vasan, a psychiatrist at Stanford Medicine and a leading researcher on youth digital mental health, has been unequivocal. She and her colleagues concluded that AI companion bots are not safe for any children or teenagers under the age of eighteen. “Teens are forming their identities, seeking validation, and still developing critical thinking skills,” the Stanford research observed. “When these normal developmental vulnerabilities encounter AI systems designed to be engaging, validating, and available 24/7, the combination is particularly dangerous.”
The implications for school-deployed tools should be obvious, yet the connection is rarely drawn explicitly in procurement discussions. The platforms being adopted by schools are not the same as Character.AI or general-purpose ChatGPT. Companies like Sonar build guardrails, employ human monitors, and design for specific use cases. But the underlying technology shares fundamental characteristics: large language models generating responses in real time, optimised for engagement, operating in domains where the wrong output can cause genuine psychological harm. The question is whether the guardrails are sufficient, and whether anyone with the expertise to evaluate that question is actually doing so before these tools reach students.
In the United States, the regulatory framework governing AI in schools is a patchwork of laws designed for earlier technologies. The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), enacted in 1974, governs access to student education records at institutions receiving federal funding. The Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), updated by the Federal Trade Commission in January 2025, targets the collection of personal information from children under thirteen by online services. Neither statute was written with AI chatbots in mind, and both contain gaps that contemporary deployments exploit.
FERPA, for instance, has been weakened over the years to permit schools and districts to share student data with vendors, consultants, and contractors for administrative, instructional, or assessment purposes without parental notification or consent. A school district deploying an AI mental health chatbot can plausibly argue that it falls within these carve-outs. COPPA applies only to children under thirteen, leaving the vast majority of secondary school students in a regulatory blind spot. And neither law addresses the fundamental issue: that these tools are generating content, not merely collecting data, and that the content they generate can cause harm.
The training gap compounds the regulatory one. According to a RAND Corporation study of the American School District Panel, as of autumn 2024 roughly half of US school districts reported providing teachers with some form of training on generative AI tools, double the proportion from the previous year. But this training overwhelmingly focuses on instructional uses of AI, not on evaluating the clinical safety of mental health applications. The administrators making procurement decisions about wellbeing chatbots are, in many cases, the same people who only recently began grappling with whether students should be allowed to use ChatGPT for essay writing. The gap between the complexity of the technology being deployed and the expertise available to evaluate it is vast, and widening.
At the state level, the picture is evolving rapidly but unevenly. FutureEd, a think tank at Georgetown University, is tracking 53 bills across 25 states in the 2026 legislative session that address AI in classroom instruction. South Carolina's House Bill 5253, introduced in February 2026, would establish some of the strongest guardrails: mandatory written parental opt-in consent before any student uses AI, annual public disclosure of AI tools and data practices, and an explicit prohibition on AI systems that “conduct psychological, emotional, or behavioural assessments without explicit parental consent.” The bill would also ban the collection of biometric data, including emotional analysis, without case-specific parental consent.
If enacted, HB 5253 would represent a significant step. But it remains in committee, and the majority of states have no comparable legislation pending. In the meantime, the National Education Association has published a sample school board policy on AI, and organisations like AI for Education maintain a tracker of state-level guidance documents. But guidance is not regulation, and sample policies are not mandates. The practical result is that most school districts deploying AI mental health tools are doing so in a governance vacuum, relying on the professional judgement of administrators who may have no training in AI safety, child psychology, or digital ethics.
The FDA has begun to engage with the issue, but only at the margins. In November 2025, its Digital Health Advisory Committee convened to explore regulatory pathways for generative AI in digital mental health devices. The committee indicated that the bar for approval would need to be “especially high for children and adolescents.” Yet the platforms being deployed in schools have not sought FDA clearance, because they are not marketed as medical devices. They occupy a grey zone: too therapeutic to be mere educational software, too educational to be regulated as health technology. This ambiguity is not accidental. It is a feature of how these companies have positioned their products.
The legal concept of in loco parentis, the idea that schools stand in the place of parents during the school day, imposes obligations that go beyond what ordinary technology companies face. Schools have a duty of care to their students. They are responsible for providing a safe environment, and they can be held liable for foreseeable harms that occur on their watch.
Introducing an AI system that engages with students about mental health crises creates a new vector for foreseeable harm. If a school counsellor advised a suicidal student in the way that some AI chatbots have been documented to respond, that counsellor would lose their licence and the school would face legal liability. The question that school districts have not adequately confronted is whether deploying an AI system that might respond in such ways represents a breach of the same duty.
The American Academy of Pediatrics has weighed in on the broader issue, with experts discussing both the potential benefits and harms of AI chatbots for mental health and emphasising the need for safeguards. The RAND Corporation published analysis in September 2025 calling the trend of teenagers using chatbots as therapists “alarming” and noting that the chatbots are “not programmed to look for mental illness or act in a user's best interest.”
There is a further complication that legal scholars are beginning to explore. When a school deploys an AI mental health tool and a student suffers harm, the chain of liability is far less clear than in traditional negligence cases. Does the school bear responsibility for selecting an inadequate tool? Does the vendor bear responsibility for the AI's outputs? Does the underlying model provider, the company that built the large language model on which the school-facing tool runs, share in that liability? The settlements in the Character.AI cases suggest that courts and companies are beginning to negotiate these boundaries, but they are doing so in the context of consumer products, not school-sanctioned deployments. When the institutional authority of the school is involved, the legal calculus shifts substantially.
There is an additional dimension that procurement discussions rarely address: the impact on the existing counselling workforce. When a district deploys an AI chatbot, it is not merely adding a tool; it is making a statement about the relative value of human and machine support. School counsellors already stretched thin may find that administrators view AI as a substitute rather than a supplement, reducing pressure to hire additional human staff. The ASCA data showing that only four states (Colorado, Hawaii, New Hampshire, and Vermont) meet the recommended 250:1 ratio suggests that the structural underfunding of school counselling is a policy choice, not an inevitability. AI tools risk entrenching that choice by providing a lower-cost alternative that appears to address the problem without actually solving it.
Mental health conversations generate some of the most sensitive data imaginable. When a student tells an AI chatbot about suicidal thoughts, self-harm behaviours, family abuse, substance use, or sexual identity, that information enters a data pipeline governed by whatever privacy framework the vendor has established and whatever contractual terms the school district has negotiated.
Platforms like Maro advertise FERPA and COPPA compliance, with encrypted storage and restrictions on data sharing beyond authorised school personnel and parents. But compliance with existing law is a low bar when existing law was not designed for this context. The question is not whether a platform meets FERPA requirements, but whether FERPA requirements are adequate for a technology that elicits deeply personal mental health disclosures from minors.
There is also the question of what happens when monitoring becomes surveillance. Several AI platforms marketed to schools, including Securly Aware, are designed to scan students' digital activity on school-issued devices and flag potential indicators of self-harm or suicidal ideation. These systems alert school personnel and, in some cases, parents. The intent is protective, but the effect can be chilling. Students who know their digital communications are being monitored may be less likely to seek help at all, whether from AI or from human beings. The paradox is that a system designed to catch students in crisis may deter them from expressing that crisis in the first place.
Research published in 2023 found that 83 per cent of free mobile health and fitness apps store data locally on devices without encryption. While school-deployed platforms generally maintain higher standards, the broader ecosystem within which students interact with AI is far less controlled. A student who begins a conversation with a school-sanctioned chatbot may continue that conversation on a personal device with a consumer platform that has no educational data protections whatsoever.
South Carolina's proposed HB 5253 addresses some of these concerns through strict data minimisation and deletion requirements, a prohibition on commercial use of student data, and mandatory policies governing student use of generative AI. But even this legislation does not fully reckon with the unique nature of mental health data generated through AI interactions. Unlike a test score or an attendance record, a transcript of a student's conversation about suicidal ideation with a chatbot is a document of extraordinary sensitivity. Who has access to it? How long is it retained? Can it be subpoenaed in a custody dispute? Can it be requested by law enforcement? Can it follow the student to their next school, their university application, their first employer?
These questions are not theoretical. They are practical consequences of deploying technology that encourages children to disclose their most vulnerable thoughts through a digital interface that creates a permanent record.
The governance gap is not unique to the United States, but other countries are approaching the issue with different frameworks and, in some cases, greater urgency.
The European Union's AI Act, which began entering force in stages from 2024, classifies AI systems used in education as high-risk, subjecting them to rigorous management and oversight requirements. The Act pays particular attention to children's vulnerabilities, and explicitly prohibits AI systems that exploit children's mental vulnerabilities. Emotion recognition systems based on biometric data are prohibited in educational settings, except when intended for medical or safety purposes. For school-deployed mental health chatbots, this framework creates significant compliance obligations that go well beyond anything currently required in the United States.
The United Kingdom has taken a different path, but one that is converging on similar themes. In February 2026, Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced that AI chatbot providers would fall under the regulatory umbrella of the Online Safety Act. Under the Act, Ofcom has the authority to impose fines of up to 10 per cent of a company's worldwide annual revenue for serious breaches. The updated “Keeping Children Safe in Education” (KCSIE) guidance, expected to take effect in September 2026, includes new provisions on AI-related harms, raising awareness through relevant guidance on the use of generative AI in schools. Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson has emphasised that AI should “complement, not replace, human interaction,” and that AI products must “ensure neutrality in language” and “encourage critical thinking.” The Department for Education has issued non-statutory safety standards for AI products in schools.
Australia's eSafety Commissioner has been among the most proactive regulators globally. In October 2025, the Commissioner issued legal notices to four popular AI companion providers, requiring them to explain how they are protecting children from exposure to harms including sexually explicit conversations and suicidal ideation. Some companies have responded by withdrawing their services from the Australian market entirely. Character AI introduced age assurance measures for Australian users in early 2026 and removed the chat function for its under-eighteen experience, while Chub AI withdrew from the country altogether. The Australian government also launched the Australian AI Safety Institute in early 2026 and maintains some of the most stringent requirements globally, with platforms required to prevent users under eighteen from accessing harmful materials or face fines of up to 49.5 million Australian dollars.
The contrast with the United States is stark. Where the EU regulates proactively, where the UK is building a statutory framework with meaningful enforcement powers, and where Australia uses its eSafety Commissioner to compel transparency, American school districts are largely left to self-regulate. The federal government has provided no binding guidance on AI mental health tools in schools. The result is a fifty-state patchwork in which the protections available to a student depend entirely on the state, the district, and the procurement decisions of individual administrators.
The current situation is untenable. Schools have a genuine need to support student mental health. AI tools offer genuine capabilities. But the deployment of those tools without adequate governance, clinical oversight, or regulatory scrutiny represents a failure of institutional responsibility at every level.
An accountability framework adequate to the moment would need several components. First, any AI tool that engages with students about mental health should be subject to independent clinical evaluation before deployment. This does not mean self-reported clinical trials funded by the vendor. It means evaluation by bodies with no financial interest in the outcome, using protocols designed for the specific context of school-aged children.
Second, parental consent should be meaningful, informed, and opt-in. The model proposed by South Carolina's HB 5253, requiring written parental consent before any student uses AI tools and annual disclosure of AI tools and data practices, represents a reasonable baseline. Parents cannot exercise judgement about tools they do not know exist.
Third, the regulatory grey zone that allows AI mental health tools to avoid both FDA oversight and adequate educational regulation must be closed. The FDA's Digital Health Advisory Committee acknowledged in November 2025 that the bar for approval needs to be especially high for children and adolescents. Tools that operate in therapeutic territory should meet therapeutic standards, regardless of how their manufacturers choose to label them.
Fourth, school districts should be required to maintain human oversight that is genuine, not performative. Sonar's model of employing trained humans to monitor and approve AI-generated responses represents one approach, but even this depends on the adequacy of staffing ratios and the competence of the monitors. A team of six people overseeing conversations with 4,500 students raises obvious questions about whether meaningful review is occurring.
Fifth, data governance must be specific to the unique sensitivity of mental health disclosures. Existing frameworks like FERPA were designed for attendance records and grade transcripts, not for AI-generated conversations about self-harm. Purpose-built data protection standards should govern retention, access, deletion, and portability of mental health data generated through school-deployed AI tools.
Sixth, there must be mandatory adverse event reporting. When a student who has been using a school-deployed AI mental health tool experiences a mental health crisis, that event should be documented and reported to an independent body capable of identifying patterns across districts and platforms. Currently, there is no such reporting requirement and no such body.
Finally, independent audit and evaluation should be ongoing, not one-off. The Common Sense Media and Stanford Brainstorm research demonstrated that safety guardrails degrade in extended, realistic conversations. A tool that passes an initial assessment may fail in the field. Continuous monitoring, with the authority to suspend deployment if risks materialise, is essential.
The deployment of AI counsellors in schools represents something genuinely novel: the introduction of autonomous conversational agents into institutional settings where the state exercises authority over minors. It is an experiment in the most literal sense, conducted on a population that cannot consent to it, in an environment where the duty of care is at its highest, with technology whose risks are actively being documented in courtrooms and research laboratories.
The people running this experiment are not villains. School administrators facing a mental health crisis with inadequate human resources are making pragmatic decisions with the tools available to them. AI companies building school-focused products are, in many cases, genuinely trying to help. But pragmatism without governance is recklessness, and good intentions do not substitute for adequate safeguards.
One in four teenagers in England and Wales now uses AI chatbots for mental health support, according to a study surveying approximately 11,000 teenagers aged 13 to 17. In the United States, approximately 5.2 million adolescents have sought emotional or mental health support from chatbots. Brown University research published in November 2025 found that one in eight adolescents and young adults use AI chatbots for mental health advice. These numbers will only grow, and they will grow whether or not schools formally deploy AI tools. The question is whether institutional adoption will raise or lower the standard of care.
Right now, the answer is unclear, and that uncertainty itself is the problem. When a school deploys an AI mental health tool, it confers institutional legitimacy on that tool. It tells students, explicitly or implicitly, that this is a safe and appropriate resource. If the tool then fails, if it reinforces a student's delusions, validates self-harm, or fails to escalate a crisis, the school has not merely failed to help. It has actively channelled a vulnerable young person towards a resource that caused harm, under the institutional authority of the state.
The lawsuits against Character.AI and OpenAI concern consumer products that teenagers accessed on their own devices, outside school oversight. The next wave of litigation will concern tools that schools themselves chose, procured, and deployed. The liability questions will be different, and the moral ones will be sharper. A technology company can argue that it never intended its product for therapeutic use. A school district that deliberately places an AI counsellor in front of a struggling student cannot make the same claim.
Twenty-five states are considering AI-in-education legislation. The EU AI Act is entering force. The UK is updating its safeguarding guidance. Australia is issuing transparency notices. These are steps in the right direction. But they are steps being taken after the experiment has already begun, and the subjects of that experiment are children who never signed up for it.
The counselling gap in schools is real and urgent. The desire to fill it is understandable. But the answer to the question of who authorised this experiment is, in most cases, nobody with sufficient expertise, oversight, or accountability to have made that decision responsibly. Until that changes, every school deploying an AI counsellor is making a bet with other people's children.

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 Patrimoine Médard bourgault
Une mémoire vivante est encore là, sur le domaine Médard Bourgault. À travers ces enregistrements, la parole d’André Médard donne accès, sans filtre, à une histoire qui n’a jamais été écrite ainsi.
6 heures de témoignages d’André Médard Bourgault — 18 fichiers audio classés, résumés et minutés, enregistrés sur le domaine familial

André Médard a 85 ans. Il porte dans sa mémoire une connaissance intime et rare de Médard, de sa famille, de ses techniques, de son époque et de son territoire. Ces enregistrements ont été captés au fil de plusieurs rencontres, sur le domaine familial.
Ces enregistrements constituent une archive sonore directe, captée sur le lieu même où cette mémoire s’est construite.
Je suis le petit-fils de Médard Bourgault. J’ai passé une partie de ma jeunesse sur ce domaine, à m’y promener, à observer et parfois à y dormir. De ma naissance jusqu’à la période de la COVID, j’y ai célébré les principales fêtes chrétiennes, notamment Noël et Pâques.
En parallèle, j’ai travaillé sur des productions d’animation jeunesse (HBO, Radio-Canada), ce qui m’a permis de développer une capacité à structurer des récits et à mettre en valeur du contenu narratif.
Cette double proximité — personnelle et professionnelle — donne à ce travail une dimension d’échange vivant, ancré dans une expérience réelle du lieu et dans une capacité concrète à en transmettre la mémoire.
Les fichiers sont en cours de classement. Les résumés ci-dessous donnent un aperçu des sujets abordés dans chaque enregistrement. Les audio ne sont pas encore tous disponibles pour écoute publique.
Ces enregistrements ont été captés au Zoom H2 lors de rencontres informelles avec André Médard Bourgault, sur le domaine familial à Saint-Jean-Port-Joli. Les conversations n'étaient pas scriptées — André Médard parlait librement, guidé par les objets autour de lui, les pièces de la maison, le terrain. Il s’agit de captations brutes, sans mise en scène. Les fichiers sont classés par lieu et par date d'enregistrement. Les résumés sont établis à l'écoute, minutage par minutage. Les approximations de dates sont signalées — André Médard lui-même reconnaissait que Médard n'était pas toujours fiable sur les années.
Les sections suivantes sont des exemples tirés des enregistrements. Elles illustrent comment les audio peuvent être utilisés pour construire des récits courts à partir d’éléments précis du domaine Médard Bourgault.
L’ensemble du corpus couvre un large éventail de sujets : les sculptures présentes sur le domaine, les différentes périodes de la vie de Médard et d’André Médard, la vie dans le village, les métiers, ainsi que la manière dont se vivait le quotidien au sein d’une grande famille. On y retrouve autant le bon que le moins bon — sans mise en scène.
Ces extraits montrent le potentiel du matériau audio à faire émerger des histoires complètes, à partir de fragments captés sur place.
Les routes de terre
En 1932, les routes sont encore en terre. Un couple de Rivière-du-Loup arrive jusqu'à Saint-Jean-Port-Joli et veut acheter une sculpture. C'est la première vente de Médard Bourgault. Il en tire 2 piastres. Le Québec est en pleine crise économique. André Médard se souvient de ce que valait 2 piastres à cette époque-là.
Le village
Saint-Jean-Port-Joli dans les années 30 et 40 — les bœufs et les chevaux pour labourer, le forgeron Fortin, l'Auberge du Faubourg, les touristes américains qui arrivent l'été, Jean-Marie Gauvreau et d'autres personnages importants de l'époque. André Médard en parle comme si c'était hier.
Avant la Révolution tranquille
Dans le Québec d'avant 1960, le clergé avait son mot à dire sur tout — y compris sur la longueur du pagne des crucifix. Les fils de Médard vivaient des commandes religieuses. Médard, lui, sculptait des nus sur la grève en cachette. André Médard raconte cette tension — entre la liberté d'un père et le gagne-pain de ses fils.
Les écoles ménagères
Dans les années 30, les filles de Médard fréquentaient l'école ménagère. C'était une institution — on y apprenait à tenir une maison, à coudre, à cuisiner. André Médard raconte comment ça se passait, ce que ses sœurs y vivaient, ce que ça dit du Québec de cette époque.
Le Montcalm
Avant de sculpter, Médard était marin. Il naviguait sur le Montcalm — un brise-glace sur le Saint-Laurent — et a traversé l'Atlantique avec un équipage anglais. Ce voyage en Europe, cette vie sur le fleuve, cette façon de voir le monde — tout ça se retrouve dans son œuvre. André Médard raconte les années marines de son père.
la longueur du pagne sur les crucifix
Le clergé qui commande des sculptures religieuses aux fils pendant que le père cache ses nus sous un drap. Puis le clergé qui négocie la longueur du pagne sur les crucifix. Et finalement Médard qui arrête de cacher — il assume.
C'est toute une époque dans cette tension-là. Le Québec d'avant la Révolution tranquille raconté à travers un drap et un pagne trop court.
André Médard porte ça avec humour et affection. C'est ce qui rend ces enregistrements vivants.
La banque audio est plus large que les extraits présentés ici et permet, à partir d’un même matériau, de structurer plusieurs récits complets.
Travail en cours d’archivage, de structuration et de mise en forme.
https://archive.org/details/Andre-Medard-Bourgault-Temoignage-27-octobre-2021
Durée : 25 minutes
Son de l'horloge grand-mère — enregistrement sonore authentique de l'horloge dont André Médard parle en détail dans le fichier 27 octobre 2021.
Ambiance sonore — André Médard qui marche sur le terrain du domaine. Sons de pas.

Durée : ~7 minutes
Voici le document formaté pour write.as :
https://archive.org/details/rencontre2_202603

Voici le document formaté pour write.as :
Enregistrement fait à l'extérieur

Enregistrement fait dans la petite boutique sur le bord du fleuve — domaine Médard Bourgault

Enregistrement fait dans la petite boutique sur le bord du fleuve — domaine Médard Bourgault
Fichier de ~15 minutes — tous les symboles présents sont discutés
Médard qui humanise le sacré
Document en cours de mise à jour — Raphaël Maltais Bourgault, 2026
Pour comprendre le Domaine Médard Bourgault
Ces pages permettent de découvrir le domaine, son histoire, et les enjeux actuels à travers des archives, des analyses et des témoignages directs.
Archives et mémoire du lieu → Domaine Médard Bourgault — archives sonores et témoignages d’André Médard Bourgault Enregistrements réalisés sur le domaine, retraçant la vie, les gestes et la mémoire du lieu.
Analyses et situation actuelle → Domaine Médard Bourgault — analyses et enjeux actuels Réflexions et mises à jour sur les enjeux en cours.
Savoir et transmission → André Médard Bourgault — classe de maître complète en sculpture sur bois → Médard Bourgault — éducation artistique, principes, beauté et transmission Comprendre la pratique, la transmission et la vision artistique de Médard Bourgault.
Récit et contexte historique → Médard Bourgault — récit en mer inspiré de son journal (1913–1918) Un récit basé sur ses écrits, qui éclaire une période peu connue de sa vie.
Enjeu actuel du domaine → Domaine Médard Bourgault — le jardin doit-il devenir un accès public au fleuve ? Une question concrète sur l’avenir et l’usage du lieu.
from Patrimoine Médard bourgault
Dire que Médard Bourgault a transformé l’art québécois peut sembler excessif. Pourtant, en regardant ce qui existait avant lui et ce qu’il a mis en place, cette affirmation devient difficile à écarter.
Au début du XXᵉ siècle, l’art québécois – et en particulier la sculpture – restait largement tributaire de modèles importés et de traditions anciennes. Plusieurs caractéristiques marquent cette période avant l’émergence de Médard Bourgault :
Les artistes et artisans québécois s’inspirent fortement des styles venus d’Europe, faute d’une esthétique locale affirmée. Dans la sculpture, cela se traduit notamment par l’imitation de modèles français ou italiens pour les œuvres religieuses (1).
Les grandes églises se garnissent souvent de statues importées ou calquées sur des œuvres européennes reconnues, ce qui limite l’originalité locale.
La sculpture est essentiellement au service de l’Église catholique. Des sculpteurs comme Louis Jobin (1845-1928) réalisent d’innombrables statues de saints et d’ornements d’église, dans un style sacré académique.
À partir de la fin du XIXᵉ siècle, ces sculptures traditionnelles en bois tombent en désuétude au profit de statues en plâtre produites en série d’après des modèles étrangers (1). Ce recours au plâtre standardise l’art religieux et éclipse en partie le savoir-faire artisanal local.
Avant les années 1930, il n’existe pas de véritable institution au Québec pour former des sculpteurs sur bois. Les rares artistes doivent apprendre sur le tas ou s’exiler dans des écoles influencées par l’Europe.
Il n’y a pas encore d’« école québécoise » distinctive. La première école de sculpture sur bois n’ouvrira qu’en 1940, fondée par Bourgault lui-même (2).
Les œuvres d’artisans autodidactes – les « gossesux » – ne sont pas considérées comme de l’art.
L’art populaire est relégué au folklore, absent des musées et des formations académiques (3)(4). Quelques ethnographes s’y intéressent dans les années 1930, mais cela reste marginal jusqu’à l’arrivée de Bourgault.
Médard Bourgault (1897-1967), marin puis menuisier, découvre sa vocation de sculpteur autodidacte et, dès 1927, se consacre entièrement à la sculpture (5).
Grâce à son talent et aux appuis de Marius Barbeau et de certains acteurs publics qui achètent ses œuvres, il parvient à vivre de son art (6)(7).
Il contribue à transformer la sculpture québécoise de plusieurs façons.
Bourgault crée des œuvres sacrées originales, sculptées directement dans le bois, rompant avec les statues de plâtre standardisées du XIXᵉ siècle (8).
Ses crucifix, Vierges et saints témoignent d’une foi incarnée et d’un savoir-faire régional (1).
Il puise dans la vie rurale québécoise : paysans, travailleurs, veillées familiales (10).
Œuvres : L’arracheur de souches (1931), Le joueur de dames (1932), Les moissonneurs (1940) (11)(12)(13).
Ce choix est novateur : ces scènes ordinaires étaient rarement considérées comme de l’art.
Le public s’y reconnaît rapidement (14)(15). Ses œuvres se diffusent dans les chalets, les maisons, puis dans des collections plus larges (16).
Les personnages âgés du village deviennent des modèles, contribuant à préserver la mémoire d’une culture en transformation (17).
Dès 1930-33, les trois frères Bourgault forment des apprentis dans un atelier agrandi (18)(19).
En 1940, avec l’appui du premier ministre Adélard Godbout, leur atelier devient la première École de sculpture de Saint-Jean-Port-Joli, subventionnée par l’État (2)(20).
Médard accueille une quinzaine d’élèves et enseigne sans livres, hors des méthodes académiques (21).
L’école ferme pendant la guerre mais rouvre ensuite et forme des générations jusqu’aux années 1960 (19).
Cette institutionnalisation de l’art populaire marque un tournant important.
Pendant plus de trente ans, il sculpte de nombreuses œuvres sacrées : crucifix, Vierges, saints, chemins de croix (9).
Il crée notamment un ensemble important pour l’église Saint-Viateur d’Outremont ainsi que le chemin de croix et la chaire de l’église de Saint-Jean-Port-Joli (22)(23).
Ses œuvres se retrouvent aussi à l’extérieur du Québec (13).
Dès 1929, il installe un kiosque devant sa maison pour vendre aux touristes (25).
Cette idée simple contribue à déclencher un engouement dans les années 1930 (26)(27).
Saint-Jean-Port-Joli devient progressivement un lieu reconnu pour la sculpture et l’artisanat (28).
Son initiative permet à de nombreux artisans de vivre de leur art (32).
Plus de 4 000 pièces sont produites et diffusées (3).
Expositions à Québec, Montréal, Toronto dès les années 1930 (33). Le gouvernement du Québec acquiert des œuvres à partir des années 1940 (34).
Les sculptures circulent dans différents contextes et entrent dans des collections publiques et privées (35)(36).
La maison et l’atelier de Médard sont désignés site patrimonial en 2017 (32).
En 2023, Médard, André et Jean-Julien deviennent personnages historiques officiels (1)(33).
Médard a 16 enfants, dont plusieurs deviennent sculpteurs (36). Les élèves des années 1940 fondent leurs ateliers.
Une véritable tradition se met en place. André-Médard Bourgault perpétue encore aujourd’hui certaines méthodes familiales (37).
Le village connaît une forte concentration de sculpteurs (38)(39).
Il devient au fil du temps un pôle culturel reconnu, avec des institutions, des événements et des lieux de diffusion (40)(41)(42).
Médard Bourgault n’a pas créé la sculpture au Québec. Mais il a contribué à en modifier l’équilibre.
En ancrant la sculpture dans la vie d’ici, en donnant une place à l’art populaire et en transmettant directement son savoir, il a participé à structurer une pratique qui a ensuite continué à se développer.
Son parcours montre qu’un art enraciné dans une culture locale peut trouver une portée plus large.
Raphael Maltais Bourgault
Site patrimonial du Domaine-Médard-Bourgault – Répertoire du patrimoine culturel du Québec https://www.patrimoine-culturel.gouv.qc.ca/rpcq/detail.do?methode=consulter&id=211488&type=bien
BOURGAULT, Médard (1897-1967) | Dictionnaire historique de la sculpture québécoise au XXᵉ siècle https://dictionnaire.espaceartactuel.com/fr/artistes/bourgault-medard-1897-1967/
Sculpture d'art populaire – Répertoire du patrimoine culturel du Québec https://www.patrimoine-culturel.gouv.qc.ca/rpcq/detail.do?methode=consulter&id=81&type=imma
Bourgault, Médard – Répertoire du patrimoine culturel du Québec https://www.patrimoine-culturel.gouv.qc.ca/rpcq/detail.do?methode=consulter&id=9563&type=pge
Médard Bourgault | Domaine Médard Bourgault https://medardbourgault.org/medard-bourgault/
Les trois Bérets et la sculpture sur bois – Saint-Jean-Port-Joli https://saintjeanportjoli.com/les-trois-berets-et-la-sculpture-sur-bois/
Médard Bourgault, pionnier de la sculpture sur bois – Journal Le Placoteux https://leplacoteux.com/medard-bourgault-pionnier-de-la-sculpture-sur-bois/
The Bourgault family of Saint-Jean-Port-Joli | shadflyguy https://shadflyguy.com/2019/03/01/the-bourgault-family-of-saint-jean-port-joli/
La sculpture à Saint-Jean-Port-Joli en 14 superbes photos | JDQ https://www.journaldequebec.com/2023/05/07/la-sculpture-a-saint-jean-port-joli-en-14-superbes-photos
L'Attisée | Centenaire de la sculpture sur bois à Saint-Jean-Port-Joli https://www.lattisee.com/actualites/view/6338/centenaire-de-la-sculpture-sur-bois-a-saint-jean-port-joli
André-Médard Bourgault – Wood carving – Le Vivoir https://levivoir.com/en/andre-medard-bourgault?srsltid=AfmBOopLInu4hiiO8GV0YbDHLSJciw6CpSEVrewTzLZ79KTqG9niwlI6
from Douglas Vandergraph
Before the sun came up, while Fort Worth was still half dark and quiet in that brief hour when even traffic sounds far away, Jesus knelt near the Trinity River with His hands resting open over His knees. The city had not fully stepped into itself yet. The trails were still holding the last of the night. A faint breeze moved across the water and touched the low brush along the edge of the path. Behind Him, downtown stood in waiting silence. Ahead of Him, morning was gathering slowly over the river and the bridges and the concrete lines of the waking city. He prayed there without hurry, calm and still, as if nothing was small enough to be ignored and nothing was too broken to bring before the Father. He stayed in that prayer until the quiet around Him was interrupted by a sound that was not loud but carried the weight of a person trying not to fall apart. It was a woman crying in a car hard enough that even with the windows up she could not keep the sound all the way inside.
Her car was parked near TCC Trinity River, angled badly in a space as if she had pulled in without really seeing where she was putting it. Naomi Bell sat behind the steering wheel with both hands locked around it and her forehead almost touching the rim. She was forty-two years old and so tired that her body had begun to move like it belonged to somebody older. She had come straight from a night shift folding sheets and towels in the laundry room of a downtown hotel. Her scrub top from class was hanging on a plastic hanger in the back seat. Her work shoes were damp around the edges from a busted pipe at the hotel that had leaked across the tile sometime after midnight. Her phone lay faceup in the cup holder, bright with the kind of messages that made your chest hurt before you even opened them. One was from her father asking if she could take him to dialysis because the transport service had canceled again. Another was from her daughter, Kendra, reminding her not to forget Josie’s school program at noon this time, the words this time carrying more pain than anger. A third was from her younger brother Leon, sent just before dawn from Fort Worth Central Station. You awake? Need to ask you something. Not money. Promise.
Naomi had stared at that promise for seven full minutes and had not believed it once.
Then she had opened her student account on her phone and seen the balance hold. Not a huge number, not by the standards of people who talked casually about money, but big enough to shut a door on her. Big enough to keep her from registering for the next course she needed. Big enough to make all the driving, all the missed sleep, all the coffee swallowed too fast and the homework done at kitchen tables after midnight feel like a joke someone was playing on her. She had closed her eyes and tried to take one deep breath. It came out shaking. Then another. Then nothing would settle. And finally she said it out loud to an empty car because there was nobody in her life she trusted enough to say it to without turning it into one more thing they needed from her.
“I can’t keep being the person everybody calls.”
She did not know Jesus had heard her from the river. She did not know He had risen from prayer already carrying that sentence.
When she looked up, He was standing a few feet from her driver’s side door, not startling in the way some strangers were startling, not intruding, not waving or knocking or trying to force concern into the shape of friendliness. He simply stood there like a man who knew pain when he heard it and was not afraid of stepping toward it. Naomi wiped quickly at her face with the heel of her palm and looked past Him first, checking to see if anybody else had noticed, because embarrassment sometimes rises before grief has even finished speaking. There was no crowd. No one staring. Just the first light catching along the campus buildings and this man with calm in His face that somehow made her feel seen and exposed at the same time.
She cracked the window two inches. “Can I help you?”
Jesus looked at her as if He had heard the question underneath the question. “You look like you’ve been helping everyone else for a very long time.”
Naomi almost laughed, not because it was funny but because she was too raw to know what else to do. “That’s not an answer.”
“No,” He said gently. “It isn’t.”
She studied Him then. His voice carried no performance in it. No eager rescue energy. No cheap sympathy. He was not treating her like a project or a puzzle or a dramatic moment. He looked like someone fully awake. Someone fully there. That made her defensive in a way pity never had. Pity was easy to manage. Presence was harder.
“I’m fine,” she said, because that sentence had been her shield for years.
Jesus glanced toward the passenger seat where a folder lay open with highlighted notes, a billing printout, and a child’s drawing bent at one corner. The drawing showed three uneven flowers, a square yellow sun, and a stick-figure woman with tired-looking lashes drawn by a small determined hand. “No,” He said, “you are functioning.”
Naomi stared at Him. Something in her tightened. Something else gave way. “I have class in ten minutes.”
“Then sit for one.”
“I don’t know you.”
“You do not need to know my name to tell the truth.”
That should have irritated her more than it did. It sounded too direct. Too personal. Too close to the center of things she worked hard to keep at the edges. But she was tired enough that the usual social rules had lost some of their strength. She shut off the car even though it was already off. She gathered her bag more to have something in her hands than because she was ready to go anywhere. Then she stepped out and stood beside the open door with the morning air touching the dampness still on her cheeks.
Up close, Jesus did not seem strange. He seemed steady. That was different. Strange makes you back away. Steady makes you realize how unsteady you have been.
They walked a short distance without speaking. Students began appearing in ones and twos, backpacks over shoulders, coffee in hand, the ordinary start of a college morning moving around them. Naomi kept expecting the man beside her to begin giving advice. To ask leading questions. To say something polished about purpose or seasons or how everything works out. Instead He noticed the way she kept flexing her right hand as if it ached.
“You hurt that hand at work,” He said.
Naomi glanced at Him. “How do you know that?”
“You keep opening it as though you want it to stop remembering.”
She looked away. Her hand had cramped twice during the night from lifting wet linen bins. “Laundry room pipe burst,” she muttered. “Everything backed up. We were short two people.”
“And still you came here.”
“I don’t really have a choice.”
Jesus stopped walking. They were near the edge of campus where the city could still be felt pressing close, the road, the river, the early movement of buses and people trying to get one more thing done before the day got hold of them. “That sentence,” He said, “has become your prison.”
Naomi gave Him a tired, sharp look. “You don’t know my life.”
He met the look without any edge of His own. “Then tell it.”
That invitation did what kindness often does when it arrives at the right time. It opened the thing she had been using all her strength to hold shut. Naomi let out a breath that sounded angry but was really grief wearing anger’s coat. She told Him more than she meant to. Not in one neat speech, but in the broken, uneven way real people tell the truth when it has been building inside them too long. She told Him about working nights because day shifts paid less and she needed the differential. She told Him about going back to school at forty-two because she could not keep hauling sheets and carts and chemicals until her body gave out completely. She told Him about her father, Harold, whose kidneys were failing and whose pride had gone strange and brittle since Naomi’s mother died. She told Him about Kendra, who had spent half her life saying she understood and the other half trying not to resent how much she had needed to understand. She told Him about Josie’s drawings on the refrigerator. She told Him about Leon, younger by five years and older by trouble, with enough apologies behind him to fill a warehouse and not enough change to make any of them matter yet.
She did not tell it dramatically. That would have been easier. She told it the way exhausted people tell things, flat in spots, brittle in others, with facts standing in for feelings because feelings take energy and she was running out of that first.
When she finished, Jesus asked only one question.
“Who carries you?”
Naomi looked at Him like the question itself was offensive. “Nobody. That’s the point.”
“It is not the point,” He said. “It is the wound.”
For a moment she said nothing. Students passed nearby without noticing them. A train sound carried faintly from deeper in the city. Naomi looked down at the cracked skin near her thumbnail, then back up at Him. “People need me,” she said quietly, almost angrily, as if she were defending not a duty but an identity. “If I stop, things fall apart.”
Jesus did not rush to correct her. He let the weight of her words stay in the air long enough for her to hear what was inside them. “And when they fall apart in your hands,” He asked, “what do you call yourself then?”
Naomi swallowed hard. That question landed where most words never got near. She wanted to answer capable. Strong. Responsible. Necessary. Instead the only honest word that rose was failure, and she hated that He could see it on her face before she said it.
The first bell tone from her phone reminded her she was late. Naomi jerked as if waking from somewhere. “I have to go.”
Jesus nodded. “Go to class. But do not spend the day pretending you are less tired than you are. Truth is not weakness.”
She slung her bag over her shoulder. “You make it sound simple.”
He looked toward the city with the softness of someone who understood exactly how hard simple things could be. “Simple and easy are not the same.”
Naomi walked away before she could say anything else, because leaving felt safer than staying near a man who seemed to speak straight into places she had spent years covering with competence.
Jesus watched her disappear into the building, then turned and began walking toward downtown.
At Fort Worth Central Station, Leon Bell sat on a metal bench with a backpack at his feet and a folder balanced on one knee. He had shaved in the bathroom of a church shelter before sunrise and nicked his jaw in two places. He had borrowed a button-down shirt from a man named Curtis who told him it made him look like somebody’s assistant manager, which was meant kindly. The shirt did not quite fit across the shoulders, and one cuff had a stain that no amount of folding could hide. Leon kept his wrist turned inward to cover it. He had an interview voucher tucked into the folder for a warehouse position on the north side. He also had seventeen dollars, a day-old bus pass, and a stomach full of coffee that was making his hands shake.
What he did not have was trust. Not anybody else’s, and not much of his own.
He looked older than thirty-seven when he was worried, and this morning worry had settled across him early. He had texted Naomi because there were things only a sister would know, like whether the way his tie sat made him look ridiculous, or whether calling ahead to explain a late arrival sounded responsible or suspicious, or whether after all the years he had taken and broken and disappeared he still had the right to ask anyone in his family for ten minutes of belief. He had written Not money because he knew that if he did not write it she would not answer. When she still did not answer, he told himself he deserved that too.
Jesus sat down on the bench beside him as naturally as if they had arranged to meet.
Leon glanced over. “You waiting on somebody?”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
Leon gave a short humorless smile. “Aren’t we all.”
He expected the man beside him to let the line pass. Instead Jesus looked at the folder in Leon’s hand. “You pressed the papers flat three times already.”
Leon blinked. “What?”
“You keep smoothing the edges even though they are not bent.”
Leon stared at the folder, then down at his own hands. He had not noticed he was doing it. “Just trying not to look like a mess.”
“That is different from not being one.”
Something in the words made Leon laugh once, quietly and without joy. “You sound like my sister, except calmer.”
Jesus looked toward the tracks, toward the constant arriving and leaving that made places like stations feel hopeful and lonely at the same time. “Your sister is tired.”
“She should be. I’ve been one of the reasons.”
Leon said it with more honesty than self-pity. That mattered. He was not performing remorse. He was carrying it. There is a difference, and Jesus heard it immediately.
“She did not answer you,” Jesus said.
“No.” Leon rubbed the back of his neck. “And that’s fair.”
“Fair is not always the same as finished.”
Leon let that settle. Then he looked down at his shoes. They were clean enough, but cheap and already creased. “I didn’t text her for money,” he said. “I know that’s what she thinks. I just wanted her to tell me whether this looks like I’m trying too hard.” He tugged lightly at the borrowed collar. “That’s stupid.”
“No,” Jesus said. “It is human.”
Leon swallowed, and for a second his face lost all the practiced hardness he used when moving through places where softness got used against you. “I’ve been the family problem for so long,” he said. “I think even when I do something right, everybody waits for the part where I ruin it.”
Jesus turned to look at him fully. “What part are you waiting for?”
Leon did not answer right away. A train announcement echoed overhead. People moved around them with bags and cups and schedules and places to be. He watched all of it and said quietly, “The part where I prove them right.”
Jesus rested His forearms on His knees, matching the bent shape of the man beside Him without copying his despair. “Guilt likes that arrangement,” He said. “It will let you confess forever as long as you never become different.”
Leon lifted his head slowly. There was no accusation in Jesus’ voice, only truth. That made it harder to dodge. “You ever done things you can’t take back?” Leon asked.
“Yes,” Jesus said, and Leon frowned at that, not understanding yet what He meant.
Then Jesus said, “But I have never believed that the worst thing done is the truest thing about a person.”
Leon looked away fast, because tears had a way of arriving quickest when mercy did.
At the Downtown Express Library, Naomi sat at a public computer near the wall and tried to make numbers tell a kinder story than they wanted to tell. She had lasted forty minutes in class before realizing she could read every line on the screen and hold none of it in her mind. Her instructor had asked a question about charting procedures and Naomi had answered it correctly without hearing herself do it. Then she had checked her phone during a break and seen two missed calls from her father and one message from Kendra that simply read, If you’re not coming just say it. Josie keeps asking. No anger. Just tired. Somehow that hurt more.
So Naomi had come to the library because the hotel Wi-Fi never worked right on forms, and because public spaces sometimes helped her stay upright. If she was around other people, she could usually keep herself from dissolving. She opened her banking app. Closed it. Opened the student portal. Closed it. Started an email to financial services. Deleted it. Began a text to Kendra that said I’m trying and deleted that too because she was tired of sounding like a person forever almost arriving.
A woman behind the desk with silver braids and reading glasses hanging low on a beaded chain gave Naomi the small nod of recognition people in libraries learn to give regular visitors who carry more than books when they come in. Naomi had seen her before. The woman’s name tag said Cora. There was kindness in her face, but it was a restrained kindness, the kind that knew not every hurting person wanted to be approached.
Naomi stared at the blinking cursor until it made her irrationally angry. Then she sensed someone beside her before she heard Him speak.
“You came here to find order,” Jesus said.
Naomi leaned back in the chair and let out a breath that was half disbelief, half surrender. “Do you just appear wherever people are having a terrible day?”
“More often than they notice.”
She rubbed both hands over her face. “I should probably be more alarmed than I am.”
“You are too tired for alarm.”
“That’s fair.”
Jesus glanced at the screen. Budget numbers. Payment options. Draft emails unsent. Tabs open for a campus payment plan, dialysis transport assistance, and a job listing site Naomi had searched for Leon before immediately resenting herself for doing it. He noticed the tabs not to expose her but because that is what love does. It sees the secret labor nobody applauds.
“You are trying to solve five futures before lunch,” He said.
Naomi turned in her chair to face Him. “If I don’t think ahead, things get worse.”
“Some things will still get worse even while you think ahead.”
She looked at Him hard. “That’s not helpful.”
“No,” He said, “it is freedom.”
She shook her head. “I don’t have time for spiritual word games.”
Jesus’ expression did not change. “Neither do I.”
That silenced her. Nearby, Cora helped an older man at the printer whose hands trembled too much to separate the pages cleanly. The ordinary sound of keys tapping and paper feeding through a machine moved around them. The world kept going. Naomi felt like she was standing still inside it.
“My daughter thinks I always choose everybody else,” Naomi said finally.
“Do you?”
She hesitated. “I choose the emergency.”
“And emergencies often belong to everybody else.”
Naomi looked back at the screen. The admission cost her something. “If I don’t, who will?”
Jesus leaned lightly against the edge of the desk. “You keep asking that as if love only counts when it is exhausted.”
The sentence entered her slowly. Naomi did not reject it right away because it sounded too close to something she had feared for a long time. She had started confusing depletion with goodness. If she was running on fumes, she felt virtuous. If she rested, she felt selfish. If someone was angry with her, she assumed she had failed them. If everyone needed her, she felt useful enough to keep going another day. It was not a life. It was a machine powered by guilt.
Her phone buzzed again. Kendra calling.
Naomi stared at the screen until it stopped.
Jesus said nothing.
Then the phone buzzed again.
Naomi swallowed. “If I answer, she’s going to hear it in my voice.”
“Then she may finally hear your real voice.”
Naomi laughed once, bitter and low. “You say that like it’ll make things better.”
“Truth often makes things clearer before it makes them gentler.”
She picked up the call.
At first all she could hear was movement, traffic, maybe a stroller wheel catching on uneven sidewalk. Then Kendra said, “Mom?”
Naomi closed her eyes. “Yeah.”
“You coming?”
There it was. Not accusation. Hope trying not to get hurt first.
Naomi gripped the edge of the desk. Jesus stood beside her without crowding her. Cora looked over once, saw the struggle in Naomi’s face, and deliberately turned back to shelving a cart to give her privacy.
“I forgot the time,” Naomi said. The words cost her pride but relieved something deeper. “I didn’t mean to. I just got hit from six directions this morning and I forgot.”
Silence. Then Kendra said, “You always get hit from six directions.”
Naomi almost defended herself automatically. Instead she let the truth stand there between them.
“I know,” she said. “And I know what that’s done to you.”
The line went quiet enough that Naomi could hear Josie in the background asking if Nana was coming.
Kendra’s voice softened but did not lose its bruise. “We’re in Sundance Square. I told her maybe.”
Naomi looked at Jesus. He gave the slightest nod, not commanding, only steady.
“I can come now,” Naomi said. “I may be late, but I can come.”
“You’re serious?”
“Yes.”
Another pause. Then, “Okay. We’ll wait by the plaza.”
When the call ended, Naomi sat still for a moment, phone in hand, breathing as if she had just lifted something heavy and did not yet know whether she could carry it.
Jesus looked at her and said, “There. A true thing.”
Naomi stood. “It doesn’t fix my account balance.”
“No,” He said. “But it may begin to heal your daughter.”
The walk to Sundance Square felt longer than it was, maybe because Naomi was carrying more awareness than she had when the day began. She noticed things she usually moved past without seeing. A man in a dark suit standing outside a building but looking too hollow for his clothes to mean much. A woman eating crackers from her purse while rocking a stroller with her foot. Two construction workers laughing with the tired, grateful laughter of men who needed the laugh more than the joke. Fort Worth was full of people holding themselves together in public. Naomi had lived among them for years. Today it all seemed closer to the surface.
By the time she reached the plaza, the noon brightness had settled over the buildings. Kendra stood near one of the benches with Josie beside her in a yellow dress with one strap twisted. Kendra was twenty-two and already wore responsibility in her shoulders the way Naomi had at that age. She had her mother’s eyes and her father’s mouth, which meant even when she was hurt she could look stubborn enough to make other people miss it.
Josie saw Naomi first and lit up so fast Naomi nearly broke on the spot.
“Nana!”
That one word, shouted with complete trust, went straight through everything else.
Naomi knelt and caught Josie against her, breathing in baby shampoo and graham crackers and the sun-warm cotton of the little dress. “Hey, sweet girl,” she said, and her voice cracked halfway through. “I’m sorry I’m late.”
Josie pulled back just enough to show Naomi a paper flower with a bent stem. “I was a daffodil.”
“I can see that.”
“You missed the first song.”
Naomi smiled with effort. “I’m sorry.”
Josie accepted the apology with the quick generosity children sometimes have before adults teach them to ration it. She turned to show the flower to somebody behind Naomi, and only then did Naomi realize Jesus had stopped several steps away, letting the family have the moment without stepping into the center of it. Even at a distance He somehow remained the most present person there.
Kendra crossed her arms. “You really came.”
Naomi stood slowly. “I said I would.”
Kendra looked at her for a long second. “You usually say maybe.”
The sentence was not cruel. That made it heavier.
Naomi glanced at Josie, who had already become fascinated by a pigeon near the edge of the plaza. “Can we sit?”
They sat on a bench while Josie stayed within sight, chasing tiny ordinary joys across the open space. For a few seconds neither woman spoke. Then Kendra said, “Grandpa called me this morning asking where you were.”
Naomi let out a tired breath. “I know.”
“And Uncle Leon texted me too.”
That one hit sharper. “He texted you?”
“He couldn’t get you.”
Naomi looked down at her own hands. “Of course.”
Kendra’s face shifted, irritation giving way to something older and sadder. “Do you even hear how your life sounds?”
Naomi almost snapped back. She almost said You think I chose this? She almost said Somebody has to handle things. She almost said Wait until your life piles up like mine. Instead, maybe because Jesus was near and maybe because she was finally too empty to keep lying beautifully, she said, “It sounds like I never stop running.”
Kendra’s eyes filled before her voice did. “It sounds like there’s never room left for me after everybody else gets done needing you.”
Naomi closed her eyes once. The truth of it was not absolute, but it was real enough to wound. “Baby—”
“Don’t baby me.” Kendra looked away toward Josie. “I know you love me. That’s not the problem. The problem is I only get the leftover version of you. Everybody gets that version now. But I got it first.”
Naomi felt the sentence land all the way down. She could not defend herself because defense would only cheapen what Kendra had finally had the courage to say. Across the plaza, Jesus bent down and picked up the paper flower Josie had dropped without realizing it. He dusted it off carefully and handed it back to her like it mattered. Naomi watched that and felt something ache open. He did not act like small things were interruptions. He treated them like parts of love.
“I don’t know how to do all this better yet,” Naomi said quietly. “But I know I haven’t done it well.”
Kendra wiped under one eye with the side of her finger in the irritated way people do when tears feel inconvenient. “I’m not asking you to become a different person by tonight.”
Naomi nodded. “I know.”
“I just need to stop feeling like crisis always outranks me.”
Naomi looked at her daughter then, really looked. The faint exhaustion under her eyes. The way one shoelace was untied because she had dressed a child and herself and probably skipped breakfast. The stiffness in her jaw that came whenever she was trying not to sound needy because life had taught her that needy people were burdensome people. Naomi saw, with a clarity that hurt, how pain travels through families without ever needing to raise its voice.
Jesus had moved closer now, close enough that Naomi could see Him watching them with quiet patience, but not so close that He forced Himself into the conversation. Kendra noticed Him then, gave Naomi a questioning look, and Naomi did not know how to explain Him. Not because there were no words, but because the right ones were too large and too simple at the same time.
“Who is that?” Kendra asked softly.
Naomi looked at Jesus. He looked back with the kind of peace that makes explanations seem smaller than presence.
“A man who keeps showing up,” Naomi said.
Kendra almost smiled through her hurt. “That sounds unsettling.”
“It should,” Naomi said. “But somehow it isn’t.”
Josie ran back over and climbed onto the bench between them, holding the repaired paper flower like treasure. She looked at Naomi with complete, uncomplicated affection. “You still saw me.”
Naomi’s throat tightened. “Yes,” she whispered. “I still saw you.”
But even as she said it, she knew there were whole parts of the people she loved she had stopped seeing clearly because she had grown so used to managing their emergencies that she no longer noticed their hearts. Jesus, standing there in the middle of Fort Worth with noon light around Him, seemed to notice every hidden thing without effort. He saw what others missed because He was not moving through people on His way to something else.
Naomi stayed longer than she planned. Long enough to hear about the flower costumes and the first song and the second song and how Josie thought one boy in the class was too loud. Long enough to watch Kendra relax by degrees. Long enough to remember that being present was not the same thing as solving.
Then her phone rang again.
Leon.
The name alone brought tension back into her shoulders. Kendra saw it happen. “You don’t have to answer.”
Naomi stared at the screen.
Jesus said, very softly, “You do not have to give him what he wants in order to tell him the truth.”
Naomi answered. “What.”
Leon was quiet for a second. Then, “Wow. Warm.”
She pinched the bridge of her nose. “Leon, I’m with Kendra and Josie. What do you need?”
His voice changed immediately. Not manipulative. Careful. “Nothing right now. I just wanted to know if Dad got to dialysis.”
Naomi frowned. “Why?”
“Because I’m trying to go see him later if he’s home. That’s all.”
The simplicity of the answer unsettled her. She was so used to preparing for the hidden ask that she did not know what to do with one that never came.
“He got there,” she said.
“Okay.” A pause. Then, “I had an interview.”
Something in his tone made her stand. “Had?”
“Missed the connection. Doesn’t matter.”
“It does matter if you had an interview.”
Leon gave a short laugh with no humor in it. “Well, it mattered about forty minutes ago.”
Naomi looked across the plaza without really seeing it. “Where are you?”
“Near the Water Gardens.”
“Why there?”
“Because I didn’t feel like sitting at the station looking stupid anymore.”
Before Naomi could answer, he said quietly, “I really didn’t text you for money.”
Then the line went dead.
Naomi lowered the phone slowly. Kendra was watching her, wary. Jesus was watching too, though there was no wariness in Him, only a depth of understanding Naomi had no words for.
“I need to go,” Naomi said.
Kendra’s face closed a little. “Of course.”
The old pattern was right there, ready to repeat itself again. Naomi felt it like a groove in the ground her feet had walked too many times. She looked at Kendra. Then at Josie. Then at Jesus.
“No,” she said, correcting herself. “I need to choose how I go.”
She knelt in front of Josie and kissed her forehead. She stood and looked at Kendra with tired honesty instead of promises she might fail to keep. “I’m going to see him. Not because he gets to take the day from you. Not because he’s the loudest problem. Because I think I’ve been responding to him from old anger for years, and I need to stop doing that. But after that, I’m coming back to you tonight if you’ll let me.”
Kendra held her gaze, testing whether this was another polished answer from a woman who lived on polished answers. Whatever she saw in Naomi’s face must have been different enough, because she nodded once.
“Okay,” she said. “Tonight.”
Naomi turned and found Jesus already beginning to walk.
She followed Him toward the Water Gardens, the city moving around them, the afternoon bright and hot, her mind restless with all the things she had not fixed and all the things that still might go wrong. For a while neither of them spoke. Then, with the sound of water beginning to rise ahead of them, Naomi said the truest thing she had said yet.
“I’m angry at him.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
“I’m angry at everybody, if I’m honest.”
“Yes.”
“I’m angry at God too.”
Jesus looked at her then, and there was no offense in Him, only sorrow and understanding joined together without conflict. “I know.”
Naomi stopped walking. The noise of the Water Gardens moved around them, steady and full. Tourists and office workers and tired locals passed nearby without knowing that a woman had just admitted the deepest thing in her chest out loud on a Fort Worth afternoon.
“I did everything I knew to do,” she said, her voice low and fierce now. “I kept working. I kept showing up. I kept saying yes when people needed me. I kept trying to believe there was a point to all of it. And all I feel is tired. Tired and mad and guilty for being tired and mad.”
Jesus stood before her with the calm of heaven and the nearness of a friend. “Being tired does not make you faithless,” He said. “It makes you human.”
Naomi’s eyes filled at once. “Then why do I feel like I’m failing everybody?”
“Because you learned to measure love by how much of yourself you could spend.”
She stared at Him through tears she was no longer trying very hard to hide.
“And because,” He continued, “you have mistaken being needed for being known.”
That one broke something open.
Naomi sat down hard on the low edge of a wall, one hand covering her mouth, the other pressed against her chest like she was holding herself together manually. Water moved and echoed nearby. Sunlight struck the concrete and threw brightness into the air. Jesus did not rush her. He stayed.
After a long moment she whispered, “What am I supposed to do with Leon?”
Jesus looked toward the path ahead. “Tell him the truth without punishing him with it.”
Naomi let out a wet laugh. “I don’t even know what that sounds like.”
“It sounds like this,” Jesus said. “You cannot keep carrying him. You will not lie for him. You will not finance what is killing him. But you will not reduce him to his worst years either.”
Naomi sat with that.
Then Jesus added, “And it sounds like telling him what his life has cost you.”
She looked up sharply. “That would destroy him.”
“It may humble him,” Jesus said. “There is a difference.”
Naomi wiped her face with both palms and drew in a long breath that finally reached the bottom of her lungs. The city still felt hard. Her life was still complicated. Her account balance had not disappeared. Her father still needed a ride. Her daughter still carried hurt. Leon was still Leon. Nothing in the practical sense had become easier.
And yet something had shifted.
Jesus had not removed the weight of her life. He had put truth under her feet so the weight no longer owned her completely.
Naomi stood.
“Come on,” He said.
“Where?”
“To your brother.”
They walked the rest of the way together, and Naomi felt every step like a movement toward something she had delayed for years. Not just one conversation. Not just one apology. Something deeper. A line she had never learned how to draw. A mercy she had never learned how to give without lying. A truth she had never spoken without anger wrapping around it like wire.
By the time she saw Leon sitting alone near the edge of the path, elbows on knees, staring down at his clasped hands, Naomi’s heart was pounding hard enough to make her feel nineteen again, the age she had first learned that one family member’s chaos could become everybody else’s weather.
Leon looked up when he heard her coming. Surprise crossed his face first. Then caution. Then shame.
And before either of them could hide behind old habits, before Naomi could turn sharp and before Leon could turn slippery, Jesus stopped between them just long enough for both of them to feel the full weight of His presence.
Then He stepped aside.
Leon rose slowly and looked at Naomi like a man braced for impact.
Naomi looked back at him, seeing at once the brother who had broken trust, the boy who had once slept on the floor outside her room during thunderstorms, the man trying and failing and trying again, the wound, the damage, the cost, the fear.
Leon swallowed. His voice came out quieter than she expected.
“I didn’t ask you for money today,” he said. “I asked if you could look at me and not see the worst thing I’ve done.”
Naomi stood still with the sound of water moving around them and the heat of the afternoon settling heavier on the concrete. For years she had kept whole speeches ready for moments like this. Sharp speeches. Efficient speeches. Speeches built to protect what was left of her energy. She knew how to speak from frustration so fast that nobody could get near the softer truth underneath it. She knew how to keep a person in their place with facts they could not argue with. Standing there now, looking at her brother’s tired face and the stiffness in his shoulders, she realized those speeches had never healed a thing. They had only helped her survive another conversation.
Jesus said nothing. He did not need to. His silence held the shape of permission. Naomi did not have to rush. She did not have to choose between pretending everything was fine and setting fire to the whole history between them. There was a middle place she had almost never stood in before. Truth without cruelty. Mercy without surrender. Love without self-erasure.
She took one slow breath. “You want me not to see the worst thing you’ve done,” she said. “The problem is the worst thing you’ve done isn’t just one thing.”
Leon looked down.
Naomi kept going because stopping now would only turn the truth back into poison inside her. “It was mom’s ring. It was Dad’s tools. It was all the times you said you were coming and didn’t. It was the nights I sat up waiting because I didn’t know if you were dead or high or in jail or under a bridge somewhere. It was Kendra learning too young that grown men can cry and lie at the same time. It was every holiday where we all acted normal for half an hour and then the room changed the second your name came up. It was me becoming the person who always had to answer the phone because nobody else could handle one more problem.”
Leon had gone pale under the sun. His mouth parted once as if he meant to interrupt, then closed again. Naomi saw the instinct in him to defend himself and watched it die before it reached his face. That alone told her something had shifted.
She wiped at one eye angrily because tears were showing up again and she was tired of crying in public. “So no,” she said. “I cannot pretend it was one thing.”
Leon nodded slowly. “That’s fair.”
“No,” Naomi said, surprising herself with the steadiness in her own voice. “It’s not about fair. It’s about true.”
He looked up at that. Jesus stood a few steps away, quiet and fully present, not rescuing either of them from what needed to be said.
Naomi felt her chest tighten, but not with the same trapped panic as before. This pain had air in it. “I’m going to tell you something I should have told you years ago,” she said. “I have been angry for so long that I stopped knowing the difference between your life and the damage your life caused. Every time I saw your name on my phone, my body reacted before my mind did. I was never talking to the man in front of me. I was talking to every version of you that broke something and left me holding it.”
Leon’s face crumpled, not theatrically, not as a performance, but the way a man’s face changes when a truth finally arrives without escape routes. “I know,” he said. “I could feel it even through the phone.”
Naomi let out a small breath. “Good. Then hear the rest. I cannot keep carrying you. I am not giving you money. I am not lying for you. I am not explaining you to people who are done listening. I am not making your emergencies the center of my life anymore.”
Leon nodded again, but this time his jaw was trembling. “Okay.”
The simplicity of the answer startled her. She had braced for argument. For guilt. For one more heartbreaking excuse wrapped in self-hatred. Instead there was only agreement, and somehow that undid her more.
“But,” Naomi said, and her voice softened in spite of herself, “I am also not going to keep talking to you like you’re only the sum of everything you ruined.”
Leon looked at her as if he had misheard.
Naomi glanced toward Jesus for half a second, then back to her brother. “I don’t know what happens next. I don’t know if this job thing turns around. I don’t know if you’ll really change or if we’re all in for one more round of hoping. But I do know this. You are still my brother. I have hated what you’ve done. I have hated what it cost us. I have hated what it did to me. But I am tired of hating you and pretending that hatred is wisdom.”
For a moment neither of them moved. The afternoon noise carried around them. Water fell and echoed. Somewhere above, a child laughed and a car horn answered from farther out in the city. Life kept going while something old and hard cracked open between a sister and a brother.
Leon pressed the heels of his hands into his eyes once, fast and embarrassed, then let them fall. “I missed the interview because I froze,” he said. “I got all the way there. I even saw the building. Then I sat on the curb for ten minutes and told myself there was no point going in because the second they asked about work history I’d see it on their faces. So I walked off and came here and hated myself for proving myself right.”
Naomi stared at him. Some part of her still wanted to call that weakness. Another part, the truer part, knew the kind of fear that can make a person sabotage the very thing they prayed for. She had done it differently in her own life. Not with jobs. With rest. With honesty. With believing good things could belong to her without needing to be earned through exhaustion first. Brokenness wears different clothes on different people.
Jesus stepped closer then, not to interrupt but to bring His quiet into the center of what they were saying. “Shame told you the future before the day began,” He said to Leon. “And because you believed it, you obeyed it.”
Leon let out a dry laugh. “That sounds about right.”
Jesus looked at him with the grave tenderness of someone who never confuses diagnosis with condemnation. “You have spent years practicing defeat until it feels more familiar than hope.”
Leon did not answer because there was nothing to say against that.
Naomi folded her arms, not from anger now but because she suddenly felt cold inside the heat of the afternoon. “So what happens when he does better for a week and then falls apart again?”
Jesus turned to her. “Then the truth you spoke today will still be true.”
She held His gaze. “And if he keeps disappointing us?”
“He may,” Jesus said.
The honesty of it steadied her more than false comfort would have. He was not handing out polished inspiration meant to float above reality. He was standing in reality without blinking.
“But disappointment,” He continued, “does not require you to abandon truth or mercy. You do not have to choose one by killing the other.”
Naomi looked down. That was the whole of her life lately. She had been living as if every hard situation demanded a violent choice. Either give everything or shut down completely. Either rescue or reject. Either endure silently or explode. Jesus kept opening a third way right in front of her, and every time He did it felt both merciful and demanding.
Leon kicked lightly at the concrete with the side of one shoe. “Dad still at dialysis?”
Naomi nodded.
He looked uneasy immediately. “I should probably leave him alone.”
“Probably,” Naomi said, then surprised herself by adding, “But not forever.”
Leon stared at her. “You think he wants to see me?”
“No,” she said plainly. “I think he wants his old life back. Since he can’t have that, wanting and seeing have gotten mixed up in him.”
Leon let out a long breath. “That sounds like him.”
Jesus looked toward the street beyond the Water Gardens. “Go to him today.”
Both of them turned toward Him.
Leon frowned. “Today is not the day for that.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “It is.”
Naomi shook her head. “He’s going to come in mad from treatment, tired, swollen, and already looking for somebody to blame for being old.”
“Then he will be himself,” Jesus said gently. “And you will still need to go.”
The certainty in His voice left almost no room for negotiation. Naomi felt resistance rise anyway. She had already had enough truth for one day. She had already said what had been sitting in her chest for years. The thought of walking into her father’s apartment with Leon beside her and all their unfinished family pain waiting inside it made her want to sit down on the nearest curb and refuse the rest of the day.
Jesus saw all of that without her saying a word. “You are not going there to solve every wound your family carries,” He said. “You are going because love tells the truth while there is still time.”
Naomi closed her eyes briefly. Harold Bell was not dying that day, at least not in the dramatic sense people mean when they say that. But the years had been narrowing around him. His body had gone from stubbornly strong to stubbornly failing. His temper had grown short in proportion to his helplessness. Since Naomi’s mother died, his apartment had carried the stale loneliness of a place no one fully lived in anymore. Naomi visited because she loved him and because she was the only one he would let close for long. Even then he received her care like a man offended by needing it. There were days she left his place so angry she had to sit in the car with both hands on the wheel before she trusted herself to drive.
Today, apparently, was going to be one of those days turned inside out.
They rode together on the bus because Naomi’s car was still near Trinity River and because none of them felt like explaining logistics to one another. Leon sat across the aisle, hands clasped, gaze shifting between the window and the floor. Jesus sat beside Naomi. The city moved by in pieces. Glass and brick. Wide roads. Bus stops. People waiting under the sun with grocery bags, backpacks, work uniforms, old pain, new hope, invisible questions. The kind of city day where hundreds of lives brush past one another and nobody sees how much courage it takes for some people just to keep going until evening.
Naomi watched a young mother near the front of the bus trying to keep a toddler from melting down while answering a work call in a voice pitched too cheerful to be real. She watched an older man sleeping upright with one hand closed around a folded cap. She watched Leon scratch anxiously at the edge of his thumbnail and remembered suddenly, without warning, the way he used to do that at eight years old during thunderstorms.
“You still do that,” she said.
He glanced up. “Do what?”
“That thing with your thumb.”
He looked at his hand and stopped. “Huh.”
For the first time all day, the corner of Naomi’s mouth moved. It was not quite a smile, but it was no longer the hard line it had been wearing since dawn.
Jesus noticed. Of course He noticed. He always seemed to notice the smallest signs that a heart was unclenching. He did not point them out. He simply held them as if they mattered.
Harold lived in a worn apartment complex off Hemphill, not far enough from the center of the city to feel forgotten but far enough that prosperity had learned to pass it by. The courtyard carried the smell of sun-warmed concrete, old mulch, and somebody’s dinner starting early. When Naomi unlocked the door, she could already tell her father was home. The television was on too loud, which meant he was either angry or lonely and sometimes both meant the same thing.
Harold sat in his recliner with a blanket over his legs despite the warmth of the room. He had once been a broad-shouldered man who could carry appliances with one other person and make it look manageable. Now his wrists looked too thin when his sleeves rode back, and the skin under his eyes had gone the color of worn paper. He glanced toward the door and immediately set his mouth in a line that warned the room it might become difficult.
“You’re late,” he said to Naomi.
That was his way. Not hello. Not thank God you made it. Just the first sharp stone thrown before anyone else could throw one at him.
Naomi usually absorbed those stones automatically. Today she heard the fear underneath it almost as clearly as the anger. She stepped inside and set down the bag of groceries she had picked up from the corner store on the way. “Treatment ran long?”
“Everything runs long when people don’t know what they’re doing.”
He saw Leon then, and the room changed. Not loudly. More like the air itself became careful.
“What’s he doing here?”
Leon stayed by the door as if he knew better than to act invited. “Hi, Dad.”
Harold’s face hardened. “I asked what you were doing here.”
Naomi looked once at Jesus. He stood near the kitchen entryway, quiet, not hidden and yet somehow not demanding to be noticed. The peace around Him did not remove the tension in the room, but it kept the tension from swallowing everything else.
Leon’s throat moved. “I came to see you.”
Harold gave a short laugh with no humor in it. “You come to see me when there’s a reason.”
“There is a reason,” Leon said.
“Oh good. Let’s hear it then.”
Naomi felt the whole familiar structure of their family rise up around them. The father daring. The son flinching. The daughter bracing to mediate. The old dance. The old wound. The old exhaustion. For a second she almost stepped into her usual role just to keep the room from blowing apart.
Then she remembered what Jesus had said. Love tells the truth while there is still time.
She remained where she was.
Leon looked at his father, and what Naomi saw in his face then was not smooth or confident. It was frightened. Barely held together. Honest. “The reason is that I keep waiting until everybody’s half gone before I try to say anything real,” he said. “And I’m tired of living like that.”
Harold scoffed, but the scoff had less force in it than before. “That sounds rehearsed.”
“It would be easier if it was.”
Something in the answer landed. Harold shifted in the recliner and winced, annoyed that his own body had betrayed him in front of witnesses. Naomi knew that wince. It almost always turned into temper three seconds later.
Leon took a step farther into the room. “I know you don’t trust me.”
“Correct.”
“I know I’ve given you reason.”
Harold said nothing.
Leon glanced once at Naomi and then back to his father. “I also know most of the time when I’ve tried to apologize, I’ve really just been trying to make myself feel less terrible. I can see that now. So I’m not here asking you to say it’s okay. It’s not okay. I stole from you. I lied to you. I disappeared on Mom when she needed everybody. I left Naomi carrying things I should’ve helped carry. And I kept acting like feeling bad about it was the same thing as becoming different.”
The room was silent except for the television murmuring to itself in the corner. Naomi had never heard Leon speak so plainly without trying to soften the edges afterward. It made him sound older. Smaller too, in a way. Smaller in the false parts of himself. More solid in the true ones.
Harold looked at him for a long time. “So why are you here now?”
Leon’s eyes dropped, then rose again. “Because I missed another chance today and I almost used that as proof that I’ll never be anything but what I’ve been. And then I realized if I keep waiting to become impressive before I tell the truth, I’m going to die lying.”
Harold’s face changed, just a little, at the word die. Illness rearranges a man’s hearing. Words about time start landing harder.
Naomi walked into the kitchen and turned the television volume down. No one stopped her. She took out the groceries slowly, giving the room enough ordinary movement to keep the moment from becoming too brittle. Bread. Soup. Bananas. Crackers low in sodium. The small practical things that keep a life going when grand gestures have no idea what to do.
Jesus came to stand near the counter. “You are not holding the room together,” He said quietly, only for Naomi.
She looked toward the living room where her father and brother sat inside years of damage and one narrow opening of honesty. “It feels like I am.”
“It feels different because you are not controlling it.”
That was true. Terribly true. Naomi had always mistaken control for peace because actual peace had seemed too fragile to trust. Standing there now, she felt the room breathing on its own for maybe the first time in years. Not smoothly. Not pleasantly. But honestly.
Harold rubbed one hand over his mouth. “Your mother waited for you,” he said abruptly.
The words hit Leon like a physical blow.
“I know.”
“No,” Harold said, sharper. “You don’t. You know facts. You don’t know what it did to her. Every sound outside after ten o’clock and she thought it might be your car. Every phone call from a number she didn’t recognize and her whole face would change. She kept defending you to everybody. To me. To Naomi. To church people who’d already written you off. She kept saying you were coming back to yourself.” Harold’s voice thinned, not with weakness but with the strain of carrying too much feeling through an old damaged body. “Then she died still making room for you at the table.”
Leon’s shoulders buckled. He sat down hard on the edge of the sofa like his legs had given out. Naomi had known some of that. Not all of it. Her mother had hidden the depth of her waiting better than Naomi realized.
“I know,” Leon said again, but this time the words came broken.
Harold looked exhausted now, anger burned down to sorrow and the sorrow worse because of it. “No father wants to bury a wife wondering if her boy is going to show up whole before it’s over.”
Naomi turned away under the pretense of putting soup in the cabinet because she needed a second to steady herself. She had lived so long inside her own burden that she had stopped seeing the particular shapes of everyone else’s. Her father’s anger had always felt personal to her. In truth much of it had been grief with nowhere to go. He had lost his wife and then spent years losing his son in installments.
Jesus stood near enough that Naomi could feel the calm coming off Him like shade.
Leon bent forward, elbows on knees, face in his hands. “I have hated myself for what I did to her,” he said, voice muffled. “But I don’t think I ever really let myself hear what it did to you.”
Harold laughed once, but there was no mockery in it now, only weariness. “Most sons don’t hear their fathers until life hits them in the mouth a few times.”
The line would have been almost funny in another room, on another day. Here it carried a rough mercy.
Leon looked up, eyes red. “I can’t give you back the years I took.”
“No.”
“I can’t make you trust me today.”
“No.”
“I can’t make Mom less gone.”
Harold closed his eyes once. “No.”
Leon nodded like each answer was a nail going into something that needed fastening down. “Then all I can say is I’m done asking people to call regret change. I don’t know what the next six months of my life look like. I missed the interview. I’m still broke. I’m still me in all the places that scare me. But I am done hiding behind being sorry.”
Harold opened his eyes and stared at him. “Then don’t.”
It was not a blessing. Not yet. But it was the first thing that had sounded even a little like a door instead of a wall.
Naomi carried three glasses of water into the living room because everybody needed something in their hands. Harold took his without thanking her because thanking her for care still felt too much like admitting helplessness. Leon took his like a man who had just been spared something he deserved but did not want. Jesus remained standing, and Harold noticed Him fully for the first time.
“Who are you?” Harold asked.
Jesus met the question without hesitation. “A friend of this family.”
Harold frowned. “We don’t have many of those.”
“I know,” Jesus said.
There was something about the answer that made Harold study Him harder. Not suspiciously. More like an old mechanic looking at an engine and realizing the problem is deeper than the part everybody keeps replacing. “You talk like you know a lot.”
“I know enough.”
Harold leaned back and winced again, annoyed at his own body. “Then tell me why God lets a man outlive the parts of himself he respected.”
Naomi looked up sharply. Harold did not ask questions like that where other people could hear. He preferred complaint to confession. Complaint sounded strong. Confession risked tenderness.
Jesus did not move toward him, yet somehow He came nearer all the same. “Because sometimes a man only learns he is loved after he can no longer perform being useful.”
The room went still.
Harold stared at Him and something unguarded crossed his face so quickly Naomi might have missed it if she had not spent decades studying that face. Fear. Not fear of Jesus. Fear of the answer being true.
“My whole life,” Harold said slowly, “I worked. I fixed things. I carried people. I paid. I solved. Now I sit in that chair and wait for rides and pills and machines to decide how my day goes.”
Jesus nodded. “And now you must learn whether your worth was ever in your strength.”
Harold’s eyes shifted away. “Easy for you to say.”
“No,” Jesus said softly. “It is costly for me to say.”
Naomi did not understand all that was moving through the room at that moment, but she understood enough to know the conversation had turned holy in the plainest, least theatrical sense. No raised voices. No dramatic music in the mind. Just truth, quiet and clear, doing what loud force almost never can.
Harold looked down at the blanket over his legs. His hands, once so sure and capable, rested small and tired on the fabric. “I don’t like being a burden,” he muttered.
Naomi sat in the chair across from him. “You are not a burden.”
He looked up immediately, almost offended. “Easy for you to say. You’re not the one needing help.”
Naomi held his gaze. She loved him enough now not to protect him from reality with soft lies. “Actually,” she said, “I am the one helping. Which means I get to tell the truth too. You are not a burden. But the way you push people away when you’re scared makes loving you harder than it needs to be.”
Leon looked from one to the other as if he could not believe his sister had just said that out loud.
Harold stiffened. “So now this is a lecture.”
“No,” Naomi said, and her voice stayed remarkably steady. “It’s honesty. I come because I love you. I answer because I love you. But some days I leave here feeling like you needed me and resented me at the same time. That does something to a person.”
Harold opened his mouth, then closed it. His eyes grew wet before his pride could stop them. Naomi had seen her father angry a thousand times. She had seen him sarcastic, dismissive, stubborn, tired, even afraid. She had almost never seen him reached.
“I don’t know how to be this version of myself,” he said.
Naomi felt something in her chest soften all the way through. There it was. The truth underneath every snapped comment and every impossible mood and every complaint about doctors and timing and transportation. A proud man grieving the disappearance of his own life while trapped inside the one that remained.
“I know,” she said.
Jesus looked from father to daughter to son, and Naomi had the strange, overwhelming sense that nothing in the room was hidden from Him. Not the love. Not the damage. Not the years wasted. Not the years left. Not the ways each person had sinned. Not the ways each person had suffered. He saw it all without confusion. And somehow, instead of making the room collapse, that made it easier to breathe.
The afternoon stretched on. Harold ate half a bowl of soup after first claiming he was not hungry. Leon washed dishes in the kitchen, awkwardly, because he was unused to doing small domestic things under his father’s roof without suspicion attached to them. Naomi found an old stack of unopened mail and began sorting it while Harold grumbled about junk offers and medical bills as though irritation were easier than gratitude for the help. In the middle of it all, Jesus remained with them, sometimes speaking, often not, His presence changing the feel of every ordinary motion.
At one point Leon found a loose cabinet hinge and tightened it with a screwdriver from the drawer. Harold watched him do it and said, almost against his own will, “You did that crooked.”
Leon looked at the hinge. “No, I didn’t.”
Harold squinted. “Hand me my glasses.”
Naomi passed them over. Harold put them on, leaned forward, and grunted. “Huh.”
Leon almost smiled. “High praise.”
“Don’t get used to it.”
But the edge was gone. Not gone forever. Not miraculously erased. Just loosened. Sometimes that is what grace looks like first. Not fireworks. Not instant restoration. Just the old hardness losing a little of its grip.
By early evening, the light in the apartment had shifted from harsh to golden. Naomi checked the time and thought of Kendra. She had promised tonight, and for once she meant to keep a promise without waiting until every other need in the room had been fed first.
“I need to go see Kendra,” she said.
Harold nodded, tired now in a way that had softened him. “Take the leftover soup if she wants it.”
Naomi almost laughed. “That’s your apology?”
He gave her a look that said he was not a man who apologized in neat direct ways if there was any other method available. “Take the soup,” he muttered.
Naomi stood and gathered her bag. Leon had moved toward the door already, uncertain whether he should leave with her or stay a little longer or disappear before anyone changed their mind about letting him be there at all.
Harold looked at him. Really looked. “You still got that warehouse number?”
Leon blinked. “Yeah.”
“Call tomorrow. Early. Don’t give them time to forget your name.”
Leon nodded slowly. “Okay.”
“And shave cleaner next time. You look like you fought a weed trimmer.”
Naomi covered her mouth. Leon actually laughed, the sound rusty from disuse.
When they stepped outside, the air had cooled just enough to feel different. The city was moving toward evening. Traffic was thickening. Somewhere close by somebody was grilling. Somewhere farther off, sirens moved and faded. Fort Worth did what cities do, carrying thousands of private stories without slowing down for any of them.
Naomi stood near the walkway and looked up at the sky changing colors over the roofs. “I don’t know what to do with today,” she said.
Jesus stood beside her. Leon lingered a few feet away, giving them space without leaving entirely.
“You do not have to master it tonight,” Jesus said.
“It feels like three different lives happened between sunrise and now.”
“Sometimes truth arrives all at once where delay has lived for years.”
Naomi let that settle. Then she said the thing she was almost afraid to ask. “What if tomorrow I wake up and I’m still tired?”
“You will,” Jesus said.
That startled a laugh out of her.
“And what if everything is still hard?”
“Much of it will be.”
She shook her head, half smiling, half crying again because apparently that was the rhythm of the day now. “You are not very interested in selling me comfort.”
“I am interested in giving you something stronger.”
She looked at Him. “What’s stronger than comfort?”
“Peace that tells the truth.”
The answer stayed with her as they made their way toward Near Southside. Kendra had texted an address on Magnolia Avenue where she and Josie were eating grilled cheese and tomato soup at a small café because Josie had insisted on going somewhere that felt like a “fancy lunch” even though it was nearly dinner. Naomi smiled when she read that. Children can crown ordinary places with glory simply by wanting to.
The café windows glowed warm against the evening street. People moved past outside in date-night clothes, work clothes, tired-parent clothes, lives crossing lives in the way they do on corridors full of restaurants and old brick and weekend expectation. Naomi paused before going in. Leon stopped beside her.
“You want me to come?” he asked.
She considered it. Not because she feared him, but because she was finally learning that not every next step had to happen on the same day. Some bridges can be crossed in sequence without that meaning failure.
“Not tonight,” she said. “But soon.”
He nodded. There was disappointment in him, but not wounded entitlement. That mattered. “Okay.”
Naomi reached out and touched his forearm once. It was a small thing, brief enough that neither of them could get sentimental about it, but it said what bigger speeches might have spoiled. He looked down at her hand and then back at her face with the stunned expression of a man who had gotten used to distance and did not know what to do when it shifted.
“Call the warehouse,” she said.
“I will.”
“And Leon?”
“Yeah?”
“Don’t disappear.”
His throat moved. “I won’t.”
Jesus watched them with that same quiet authority He had carried all day, as if love itself were both the gentlest and the strongest force in the room.
Inside, Kendra and Josie sat in a booth by the window. Josie was drawing on a paper placemat with total concentration. Kendra looked up when Naomi entered and something careful in her face relaxed. Naomi saw it happen in real time and understood how many times she had been too late to see such moments before they closed.
“You came back,” Kendra said.
“I told you I would.”
This time the sentence did not sound like defense. It sounded like a gift she intended to keep giving.
Josie lifted her marker. “Nana, I made you a house.”
Naomi slid into the booth and looked at the drawing. It was a square house with six windows, a crooked tree, and four people in front holding hands. One was clearly Josie. One was Kendra. One, Naomi assumed, was herself. The fourth figure was taller and set a little to the side but connected to the others by the same line of hands.
“Who’s this?” Naomi asked gently.
Josie answered as if it were obvious. “The man that helps.”
Naomi looked up. Through the window she could see Jesus outside on the sidewalk, not entering, not intruding, just present. Streetlight and evening glow touched His face. He gave no sign that He needed acknowledgment. He simply remained.
Kendra followed Naomi’s eyes to the window and went quiet. “That’s him?”
Naomi nodded.
Kendra looked for a long moment, then back at her mother. “There’s something different about you.”
Naomi leaned back against the booth and let out a breath she had not realized she was holding. “I think I finally got tired enough to stop pretending tired wasn’t telling me something.”
Kendra’s face softened. “That sounds miserable.”
“It was.”
They both smiled a little at that, and the shared smile carried more healing in it than a hundred over-explained apologies might have.
Over soup and sandwiches and Josie’s dramatic retelling of how one boy had forgotten the dance move with the flower basket, Naomi told Kendra the truth about the day. Not every detail. Not the parts that belonged first to Leon or Harold. But the true shape of it. She told her she had been breaking under the weight of needing to be needed. She told her she had confused running herself empty with being loving. She told her she had missed her daughter in more ways than schedules could explain. She told her she was sorry.
Kendra listened with the seriousness of someone who had wanted an honest mother more than a polished one. When Naomi finished, Kendra reached across the table and laid her hand over Naomi’s. “I don’t need you to be perfect,” she said quietly. “I just need you to stop acting like you’re made of metal.”
Naomi laughed once, tears close again. “That’s fair.”
“No,” Kendra said, echoing the day in a way she did not realize. “That’s true.”
By the time they left the café, night had come all the way in. Magnolia Avenue glowed in scattered reflections from signs and headlights and restaurant windows. Josie fell asleep almost immediately in Kendra’s car seat, one paper flower still clutched loosely in her hand from the noon program. Naomi kissed them both goodbye and stood on the sidewalk after the car pulled away, feeling the strange, holy emptiness that comes after a day where too much has changed to name all at once.
Jesus was waiting a little farther down the block.
They walked without hurry. The city at night felt different. Softer in some places. More exposed in others. Laughter from patios. Music leaking from an open door. A man smoking outside a service entrance with the expression of somebody postponing going back in. A woman sitting alone on a bench staring at her phone with tears on her face she thought nobody noticed. Jesus noticed, of course. He noticed everything. Once or twice He slowed, spoke briefly to someone, placed a hand on a shoulder, listened to a sentence nobody else made time for. Naomi watched and understood in a new way that power does not always announce itself. Sometimes it moves quietly through ordinary streets carrying other people’s hidden pain as if none of it is beneath notice.
They made their way back toward the Trinity. The city thinned a little. The noise opened. Night air moved cleaner near the water. Naomi felt the whole day inside her body now, not just as fatigue but as something rearranged. The problems had not vanished. Tomorrow still held bills, classes, rides, work, uncertainty, and whatever shape Leon’s next attempt at change would take. Harold would still wake up in a failing body. Kendra would still have bruises from years of receiving the worn-out version of her mother. Nothing had become simple.
And yet it no longer felt hopeless in the same way.
“Why today?” Naomi asked as they neared the river.
Jesus looked ahead into the dark line of water and the dim path curving beside it. “Because you were finally done surviving your life without telling the truth about it.”
Naomi thought about that. “I wasn’t done. I was breaking.”
“Yes,” He said. “Sometimes that is how truth gets in.”
They stopped near the place where the day had begun. The river moved quietly under the dark. The city lights did not disappear, but from there they seemed less like pressure and more like witness. Naomi stood with her arms folded against the slight night chill and felt more human than she had in months. Less controlled. Less defended. More exposed, yes, but also more alive.
“I don’t know how to do this tomorrow,” she admitted.
Jesus turned toward her fully. “Tomorrow is not asking you to carry it tonight.”
She looked at Him and wished, not for the first time that day, that she could keep Him physically near in the blunt practical way children want to keep good things from leaving. There was safety in His presence. Not the soft safety of having everything made easy. The stronger safety of being seen completely and not turned away from.
“How do I know I won’t just slip back into the same thing?” she asked.
“You may catch yourself trying,” He said. “Then stop and tell the truth sooner.”
“That sounds small.”
He smiled, and in the night by the river that smile felt like warmth itself. “Most real change begins smaller than people expect.”
Naomi nodded slowly.
Jesus stepped back a little, the way He had in every moment when people needed to stand in what had been given them. He never clutched the center out of insecurity. He remained central without demanding it.
Then He knelt near the riverbank just as He had at dawn.
The movement struck Naomi so deeply she had to draw in a breath. After everything the day had carried, after all the pain, all the truth, all the small reconciliations and not-yet-healed wounds, He ended where He began. Not in spectacle. Not in triumph. In prayer.
The city behind Him was still alive with traffic and lights and loneliness and hunger and laughter and secret grief. Somewhere Leon was probably replaying every word from the apartment and trying to decide what kind of man he might still become. Somewhere Harold was sitting in his chair with the television too loud, feeling for once that maybe his life had not narrowed into uselessness after all. Somewhere Kendra was lifting a sleeping child from the back seat and carrying her inside while thinking, cautiously, that her mother had sounded different today. Somewhere the woman on the bench and the man by the service entrance and the mother on the bus were still carrying what they had woken up with. Fort Worth was full of ache and want and ordinary lives stretched thin.
And Jesus knelt there praying over it all as if none of it was too small and none of it was too late.
Naomi did not interrupt. She sat on a low concrete edge and watched the river move in the dark while His quiet prayer held the end of the day together. For the first time in a long time, she did not feel responsible for making everything better before she could rest. She did not feel forgiven because she had performed well. She did not feel valuable because she had solved enough. She simply sat there, tired and honest and loved, while Jesus prayed.
The breeze shifted over the water. Night deepened. Somewhere a train sounded in the distance and moved on. Naomi lowered her head and let the silence do its work inside her. Tomorrow would come. It would ask things of her. Some of those things she could give. Some of them she could not. The difference no longer felt like failure. It felt like truth, and truth, she was beginning to learn, was where peace had room to enter.
Jesus remained in quiet prayer by the river, and Fort Worth, for all its noise and burden and beauty, rested for one holy moment inside the stillness He carried.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from Patrimoine Médard bourgault
Ce texte propose une lecture de l’œuvre de Médard Bourgault sous l’angle de son expressivité. La comparaison avec Auguste Rodin vise à éclairer certains aspects de cette expressivité, sans prétendre à une équivalence de parcours, de reconnaissance ou de contexte.
Médard Bourgault (1897–1967) est un sculpteur québécois autodidacte originaire de Saint-Jean-Port-Joli, un village rural catholique sur la côte du Saint-Laurent. Issu d’une famille modeste de menuisiers et de marins, il apprend la sculpture sur bois par lui-même, en puisant dans le savoir-faire artisanal de sa communauté. Jeune homme, il est encouragé par un sculpteur local au canif (Arthur Fournier) puis remarqué en 1930 par l’anthropologue Marius Barbeau, qui lui achète des pièces et le fait connaître aux milieux culturels.
Grâce à cette reconnaissance et à l’essor du tourisme le long du Saint-Laurent pendant la Grande Dépression, Bourgault commence à vendre ses sculptures aux visiteurs de passage, installant même un étal devant sa maison pour écouler ses œuvres. Rapidement, ses scènes sculptées de la vie traditionnelle séduisent le public : il reçoit un nombre impressionnant de commandes qui l’obligent à améliorer et adapter son style tout en conservant son indépendance. Avec ses frères André et Jean-Julien – également sculpteurs –, il forme des apprentis et contribue à faire de Saint-Jean-Port-Joli la « capitale de la sculpture sur bois » au Québec.
Bourgault est profondément ancré dans le Québec catholique du XXᵉ siècle, à une époque où l’Église et les traditions rurales rythment la vie quotidienne. Sa foi personnelle est intense : très tôt, il décide de se consacrer à l’art religieux pour répondre aux besoins de l’Église tout en exprimant sa propre spiritualité. Pendant plus de trente ans, ses sculptures témoignent de sa foi profonde, trouvant place dans de nombreuses églises et chapelles de la province.
Cette double identité – artiste paysan autodidacte et croyant fervent – définit le parcours de Bourgault et la singularité de son œuvre. Profondément enraciné dans son terroir, il puise son inspiration dans la vie de la campagne québécoise et la dévotion catholique, tout en aspirant à une expression artistique universelle.
Les thèmes de prédilection de Médard Bourgault reflètent son milieu et ses croyances. Ses premières œuvres s’inspirent du quotidien rural qu’il observe autour de lui : familles de fermiers, bûcherons au travail, scènes de la vie des champs, attelages de bœufs, chiens de ferme, etc.
Il affectionne aussi les sujets liés à la mer et à la navigation, héritage de son passé de marin. Par exemple, il représente des pêcheurs gaspésiens tirant leurs filets pleins de poissons, ou des capitaines de goélettes en imperméable affrontant le vent du fleuve. Une de ces scènes maritimes est le bas-relief La pêche (1961) – une grande composition en pin où trois pêcheurs halent un lourd filet à bord de leur embarcation, sous le vol des goélands.
En parallèle, et de plus en plus avec le temps, Bourgault se tourne vers les sujets religieux dictés par sa foi catholique. Il sculpte de nombreuses représentations de la Vierge Marie ainsi que des scènes tirées de la Bible et de la vie des saints.
Surtout, il excelle dans la réalisation de chemins de croix : ces suites de quatorze bas-reliefs illustrant la Passion du Christ sont très demandées par les paroisses en expansion dans les années 1940-50. Cette production sacrée – Vierges à l’enfant, crucifix, statues de saints – occupe une place centrale dans son œuvre.
Qu’il représente un paysan semant son champ ou le Christ tombant sous la Croix, Bourgault travaille essentiellement le bois qu’il sculpte en ronde-bosse ou en haut-relief. Il pratique la taille directe, sans moule ni modèle intermédiaire. Cette approche artisanale confère à ses pièces un caractère brut et vivant.
Malgré son étiquette d’« artiste d’art populaire », Médard Bourgault développe une technique et un style capables de véhiculer une intense charge émotionnelle. Son statut d’autodidacte lui permet de sculpter avec sincérité, en dehors des conventions académiques.
Ses œuvres privilégient la force des attitudes et des expressions sur la précision anatomique. Comme Rodin l’affirmait lui-même :
« Un bon sculpteur (…) ne représente pas seulement la musculature, mais aussi la vie qui les réchauffe. »
La spiritualité de Bourgault est un moteur essentiel de son art. Ses œuvres expriment une humanité qui touche directement le spectateur.
Sur le plan de la composition, Bourgault fait preuve d’une inventivité remarquable. Dans ses bas-reliefs narratifs, il utilise la profondeur, le mouvement et la tension dramatique.
Parmi les exemples marquants :
Chemins de croix Des compositions d’une grande intensité émotionnelle, où la relation entre les figures crée une forte dramaturgie.
Le fardeau des guerres (1943) Un homme courbé sous le poids d’armes symboliques. Cette œuvre présente une force expressive qui peut, à certains égards, être comparée à celle que l’on retrouve chez Rodin.
Statues mariales Certaines pièces ont été reconnues dans des contextes internationaux, notamment par des historiens de l’art.
Auguste Rodin fut reconnu internationalement et intégré aux grandes institutions de l’histoire de l’art.
Médard Bourgault, autodidacte rural, a connu une reconnaissance plus limitée, souvent associée à l’« art populaire ».
Cette différence tient en grande partie aux structures culturelles et aux hiérarchies artistiques, qui privilégient les artistes issus des milieux académiques.
Il apparaît pertinent de reconsidérer l’œuvre de Bourgault dans une perspective plus large. Son travail dépasse largement son contexte local et rejoint des thèmes universels.
En rapprochant Bourgault de figures comme Rodin, on souligne que l’émotion artistique ne se limite pas aux cadres habituels de reconnaissance.
La comparaison proposée ici relève avant tout d’une analyse de l’expressivité des œuvres, et non d’une équivalence historique ou institutionnelle.
Raphael Maltais Bourgault
from
Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * A quiet and enjoyable Sunday is winding down as I listen to an MLB Game between the Cleveland Guardians and the Atlanta Braves. Through most of the afternoon I followed the last round of this year's Masters Golf Tournament. Congrats to Rory McIlroy who won this year's Masters.
I may or may not stay with this ball game to the end, depending on when my metabolism starts to shut down. Tomorrow is Monday and I'll want to wake early with my alarms to fix the morning coffee and help the wife get ready to leave for work. I'll work through the night prayers while listening to the game, and head to bed shortly after.
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= 229.61 lbs. * bp= 140/84 (68)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups
Diet: * 07:00 – 1 peanut butter sandwich, 1 banana, 1 HEB Bakery cookie * 08:55 – crispy oatmeal cookies * 12:20 – crackers and cheese * 15:20 – shrimp, meat, and vegetable soup
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 05:00 – listen to local news talk radio * 06:00 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 07:00 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap. * 11:00 – watch 2 special golf history shows ahead of this afternoon's coverage of the 2026 Masters Golf Tournament * 13:00 – watching coverage of the final round of this year's Masters – and once again, Rory McIlroy wins the Masters * 18:00 – listening to the Cleveland Guardians pregame show ahead of tonight's MLB game featuring the Guardians playing the Atlanta Braves.
Chess: * 17:00 – moved in all pending CC games
from Douglas Vandergraph
Before the sun pushed its first pale light into the glass and concrete of downtown Dallas, Jesus was already alone in prayer.
The city around Him still carried the aftertaste of a sleepless night. Traffic had not yet become its full hard river. The air was cool in the way Texas mornings sometimes are before the heat remembers itself. In the hush near Thanks-Giving Square, the towers stood above Him like watchmen that had seen too much and understood too little. He knelt in the stillness with His head bowed, not rushed, not distracted, not half-present. He prayed as one who belonged completely to the Father even while standing inside a city full of people who had forgotten what rest felt like. There was no performance in Him. There was no need to be seen. The quiet itself seemed to gather near Him and settle.
By the time He rose, the sky had softened from black to bruised blue. He stood for a moment with His eyes open, not staring at anything the way tired people do, but seeing. The streets were beginning to wake. A bus sighed at a curb. Somewhere metal rattled against metal. Somewhere a man laughed too loudly because he had not gone home yet. Somewhere a woman in scrubs was trying not to cry before the day even properly started. Jesus stepped out from prayer and into the city as if there were no separation between the two.
A few blocks away, Alina sat on a bench near EBJ Union Station with both elbows on her knees and her phone in her hands. She was thirty-eight and felt older in the way people feel old when life has taken too much from the center of them. She had finished a double shift at a memory care facility in North Dallas, and the skin beneath her eyes looked gray. Her hair was tied back in a loose knot that had half-fallen apart. One of her shoelaces had come undone, but she did not have the strength to care. On her phone was a screen full of unopened messages from her son, Mateo, who was sixteen and angry in the special way that frightened mothers because it mixed pain with pride. The most recent text had come just after three in the morning.
Don’t wait up.
That one was less painful than the one before it.
You always choose work.
The cruel thing was that he believed it. The crueler thing was that sometimes she believed it too.
She had meant to answer. She had meant to call. She had meant to be the kind of mother who knew exactly how to hold together a house that was always threatening to split at the seams. But the woman in room 214 had wandered all night and cried for a husband who had been dead for nine years, and the new aide had called in sick, and another resident had thrown a breakfast tray at the wall before dawn, and by the time Alina sat down for six minutes in a break room that smelled like old coffee, her own body had felt like something borrowed and failing.
Now she stared at her phone while the first trains and buses of the morning began to fill the station area with movement. Men in work boots. Women with tote bags and fast steps. Students with earbuds in and eyes down. Everybody carrying somewhere they had to be. Everybody moving like they could not afford softness.
A shadow fell across the pavement beside her.
She looked up because that is what people do when they feel a presence before they hear a voice. Jesus stood there with nothing dramatic about Him. No grand entrance. No stage light. Just a calmness that did not seem borrowed from the weather or the hour. He looked like someone who had not come to take from her. In a city where almost every interaction asked for something, that alone felt strange.
“You’re tired in more places than your body,” He said.
Alina gave a quick humorless laugh because she did not know what else to do with a sentence like that. “That obvious?”
“Yes,” He said, and there was no cruelty in it at all. “But not to the people around you.”
She looked down again at her phone. “I should go home.”
“You should.”
She waited for Him to say the other thing people always said next. Try harder. Sleep when you can. Teenagers are difficult. God won’t give you more than you can handle. She had heard so much shallow comfort in her life that she had developed a quiet hatred for tidy words. But He did not rush to cover her pain. He let it breathe.
“My son thinks I don’t care,” she said, surprising herself. She was not the kind of person who opened her life to strangers. Not anymore. “He thinks I’m never there. He thinks work matters more.”
Jesus sat beside her on the bench as if there were all the time in the world. The station noise moved around them. Footsteps. A rolling suitcase. A low speaker announcement. Somewhere nearby someone coughed and spat into the gutter. Dallas was becoming itself by degrees.
“Do you care?” He asked.
The question broke something because it was not a trick and it was not accusation. It was almost gentle enough to hurt.
She answered without looking at Him. “Every minute.”
“Then what is bruising your house is not the absence of love.”
She swallowed. “That doesn’t make it better.”
“No,” He said. “But it makes it true.”
Her eyes filled before she could stop them. She wiped one cheek fast with the heel of her hand, embarrassed by her own body again. “Truth doesn’t pay rent. Truth doesn’t fix a boy who won’t listen.”
“No,” Jesus said quietly. “But lies deepen the wound. You have been speaking to yourself like a woman who abandoned her son. That is not the whole story. Exhaustion has a voice, and it is not always honest.”
She closed her eyes. For a moment the words Mateo had sent and the words she had been saying to herself all week blurred together so completely she could not tell which had cut deeper.
A train groaned somewhere in the distance. Morning light slid a little farther down a nearby wall.
Jesus turned His gaze toward the city waking around them. “He is not only angry with you,” He said. “He is afraid.”
That made her look at Him.
Jesus continued, still watching the street. “Children do not always know how to say fear with clean words. They say it crooked. They say it loud. They say it as accusation because accusation feels stronger than sorrow.”
Alina thought of Mateo at eight, waiting at the apartment window for his father to come back from a construction job he never returned from. Not dead. Just gone. Gone in the ordinary ugly way that destroys a home without making headlines. After that, Mateo had learned to wear hardness too early. The older he got, the more he acted like needing anyone was shameful. Still, every anger in him had roots. She knew that. She just did not know what to do with it anymore.
“I don’t know how to get through to him,” she whispered.
“Start by going home without a speech prepared,” Jesus said. “Do not arrive armed. Do not arrive ready to defend every sacrifice you have made. Sit in the room if he lets you. Stay near even if he gives you very little. People who feel abandoned often test love by making it stand in discomfort.”
She let out a slow breath. “And if he says terrible things?”
“He is not the only one in pain.”
There was no command in the sentence. No excuse either. Just reality laid down cleanly between them.
A man in a pressed shirt hurried past and glanced at them without seeing either one. A woman with a coffee carrier nearly dropped one cup and caught it against her chest. The city had no shortage of motion. It simply had a shortage of witness.
Jesus rose from the bench.
Alina looked up. “Who are you?”
He met her eyes then, and for one odd suspended second the noise of the station seemed to thin out. “Go home,” He said. “And do not confuse delayed tenderness with failed love.”
He started walking south, steady and unhurried, as if He knew every street and every soul they held.
Alina stood there with the phone still in her hand. She looked down at Mateo’s messages again. Her thumb hovered over the screen. She thought about sending something long, something explanatory, something crafted to make herself sound better or him feel worse. Instead she typed four words.
I’m coming home now.
She stared at the message before sending it. Then she pressed her thumb to the screen and stood up on shaking legs.
Jesus had already reached the next corner.
He did not look back, but something in her felt less deserted than it had twenty minutes earlier.
By the time the morning thickened, the Dallas Farmers Market had begun pulling people toward it like hunger always pulls people toward light and movement. Workers rolled bins. Vendors straightened produce. The smell of bread, coffee, spice, fruit, and wet pavement met in the air and became something almost hopeful. Jesus moved through the edges of the market without hurry. He saw what was for sale. He also saw what could not be named on chalkboard signs. Pressure. Thin margins. Private disappointments. Smiles held up by necessity.
At a produce stand near the open-air shed, a man named Ruben was unloading boxes of greens with the clipped force of someone who was angry long before the day began. He was forty-six, broad-shouldered, and permanently one bad week away from speaking words he could not take back. His father had started selling produce in Dallas out of the back of a truck years before there was any dignity in the work. Ruben had inherited the stall and the pride that came with it, but not the ease. The numbers were tighter now. Costs were up. His knees hurt when the weather changed. He slept badly. His daughter, Noemi, who was twenty-two and sharper than he liked to admit, had been telling him for months that they needed to change how they did things if the business was going to survive. Online orders. Updated branding. Different suppliers. More flexibility. More collaboration. Every suggestion felt to him like criticism. Every criticism felt like disrespect.
That morning she was late.
He kept checking his phone and muttering under his breath while he stacked tomatoes, cucumbers, herbs, and spring onions in neat rows that looked more peaceful than he felt. At 8:17 she finally appeared, moving fast through the market with her dark hair still damp from a rushed shower and an apology already halfway out.
“I know,” she said.
“You always know after,” Ruben replied without looking at her.
“I had to take Abuela to urgent care last night. I texted you.”
“You texted at one in the morning.”
“I was in a clinic.”
He set down a crate harder than necessary. “There’s always something.”
Noemi stopped walking. Her face changed almost invisibly, but enough. “That’s not fair.”
Ruben turned on her then, not yelling yet, but close enough to it that nearby customers began to pretend they were not listening. “You want fair? Fair would be not carrying this place on my back while everybody else has reasons.”
“I’m here, aren’t I?”
“You’re here when it works for you.”
The words landed. He knew they landed. He said them anyway because people in pain often prefer damage to vulnerability if forced to choose quickly.
Noemi set down the paper bag she had been carrying. “I was at the clinic with your mother.”
“My mother,” he repeated, as though the phrase itself irritated him. “Not yours?”
Her expression went flat. “You know what I mean.”
He did know. He also knew he was already being smaller than the moment required. But once pride enters a room, it hates to leave first.
A customer reached toward a basket of jalapeños and then withdrew his hand, deciding this was not the right time. Another woman studying avocados moved two stalls down without making eye contact. The market sounds kept going, but the air around Ruben and Noemi tightened.
Jesus stepped into the space as naturally as if He had been expected.
“What time did the clinic discharge her?” He asked Noemi.
Both of them looked at Him. Something about the question interrupted the fight because it made room for the person neither of them had actually been tending to in their argument.
“A little after three,” Noemi answered, still breathing hard. “They said it wasn’t her heart. They think anxiety and dehydration.”
Jesus nodded. “And who sat with her?”
Noemi blinked. “I did.”
“Who called the rideshare?”
“I did.”
“Who missed sleep to make sure she got home?”
She swallowed. “I did.”
Ruben shifted his weight, irritated now not just with her but with the fact that the truth was becoming inconvenient in public.
Jesus turned toward him. “And who has been afraid of losing what his father built?”
Ruben’s face changed. He did not answer because men like him often spend years being legible to everyone except themselves. He wiped his hands on his apron, though they were not dirty.
“I’m not afraid,” he said.
Jesus did not argue. “Then why does every suggestion sound to you like a threat?”
Ruben looked away toward the crowd. A child laughed near the bread stand. Someone called for change. Somewhere glass clinked. The city offered endless ways to avoid a question. None of them worked.
Noemi folded her arms, but her anger had weakened because something truer had stepped into the light.
“My father thinks if anything changes, it means he failed,” she said, and there was no venom in it now. Just tired knowledge. “He thinks if I want to help, I’m trying to replace him.”
Ruben let out a hard breath through his nose. “I didn’t say that.”
“You live like it.”
Jesus looked at the produce arranged so carefully between them. He picked up a tomato and held it in His palm for a moment before setting it down again. “Some things rot because they are neglected,” He said. “Other things rot because they are gripped too hard.”
Ruben stared at Him.
“This work matters to you,” Jesus said. “That is good. But fear has begun speaking through devotion, and the people nearest you are paying for it.”
Ruben’s jaw tightened. “Everybody wants something from me.”
Jesus held his gaze. “Your daughter wants to stand with you, not over you.”
Noemi’s eyes filled unexpectedly. She had not come to the market hoping to be defended. She had come braced to survive. Those are not the same thing, and the body knows the difference.
Ruben looked at her then, really looked. Her shoulders were slumped in a way they never used to be. There were half-moons of fatigue beneath her eyes too. He noticed, all at once, that she looked older than twenty-two that morning. Not in years. In burden.
He sat down heavily on an overturned crate and rubbed one hand over his mouth. “Your grandmother okay now?”
Noemi nodded. “She’s resting.”
“And you?”
She almost laughed because no one had asked her that in weeks. “I don’t know.”
Ruben stared at the concrete beneath his boots. Regret moved through him slowly because large men with old habits do not become tender in a second. But the first crack mattered. “You should’ve called me.”
“I did,” she said quietly. “You didn’t answer.”
He closed his eyes for a moment.
Jesus stood with them without demanding a grand reconciliation. That was part of His mercy. He did not force fruit before roots had been tended. He let truth arrive at human speed.
A little later, when a customer finally approached again for cilantro and onions, Ruben stood up and filled the order in silence. Noemi took payment. They worked beside each other with the awkwardness of people who had not resolved anything fully but had stopped pretending the wound was only logistical. When the customer left, Ruben said, still facing the produce, “We can look at the online order thing again after lunch.”
Noemi did not answer at once because she had been disappointed too many times to treat a soft word like a miracle.
Then she said, “Okay.”
It was small. Small is how many salvations begin.
Jesus moved on.
Near the edge of the market building, a woman named Tessa sat at a table with a paper cup of coffee she had let go cold. She wore office clothes that were careful without being expensive. Her hair was pinned back too tightly. She had come here because she could not make herself go directly into work and could not make herself go back home either. She had left a voicemail for her manager before sunrise and then turned off her phone when he called back. On the table beside her sat a manila folder with a logo on it and the kind of paperwork no one confuses for good news. Her husband had lost his job two weeks earlier. They had not told the kids the full truth yet. She had been doing numbers in her head every night since, trying to stretch money the way people stretch silence in a house that cannot afford panic. That morning she had opened the banking app in bed and felt a flash of heat rush through her whole body so fast she thought something was medically wrong with her. It was not. It was fear.
She stared at the crowd and hated them a little for looking normal.
Jesus sat across from her without asking whether the seat was taken.
She looked at Him, weary enough not to be startled. “You probably want this table.”
“No,” He said. “You need it.”
She gave a tired huff that was almost a laugh. “That obvious too?”
“Yes.”
Her fingers tightened around the cold coffee cup. “I’m not in the mood for encouragement.”
“That is not what I came to offer.”
That got her attention.
For a moment she just looked at Him. People were always trying to hand her silver-wrapped optimism. She was drowning in practical realities, and most encouragement felt like decorative ribbon on a bill she still had to pay.
“Then what did you come to offer?” she asked.
“Company before clarity.”
The sentence undid her more than a sermon would have. Her chin trembled once. She pressed it still. “That sounds nice,” she said. “But I need money. I need answers. I need my husband to stop walking around the apartment acting like his whole worth got fired with him. I need my daughter not to ask me why I’m awake at three in the morning. I need the car not to make that sound. I need groceries that don’t feel humiliating. I need...” She stopped because breath had run ahead of composure. “I need a lot.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “You do.”
He did not tell her to stop worrying. He did not tell her lilies existed. He did not step over the weight in her chest. He let it arrive whole.
Tessa looked down at the folder. “I was supposed to go into the office and act normal. I just couldn’t do it today.”
“What would acting normal cost you?”
She blinked, then answered honestly. “More than I had.”
Jesus nodded once. Around them chairs scraped. Orders were called. Someone passed carrying flowers wrapped in brown paper. Dallas went on being Dallas. The ordinary world rarely pauses for anyone’s crisis.
“You are afraid,” Jesus said.
She gave Him a look that said she found the observation unhelpfully obvious.
“But that is not the deepest thing happening,” He continued.
She frowned slightly. “Then what is?”
“You are beginning to believe that provision is the same thing as control.”
She sat back a little. “I don’t even know what that means.”
“It means you have been measuring safety by your ability to keep every plate spinning.”
Her eyes filled before she wanted them to. She thought of budgets, meal plans, calendar apps, late-night math, contingency plans, and the private shame of not being able to hold everything together with competence and effort.
“I’m trying to protect my family.”
“Yes,” He said. “But fear has convinced you that if your hands cannot hold it all, then no one will.”
That sentence found the center of her in a way that made silence necessary.
She whispered, “That feels true.”
“It feels true because you are tired.”
He let the words settle. Tessa stared past Him into the market, but she was not seeing people anymore. She was seeing the inside of her own frantic soul, and it embarrassed her to have it named so plainly.
“Your husband is ashamed,” Jesus said after a moment. “Be careful not to answer his shame with management. Shame hardens when it feels supervised.”
She looked back at Him. “Then what am I supposed to do?”
“Sit beside him before you solve him.”
That line sat between them like clean water.
Tessa covered her mouth with one hand. She had not meant to cry in public. She had especially not meant to cry in front of a stranger who sounded as though He knew her house from the inside.
“What about the bills?” she asked.
“You pay what can be paid today. You ask for help where pride has forbidden it. You do not turn tomorrow into an altar and sacrifice today on it.”
She lowered her hand slowly. “You make it sound simple.”
“No,” Jesus said. “I make it sound near.”
For the first time that morning, the terror in her chest loosened enough for one full breath to enter cleanly.
Jesus stood, and Tessa found herself wanting Him to stay, which startled her because she trusted almost no one with her inward life. “Will things be okay?” she asked, and hated how small her voice sounded.
He looked at her with that same quiet authority that seemed to shame panic without shaming the person who felt it. “You are not abandoned in the middle of this,” He said. “Start there.”
Then He was gone into the movement of the market.
Tessa sat very still. After a while she pulled her phone from her bag and turned it back on. Her manager’s voicemail notification appeared. So did three texts from her husband.
One read: Sorry. I know I’ve been impossible.
She stared at it for a long time.
Then she typed back: Come sit with me when I get home. No fixing. Just sit.
She sent it before she could overthink herself out of tenderness.
Near noon the heat had begun to gather. Dallas was shaking off its gentler morning skin. Light struck metal, glass, parked cars, and the corners of buildings with increasing force. Jesus left the market and walked south and west, passing through blocks where luxury and need sat uncomfortably near each other, as they do in so many American cities. He did not move as one overwhelmed by contradiction. He moved as one who had come for it.
In Oak Cliff, not far from the Bishop Arts District, a barber named Simeon was unlocking his shop later than usual. The front windows still carried the old gold lettering from the previous owner, and one corner of the sign out front had been cracked since winter storms two years earlier. Inside, the room smelled faintly of talc, clippers, aftershave, and old conversations. Simeon had bought the place eighteen months earlier with more courage than wisdom, depending on who you asked. He was thirty-four and gifted with his hands, but not with stillness. His problem was not laziness. It was that ambition had become the only language in which he knew how to value himself. He worked too many hours, smiled too broadly at clients he resented, and told everyone the shop was growing when in truth he was barely keeping pace with the rent. Three chairs. One apprentice who might leave. A mother in DeSoto asking every Sunday if he was okay. A relationship that had quietly ended because he was always “building something.” He called that sacrifice. The woman who left him had called it worshiping the wrong god.
That morning his landlord had sent another message about being late.
Simeon unlocked the door, stepped inside, and stood there in the dim light without turning anything on. The silence of the shop pressed against him. There are places that reveal a man the moment everyone else leaves. This was one of them.
He walked to the back, sat in the old vinyl chair by the storage shelves, and bent forward until both hands covered his face. He did not cry. He had trained himself too thoroughly for that. But his whole body carried the heavy inward sway of someone nearing collapse while still outwardly functioning. He was tired of performing confidence. Tired of saying the business was fine. Tired of the peculiar loneliness that comes when people admire your hustle while having no idea it is slowly eating you alive.
The front door opened.
Simeon looked up fast, irritation ready on his face. “We’re not open yet.”
Jesus stepped inside and let the door close behind Him.
Something in the room changed at once. Not the furniture. Not the light. The air.
Simeon straightened. “Did you hear me?”
“Yes.”
“Then why’d you come in?”
Jesus looked around the shop, taking in the mirrors, chairs, broom, jars, framed photos, and the faint cracks in the baseboard near the back wall. He saw it like a person, not a business. That unsettled Simeon almost immediately.
“You built this place to prove you mattered,” Jesus said.
Simeon barked out a short laugh. “You don’t even know me.”
“I know enough.”
Anger came up quick because exposed people often grab for irritation first. “Everybody’s trying to prove they matter.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “But not everyone is willing to lose themselves doing it.”
Simeon stood. “Look, I don’t know what this is, but I don’t have time for it.”
Jesus met his eyes in the mirror, and it was the mirror more than the gaze that did the damage. Simeon saw himself there. Saw the tight jaw. The sleeplessness. The lonely posture of a man trying to appear larger than the fear under his ribs.
“You have time,” Jesus said. “What you do not have is peace.”
The sentence landed with offensive accuracy.
Simeon turned away and grabbed a spray bottle from the counter just to have something in his hand. “You one of those street preachers or something?”
“No.”
“Then what?”
Jesus did not answer the category question. He almost never did. Categories help people stay in control of what they are hearing.
Instead He asked, “When did work stop being work and become your defense against emptiness?”
Simeon set the bottle down harder than necessary. “I’m done with this.”
“No,” Jesus said, and His voice was not loud, but it carried enough weight to make the room feel smaller. “You are done pretending your exhaustion is noble simply because it is productive.”
That was where part of Simeon’s anger broke open and showed the wound beneath it. He turned around fast. “You know what people say when you come from nothing? They tell you to grind. They tell you to stay hungry. They tell you to outwork everybody. They tell you rest is for people who already made it.”
“And have they made you whole?”
Simeon opened his mouth and then closed it.
From outside came the ordinary noises of the neighborhood starting its day. A truck braking. Music low in the distance. Someone walking by while talking too loudly on speakerphone. Life went on with no respect for a private reckoning.
Jesus walked slowly to one of the barber chairs and rested His hand on the back of it. “You are not wrong to build,” He said. “But you are wrong to ask the work to tell you who you are.”
Simeon stared at Him, breathing harder than the moment seemed to require. His father had left when he was ten. His mother worked until her feet swelled. He had spent half his life promising himself he would never again be the man with the empty pockets, the weak excuses, the look in his eyes that said life had decided his value already. He had built everything against that old terror. Every late night. Every skipped meal. Every smile through stress. Every lie that he was fine. It had all been an altar to a younger wound.
His voice came out rough. “If I stop pushing, everything falls apart.”
Jesus looked at him with a compassion so steady it stripped self-deception without humiliating him. “You say that as if everything is not already fraying.”
Simeon’s face tightened.
That was where the first part of the day, and the first part of the story, truly turned. Not because the city had changed, but because another soul had finally been told the truth in a room where he could not run from hearing it. Outside, Bishop Arts would fill with people before long. Coffee shops, storefronts, passing laughter, afternoon heat, little visible signs of life going on. Inside the barbershop, a man stood at the edge of admitting that his striving had become a prison with polished floors.
Jesus did not move toward the door.
Simeon did not ask Him to leave again.
And for the first time in a long while, the room seemed honest enough for whatever came next.
Simeon hated that the stranger was right. He hated it because men who have built themselves around effort do not know what to do when truth arrives without permission. He stood there in his own shop feeling exposed in a way that had nothing to do with being seen by another man and everything to do with being seen by himself. He looked at the clippers lined up on the counter, the three chairs, the framed photos of satisfied customers, the little sweep piles he had missed near the trim of the floor, and all at once the place looked less like proof and more like a question. He had called this room his future. He had called it his answer. He had called it what people were supposed to call the thing they risked themselves for. But inside him it had slowly become the place where he hid from every old fear that still knew his name.
He leaned both hands on the counter and kept his eyes on the mirror because that was easier than looking straight at Jesus. “So what am I supposed to do,” he asked after a while, “just stop caring?” The question came out hard, but beneath it was something less defended. It was the voice of a man who had mistaken one false choice for the only choice. Grind or disappear. Prove yourself or get swallowed. Win or become the version of your father people pitied and forgot.
Jesus shook His head. “You already know that indifference is not peace.” He let the sentence sit before continuing. “Caring is not your problem. Worship is.”
Simeon looked up then. “I’m not worshiping my shop.”
Jesus did not answer immediately. He waited long enough for the denial to lose some of its force. “What do you feel when business is slow?”
Simeon shrugged. “Stress.”
“What do you feel when people praise your work?”
He hesitated. “Good.”
“And when no one notices?”
There was the wound. Simeon felt it before he answered because the body knows where a question is headed even when the mouth is still buying time. “I don’t know.”
“You do.”
The room went quiet again. From outside came the softened roll of traffic and a burst of laughter from someone farther down the block. Simeon stared at his own face in the mirror. The answer was humiliating because it sounded weak when brought into the light. “I feel small,” he said at last. “I feel like I’m back at the beginning. Like if I stop moving, everything catches up.”
Jesus stepped closer, not invading, just near. “Then the shop has not only been your work. It has been your shield.”
Simeon swallowed and nodded once before he could stop himself.
It is a frightening thing when a man realizes he has not merely been doing too much. It is far more frightening to realize he has been kneeling inwardly to the wrong thing and calling it ambition because ambition sounds cleaner. Simeon had spent years talking about vision, future, discipline, growth, sacrifice, and staying hungry. Some of it had been true. Much of it had been fear wearing polished language. He had been starving for worth and feeding himself numbers, long hours, and the temporary relief that came when strangers told him he was doing big things.
“What do I do with that?” he asked quietly.
Jesus looked around the room again. “You tell the truth about it. You stop asking this place to save you. You let the work become work again.”
Simeon gave a dry laugh. “That sounds simple when you say it.”
“It is not easy,” Jesus said. “But it is simple.”
Simeon lowered himself into one of the waiting chairs and rubbed both hands over his face. “I’m late on rent here. My landlord’s tired of hearing my plans. My mother thinks I’m fine because I know how to sound fine on the phone. A woman who loved me got tired of coming in second to a dream I kept calling temporary. And every day I tell myself if I just push a little harder I’ll finally get ahead enough to breathe.” He let his hands fall and looked up at Jesus with tired anger that had started turning honest. “What if I can’t afford to slow down?”
Jesus did not give him a speech. “Then stop lying while you keep working.”
That struck deeper than any gentler reply could have. Simeon frowned. “What does that even mean?”
“It means call strain strain. Call fear fear. Call loneliness loneliness. Stop dressing every wound in the language of hustle. It is keeping you from receiving help.”
Before Simeon could answer, the bell over the shop door gave a small tired ring. Both men looked up. A boy stood in the entrance with the stiff posture of someone deciding whether to leave before being noticed. He looked about sixteen. Dark hair, school hoodie half-zipped, jaw tight, one knuckle reddened and skinned like he had either hit something or fallen wrong. He carried no backpack. His eyes moved quickly around the room and settled on the nearest outlet.
“We’re not open,” Simeon said automatically.
The boy nodded once as if that was what he expected and turned slightly toward the door again.
Jesus spoke before he left. “You can come in.”
The boy looked at Him, then back at Simeon, unsure which man had authority in this place. Simeon almost said no again. He was not in the mood for a teenager drifting in to use space without buying anything. Then he saw Jesus watching him, not accusingly, just steadily enough that Simeon heard his own reflex for what it was. Hardness had become easy. Refusal had become protective. The boy’s shoulders carried something rawer than attitude.
Simeon jerked his chin toward the row of waiting chairs. “Fine. Sit down.”
The boy came in without thanks, which told the truth better than politeness would have. He moved like someone embarrassed to need anything. When he sat, he kept one hand in his pocket and the other around a dead phone. His eyes were tired in the familiar way of people who had not slept well because their home life had been too loud or too lonely or both.
“You need a charger?” Simeon asked.
The boy shrugged. “Yeah.”
Simeon pointed to the one near the counter. “Use it.”
The boy plugged in his phone and sat back without speaking. Jesus remained standing near the mirror. No one rushed the silence. Outside, the neighborhood had fully woken. The coffee place across the street had a line now. A cyclist rolled past. Sunlight angled through the front windows in a way that made dust visible if you looked at the right slant.
After a minute Jesus said, “Your hand hurts.”
The boy looked down at his knuckles. “It’s nothing.”
“Most things are not nothing.”
He did not answer. He leaned back farther, but he had already been drawn into the gravity of being spoken to by someone who did not seem interested in posturing. Boys that age know the difference between being corrected and being regarded. It matters.
“What happened?” Jesus asked.
The boy stared at the floor. “Locker.”
Simeon looked at the knuckles again. “Lockers don’t usually hit back.”
That almost got a real reaction. Almost. The boy’s mouth moved like he nearly smiled and then decided against it. “It’s fine.”
Jesus did not push through the resistance carelessly. “Did you skip school or leave it?”
The boy’s eyes lifted fast. “Why?”
“Because they are different.”
He let out a slow breath through his nose. “Left.”
“Why?”
The boy shifted in the chair. “Why do you care?”
Jesus answered simply. “Because you are not angry for the reasons you are pretending.”
That hit. The boy looked away toward the front window where people walked by carrying coffee, bags, phones, and all the little visible evidence of having somewhere to belong. “Everybody keeps saying that,” he muttered.
“Are they wrong?” Jesus asked.
The boy’s jaw set again. Simeon had seen that look before. He had worn it himself. The face of someone using irritation to keep from being known as wounded. “People think they know everything.”
“No,” Jesus said. “Most people only know enough to judge quickly. That is not the same as seeing.”
Something in the boy’s shoulders shifted. He still looked guarded, but not dismissive anymore. He rubbed his thumb along the cracked edge of his phone screen. “A guy at school said something stupid,” he said at last.
“What did he say?”
The boy hesitated. “That my mom’s never around because she’d rather be anywhere else.”
The room went still in a new way. Simeon glanced at Jesus and then back at the boy.
“And you hit the locker,” Jesus said.
The boy laughed once, bitter and short. “I hit him first.”
There it was. The shame arrived right behind the confession and sat beside him.
“Did it make you feel stronger?” Jesus asked.
“No.”
“Did it make the ache smaller?”
“No.”
The boy blinked hard and stared at the floor again. “I know what everybody thinks,” he said. “That I’m some angry kid with no self-control.”
Jesus walked closer and took the chair opposite him. “That is not all you are.”
The boy’s face tightened. “Then what am I?”
Jesus answered without any softness that would have sounded false. “You are a son who is afraid that if he needs too much, he will be left.”
The boy looked at Him as if a private door had just been opened without his permission. He did not deny it because he could not. He had lived with the fear for too long. It had started when his father vanished from the shape of their life in the ordinary unheroic way men disappear, and it had deepened every year his mother came home tired enough to love him honestly but not always visibly. He knew she worked. He knew she tried. He also knew what it felt like to eat alone too many nights and pretend not to listen for a key in the door.
“My mom’s always tired,” he said, and now the voice was smaller. “Even when she’s there, she’s not really there.”
Jesus nodded. “That hurts.”
The boy looked surprised by the answer because it did not defend the mother or attack the son. It simply honored the wound. For someone his age, that was rare enough to feel holy.
Simeon leaned against the counter and listened. Something in him was cracking open too, though he had no words for it yet. He saw the boy’s anger and recognized the machinery underneath it. The old fear of not mattering. The refusal to say need out loud because need had once been answered with absence.
“What’s your name?” Simeon asked.
The boy answered after a second. “Mateo.”
The name landed softly in the room. Jesus had known it already, of course, though He wore the moment without spectacle.
Simeon nodded. “You want water?”
Mateo shrugged again, but this time it was less defensive. “Sure.”
Simeon handed him a bottle from the mini fridge near the back. Mateo took it and drank too fast at first. Jesus watched him with the same steady presence He had given Alina, Ruben, Noemi, and Tessa earlier in the day. He never seemed hurried by another person’s pain. That alone changed people. The whole world teaches speed. It takes very little time for a soul to become convinced that if it cannot explain itself quickly, it will not be held with care. Jesus never dealt in that cruelty.
“Your mother came home this morning,” He said.
Mateo looked up sharply. “How do you know that?”
“She came home.”
Mateo’s throat worked once. “Yeah.”
“Did you speak to her?”
“Not really.”
“Why?”
He twisted the cap on the water bottle. “Because I was mad.”
“And now?”
“I’m still mad.”
Jesus nodded. “And underneath that?”
Mateo looked away. His voice dropped. “I don’t know.”
Jesus let a beat pass. “You do.”
Mateo pressed the bottle to his forehead as though cooling the outside of him might settle the inside. “I don’t want to be the one always understanding,” he said finally. “Everybody acts like because she works hard I’m just supposed to get it. I do get it. I just hate it too.”
“That is honest,” Jesus said.
Simeon felt that one in his own chest. Honest. Not disrespectful. Not dramatic. Just true. How many wounds in people hardened because they were never allowed to tell the clean truth about what hurt them without being accused of ingratitude.
Mateo took another drink. “Sometimes I think if I stop needing anything, it’ll be easier.”
Jesus held his gaze. “For whom?”
Mateo did not answer.
“For you,” Jesus said, “or for the people you are afraid will fail you?”
The boy’s eyes filled with tears so sudden and unwelcome he turned his head away in frustration. “I’m not crying.”
“No,” Jesus said gently. “You are tired of carrying this alone.”
The phone on the counter lit up. Mateo glanced toward it and froze. The caller ID read Mom. It buzzed and buzzed and then stopped. Two seconds later another call came through.
He did not move.
Simeon looked at Jesus, then at the boy. “You should answer that.”
Mateo shook his head.
“Why not?”
“Because I don’t know what she’s gonna say.”
Jesus spoke before the fear could harden into defiance again. “And what are you prepared to make her silence mean if you do not answer?”
Mateo stared at the phone. Another vibration. Another call. He looked cornered, and yet there was mercy in the corner because sometimes the moment when we can no longer stay hidden is the moment grace begins to do its clearest work.
He reached for the phone and answered without speaking. For a second there was only breathing on both ends.
Then Alina’s voice came through, tight with restrained panic. “Mateo?”
He swallowed. “Yeah.”
She let out the kind of breath that tells the truth about the last hour better than any sentence could. “Where are you?”
He looked toward the front window as if the answer might be somewhere in the street. “At a barbershop.”
She closed her eyes on the other end. “Are you okay?”
“I’m fine.”
There was the old pattern, ready to resume. Fine. Angry. Closed. A whole family on the edge of missing one another by inches again.
Jesus said quietly, not to the phone but to Mateo, “Tell her where.”
Mateo hesitated. Simeon gave the address.
Alina said, “Stay there. I’m coming.”
Mateo almost launched into protest, but the line had already gone dead.
He dropped the phone onto his lap and slumped back in the chair. “Great.”
Simeon did not smile. “She sounds scared.”
Mateo stared at the ceiling. “She’s always worried after the fact.”
Jesus said, “That is still worry.”
The boy did not answer, but he did not leave either.
While they waited, the shop remained technically unopened and yet more honest than it had been in months. Simeon stood behind one of the chairs and looked through the front window at Bishop Arts filling up with lunch traffic. Couples walked by. A woman pushed a stroller one-handed while sipping iced coffee. A delivery truck idled half in the lane. The world had no idea that inside this small room three people sat at the edge of something that mattered more than most transactions taking place all over the city.
After a while Jesus said to Simeon, “Turn the sign around.”
Simeon frowned. “What?”
“The sign.”
He looked at the glass door where the OPEN placard still faced inward because he had been too distracted to flip it. “Why?”
“Because this room is open.”
Simeon stared at Him, then at the sign, then at the boy in the waiting chair. Something about obeying the small thing felt important in a way he did not yet understand. He walked over, turned the placard, and came back.
Not two minutes later the bell over the door sounded again. A middle-aged man stepped in, glanced around, and said, “Y’all open?”
Simeon looked at Jesus before answering, which would have embarrassed him any other day. “Yeah,” he said. “Give me ten minutes.”
The man nodded and sat at the far end of the waiting row, reading messages on his phone and sensing enough tension in the room not to intrude.
Ten minutes later Alina pushed through the door out of breath and still wearing the same clothes from the morning. Her hair was flatter now. Her face looked drawn with the private terror of a mother who has spent an hour imagining outcomes and forcing herself not to believe the worst. She saw Mateo first, sitting there whole, and stopped. Relief moved through her so hard it made her weak for a second.
Then she saw Jesus.
Recognition crossed her face like a quiet shock. She did not say His name because she was not even sure what name to put to Him. But she knew. There are moments when the soul recognizes before the mind has assembled language.
Mateo noticed the look. “You know him?”
Alina’s eyes moved from Jesus to her son. “I met Him this morning.”
Mateo frowned, unsure whether to be irritated or unsettled.
Jesus said to Alina, “Sit down.”
She had come with speeches ready in fragments. Questions. Warnings. Anger sharpened by fear. She had also come remembering the bench near Union Station and the words that had met her there. Do not arrive armed. Stay near even if he gives you very little. She swallowed all the prepared sentences and took the chair beside Mateo instead.
For a while no one spoke. The waiting customer at the far end kept his eyes on his phone. Simeon moved slowly around the counter pretending to organize comb guards he had already organized. Outside, people kept walking by. Light shifted across the floorboards.
Alina clasped her hands together because it kept them from reaching too fast. “I was scared,” she said at last.
Mateo’s gaze stayed on the floor. “I’m not a little kid.”
“I know.”
He looked at her then, expecting defense or correction. Instead he found exhaustion and sincerity sitting side by side on her face.
“I know you’re not,” she said. “But I was scared.”
He looked away again. “You’re always working.”
There it was. Not shouted. Not disguised. Just the wound itself.
Alina nodded slowly. “Yes.”
The honesty surprised him more than denial would have.
“I hate it,” he said, and now his voice shook with the effort of not sounding small. “I hate eating by myself. I hate coming home and you’re asleep. I hate when you say we’ll talk later and later never comes. I hate hearing people talk about their families like everyone’s actually there.” His throat tightened. “I know you’re trying. I know you work hard. I still hate it.”
Alina closed her eyes briefly because the sentence hurt and because it was true enough to be useful. When she opened them again, she did not argue with him. “You get to hate it,” she said.
Mateo looked at her quickly.
She kept going, one careful sentence at a time because honesty without blame is harder than yelling. “I need you to hear me though. I am not away from you because I don’t love you. I am away because I am trying to keep us standing. But I know that doesn’t make the empty parts of this house feel less empty.”
Mateo stared at his hands. His red knuckles looked younger now. “It feels like everybody leaves.”
The words were almost too quiet to hear, but the room heard them.
Alina inhaled sharply. That was the wound beneath everything. Not chores. Not curfew. Not sass. Not school. The old abandonment rising again in her son under every new pressure. She wanted to tell him she would never leave, but she knew life had already taught him how fragile promises can sound.
So she told him something truer. “I am still here,” she said. “Even tired. Even late. Even imperfect. I am still here.”
Mateo’s face crumpled in spite of himself. He turned away and covered it with one hand. Sixteen-year-old boys do not like being seen breaking. Jesus looked at him with such gentleness that even the shame in the moment lost some of its power.
Alina did not reach for him right away. She stayed near first, the way Jesus had told her. After a few seconds she laid one hand lightly on his shoulder. He did not shrug it off.
Simeon looked away because the room had become sacred in the ordinary way truth makes places holy. The customer waiting in the far chair lowered his phone and quietly kept still. Even he understood this was not a moment to interrupt with small talk.
Mateo wiped his face hard and muttered, “I got suspended for two days.”
Alina almost laughed from sheer emotional whiplash. Not because it was funny, but because life never seems to deliver pain one piece at a time. “Okay,” she said. “Then we’ll deal with that too.”
He looked at her suspiciously. “That’s it?”
“No,” she said. “It’s not it. But I’m not doing all of it in this room.”
That nearly made him smile again. Nearly.
Jesus stood then and moved toward the door. Alina rose halfway from her chair. “Wait.”
He turned.
Her eyes filled. “Thank You.”
He held her gaze kindly. “Stay close to one another while the wound is still speaking.”
Then He looked at Mateo. “And do not make hardness your home simply because pain knocked first.”
Mateo swallowed and nodded once.
Jesus stepped outside into the afternoon.
He did not hurry. He never seemed to carry the frantic pace of the people around Him, but He also never felt removed from them. Dallas had become hot now in the way only a lived-in city can. Pavement held light. Air held weight. Cars passed with windows up and music muffled behind glass. Somewhere nearby, lunch laughter spilled from a restaurant patio. Somewhere else a siren passed without explanation. Above it all, the skyline watched from a distance as if height were the same thing as perspective.
Back inside the shop, Simeon stood motionless for a moment after Jesus left. The room felt less like a business and more like a place where somebody had opened a door he had kept bolted for years. He watched Alina and Mateo sit there together in their awkward unfinished tenderness. Nothing had been fixed neatly. Bills still existed. Suspension still existed. Night shifts still existed. But truth had entered the room and driven out some of the lies. That mattered.
Simeon looked at his waiting customer. “Give me another few minutes?”
The man nodded. “Take your time.”
Simeon reached into the drawer below the register, pulled out a clean towel and a small first-aid packet, and handed them to Mateo. “Clean that hand before it gets stupid.”
Mateo took them. “Thanks.”
Simeon hesitated, then asked, “You want a cut while you’re here? No charge.”
Mateo looked surprised. “Why?”
Simeon gave half a shrug. “Because sometimes people need to sit still long enough to breathe.”
Mateo glanced at his mother. She nodded. “Go ahead.”
While Simeon draped the cape around the boy and adjusted the chair, he felt something in himself settling that had not settled in a long time. He was still worried about money. He was still late on rent. None of that had vanished. But for the first time in months the shop was not asking him to become larger than human. It was simply a room where he could serve. That was smaller. It was also freer.
As the clippers began their low steady hum, Alina sat in the waiting chair and watched her son’s face in the mirror. He looked younger when he was still. Simeon worked with quiet care. After a while he said, “I used to punch walls.”
Mateo looked at him in the mirror. “Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
“Did it help?”
Simeon smiled faintly. “Not once.”
Mateo gave the smallest real smile of the day.
Sometimes healing begins with a grand turn. More often it begins with a clean towel, a chair, a mother staying seated instead of escalating, and a man telling the truth while clippers hum in a room that finally feels safe enough for honesty.
Elsewhere in Dallas the other threads of the day kept moving. At the farmers market, Ruben and Noemi finished the afternoon side by side. He caught himself twice before snapping at her. That mattered too. Near closing he handed her the vendor tablet and said, awkwardly, “Show me how the pre-orders would work.” She looked at him for a long second before stepping closer. Neither of them made a big speech out of it. They stood shoulder to shoulder over a glowing screen while the last light shifted across emptying stalls and the smell of herbs and fruit stayed in the air like a gentler version of labor. The old man who sold honey two booths down saw them and pretended not to notice the softness returning. That was his kindness.
Across town, Tessa went home and found her husband sitting at the kitchen table with both elbows planted and his stare fixed on nothing. The apartment carried the tired silence of people who love each other and do not know how to step around the shame in the room. She set down her bag, looked at him, and remembered what Jesus had said. Sit beside him before you solve him. So she did. No spreadsheets. No strategy talk. No forced brightness. She simply sat. At first he did not speak. Then he said, “I don’t know who I am right now.” She did not correct him or patch over it. She put her hand over his and let the silence hold them until he started to cry in the quiet exhausted way grown men cry when humiliation has been chewing on them for days. Their situation had not changed by evening. The bills had not vanished. But shame had lost some of its grip because it was no longer being faced alone.
By late afternoon Simeon finished Mateo’s haircut, swept the floor, and finally took his first paying customer of the day. He worked differently now. Not slower in a way that hurt business. Slower in the soul. Present. The man in the chair talked about ordinary things, traffic and office nonsense and a cousin getting married in Plano. Simeon listened. Really listened. It struck him, somewhere between clipper strokes and comb passes, that he had spent months treating clients as proof or pressure when most of them were just people walking in with invisible burdens. The thought softened him. He did not become saintly in an instant. He simply became less defended. Grace often looks like that before it looks like anything dramatic.
When the customer left, Alina rose and touched Mateo’s shoulder again. “Let’s go.”
Mateo stood. He looked better somehow, not because of the haircut itself, though that helped, but because something inside him had shifted out of full combat. He looked at Simeon. “Thanks.”
Simeon nodded. “Go easy on lockers.”
Mateo huffed a laugh. “I’ll try.”
At the door Alina turned back toward the room. For a moment it seemed she was looking for Jesus, but of course He was gone from that place already, moving where He was needed next. Still, the room held an aftertaste of Him. Some spaces do after He passes through.
She and Mateo stepped into the late afternoon light together.
Simeon watched them through the window until they disappeared into the flow of people moving along the street. Then he reached for his phone and stared at it for a long time before pressing a name he had not called honestly in months.
Mom.
She answered on the third ring. “Baby?”
He almost laughed because at thirty-four he was still baby in her mouth and still half-broken in her prayers. “Hey.”
“You okay?”
He looked around the shop. The old answer was ready. Yeah, I’m good. Busy. Just grinding. He let it die before it reached his mouth.
“No,” he said. “Not really.”
Silence held for one breath, then another. On the other end he heard his mother sit down somewhere. “All right,” she said softly. “Talk to me.”
He closed his eyes. A man does not become free the first time he tells the truth, but that first truth matters more than he knows.
Evening lowered itself over Dallas slowly. Heat softened. Shadows lengthened. The edge came off the streets. Jesus moved north as the city changed colors. He passed places full of people and places almost empty. He crossed through neighborhoods where money insulated loneliness and neighborhoods where hardship wore no disguise. He walked without spectacle near places others used for spectacle. By the time the sky began turning gold toward the western edges of the skyline, He had come near White Rock Lake where the city loosens a little and the air feels different around the water.
There, late runners moved along the path with tired determination. Couples walked dogs. A father tried to teach a little girl to keep balance on a bike that wobbled more than rolled. Birds skimmed low over the water and then lifted again. The city was still near, but softened by distance and evening light. Jesus walked until the foot traffic thinned, until conversation sounds were farther apart, until the noise of Dallas became more background than pressure.
Not far away, Alina and Mateo sat in her parked car before going inside their apartment complex. She had bought tacos on the way home because food sometimes makes hard conversations more bearable. They ate in the front seats with the windows cracked. For a while they did not talk much. Then Mateo said, “You really met Him this morning?”
Alina kept her eyes on the windshield. “Yes.”
He waited.
“He knew things,” she said. “Not in a way that scared me. In a way that made me feel less alone.”
Mateo looked down at the wrapper in his lap. “He said I make hardness my home.”
Alina nodded. “Did He lie?”
Mateo stared out his own window. “No.”
After a while he said, “I’m still mad.”
She let out a breath that was almost a smile. “Okay.”
“And I’m still hungry too.”
That made them both laugh, which helped.
Across town Ruben locked up the market stall with Noemi beside him. Before they left he asked if she wanted to grab something to eat. She tried not to show how much the question mattered. At home Tessa and her husband sat together on the couch after the children were asleep. No TV. No fake cheer. Just two worn people in the difficult beginning of learning how not to face trouble as enemies. In Oak Cliff, Simeon swept the floor one last time, turned the sign to CLOSED, and sat in the barber chair nearest the window. He did not reach for his laptop. He did not start reworking numbers. He sat there with the room quiet around him and let himself feel the ache he had been outrunning for years. It did not kill him. That surprised him. A little later he texted his landlord and told the full truth. Then he texted his apprentice and said, Tomorrow we talk for real about the schedule and the money. No more pretending. After that he sat with both feet on the floor and whispered into the silence, not eloquently, “I don’t know how to do this different yet.” It was not much of a prayer, but heaven has never required polished beginnings.
Night came on.
The city lights came up one by one, then in clusters, then in long grids and scattered verticals until Dallas looked from a distance like something almost calm. That is one of the strange mercies of cities. At night their outlines can look peaceful even when thousands of private struggles still burn within them. Jesus knew every one of those struggles. He also knew every name attached to them. None were blurred to Him. None were reduced to crowd.
At the edge of the lake where the path had emptied and the last color lingered low in the sky, He stopped. The breeze had cooled enough to move lightly across the water. Somewhere farther off a dog barked once and then stopped. A cyclist passed and vanished into dimmer stretch. The city kept humming in the distance, but here it was soft enough to hear smaller things. Water against stone. Leaves shifting. Night settling.
Jesus stepped a little away from the path and knelt in the quiet.
He bowed His head as He had that morning, not because the day had wearied Him into retreat, but because prayer was never retreat in Him. It was communion. It was belonging. It was the unbroken center from which every word and every act had come. He prayed over the city as the night gathered. Over mothers carrying more than they say. Over sons mistaking hardness for safety. Over fathers frightened by change and daughters tired of translating love through strain. Over men who had confused work with worth and women who had confused control with provision. Over homes with too much silence and homes with too much noise. Over grief that had gone underground. Over shame hiding behind performance. Over the aching invisible places that no skyline ever shows.
The city did not fully go quiet, not in the ordinary sense. Dallas still breathed and flashed and moved. Sirens still sounded somewhere. Doors still slammed. Restaurants still filled. Screens still glowed in tired hands. But beneath all that, in rooms and cars and kitchens and shop chairs and waiting places across the city, something quieter had begun. Not perfection. Not neat endings. Something truer. A softening. A loosening. The first honest breath after too much strain. The first turn back toward one another. The first unguarded sentence. The first prayer spoken without polish. The first moment a person stops calling the wound by another name.
Jesus remained there in prayer until night had fully taken the sky.
And over Dallas, where so many had learned to live loud on the outside and lonely on the inside, the quiet of God held.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from Douglas Vandergraph
Before the first train of light reached the city, Jesus was already awake.
The sky over Oklahoma City still held that deep blue hour that comes before morning decides what kind of day it will be. The towers downtown stood quiet and watchful. The streets near Scissortail Park were not empty, but they were softened, as if the noise had not fully remembered itself yet. Jesus stood alone beneath the last of the night, His head bowed, His hands open, the grass still wet with dawn. The air carried that faint coolness that disappears quickly in Oklahoma once the sun gets serious. Somewhere in the distance, a truck rolled through an intersection. Somewhere else, a siren rose and fell. A sprinkler whispered over a patch of green. Jesus prayed as the city breathed in before another long day. He did not rush. He did not perform stillness. He simply stood before the Father with that full and steady nearness that made silence feel inhabited instead of empty.
Not far away, in a second-floor apartment above a row of weary parking spots and metal railings, Ruth Ann Carter was standing barefoot in her kitchen with one hand pressed against the counter and the other covering her mouth because she had already called Micah’s name six times and she now knew what the silence meant. His cereal bowl from the night before was still in the sink. His school hoodie was gone from the chair. His shoes were gone from the mat by the door. The old backpack with one broken zipper was gone too. The apartment was too still in the way only a place can be when somebody has left for real. Ruth Ann turned fast and walked to his room again even though she had already looked. The blanket was half on the floor. The window was cracked open because he liked cool air when he slept. His phone charger was still plugged into the wall, hanging useless and white. That was when the fear truly reached her, because Micah never left that charger behind unless he did not want to be found.
She sat down hard on the edge of his bed and felt the whole argument from the night before come back like something alive. He had come home late. Again. She had been tired before he even opened the door. Tired in her bones. Tired in the place behind her face. Tired in the little thin line where patience goes when it has been scraped too many times. He had dropped his backpack, shrugged at her, and tried to walk past as though hours mattered to no one but her. She had stopped him with one sentence too sharp for the hour and too sharp for his age. He had answered with one of his own. Then another. Then she had said the thing she did not mean and would have given anything to pull back before it left her mouth. I cannot keep doing this by myself, Micah. I am so tired of carrying everything.
She had meant the bills. She had meant the extra shifts at the elementary cafeteria. She had meant the calls from school and the laundry and the rising rent and the groceries that got smaller every week. She had meant the ache of being sixty-one and raising a fourteen-year-old boy after already raising her own children. She had meant the way grief keeps changing clothes and coming back into the room. She had not meant him.
But he had heard him.
Now he was gone.
Ruth Ann stood up so quickly the bedframe shook. She went back to the kitchen, grabbed her phone, called him once, then again, then again. Straight to voicemail every time. She called his friend Andre. Nothing. She called the mother of another boy from school. No answer. She opened the apartment door and stepped into the hallway in the same old T-shirt she had slept in, hair uncombed, eyes burning, and yelled his name down the stairs as if the sound itself might drag him back into sight. A woman across the hall opened her door a few inches and then closed it again when she saw Ruth Ann’s face. The world had already started doing what it always did when somebody’s life was cracking. It kept moving.
By the time she got to the parking lot, she was crying in the angry way some people cry when they do not yet have room for fear. She looked under the stairwell even though she knew he would not be there. She looked behind the dumpster. She walked to the corner and looked down both streets as if a person could still be standing there if only she wanted hard enough. Then she got in her car, turned the key twice before the engine caught, and backed out too fast. The low fuel light had been on since yesterday. She almost laughed when she saw it. Of course it was on. Of course this would happen on a morning when she had forty-three dollars in checking and twelve in cash and a shift she could not miss and a grandson who had heard the wrong thing from the wrong mouth at the wrong time.
Micah had left before sunrise because he had not wanted to see her face when she woke up.
That was what he had told himself while walking with his backpack slung over one shoulder and the city still half-dark around him. He had told himself she would be relieved to have one less problem in the apartment. He had told himself he was doing something noble, which was easier than admitting he was hurt. The truth was he had no real plan beyond leaving. He had twenty-seven dollars in wrinkled bills, a notebook, two shirts, a bag of spicy chips, and the kind of anger teenage boys wear when what they really have is sorrow with nowhere safe to go.
He kept walking until the sunrise began sliding over the city in thin gold edges. By then his feet hurt and his stomach had started twisting with hunger, but going back already felt impossible. Pride is strange that way. It can make a child feel older than he is and more trapped than he needs to be. Micah reached the edge of downtown and stood staring across the open stretch near Scissortail Park, trying to decide whether to keep moving or sit down somewhere and disappear for a while. The green opened ahead of him. The city stood behind it. He hated how beautiful everything looked when he felt this bad.
Jesus lifted His head from prayer before Micah ever noticed Him.
He had already seen the woman crying in the parking lot of the apartment complex miles away. He had already heard the fear in her breath. He had already watched the boy build a whole theology of rejection out of one tired sentence. He had already held them both before either of them knew they needed holding. When He began walking through the park, He did not move like a man trying to find something lost. He moved like one who already knew where sorrow had gone to hide.
Micah saw Him near a path by the water and would not have looked twice except there was something unnerving about how unhurried He was. Everyone else who passed through the morning seemed to belong to some clock. Joggers had the rigid focus of people competing with themselves. A woman pushing a stroller was already on a phone call. Two city workers rolled by in a cart talking over the day. But this man walked as if time answered to Him and not the other way around. Micah looked away first. Then looked back. The man’s clothes were simple. Not strange exactly, but they did not fit the city. His face held that calm some people think they want until they meet it and realize it sees too much.
“You left before anyone could tell you that you heard her wrong,” Jesus said.
Micah’s jaw tightened at once. He did not ask how the man knew anything. Shame makes people less curious than you might think.
“I heard her just fine.”
Jesus stopped a few feet from him. “No. You heard her pain and called it your name.”
Micah hated how quickly that landed. He looked out across the park instead. “You don’t know me.”
“I know you did not leave because you are strong enough to be on your own,” Jesus said gently. “You left because it hurts more to stay where you are afraid you are unwanted.”
That made Micah angry, which was a relief because anger felt less exposing than being known. “You gonna preach at me or something?”
Jesus sat down on a bench as though Micah had invited Him there. “Not unless you want less than the truth.”
Micah laughed once under his breath. “Everybody thinks they know what truth is.”
Jesus watched a bird skip across the grass. “Most people call whatever protects them by that name.”
Micah shifted his backpack. “I’m not going back.”
Jesus did not answer right away. He looked toward the skyline and then back at the boy. “You are not trying to find a place to go. You are trying to make someone miss you enough to prove you mattered.”
Micah’s throat tightened so suddenly he looked away again. He wanted to leave. He wanted to ask more. He wanted to punch something. He wanted the morning to stop acting like it had caught him naked in his thoughts.
“She said she was tired of carrying everything.”
“She is,” Jesus said.
Micah turned sharply. “So I was right.”
“No,” Jesus said, and there was no hardness in it, only certainty. “You are part of what keeps her going. You are not the weight that is killing her. The fear is. The bills are. The years are. The loneliness is. The way she thinks she has to be enough without help is. But you, Micah, are not a burden to love.”
The boy’s eyes flashed. “You don’t know what I’ve done.”
Jesus looked at him so steadily that Micah felt suddenly twelve instead of fourteen. “I know what you have broken. I know what has been broken in you. I know the lies you believe when the room gets quiet. I know the part of you that thinks leaving first hurts less than being left.”
Micah stared. Then his face closed. “I need to go.”
Jesus nodded as if He had expected that. “Then walk. But do not confuse distance with freedom.”
Micah turned and started down the path. He got thirty steps before the shaking in his chest made him stop. He hated that the man had not called after him. He hated even more that part of him wished He would. When he looked back, Jesus was still seated, hands resting lightly on His knees, not worried, not chasing, not moved by panic. It was the first time in months Micah had seen a face that did not seem afraid of what he might do next.
Ruth Ann spent the next hour calling people who did not know where Micah was.
By then she had thrown on jeans and pulled her hair back and driven three times around the block near his school just in case he had gone there early, which made no sense because school had not even started. She checked the basketball court at a nearby church. She checked the gas station where he sometimes bought candy with friends. She called the school office and left a message that came out sounding too calm. When panic cannot find a solution, it often tries on politeness. Then, because there was nowhere else to put what she was feeling, she drove without really planning to and found herself parked near Myriad Botanical Gardens with both hands on the steering wheel and her forehead leaning against them.
She had not come there for years. Her daughter used to love bringing Micah when he was little, before everything started slipping. Before the pills. Before the arrests. Before promises turned into weather. Before one phone call changed the shape of every family meal. Ruth Ann sat looking through the windshield at the morning opening over downtown and felt the helplessness of old women who have outlived the years they thought would be hardest. Her chest ached from all the words she wished she had not said.
When she finally lifted her head, she saw a man standing on the sidewalk a little ahead of her car. Not blocking it. Just there. He was looking at the gardens as if He loved the place and grieved for everybody walking through it at the same time.
She got out because she was too torn open to care whether it made sense.
“Have you seen a boy?” she asked before she even reached Him. “Fourteen. Thin. Dark hoodie. Backpack. He would look like he is trying not to look lost.”
Jesus turned toward her, and the first thing Ruth Ann felt was not surprise. It was relief. Relief so sudden it almost angered her because strangers were not supposed to feel safe that quickly.
“He has been seen,” Jesus said.
Tears filled her eyes on the spot. “Where?”
“He is moving, but not toward peace.”
That answer nearly broke her. “Sir, I do not need mystery. I need my grandson.”
“I know,” Jesus said softly.
Ruth Ann covered her mouth with her fingers. “I said something I should not have said.”
Jesus waited.
“She came to me at nineteen with that baby in her arms,” Ruth Ann whispered, as if the city would punish her for saying it aloud. “My daughter. She was already slipping. I knew it and I still could not stop it. I took him in because who else was going to? I have done everything I know to do. I worked when I was tired. I cooked when I had nothing left. I prayed when I could not feel God. I stood between that boy and all the things that wanted to take him. And last night I was so exhausted I told him I could not keep carrying everything. I did not mean him. I did not mean him.”
“I know,” Jesus said.
“But he heard himself.”
“Yes.”
Ruth Ann started crying harder then, because there was mercy in being understood, but there was no escape in it. Mercy tells the truth too. “What kind of grandmother says that?”
“The kind who has been carrying too much for too long,” Jesus said. “The kind who mistakes exhaustion for failure.”
She shook her head. “He has already had too many people leave.”
“And you have stayed,” Jesus said.
She looked up at Him.
“You have stayed when staying cost you sleep. You have stayed when staying cost you money. You have stayed when staying cost you peace. Do not let one sentence speak louder than years of love.”
Ruth Ann closed her eyes. The sentence entered her like water finding a cracked place in stone.
“I need to find him.”
“You will,” Jesus said.
Something in her stiffened against hope because hope is expensive when you have been disappointed enough. “How do you know?”
Jesus looked toward the bright glass of the Crystal Bridge catching morning light. “Because he is not running from your love. He is running from the fear that he has worn it out.”
Ruth Ann let out a breath she had been holding since dawn. “Can you help me?”
“I am helping you now.”
That would have sounded insufficient from anyone else, but from Him it did not. She could not explain why. His presence did not erase her fear. It steadied it. It made panic feel like something that did not have the final word.
Jesus began walking, and Ruth Ann, against all ordinary caution, fell into step beside Him.
They crossed near the gardens as the city grew louder. Office workers began filtering into downtown. A groundskeeper dragged a hose across a lawn. A young woman in scrubs sat alone on a bench with her head down, staring at an unopened energy drink as though she no longer trusted herself to begin another shift. Jesus slowed beside her.
“You have not slept,” He said.
The woman looked up with red eyes, startled. She was maybe thirty, maybe younger in years and older in the face. “Who are you?”
“A man who sees that you are not tired because of work,” Jesus said.
She almost laughed, but it came out broken. “I work nights at Mercy. Everybody’s tired.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “But you are tired from pretending you can keep loving people and never be emptied by it.”
The woman looked down at once. Ruth Ann could see she wanted to end the conversation and remain in it forever. “My dad was supposed to move in with me this month,” she said after a moment. “Then my brother lost his job again. Then my son got suspended. Then my ex said child support would be late. Then a patient grabbed my wrist last night and called me by some other woman’s name and cried for twenty minutes and I stood there and took it because she was scared. So yes. I’m tired.”
Jesus nodded. “You have been offering pieces of yourself to everyone around you and calling it strength. But even love needs rest to remain love.”
The woman’s face crumpled in that quiet way people do when they have been one sentence away from collapse for days. “I cannot drop anything.”
“No,” Jesus said. “But you can stop believing that your worth is measured by how much pain you can absorb without asking for help.”
She bowed her head. Ruth Ann stood there listening and felt the strange comfort of seeing somebody else known too. The city was full of people carrying private ruins in clean clothes.
Jesus touched the woman lightly on the shoulder. “Go home after this shift. Sleep. Let one honest conversation happen before the day is over.”
The woman looked up. “With who?”
“With the person you keep rescuing from the truth.”
Something changed in her face then, not full peace, but the beginning of it. She nodded slowly.
As they walked on, Ruth Ann said, “You know everybody.”
Jesus smiled faintly. “I know what they hide.”
“Then you know what I hide too.”
“Yes.”
She looked straight ahead. “That does not scare you?”
“No.”
Ruth Ann swallowed. “It scares me.”
“That is because you think what is hidden is what defines you,” Jesus said. “It does not. But what you do with it will.”
Micah had kept moving because standing still made him feel foolish.
He walked north without deciding much. He cut across blocks, avoided eye contact, bought a cheap bottle of water from a corner store, and spent too much time trying to look like he belonged wherever he was. He ended up in the Plaza District near late morning because he had ridden with a man in an old pickup who offered him a lift after asking no questions and talking mostly about weather. Micah got out on NW 16th and stood there with the sun warming the brick and painted walls around him. The street had started to fill. Shop doors opened. Somebody swept a sidewalk. Music floated out from somewhere with the windows propped open. It should have felt alive. To him it felt like being alone in public.
He wandered past places that sold things he could not afford and looked through windows as if maybe another life might be visible from the sidewalk. In front of a small shop with handmade earrings and candles in the window, he stopped longer than he meant to. Not because he wanted any of it. Because the air conditioning leaking through the door felt good and because inside it looked calm. A woman about Ruth Ann’s age noticed him and came toward the entrance with the careful suspicion of someone who had dealt with enough trouble to recognize the posture of a boy trying not to seem like trouble.
“You need something?” she asked.
Micah straightened. “Just looking.”
“At what?”
He shrugged.
She folded her arms, not cruel, just guarded. “You waiting for somebody?”
Micah shook his head.
The woman’s face changed a little then. She had likely seen enough teenagers drifting around midday to know when one had nowhere to be. “You in school?”
“No.”
“You should be.”
He gave a bitter half smile. “Thanks.”
She exhaled through her nose. “That was not meant to be clever. It was meant to be true.”
He started to move on, but the shame of being looked at like a problem rose up fast. “I’m not stealing anything.”
“I did not say you were.”
“You thought it.”
Before she could answer, Jesus stepped up beside Micah as if He had been walking there the whole time.
“He is hungry,” Jesus said.
The woman blinked. “What?”
“He is also ashamed,” Jesus said. “Those two things make people sound harder than they are.”
Micah stared at Him. “How do you keep doing that?”
Jesus ignored the question and looked at the woman. “What do you do when you are scared?”
The woman frowned. “Depends what kind of scared.”
“The kind that remembers loss before it has actually happened.”
That took the stiffness from her face. She looked at Micah again, and now there was recognition in it, though not of him exactly. Of something in herself. “I get suspicious,” she said quietly. “I get controlling.”
Jesus nodded. “Because you think vigilance can save you from pain.”
Her throat moved. “Sometimes it feels safer than kindness.”
“It often does,” Jesus said. “At first.”
The woman looked from Jesus to Micah. “You eaten today?”
Micah hesitated. His pride and his stomach were at war. His stomach won.
“No.”
She pointed across the street. “There’s a place open already. I can get you something.” She looked at Jesus. “And you too, I guess, if you’re with him.”
“I am with him,” Jesus said.
Micah almost refused on instinct. Jesus looked at him once, and whatever was in that look made refusal feel smaller than he wanted it to. They crossed together into the growing day, and for the first time since leaving the apartment, Micah sat somewhere inside four walls without feeling like he needed an escape route.
The woman bought him eggs, toast, and bacon, though he tried to say toast was enough. She told the server to put coffee in a to-go cup for herself because she still had to open her shop all day. Her name was Elena. She had a son in Tulsa she had not spoken to in eight months because both of them were too proud to be the one who called first. She did not tell them that immediately. Most people do not hand strangers their truest pain before noon. But Jesus had a way of making buried things feel tired of being buried.
While Micah ate with the urgency of someone who had not realized how hungry he was, Elena stirred her coffee and said, “You got people looking for you?”
He kept his eyes on the plate. “Probably.”
“That means something.”
He chewed. Swallowed. “Doesn’t mean they want me.”
Elena looked down at that. Jesus said nothing, because sometimes silence is what keeps a false sentence from going unchallenged too soon.
“My son used to say that,” Elena murmured. “Whenever I got angry. He’d act like anger canceled everything else.”
Micah glanced up.
“He thought every hard conversation meant I was done with him,” she said. “Truth is, I was usually terrified. But fear has an ugly accent. It can sound a lot like rejection.”
Micah set his fork down.
Jesus looked at him. “And what accent does your fear use?”
Micah stared at the table. “It tells me people mean the worst thing they say when they’re mad.”
“And you believe it because?”
He did not answer.
Jesus waited.
Finally Micah shrugged once, but it was weak. “Because people usually leave.”
Elena looked away. Jesus said, “Some do. Not all.”
The boy swallowed hard. “You can’t know that.”
Jesus’ voice stayed gentle. “I know your grandmother is searching with fear in her mouth and regret in her chest. I know she would trade every dollar she has for one more chance to say the sentence right.”
Micah’s eyes widened. “How do you know about my grandma?”
Jesus held his gaze. “Because love calls louder than shame, even when you cannot hear it yet.”
Micah looked like he wanted to argue and cry at the same time, which is often what healing looks like before it has enough courage to call itself that.
Elena pushed the syrup bottle away and sat back. “I need to make a call today,” she said quietly.
Jesus nodded. “Yes.”
“To my son.”
“Yes.”
She gave a dry little laugh. “I hate when I already know you’re right.”
A shadow passed through Micah’s face then, not because of Elena, but because he was starting to realize the day was becoming about more than running away. That is often the moment a hurting person gets tempted to flee again. Pain can be familiar. Being found asks more of you.
When they stepped back out into the brightness on NW 16th, the city felt different to him. Not softer exactly. More exposed. Jesus walked beside him without crowding him. Elena stood in the doorway of her shop watching them go with her phone already in her hand and tears she was not yet ready to explain.
“Are you trying to take me home?” Micah asked after a while.
“I am trying to take you out of the lie you ran with,” Jesus said.
“That sounds the same.”
“It is not.”
Micah kicked lightly at a crack in the sidewalk. “What if I don’t want to go back and hear her apologize?”
Jesus looked at him. “That is not what you are afraid of.”
Micah hated that He was right again. “Then what?”
“You are afraid she will apologize and you will still have to tell the truth about how much it hurt.”
Micah said nothing.
“And you would rather stay angry than be seen there.”
The boy’s throat tightened. They kept walking.
By early afternoon, Ruth Ann’s fear had sharpened into exhaustion. She had spoken to the school counselor, checked two more places Micah sometimes went, and ignored six calls from work before finally answering one and saying only, “My grandson is missing.” Her manager, who had heard enough in her voice to stop asking questions, told her not to come in. Ruth Ann thanked her and cried again after hanging up because mercy can undo a person faster than cruelty sometimes can.
She and Jesus had moved through much of downtown by then, and though He did not explain everything, He never once walked with uncertainty. At one point they passed near the Oklahoma City National Memorial, and Ruth Ann stopped without meaning to. The chairs stood in their ordered silence. The place held its own kind of weight, even from the edge of it. She had not visited in a long time. Too much sorrow had always lived there for her taste. But age changes what people can bear to look at. Sometimes when your own life hurts enough, the grief of a place no longer repels you. It calls you.
Jesus followed her gaze.
“I used to think if I let myself feel everything,” she said quietly, “I would not come back from it.”
“And now?” Jesus asked.
She watched the memorial for a moment longer. “Now I think maybe I never really stopped feeling it. I just got better at moving around with it.”
Jesus turned toward her. “That is what many call surviving.”
She nodded once, slow and tired.
“It is not the same as living.”
Ruth Ann closed her eyes, because that was true in more ways than she wanted to admit.
She nodded once, slow and tired.
“It is not the same as living.”
Ruth Ann closed her eyes, because that was true in more ways than she wanted to admit. She had survived her daughter’s unraveling. She had survived the years of hoping the next rehab would hold. She had survived the courtroom benches and the late-night calls and the way neighbors stop asking after a while because even sympathy gets tired when a story runs too long. She had survived taking in a little boy with wide eyes and a cough and two shirts in a plastic sack. She had survived learning how to stretch food and medicine and patience. She had survived funerals of people younger than herself. She had survived opening the mailbox and praying there would not be one more bill she could not answer. She had survived all of it, but living was another matter. Living would have required room for joy that did not have to apologize for existing. Living would have required trust she had not felt safe enough to practice. Living would have required setting down the old belief that if she ever loosened her grip on the world for one minute, everything she loved would roll away.
“I do not know how to do that anymore,” she said.
Jesus looked at the empty chairs in the distance and then back at her. “Most people do not notice when survival becomes the only language they speak. They think because they are still moving, they are still alive in the fullest sense. But fear can teach a person to breathe shallow for so long that they forget they were made for more air than that.”
Ruth Ann gave a sad little smile. “That sounds lovely, but I still have to find my grandson.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “And you will not find him by punishing yourself all the way there.”
She lowered her eyes. “You say that like it is a choice.”
“It becomes one when truth enters the room.”
Ruth Ann stood in silence for a moment, and then she did something she had not done in years without first rehearsing how it would sound. She told the truth plainly. “I am angry with God.”
Jesus did not flinch.
“I have prayed and prayed and prayed,” she said, her voice starting to shake again. “I have prayed in kitchens. I have prayed in waiting rooms. I have prayed in cars that needed gas and in apartments that needed repairs and in the middle of the night when every sound in the house made me afraid somebody was gone for good. I have asked for help. I have asked for mercy. I have asked Him to reach my daughter where I could not. I have asked Him to protect that boy from becoming what he has seen. And half the time it feels like heaven sits there and watches me drown slowly without even the courtesy of an answer.”
Jesus stayed quiet long enough for the full weight of her words to land between them without being smoothed over.
“Do you think your anger frightens God?” He asked.
Ruth Ann wiped at her face. “No. I think my need embarrasses me.”
“Why?”
She let out a bitter breath. “Because I am old enough to know better than to be this broken.”
Jesus turned toward her fully then. “Age does not cure the need to be held. It only removes the illusion that you can live without it.”
Something in her posture softened and collapsed at the same time. The hardest part of many people is the part that has been holding itself together too long.
Across the city, Micah had followed Jesus farther than he meant to. He would have denied it if asked. He kept telling himself he was just walking, just waiting, just thinking, but he knew the truth. He was staying near the one person who did not seem exhausted by him. They had made their way through blocks that grew louder with traffic and heat. By midafternoon the city had turned bright and restless. The sun pressed down hard enough to make every patch of shade feel earned. Micah’s anger had lost some of its early fire and become the heavier thing underneath it. Hurt, once it has eaten, grows quieter and harder to ignore.
They stopped near a convenience store not far from Bricktown because a little girl was crying outside by the ice freezer while her father argued into a phone with the strained voice of a man trying not to come apart in public. He was in work boots and a stained shirt with the name Carl stitched over one pocket. The kind of man who looked as though sleep had become something he negotiated with rather than received. The girl could not have been older than six. She held a melted ice cream sandwich in its wrapper and sobbed not because it was ruined, though that was part of it, but because children can feel when the adults around them are balancing too much more than they can explain.
Jesus crouched in front of her before Carl even noticed.
“What happened?” He asked.
The little girl tried to answer through hiccuping breaths. “It broke.”
Jesus looked at the crushed ice cream in her hand with great seriousness, as if a melted dessert deserved the dignity of being mourned properly. “That is a real disappointment.”
She nodded hard.
Carl ended the call with more force than he meant to and looked over, startled. “Hey. Sorry. She’s okay.”
Jesus stood. “She is small enough that broken things still get to be sad before they are called small.”
Carl looked embarrassed. “Yeah. I know. I just got a lot going on.”
“I know,” Jesus said.
Carl rubbed his forehead. “Transmission’s shot. Boss says if I miss tomorrow I might not have a job. My ex says the school called about attendance. My daughter’s supposed to be with her grandma by four and I’m here trying to get a tow estimate I can’t pay. So if she’s crying over ice cream right now, I guess that makes two of us who picked a bad time.”
The little girl leaned against his leg. Carl looked down at her and his face changed into the guilty tenderness of a father who knows his frustration keeps spilling onto the wrong person.
Jesus said, “What are you most afraid of right now?”
Carl laughed once, exhausted. “That everything I’ve barely kept together is about to quit at the same time.”
“And what do you tell yourself when that fear starts talking?”
Carl stared at Him for a second. “That I should’ve fixed more by now.”
Jesus nodded. “So your trouble becomes your identity.”
Carl’s shoulders dropped a little. “Feels that way.”
Micah stood off to the side listening, hands shoved in his pockets. He was irritated by how everyone seemed to become honest around Jesus. Irritated, but drawn in.
Jesus reached into the inside fold of His outer garment and withdrew enough cash to cover the tow and then some. He placed it into Carl’s hand before the man could protest. Carl looked stunned and then ashamed and then angry in the reflexive way pride often shows up when grace arrives too directly.
“I can’t take this.”
“You can,” Jesus said. “The question is whether you can receive help without turning it into humiliation.”
Carl looked down at the bills again as if they might disappear. “Why would you do this for me?”
Jesus glanced at the little girl. “Because she should not have to carry your panic in the shape of your face all afternoon.”
Carl swallowed and nodded once, unable to hide the tears that filled his eyes. The little girl, who understood none of the conversation and all of the mercy, held up the ruined ice cream wrapper and asked, “Can I get another one?”
Carl laughed then, and the sound had relief in it. “Yeah, baby. You can get another one.”
They went inside. Micah looked at Jesus. “You just carry money around for random people?”
“Not random,” Jesus said. “Never random.”
Micah stared at the door Carl had gone through. “Must be nice.”
“To help?”
“To be the one helping instead of the one everybody’s tired of helping.”
Jesus looked at him. “Do you think need makes you less worthy of love?”
Micah shrugged.
“That is not an answer.”
Micah kicked at a pebble. “Maybe.”
Jesus’ voice remained steady. “Need is not what disqualifies people from love. Refusing to let yourself be loved is what starves you.”
Micah did not respond. He was thinking about Ruth Ann paying electric bills late and still making sure there was cereal in the house. He was thinking about the way she left the light over the stove on when he came home late, even when she was mad. He was thinking about how often she asked if he had eaten and how rarely he answered kindly. Shame was starting to move inside him, but this time it was not the useless kind that just bruises. It was the kind that opens a door to truth if a person does not run from it.
They crossed toward the canal in Bricktown after that. The water moved lazily under the bright afternoon, and tourists drifted along with drinks and shopping bags and phones lifted to capture a version of the city that would fit on a screen. Micah leaned on the railing for a while. Jesus stood beside him without interrupting the silence. Sometimes the soul needs room to stop performing before it can say anything real.
Finally Micah said, “My mom used to tell me she was coming back.”
Jesus said nothing.
“She’d disappear for a while and then come back acting like things were about to get better. She always had some reason. Some promise. Some plan.” Micah’s eyes stayed on the water. “When I was little I believed her every time. Then one day I stopped. But I still acted like I did, because it was easier than admitting I knew.”
Jesus turned His head toward him. “And when did leaving start to feel safer than staying?”
Micah swallowed. “Probably then.”
“Because if you go first,” Jesus said, “it feels like you chose the wound.”
Micah nodded once.
Jesus let the moment settle. “Your grandmother is not your mother.”
“I know that.”
“No,” Jesus said, not unkindly. “You know it with your mind. But you keep handing her the debt of another woman’s absence.”
Micah’s face tightened and he looked away fast. The sentence went where he did not want it to. That was usually a sign it was true.
“She gets mad,” he muttered.
“Yes.”
“She says stuff.”
“Yes.”
“She gets tired of me.”
Jesus did not soften His gaze. “She gets tired. That is not the same sentence.”
Micah blinked hard and stared down at the canal. He wished he could stay defiant because defiance felt older and stronger. But grief had already started rising through it.
“She looked at me like she meant it.”
“No,” Jesus said quietly. “She looked at you like she had reached the end of herself. You only thought it was the end of you.”
That was the sentence that finally broke him. He did not collapse dramatically. He did not fall to his knees. He simply put both forearms on the rail, bowed his head into them, and cried the way boys often cry when they have spent too long trying not to. The tears came hot and humiliating and unstoppable. People passed behind him without noticing. A city can be mercifully blind that way.
Jesus rested a hand between his shoulders and said nothing for a long time.
When Micah finally spoke, his voice sounded younger than it had all day. “What if I go back and nothing changes?”
Jesus answered without delay. “Then truth will still have entered your house, and truth changes more than you can see in a single hour.”
“What if I can’t forgive her right away?”
“You are not being asked to lie.”
Micah breathed shakily.
“What if she cries?”
“She will.”
Micah almost smiled through the tears. “You really do know everything, huh?”
Jesus’ mouth moved with the faintest hint of a smile. “Enough.”
On the far side of the city, Ruth Ann sat for a moment on a low wall near the memorial because her knees had begun to ache and Jesus had not hurried her once. The afternoon light had turned the edges of things sharper. People came and went in quiet clusters. Some spoke softly. Some did not speak at all. Grief teaches strangers to lower their voices even when they know nothing about one another.
A man in his seventies stood not far off with a folded cap in both hands, staring toward the chairs in a way that suggested this was not a tourist stop for him. Ruth Ann noticed because pain recognizes its own kind even when it wears different clothes. Jesus noticed too. He walked toward the man before Ruth Ann could ask anything.
“You still come on this date every year,” Jesus said.
The man turned, startled. “How’d you know what date it is to me?”
Jesus looked toward the memorial. “Because some losses keep time differently.”
The man swallowed and looked back at the chairs. “My sister was in the building.”
Ruth Ann came closer without meaning to intrude. The man kept talking anyway, maybe because something in Jesus made concealment feel unnecessary.
“She was younger than me,” he said. “Always was. Even when she was fifty. Funny how that works.” His mouth trembled with a brief smile that collapsed almost immediately. “I still come and talk to her sometimes. Not because I think she hears me the way I used to. I don’t know what I believe about that anymore. I just can’t stand the thought of being the only one left who says her name out loud.”
Jesus said, “Love resists disappearance.”
The man closed his eyes once. “That’s exactly it.”
He looked at Ruth Ann then, as if suddenly remembering other people existed. “Sorry. Didn’t mean to unload.”
Ruth Ann shook her head. “Some days there’s nowhere else for it to go.”
The man nodded. “You lose somebody?”
Ruth Ann looked down. “Not today, I pray. But I’m afraid I might.”
He gave a knowing little tilt of the head. “Sometimes fear feels like loss practicing early.”
Jesus watched them both. “And sometimes fear borrows authority it does not actually have.”
The man let out a slow breath. “I’d like to believe that.”
“You do,” Jesus said. “You just grieve in a way that makes hope feel disloyal.”
The man stared at Him. Ruth Ann did too. There was never any flourish in the way Jesus spoke. He simply kept touching the exact wound.
The man lowered his eyes. “If I let myself feel joy again, part of me thinks it means I left her behind.”
Jesus answered gently. “You do not honor the dead by refusing life. You honor love by carrying forward what death could not keep.”
The man pressed the folded cap harder in his hands. Ruth Ann saw tears gather in the lines around his eyes. Something inside her shifted again. She had done the same thing with her daughter long before the girl died to everyone else without yet being dead in body. She had mistaken constant dread for faithfulness. She had lived as if relaxing her grip would count as betrayal.
When the man finally walked away, a little straighter than before, Ruth Ann whispered, “You keep doing that to people.”
“Doing what?” Jesus asked.
“Getting underneath the sentence they say and answering the one they mean.”
Jesus looked at her with that same quiet authority. “Would you like Me to stop?”
She almost laughed, then almost cried instead. “No.”
He held out His hand, not like a performance, just an invitation. She took it and stood.
“Where are we going?” she asked.
“To the place where fear and love will have to tell the truth in front of one another.”
She would have asked what that meant, but she already knew in the part of herself that had begun to trust Him. So she followed.
Micah rode the streetcar with Jesus in the late afternoon because neither of them had any hurry in them now. The city moved outside the windows in steady fragments: glass, murals, crosswalks, parked cars, construction, people with bags, people with headphones, people with faces that looked tired even from a distance. Jesus seemed to belong nowhere and fully belong anyway. Micah wondered, not for the first time, who He really was. He knew the obvious answer in the way anyone raised around church language knows certain names. But knowing something as vocabulary and knowing it as presence are not the same thing.
A woman across the aisle rocked a baby whose cry had reached that frantic pitch which makes every adult nearby tense up. She looked exhausted and embarrassed. The baby’s diaper bag was open on the seat beside her, and she was rummaging with one hand while balancing him with the other. Micah, without even deciding to, leaned over and picked up the pacifier that had rolled to the floor. He held it out awkwardly. The woman looked startled and grateful.
“Thanks,” she said.
He shrugged. “It’s fine.”
Jesus watched him but did not comment. Micah was grateful for that. Some changes die the minute they are praised too early.
When they stepped off near downtown again, the sky had begun that slow turn toward evening that makes the city seem briefly gentler than it is. The light softened the buildings and lengthened every shadow. Jesus led him without explanation until the memorial came into view.
Micah stopped. “Why are we here?”
“Because there are places where people remember what can be taken,” Jesus said, “and because you need to decide whether love will be counted among those things.”
Micah looked confused, but then he saw Ruth Ann.
She was standing near the Survivor Tree, shoulders small inside her blouse, hands clasped together so tightly that even from a distance he could see the strain in them. For one long second he thought about turning and running again, not because he wanted to be gone, but because being found was suddenly terrifying. Jesus looked at him once, and in that look there was no pressure, only truth and mercy together.
“So this is it?” Micah asked.
“This is a beginning,” Jesus said.
Ruth Ann saw him then.
There are moments when the body moves before the mind catches up, and this was one of them. She took two stumbling steps forward and then stopped herself, maybe out of fear that rushing him might push him away, maybe because she was no longer sure what shape this meeting should take. Micah stood frozen too. The whole day seemed to gather there between them, all the fear and pride and fatigue and love that had been talking over one another for years.
“I’m sorry,” Ruth Ann said first, and her voice broke on the second word. “I am so sorry, baby.”
Micah looked down. His backpack hung from one shoulder exactly as it had that morning. Suddenly it looked less like independence and more like a child carrying proof that he did not know where else to go.
“I shouldn’t have left,” he muttered.
“No,” Ruth Ann said, shaking her head. “Listen to me. What I said last night was wrong in the way you heard it. I was tired, and I let my tired mouth speak like you were part of the burden. You are not. You hear me? You are not.”
Micah’s eyes filled again, but he kept his jaw tight. “You said you were tired of carrying everything.”
“I am tired,” she said honestly. “But not tired of loving you. Never that. I have been scared and worn down and too alone in this some days, and I have let my fear come out sharp. But you are not the thing I wish I could escape. You are the person I have fought to keep.”
The words landed, but not easily. Truth often has to push through old lies that have already rented rooms inside someone.
Micah’s voice rose with the old hurt. “You always act like I’m one more thing to deal with.”
Ruth Ann flinched because there was enough truth in that to hurt. “Sometimes I do. And that is wrong. But it is not because I don’t want you. It is because I have been scared to death trying to keep you safe and trying to be enough and trying to do what two or three people should’ve been doing. I am asking you to forgive the way my fear has sounded.”
Micah wiped at his face angrily. “I thought you meant it.”
“I know,” she whispered.
The city seemed to go quiet around them, though of course it did not. People still moved through the memorial. Cars still passed. The evening still unfolded. But when truth is finally being spoken, the soul hears it louder than traffic.
Micah looked at Jesus, as if needing to know what was expected of him next.
Jesus said, “Tell her what it felt like.”
Micah’s first instinct was resistance. Then he saw that neither of them was going anywhere. So he told the truth in the clumsy, painful way truth often first comes out.
“It felt like… like I was too much,” he said, voice shaking. “Like maybe you were finally saying what everybody ends up thinking. Like if I stayed any longer you were gonna get tired enough to stop wanting me there.”
Ruth Ann covered her mouth and cried openly then. “Oh, Micah. No.”
He kept going because once a wound is open, stopping halfway leaves poison inside it. “And I know you’re not my mom. I know that. But when people leave enough times or lie enough times or get mad enough times, everything starts sounding the same. I didn’t want to wait around and hear you say more.”
Ruth Ann stepped closer. “I am not leaving.”
He looked at her, really looked, and saw the full day on her face. The fear. The regret. The love.
“I know you’re tired,” he said, softer now.
“I am.”
“And I make it harder.”
“Sometimes you do,” she said with painful honesty. “But that is not the same thing as saying I do not want you.”
Micah let out a broken breath. There it was. Not polished. Not perfect. But real. Maybe real enough to build on.
Jesus stood a few feet away, letting the moment belong to them. There was no need for Him to take the place truth had now taken.
Micah took a step toward Ruth Ann. Then another. She did not grab him. She waited. When he finally reached her, he folded into her in that awkward too-big way boys do when they have not let themselves need comfort in a long time. Ruth Ann held him with both arms and cried into his shoulder. He cried too, though he tried to hide it at first. The backpack slid to the ground beside them.
“I’m sorry,” he said into her shoulder.
“I know,” she whispered. “Come home.”
After a long moment they pulled back. Ruth Ann touched his face the way she had when he was little and feverish. “Have you eaten?”
The question made him laugh through tears because of course that would be what she asked. Of course love would return sounding like itself.
“Yes,” he said. “Some lady in the Plaza District bought me breakfast.”
Ruth Ann blinked. “What?”
Micah glanced toward Jesus with the smallest hint of a smile. “It’s been a weird day.”
“It has been a merciful one,” Jesus said.
Ruth Ann and Micah turned toward Him together then, as if only just realizing the day had been carried by someone more than either of them. The evening light rested across His face without diminishing anything in it. For the first time neither of them seemed afraid to fully ask with their eyes who He was.
Ruth Ann spoke first. “Will we see you again?”
Jesus looked at Micah, then at her. “You will find Me where truth is not avoided, where mercy is not ashamed, and where the weary stop pretending they can live without grace.”
Micah frowned slightly, as if wanting something less mysterious and more direct.
Jesus’ expression softened. “And when you pray.”
Ruth Ann’s tears started again, though gentler now.
Micah bent to pick up his backpack. “Can I ask you something?”
“Yes.”
“Why did you come after me?”
Jesus held his gaze, and His answer came simple and steady. “Because you were never too much to carry.”
Micah looked down fast, overwhelmed by the kindness in that sentence.
Ruth Ann reached for his hand, and this time he let her take it without embarrassment. They began walking together toward her car, slower than they had moved all day. Not because everything was solved. It was not. There would still be bills. There would still be old habits and new arguments and days when pain came back wearing familiar clothes. Micah would still have to learn how not to hear every correction as abandonment. Ruth Ann would still have to learn how not to let fear speak for love. But something essential had shifted. A lie had lost its throne. Sometimes that is where a family begins to heal.
As they neared the parking area, Micah looked back once, perhaps to wave, perhaps to make sure Jesus was really there, perhaps because part of him already missed the feeling of being fully seen. Jesus stood where they had left Him, near the memorial, with the evening gathering around Him. He raised a hand in the smallest gesture of peace.
Ruth Ann drove home with one hand on the wheel and the other resting over Micah’s for half the trip. Neither of them talked much at first. There are silences after deep truth that do more healing than conversation. Finally she said, “We’re gonna have to do this different.”
Micah looked out the window. “Yeah.”
“I mean really different. Not just tonight-different.”
He nodded. “Yeah.”
“We may need help.”
He glanced at her. “Like what?”
“Like me admitting I can’t keep doing this alone. Like you telling me the truth before you disappear inside yourself. Like maybe church again. Like maybe counseling if I can find something we can afford. Like maybe asking people for things I have spent years acting like I don’t need.”
Micah listened. “You really mean that?”
“Yes.”
He sat with that. “Okay.”
That one word did not sound dramatic, but it held more openness than either of them had brought into the day.
By the time they reached the apartment, the stove light was on again. Ruth Ann noticed and nearly laughed at herself because she had left it burning in the rush that morning. Micah noticed too. Neither said anything, but both knew what that little bulb had become. A quiet witness. A small stubborn sign that someone expected return even when afraid.
They went inside. The rooms looked exactly the same as they had at dawn, but nothing in them felt identical now. Ruth Ann set her purse down. Micah dropped the backpack by his door. She asked if he wanted eggs. He said sure. He stood in the kitchen while she cooked, which he had not done in a while. They were not suddenly cheerful. They were simply present. Sometimes presence is the first form peace takes.
Across town Elena sat in the back room of her shop with her phone pressed to her ear while it rang in Tulsa. When her son answered, suspicious and guarded, she almost lost courage. Then she remembered the man who had seen straight through the armor to the ache beneath it. So she did not waste the moment on small talk.
“I’m sorry for the way my fear has sounded,” she said.
There was a long silence on the line, and then her son, no longer a boy but still wounded in all the places boys remain, began to speak. Not smoothly. Not instantly. But honestly enough to let a door crack open.
At nearly the same hour, the young nurse from the bench near Myriad Botanical Gardens sat in her parked car outside her apartment and sent a message she had avoided for months. I am not okay enough to keep pretending I am. Can we talk tonight? She stared at the screen for a long time before pressing send, and when she did, she wept with relief and dread mixed together, because truth often feels like both before it starts to feel like freedom.
Carl got his truck towed and his daughter to her grandmother’s house before four. That evening, when she fell asleep on the couch with a children’s movie still playing, he sat beside her and cried quietly into his hands, not because everything was fixed, but because a stranger had interrupted the story he was telling himself about what it meant to need help. Sometimes grace enters a day through money. Sometimes through words. Often through both.
And Jesus moved through Oklahoma City as the sun lowered and the long shadows stretched across sidewalks and parking lots and patches of grass. He passed people laughing at outdoor tables and people arguing in cars at red lights and people carrying groceries and people carrying loneliness under clean shirts. He passed those who knew they were hungry and those who had become expert at calling hunger by other names. He noticed what others missed, just as He always had. The cashier with the brave smile and the shaking hands. The man in a suit sitting too long in his parked car because he could not bear to go inside to one more silent room. The teenage girl pretending confidence while rereading a text that had humiliated her. The widow comparing soup cans and trying not to remember who used to like which brand. He saw them all. He did not move like someone sampling the city. He moved like the Lord of every street that had forgotten His nearness.
When night began settling in for real, He returned to Scissortail Park.
The air had cooled just enough to make the day loosen its grip. The skyline glowed against the deepening sky. A few runners still passed. Couples walked slowly along the paths. Somewhere music drifted from a distance and then faded. The water reflected slivered light. Jesus stepped again onto the grass where the day had begun. The city was louder now than it had been in the morning, yet beneath the noise there was that same hidden stillness waiting to be entered.
He bowed His head.
There was no display in it. No distance. No exhaustion. Only that full and living communion that had carried Him through every mile of the day. He prayed for Ruth Ann and for Micah and for the rooms they would have to walk through next. He prayed for Elena and her son, for the nurse who had finally told the truth, for Carl and his daughter, for those still wandering inside the lie that they were too much or not enough or too far gone or too tired to be reached. He prayed for the city with its glass towers and side streets and private griefs and hidden tenderness. He prayed as one who was never overwhelmed by human need because He had come precisely for it.
The last light thinned over Oklahoma City. The breeze moved lightly through the park. Jesus remained there in quiet prayer, calm and grounded and fully present, while the city He loved settled under the night.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from Patrimoine Médard bourgault


Il y a deux ans, j'ai passé plusieurs journées dans l'atelier d'André, au Vivoir, à Saint-Jean-Port-Joli.
J'avais une caméra. Lui, ses gouges.
Ce que j'ai filmé, c'est un processus complet — un tronc de tilleul brut qui devient, coup par coup, un visage de femme. Environ huit heures de travail entièrement filmées. Du premier trait de crayon à la dernière passe de ciseau.

André Médard Bourgault a 85 ans. Il est le fils de Médard Bourgault. Il sculpte depuis l'enfance. Il sculpte encore.

Pendant ces heures, il travaille et il parle. Il nomme chaque outil au moment où il le prend. Il explique pourquoi ce ciseau plutôt qu'un autre, comment lire le fil du bois, où frapper et où s'arrêter. Il montre comment il a appris — les gestes transmis par son père, et ceux qu'il a développés lui-même au fil des décennies.
Ce n'est pas un cours. C'est une transmission.
Ce qui est capté ici ne peut pas être reconstruit. C'est un savoir en action, porté par une personne qui l'a reçu directement et qui le pratique encore.

Je n'ai pas encore décidé comment rendre ce contenu accessible — la forme, le moment, la manière. C'est un projet qui se construit.
Mais pour l'instant, je partage un extrait. Dix minutes tirées du début du processus.
Le reste existe. Et ça, c'est irremplaçable.
Raphaël Maltais Bourgault


Pour comprendre le Domaine Médard Bourgault
Ces pages permettent de découvrir le domaine, son histoire, et les enjeux actuels à travers des archives, des analyses et des témoignages directs.
Archives et mémoire du lieu → Domaine Médard Bourgault — archives sonores et témoignages d’André Médard Bourgault Enregistrements réalisés sur le domaine, retraçant la vie, les gestes et la mémoire du lieu.
Analyses et situation actuelle → Domaine Médard Bourgault — analyses et enjeux actuels Réflexions et mises à jour sur les enjeux en cours.
Savoir et transmission → André Médard Bourgault — classe de maître complète en sculpture sur bois → Médard Bourgault — éducation artistique, principes, beauté et transmission Comprendre la pratique, la transmission et la vision artistique de Médard Bourgault.
Récit et contexte historique → Médard Bourgault — récit en mer inspiré de son journal (1913–1918) Un récit basé sur ses écrits, qui éclaire une période peu connue de sa vie.
Enjeu actuel du domaine → Domaine Médard Bourgault — le jardin doit-il devenir un accès public au fleuve ? Une question concrète sur l’avenir et l’usage du lieu.
from Nerd for Hire
I shifted some poetry chapbooks to the top of my TBR stack in honor of National Poetry Month, and I've been enjoying the change in pace. I always try to read a mix of novels and short story collections, but my usual reading is definitely very fiction heavy, and it's fairly rare for any nonfiction or poetry to slip into the mix. This is, in part, because I'm often not just reading for enjoyment. That's part of why I read, but I also see every book as an opportunity to learn—to see what kinds of stories other people are telling, or to pick up tricks of the trade, or get ideas for how to do things better in my own stories.
What I need to remember, though, is that fiction writers can also learn a lot from reading outside their genre. I've been aiming to keep the same craft-focused mindset when I'm reading poetry chapbooks, and I think I’ve picked up some useful tidbits. So, of course, figured I’d come share them with yinz.
Epic poems exist, but the majority of them are just a page or two long. From a wordcount perspective, they tend to stay comfortably in the flash fiction range, or even down in the micro- and nano-range. If you write in those lengths—or if you perpetually struggle to write flash because you can't seem to make a story stay short enough—then you can't find a better model for maximizing limited real estate than a well-written poem.
Poets do two things especially well that allows them to build characters, scenes, and big emotions without a lot of words. The first is that they're exacting in the words they do use. As a rule, poets are much more likely to search out the single specific, perfect word to convey their meaning than the average fiction writer (although, unsurprisingly, flash and micro writers tend to be experts in this area, as well). Speculative writers in particular can benefit from honing this skill because it can do more than limit the length of your descriptions. It can also prevent the need for info dumps to fill in world details when you can use the language of the story itself to make the reader feel immersed in your story's reality.
The second big thing poets do to keep things short: they understand subtext and implication, and trust their readers to figure things out without needing their hand held. This is another area where I struggle sometimes, and I think speculative writers especially are often prone to over-explaining. It can be tricky to strike the right balance, where you give readers enough information to fully picture the world you created without overwhelming them and bogging the story down with unnecessary details. This doesn't just happen with worldbuilding details, either. Themes and character backstories are also prone to this kind of over-explaining, and it can make readers feel hammered over the head in addition to adding unnecessary words that slow the pace. It's counter-intuitive, but readers actually feel more immersed in and connected to what they're reading when you give their imagination some space to play.
Poets think about words in a different way than most fiction writers. One way that manifests is that they're usually way more tuned in to the more musical aspects of language, like the rhythms created by the arrangement of stressed and unstressed syllables, and the punctuation and line breaks used to separate them.
I tend to think about rhythm on a more macro-level, but there are definitely times that it can benefit a fiction writer to pay attention to the line-by-line rhythm. When you do, you can use the language to make the reader linger over a key image or moment, or give them a rushed, breathless feel that pushes them forward through fast-paced action sequences.
Poets do have different tools at their disposal, line breaks being the big one. But fiction writers can make use of different sentence lengths and paragraph breaks to achieve similar effects. In a poem, a series of short lines creates a staccato feel, or a single word or phrase can be set on its own line to highlight it. The prose equivalent would be using very short, simple sentences, or using occasional one-sentence paragraphs that stand out from the longer stretches of text around them.
When a poem has consistent line lengths and stresses, that creates a steady rhythm that the reader settles into, to the point it's jarring when it's broken. Fiction writers can mimic this. For instance, let's say you want to set the scene of a normally peaceful suburban home that's just been the setting of a tragedy. You could describe the typical parts of the house using similar sentence lengths and structures, then break that rhythm for details related to the tragedy, mirroring the way that event broke the sameness of daily life in the house.
I'm weirdly enamored with poetic forms like the villanelle, pantoum, or sestina that use repeated words or lines as touchstones. When this is done well, it can create a feel of dwelling on or obsessing over a concept, or convey the sense of a narrator who feels stuck or trapped. This isn't the only way that repetition gets employed in poetry, of course, and it doesn't have to mean direct repetition of words or lines. A recurring image can serve the same function, especially when that image evolves over the course of the poem to reflect changes in the speaker.
This is a concept that fiction writers can steal wholesale from poets. And many already do. The first one that pops to my mind is always Chuck Palahniuk, whose books frequently have a refrain that runs through them. In Fight Club, for instance, there's the repeated aside start with “I am Jack's”—I am Jack's Medulla Oblongata, I am Jack's complete lack of surprise, etc. It becomes a kind of chorus commentating on the narrator's mental state. Another example is Slaughterhouse-Five, where Kurt Vonnegut repeats “so it goes” over a hundred times, a kind of fatalistic mantra that punctuates key moments.
This is one of those approaches you don't want to go overboard with, because too much repetition can make a story tedious to read. But selective repetition can be very useful for fiction writers. It functions as an anchor and flag for the reader, helping them to make the right connections between scenes, characters, and themes.
One of the cool things about poetry is that the experience of reading it on the page can sometimes be very different than that of hearing it read aloud. Some poems are intended for spoken performance more than silent reading. Obviously this is an area where it's poet-by-poet, but as a rule this is another area of language that poets think about a lot, and fiction writers usually neglect.
I'm not necessarily thinking about things like rhyme or alliteration when I say this, although those are certainly tools that fiction writers are allowed to play with, too. More, it's about understanding how the sounds of words flow together or don't. And the best way to get a sense for that is to do what poets do and read your work aloud. Any places where you stumble or have to slow down, a reader will likely do the same thing, even if they're just reading in their head. There are times you might want to create that effect intentionally, but it's not something you want happening by accident.
Speculative fiction writers in particular often need to think about how words sound, specifically when you're naming characters, places, and objects distinctive to your world. One of my pet peeves when I'm reading sci-fi or fantasy stories is when the author signals something is alien or supernatural by overloading its name with uncommon letters like X or Z without thinking about that name looks or sounds to the reader, or whether that look/sound matches with how that thing should come across.
When you're using an invented word, the reader relies on sound as well as context to understand its meaning, and you want to use this to your advantage. In Lord of the Rings, for instance, the elves have flowy-sounding names like Galadriel and Legolas, while the dwarves' names are more blunt (Gimli, Bifur, Thorin) and the Orcs' names use harsher sounds (Azog, Gothmog, Ugluk). How a word sounds gives the reader clues that frame their expectations. Granted, you can always defy that expectation if you want to, but that should still be an intentional choice.
I'm going to make a conscious effort to work more poetry chapbooks into my reading list even after April's over. I've been reading a lot of hefty sci-fi and fantasy books lately, so inserting a quick little chapbook in between I think could be a nice little palate cleanser and hit of the reset button. That's what's nice about chapbooks in general, too—they don't take too long to read, so you can give one a try without needing to invest a ton of time in the experiment. And, if you do find a poem or two that speak to you, you can take a bit more time and let yourself linger over them and dig into what the piece is doing that caught your attention.
I'll also say you don't have to read an entire book from one author. There are loads of free literary journals across the internet publishing spectacular poetry across genres, including an increasing number of sci-fi and fantasy poetry publishers like Star*Line and Dreams & Nightmares. These can be an easy way to start if you're a fiction writer looking to learn and get fresh inspiration from poetry.
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from Douglas Vandergraph
There are mornings when the house is quiet and your life looks mostly fine from the outside, but something inside you still feels unsettled. Nothing has exploded. No fresh disaster has arrived. The bills are still there. The dishes are still there. Your body is moving through another day. But under all of that, there is this dull ache that never fully says its name. It just sits there. It follows you into the kitchen. It stands next to you while the coffee brews. It climbs into your chest before you have even had time to form a full thought. It is not always panic. Sometimes it is something slower than that. Sometimes it is disappointment with yourself that has learned how to whisper. Sometimes it is weariness that has become so normal you no longer call it weariness. Sometimes it is just the feeling that you have become difficult to love, and if you are honest, you have started to believe it.
A lot of people would never say that out loud. They would sooner say they are tired. They would say they are going through a lot. They would say they are under stress, and all of that may be true. But underneath those words, there is often another one that feels too exposing to say. The word is unworthy. Not in a polished church sense. Not in the kind of way people say when they already know the right answer and are trying to sound humble. I mean the kind of unworthy that gets into your regular life. The kind that makes it hard to receive a compliment without arguing with it in your head. The kind that makes it hard to believe good things will last. The kind that makes you feel uneasy when someone shows you patience because deep down you think they should be tired of you by now. The kind that reaches into your relationship with God and quietly tells you that Jesus may forgive people in general, but surely He must be worn out with you in particular.
That is one of the saddest private battles a person can carry. It does not always look dramatic. It does not always end in visible collapse. Sometimes it just becomes the atmosphere of your life. You keep going. You still work. You still answer people. You still smile when you need to. You still know enough about God to say the right things when the moment calls for it. But in the hidden room of your heart, you are still standing there with the same question you have been asking in one form or another for years. How could Jesus really love someone like me when I still feel this broken, this inconsistent, this disappointing, this unfinished?
I think that question sits closer to many people than they admit. We talk a lot about whether God is real. We talk a lot about whether prayer works. We talk a lot about faith in the broad sense. But sometimes the question that hurts the most is not whether Jesus exists. Sometimes it is whether His love can truly survive contact with the real version of you. Not the polished version. Not the version other people get. Not the version you present when you are having a better week. The real one. The one that knows exactly what you still struggle with. The one that remembers the words you wish you could take back. The one that can still feel old shame in the body as if it happened yesterday. The one that has promised to do better more times than you can count and still finds yourself returning to the same tired places inside.
It is strange how easy it can be to believe in the strength of Jesus and still not believe in His tenderness toward you. Many people have no problem saying that Jesus can calm storms, save souls, defeat death, heal the broken, and carry the sins of the world. Those things sound glorious. Those things sound like God. But when it comes time to believe that His heart is gentle toward your specific weakness, your specific history, your specific failure, that is where many people hesitate. It is easier to praise His power from a distance than to trust His love up close. Power is majestic. Love is personal. Power can be admired without changing you. Love gets into places you have been protecting for years.
That may be why so many people keep Jesus near enough to respect but not near enough to rest in. They will serve Him. They will talk about Him. They will defend Him. They will build entire lives around Him in visible ways. But deep down they are still bracing themselves in His presence. They are still expecting some final disappointment. They are still waiting for the look on His face to change once He sees enough. They are still treating His love like something they have to keep earning after the fact. That kind of faith may still use holy language, but it does not know peace. It may still function. It may still achieve. It may still appear strong. But it is full of tension because it is trying to love God while secretly fearing what He feels when He looks at you.
I do not think people end up there for no reason. Most of us learned something about love before we ever understood grace. We learned that love could be warm one minute and withdrawn the next. We learned that approval could be earned and lost. We learned that being too needy made people uncomfortable. We learned that weakness changed the room. We learned that some mistakes stay on the record longer than anyone says they do. We learned that people can forgive with their words while still punishing with their tone. We learned that being fully known did not always lead to being safely held. Sometimes it led to embarrassment. Sometimes it led to rejection. Sometimes it led to distance. So when someone says Jesus loves you, those words do not land in an empty place. They land in a heart that already has a whole history with the idea of love.
That matters more than people think. It means that the problem is not always rebellion. Sometimes the problem is injury. Sometimes the reason a person struggles to receive the love of Jesus is not that they want to run from Him. It is that they have spent years learning how to survive without resting in anyone’s care. They know how to be useful. They know how to be strong for others. They know how to keep moving. They know how to make it through another hard week. What they do not know is how to stop flinching when love gets close. They do not know how to believe that tenderness can stay. They do not know how to let goodness reach them without immediately preparing for it to leave.
That is why the love of Jesus can feel so unsettling before it feels comforting. People assume the love of Christ should only feel soft, but sometimes it first feels exposing. Not because He is cruel, but because He is kind in the exact places where you expected distance. That can bring tears to the surface very quickly. It can make something in you break open. A person can carry shame for years and still function, but the moment they begin to sense that Jesus is not backing away from them, all that stored pain suddenly has somewhere to go. That is when you realize how tired you have been. That is when you realize how much of your life has been spent managing yourself, defending yourself, correcting yourself, improving yourself, and apologizing for yourself, all while wondering whether God was standing nearby with folded arms waiting to see if you would finally become acceptable.
The real Jesus is not like that. He is holy. He is true. He does not play games with sin. He does not flatter people into destruction. But He is not cold. He is not irritated by human weakness. He is not fascinated with failure in the way shame is fascinated with failure. He is not standing over your life looking for a reason to reduce His mercy. He came close to broken people on purpose. He moved toward the kind of people respectable religion often moved away from. He did not treat pain like contamination. He did not treat sinners like a burden He regretted carrying. He did not save people reluctantly. He did not go to the cross with clenched teeth. Love was not an afterthought in Jesus. Love was the reason He came.
And yet I think many believers still live as if the cross opened the door for grace once, and now the rest depends on their performance. They would never say it that way because they know the words of faith too well. But they live that way. They live nervously. They live as if every setback has put them on thin ice with heaven. They live as if a bad week in their soul means Jesus has become emotionally distant. They live as if prayer is crawling back to Someone who has every right to be annoyed. They live as if they are tolerated, not loved. That kind of inner life wears a person down. It can make worship feel heavy. It can make repentance feel like humiliation instead of healing. It can make prayer sound formal because honesty feels too risky. It can make a person hide even while they are doing all the outward things that look faithful.
The sad thing is that some people have become so used to self-rejection that they think it is humility. They think staying harsh with themselves proves they are taking sin seriously. They think refusing comfort keeps them honest. They think suspicion toward their own soul is maturity. But endless self-contempt does not make a person holy. It makes them tired. It makes them guarded. It keeps them focused on themselves even when they think they are being spiritual. Shame has a way of disguising itself as depth, but it does not produce real life. It keeps a person circling the same pain without ever letting the love of Jesus say the final word.
There is a difference between conviction and condemnation, and most people know that in theory. Still, in private life, those two get tangled together more than we admit. Conviction is clean. It tells the truth and leads you toward God. Condemnation is heavy. It tells the truth in a way that leaves you stuck in yourself. Conviction has light in it. Condemnation has accusation in it. Conviction makes you want to turn back. Condemnation makes you want to disappear. Conviction says this is wrong, come closer. Condemnation says this is wrong, stay away. One leads to life. The other keeps the wound open.
The voice of Jesus has never sounded like hopelessness. It has never sounded like final rejection for those who come to Him. Strong, yes. Clear, yes. Piercing, sometimes. But never hopeless. Never the voice that tells you there is no point trying anymore. Never the voice that tells you your history has become your identity. Never the voice that whispers that other people may still be redeemable, but you have crossed some invisible line. That is not His voice. There are other voices in this world. There are voices from the past. Voices from fear. Voices from pain. Voices from pride. Voices from the enemy. Voices from people who were wounded themselves and then wounded others. Those voices can get so familiar that they begin to feel like the truth. But familiar is not the same as true.
I think some of the deepest healing begins when a person stops asking whether Jesus loves them in general and starts facing the harder question of why they keep resisting that love personally. That is where the real work often lives. Not in proving that Christ is loving. Scripture already says that plainly. Not in collecting more right answers. Many hurting people already have plenty of those. The real work is admitting, with painful honesty, that somewhere inside you there is still a locked door. There is still a place in you that believes tenderness cannot be trusted. There is still a wound that braces against kindness. There is still a part of you that would rather work harder than be loved freely because work feels more manageable than surrender.
That may sound strange to some people, but it is real. Earning feels safer than receiving when your heart has been hurt enough. Earning lets you keep control. It lets you tell yourself there is a system you can manage. If I pray enough, if I improve enough, if I say the right things, if I stop struggling, then I can finally relax. But receiving is different. Receiving asks you to stand there with empty hands. Receiving asks you to admit need. Receiving asks you to let Jesus be the one who carries the deeper burden. Receiving asks you to let love come before improvement. That is terrifying for many people because it feels too vulnerable. It feels too undeserved. It feels too good to trust.
But that is exactly where grace begins to become more than a word. Grace is not just God deciding not to punish you. Grace is God moving toward you with love you could not create, sustain, or deserve. Grace is not only rescue from hell one day. It is the daily mercy that keeps finding you in the places where you are still unfinished. Grace is the refusal of Jesus to let your worst day define His posture toward you. Grace is the steady heart of God when your own heart is unstable. Grace is not a theory for crisis moments alone. It is the atmosphere of the Christian life. Without it, people burn out trying to be worthy of a love they were only ever meant to receive.
I think about how many people are sitting in quiet rooms carrying things they have never said cleanly to another person. Some are carrying regret over how they treated someone they loved. Some are carrying the ache of years that did not turn out the way they thought. Some are carrying private habits that make them feel false. Some are carrying grief that has changed their body. Some are carrying loneliness that grows louder when the house gets still. Some are carrying the fear that they have wasted too much time. Some are carrying the humiliation of having known better and still making the same mistake again. These burdens do not always announce themselves in public. Often they make a person appear more put together because they have learned how to survive by tightening everything up.
That is another reason the love of Jesus matters so much. He does not only love the obvious brokenness. He also loves the hidden exhaustion. He does not only see the tears people show. He also sees the numbness they hide. He sees the person who is trying to keep everyone else comfortable while quietly falling apart inside. He sees the person who cannot remember the last time they felt fully rested in their soul. He sees the person who keeps pushing because stopping would mean feeling everything at once. He sees the person who has grown so used to carrying pain that they barely recognize it anymore. And He does not look at that person with impatience.
That may sound simple, but it is not small. The difference between being looked at with impatience and being looked at with compassion can change a life. Many people can endure pain, but what destroys them is the belief that their pain has made them irritating, inconvenient, or too much. That belief has crushed more hearts than many realize. A person may keep functioning for years while quietly thinking, I am too much. My needs are too much. My weakness is too much. My sadness is too much. My history is too much. My inconsistency is too much. Then along comes the love of Jesus, and what it says is almost impossible to believe at first. It says you are not too much for Me. I knew all of this before I called you Mine. I am not surprised by your humanity. I am not waiting for you to become less needy before I care for you. I came for people exactly like this.
I know there are some who hear that and immediately worry it sounds too soft. They worry that emphasizing the love of Jesus this strongly will make people casual about sin. But people who have truly been loved by Christ do not become casual. They become honest. They become grateful. They become more willing to come into the light because they are no longer convinced the light exists to destroy them. Fear can force temporary behavior. Love goes deeper than that. Love changes why a person turns. Love changes the posture of repentance. It is one thing to crawl back to God because you are terrified. It is another thing to fall at His feet because your heart has finally realized He is better than the thing that was killing you.
That kind of repentance is not shallow. It is not lenient. It is often more painful because it is more honest. It is one thing to admit that something is wrong because the consequences scared you. It is another thing to admit it because you have finally seen how far you have lived beneath the love that was meant for you. When a person really begins to believe that Jesus loves them, sin stops being only a rule problem. It becomes a relationship wound. It becomes the thing that kept them from resting in the One who never stopped moving toward them. That is why the love of Christ does not weaken holiness. It deepens it. It makes holiness feel less like performance and more like returning home.
There is a tenderness in Jesus that many people have not truly allowed into their lives. I do not mean sentiment. I do not mean a soft-focus idea of God that never tells the truth. I mean real tenderness. The kind that can sit with a person in their confusion without reducing truth. The kind that can meet a person in shame without joining the shame. The kind that does not panic when confronted with human mess. The kind that can touch the very thing everybody else avoids. The kind that can look at the place in you that even you have trouble loving and still say, I am not leaving.
That is where I want to leave this first part, because some people do not need ten more arguments right now. They need a minute to sit with one possibility that feels almost too kind to be true. The possibility is that Jesus has not been standing far off from the worst parts of your story. The possibility is that He has been closer than you knew in the places where you felt most ashamed. The possibility is that the thing you keep trying to hide may be the very place where His mercy has been trying to reach you most deeply. The possibility is that your struggle has never once changed His willingness to come near.
Maybe that is the hardest part for many of us. Not admitting we need Him. Most people know that on some level. The hardest part is letting Him love us without making Him pass through all of our defenses first. The hardest part is allowing His kindness to be stronger than our suspicion. The hardest part is letting grace be grace and not another project we try to manage. The hardest part is believing that when Jesus says come to Me, He means now, not later. He means tired, not improved. He means honest, not impressive. He means you.
And maybe you have not known what to do with that. Maybe you have been waiting to feel more deserving before you let those words get too close. Maybe you have been waiting for some cleaner season of life before you let yourself rest in them. Maybe you have been telling yourself you will deal with all of that once things calm down, once your faith feels stronger, once your mind is clearer, once your habits improve, once your heart gets less complicated. But maybe what you need is not one more delay. Maybe what you need is the kind of stillness that finally lets you hear what has been true the whole time.
Jesus loves you in the places where you still feel hard to love.
And if that sentence does not slide down easy, that may not mean it is false. It may mean it is reaching a wound.
There is something painful about realizing that the love you have wanted most may also be the love you have had the hardest time receiving. That is not because the love of Jesus is weak or unclear. It is because people can spend so many years building small inner protections that they no longer know when they are protecting themselves from the wrong thing. They know how to brace. They know how to keep one part of the heart out of reach. They know how to stay busy enough to avoid the quiet. They know how to tell the story in a way that keeps the deepest part hidden. They know how to act like everything is fine even when something inside has been aching for a very long time. That kind of guardedness can become so normal that it starts to feel like personality. It starts to feel like wisdom. It starts to feel like maturity. But sometimes it is just survival that never learned how to stop.
I think that is why some of the most exhausted people are not the ones doing the heaviest visible work. They are the ones carrying a private argument with themselves all day long. They are correcting themselves, shaming themselves, warning themselves, pushing themselves, and measuring themselves from the moment they wake up. Even when nobody else is being hard on them, they are already doing that work from the inside. They do not need an outside accuser because one has already moved into the room. They know how to smile and keep going, but they do not know how to be at peace. They know how to stay productive, but they do not know how to rest without guilt. They know how to ask Jesus for help in a general sense, but they have not yet learned how to let His love interrupt the harsh way they have been speaking to themselves for years.
That is more common than people admit. There are believers who would never deny Christ, but they deny His tenderness every day by the way they live with themselves. They keep assuming He must be standing where their own shame is standing. They keep imagining that He is agreeing with the worst thing they think about themselves. They keep treating their failures as if those failures revealed a deeper truth about who they are than the cross ever did. That is not small. That is a serious wound in the inner life. When a person keeps letting shame preach louder than grace, they may still call themselves a Christian, but they are living under a voice that Jesus never gave them.
I know this can get misunderstood, so it is worth slowing down here. Receiving the love of Jesus does not mean pretending sin is not serious. It does not mean calling darkness light. It does not mean acting as if truth is optional. It does not mean becoming soft in the wrong places. What it means is finally allowing the heart of Christ to define the ground you stand on while He changes you. It means you stop trying to climb into holiness through self-hatred. It means you stop acting like disgust with yourself is the same thing as repentance. It means you stop believing that the more severely you punish yourself inside, the more sincere your faith must be. None of that heals a person. It just keeps them staring at themselves in the dark.
Jesus never told people to fix themselves in isolation and then come back when they had become less complicated. He called people while they were still tangled up. He moved toward people with histories. He sat with people whose names carried stories that others used against them. He looked into lives that were full of damage, confusion, compromise, grief, pride, fear, and failure, and somehow His nearness did not become less holy because of their condition. It revealed holiness in its truest form. Real holiness does not run from what is broken. It enters the broken place and tells the truth with enough love to make restoration possible.
That can be hard to accept when much of your life has taught you that closeness disappears the moment your flaws become clear. A lot of people have known what it feels like to be welcomed while they are useful and then slowly held at a distance once their weakness becomes inconvenient. They know what it is to feel easier to love when they are performing well. They know what it is to sense the room change after they disappoint someone. They know what it is to watch patience wear thin. Those experiences leave marks. They teach the heart to stay alert. They teach the soul to expect that failure will cost you warmth. Then someone tells you Jesus loves you, and you quietly place Him into the same category as everybody else without even realizing you have done it.
That is one reason many people do not truly rest in Him. They visit Him. They speak to Him. They ask Him for things. They try to obey Him. But they do not rest. Rest would mean believing that His heart is not shifting around based on whether they have had a good week. Rest would mean trusting that He is not one mistake away from emotional distance. Rest would mean letting the cross matter more than the mood they woke up in. Rest would mean stopping the endless private audition. And for some people, the idea of no longer auditioning for love feels almost dangerous because they do not know who they would be without that pressure.
Some people have lived so long under pressure that they think it is what keeps them decent. They think if they ever loosened the grip, the whole life would fall apart. They think if they ever stopped driving themselves with fear, they would become careless. They think if they ever received too much mercy, they would stop growing. But that is not how the love of Jesus works. His mercy is not a sedative. It is oxygen. It does not make a person lazy. It makes them able to live. It gives strength where shame only gave panic. It gives direction where self-hatred only gave noise. It gives a reason to keep going that is rooted in something deeper than fear of failure.
There is also something else that needs to be said, because some people listening to this kind of truth feel a strange resistance rising in them. They do not always know what it is, but it is there. Part of them wants the love of Jesus. Part of them longs for it. Part of them is tired of carrying everything alone. Yet another part of them keeps stepping back. I think sometimes that resistance comes from the fact that receiving deep love threatens the identity we built around pain. When you have lived a long time feeling rejected, overlooked, or not enough, those things do not just hurt you. They start shaping how you understand yourself. They become familiar. They become part of the story you tell about who you are and what to expect from life. Then the love of Jesus comes near and quietly says that your pain is real, but it is not your deepest name. That can feel disorienting. Healing always is, at least at first.
A lot of people think they want change until change starts asking them to release the old ways they learned to survive. It is one thing to want relief. It is another thing to let go of the old scripts that have been living in your mind for years. It is one thing to say you want to be loved. It is another thing to let love correct the harsh story you have believed about yourself for half your life. That is why this process can feel slower and more personal than people expect. Jesus is not only helping you with what you did. He is also dealing with what shaped you, what wounded you, what taught you to distrust goodness, and what made you feel like grace could not possibly be for someone like you.
That work often happens quietly. It does not always come through one dramatic moment. Sometimes it happens a little at a time. A thought you once believed without question starts sounding less true. A memory that once only produced shame starts being held in a different light. A prayer that used to feel forced starts becoming more honest. You begin noticing how often you assume rejection before it arrives. You begin hearing the tone you use toward yourself and realizing it sounds nothing like Jesus. You begin to see that much of your inner life has been built around fear, and that fear has been wearing a spiritual mask. Those moments matter. They may not look impressive from the outside, but they are the kind of deep changes that begin to loosen old chains.
What often surprises people is how ordinary the setting can be when the love of Jesus finally starts reaching them in a deeper way. It is not always during some huge spiritual experience. Sometimes it happens while driving alone and feeling tired of your own thoughts. Sometimes it happens in the middle of washing dishes when the house is quiet and a sentence lands in your chest with more force than expected. Sometimes it happens after another hard day when you finally stop trying to sound strong in prayer. Sometimes it happens when you are too exhausted to say much at all and all you manage is a few broken words. Sometimes that is the very place where His love gets through, because the performance is gone and all that is left is the truth.
Truth has a way of inviting Jesus closer. Not polished truth. Not cleaned-up truth. Not truth edited for appearance. Honest truth. The kind that says I am tired. I am ashamed. I am afraid. I do not know why I keep doing this. I do not know why I feel this way. I do not know how to get out of this pattern. I do not know how to forgive myself. I do not know how to receive what You keep trying to give me. That kind of prayer may not sound impressive, but it is real. And Jesus has always done well with real.
I think many people delay healing because they keep trying to bring Jesus a better version of themselves instead of bringing Him the truest one. They keep editing before they surrender. They keep trying to improve before they come close. They keep waiting until the mind is calmer, the habit is weaker, the shame is less sharp, the faith feels cleaner, the words sound better. But if you wait until you feel ready to be honestly loved, you may wait for years. Readiness is not usually what opens the door. Honesty does. Need does. Surrender does. The quiet admission that you cannot keep saving yourself from your own heart does.
There is a kind of sadness that comes from spending years trying to be enough for everyone while secretly feeling like you are not enough for anyone. Some people know that sadness very well. It follows them into friendships, into marriage, into work, into family life, and into prayer. They can be deeply loved and still not know how to believe it. They can be appreciated and still feel disposable. They can be affirmed and still hear a deeper accusation underneath everything. It is like trying to pour clean water into a cracked container. Good things come in, but they do not stay long. Before long the old voice starts speaking again, and the person is back in the familiar place of self-doubt, self-judgment, and emotional distance.
That is why the love of Jesus has to become more than a nice line we repeat. It has to become something we let challenge the old inner system. It has to become something we return to when the mind starts slipping back into old paths. It has to become stronger than the reflex to condemn ourselves before anybody else has a chance. It has to become the place where we stand when our emotions are unreliable. This is not because feelings do not matter. They do. But feelings are not always leaders. Sometimes they are weather. Sometimes they tell the truth. Sometimes they reveal pain that needs attention. Sometimes they simply pass through and try to name the whole landscape when they are only one passing storm. The love of Jesus is steadier than weather.
There are people who feel close to God only when their emotions cooperate. If they feel full, they believe He is near. If they feel cold, they assume He has pulled back. If they feel peace, they trust. If they feel anxious, they doubt everything. That is a hard way to live because human hearts are not stable enough to carry that kind of authority. There are too many factors. Lack of sleep can darken a whole day. Grief can flatten joy for a season. Stress can make even simple prayer feel difficult. Physical fatigue can make a person feel spiritually dull. None of those things change the heart of Jesus. They may affect your experience, but they do not rewrite His love.
Some people need permission to stop treating every low emotional day like a spiritual crisis. Not every tired day means you are far from God. Not every numb prayer means your faith is failing. Not every dry season means heaven has gone quiet in anger. Human beings are not machines. You are not expected to feel the same every day. Sometimes the strongest faith in the room is not loud. Sometimes it is just a tired person turning toward Jesus one more time without much feeling, because something deep down knows He is still good. That matters. It matters more than people realize.
I think Jesus loves the small turnings more than we understand. The quiet prayer. The honest confession. The decision not to run. The moment you stop hiding and tell Him the truth. The moment you choose not to believe the cruelest thought in your head. The moment you come back after failing again. The moment you admit that what you are really afraid of is being fully seen. Those moments may look small to the world, but they are not small in the life of the soul. They are often the places where love starts doing its deepest work.
That work changes people in ways that are hard to fake. A person who is beginning to receive the love of Jesus becomes less interested in pretending. They become more patient with other people because they are no longer living under a constant private threat. They become more honest because shame is losing its grip. They become more able to apologize without collapsing because their whole worth is no longer hanging on never being wrong. They become more able to face their own darkness because they are not doing it alone. Love makes truth bearable. Love makes growth possible. Love creates the kind of inner steadiness that fear never could.
And yet none of this means the process is always smooth. Sometimes receiving the love of Jesus will bring old grief up with it. Sometimes it will show you how long you have been living under voices that never came from Him. Sometimes it will uncover how much of your life has been shaped by rejection, or pressure, or religious performance, or fear of disappointing people, or the ache of never feeling chosen. Those discoveries can hurt. They can make a person cry over things they thought they were long past. They can make a person realize that they have spent years trying to earn from God what Christ was already offering them freely. There is grief in that. But even that grief can become holy when it happens in the presence of Someone who is not condemning you for how long it took.
One of the hardest things to admit is that some of us have been more comfortable striving than being loved. Striving feels active. It feels measurable. It lets you believe progress is in your hands. Being loved is different. Being loved asks you to stop long enough to let another heart speak over yours. Being loved asks you to trust what you did not produce. Being loved asks you to receive before you prove. That is humbling. It confronts pride in a quiet way. It also confronts fear, because the moment you receive love you are no longer in full control of the story you tell yourself.
Maybe that is why some people resist gentle truth more than strong warning. Warning fits the harsh world they already know. Gentleness feels risky because it could get past the armor. It could make them soft in places they have worked hard to keep protected. It could bring tears they have postponed. It could expose the hunger under all the effort. It could reveal that beneath all the performance, all the staying busy, all the trying to hold it together, there is still a human heart that wants to be held by God without first becoming impressive.
That hunger is not weakness. It is part of being human. We were not made to live on achievement alone. We were not made to carry shame like a second skin. We were not made to build an identity out of our failures. We were not made to hide from the very One who formed us. The soul was made for God in a way nothing else can satisfy. Not success. Not attention. Not control. Not trying harder. Not numbing out. Not proving people wrong. Not staying productive enough to avoid thinking. None of those things can do what the love of Jesus does when it finally gets into the places where we live for real.
And when it does get in, something begins to soften. Not in a weak way. In a true way. The person starts becoming less divided. The outside and the inside stop being strangers. Prayer becomes less of a speech and more of an encounter. Obedience becomes less of an image project and more of a response to love. Even grief changes shape when it is held inside the faithfulness of Christ. The pain may still be real. The struggle may still be real. The healing may still take time. But the person is no longer facing those things from the same place. They are no longer trying to survive them without being loved.
I think many of us are more afraid of being fully known than we are of being in pain. Pain is familiar. Being fully known is vulnerable. Pain asks you to endure. Being fully known asks you to trust. That is why some people stay stuck in patterns that hurt them. At least the pattern is familiar. At least the loneliness is familiar. At least the shame is familiar. At least the voice in their head, as cruel as it is, sounds like home. Then Jesus comes near with love that does not sound like any of it, and the soul does not know what to do at first. It wants peace, but peace has a different voice than the one it has been living under.
This is where many people need patience with themselves. Not indulgence. Not excuses. Patience. The kind that understands healing is often uneven. The kind that knows old patterns do not disappear because you read one comforting sentence. The kind that lets grace be present while change is still unfolding. Some people hear truth like this and immediately turn it into another standard they are failing to meet. Now they are ashamed that they are not receiving the love of Jesus correctly enough. That is how twisted shame can be. It takes even healing words and tries to turn them into a new accusation. But Jesus does not work that way. He is patient while He is true. He is steady while He is honest. He knows how slowly some hearts have learned to trust. He is not surprised by the time it takes.
That patience matters, especially for people who are used to measuring themselves all the time. There are people who can barely enjoy a good day because they are already evaluating it. They are already deciding whether they did enough, whether they handled things well enough, whether they were spiritual enough, productive enough, kind enough, disciplined enough. They do not know how to just be with Jesus without turning it into an internal review. The love of Christ interrupts that. It says your value did not begin this morning. It says you are not building your worth from scratch every day. It says you are not the sum of your latest performance. It says there is a deeper ground beneath your feet than the way you have been scoring yourself.
I think some of the most life-giving words a person can hear are not always complicated. Sometimes they are simple enough to almost sound too plain. Jesus is still here. Jesus has not changed His mind about you. Jesus is not standing far away waiting for you to become easier to love. Jesus is not ashamed to be seen with the real version of you. Jesus is not trying to decide whether your weakness has become too inconvenient. Jesus is not offering love today and taking it back tomorrow. Jesus is not confused about who you are. He knows. He has always known. And that is exactly why His love means what it means.
That last part matters. He has always known. There is such comfort in that, if we let it in. Jesus does not discover your flaws later and then need time to rethink His mercy. He does not uncover your struggle and then adjust His kindness downward. Nothing about you is arriving as breaking news in heaven. He knew what He was embracing when He came for you. He knew the whole road. He knew the things that would take time. He knew the places that would hurt. He knew the patterns that would need undoing. He knew the fear. He knew the pride. He knew the shame. He knew the parts that would hide. And still He came. Still He stayed. Still He loved.
When that truth begins to sink in, it changes the way a person gets up after falling. They stop acting like every failure means starting the whole relationship over. They stop crawling back as if they are reintroducing themselves to a reluctant God. They begin to understand that repentance is not walking into an unfamiliar room. It is turning back toward the same mercy that was already there. That does not make sin light. It makes mercy strong. It gives the person hope that they can be honest without being destroyed. And that hope is powerful. Hopeless people hide. Hopeful people come into the light.
There is also a strength that comes from finally letting yourself be loved by Jesus in a real way. It is not flashy strength. It is not the loud kind people notice right away. It is quieter than that. It is the strength of a person who is no longer living on the edge of self-rejection. It is the strength of a person who can face pain without making pain their identity. It is the strength of a person who can hear correction without believing they are worthless. It is the strength of a person who can keep walking through a hard season without secretly assuming God has abandoned them. It is the strength of being rooted in something steadier than your own shifting thoughts.
That kind of rootedness does not make you less human. It makes you more human. It makes you more honest. It makes you more compassionate. It makes you less hungry for constant proof from other people because you are no longer trying to fill the deepest place in your life with what only Christ can give. It lets you care about others without losing yourself. It lets you serve without secretly hoping service will purchase worth. It lets you love people with more freedom because your soul is no longer begging them to settle something only Jesus can settle.
And maybe that is part of why this matters so much. The love of Jesus is not just about comfort in private pain, though it is that. It also changes what kind of presence you become in the lives of others. People who are learning to be loved by Christ usually become safer people. Not perfect people. Safer people. Less harsh. Less performative. Less reactive. Less eager to make others pay for their own unhealed wounds. They know what it is to need mercy, so they stop acting like mercy is beneath them. They know what it is to be carried, so they stop living as if everybody has to earn a place in the room. That matters in families. It matters in friendships. It matters in churches. It matters everywhere.
Still, before any of that reaches outward, it has to land inward. It has to meet you where you are, not where you wish you were. It has to find you in the version of life you actually have. The tired version. The grieving version. The disappointed version. The trying-again version. The numb version. The version that still loves Jesus and still struggles to believe He is not tired of them. That is where grace has to become personal, or it will remain only an idea.
So maybe tonight, or this afternoon, or early tomorrow when the house is still quiet, do not try to manufacture some perfect spiritual moment. Just tell the truth. Tell Jesus what it has felt like to live inside your own mind lately. Tell Him where you have been ashamed. Tell Him where you have been afraid. Tell Him where you have been pretending. Tell Him where you have been tired of trying to hold yourself together. Tell Him where you still do not know how to receive His love. Tell Him where you still expect rejection. Tell Him where you have been hiding in plain sight. He already knows. You are not informing Him. You are opening the door.
And when you do, do not rush past the quiet too quickly. Sometimes the most important thing is not saying more. It is staying there long enough to notice that He has not left. That may not sound dramatic, but for many people it is exactly the miracle they need. Not a spectacle. Not an emotional explosion. Just the steady realization that Jesus is still there in the honest place. Still there in the worn place. Still there in the place you thought would make Him pull away. Still there with compassion. Still there with truth. Still there with the kind of love that does not flatter you and does not abandon you either.
That is the love I hope settles into your bones. Not the thin version. Not the decorative version. Not the version that only sounds good when life is going smoothly. I mean the real thing. The love of Jesus that can sit with a person in their private ache and not look away. The love of Jesus that sees your whole life and does not reduce you to the worst line in the story. The love of Jesus that does not excuse darkness but is strong enough to lead you out of it. The love of Jesus that keeps reaching for you when you are too tired to do much more than whisper His name.
If you have been living like you are hard to love, I hope this truth follows you after you finish reading. I hope it finds you when the old voice comes back. I hope it interrupts the way you talk to yourself. I hope it reaches you before shame has time to build its case. I hope it comes to mind when you feel tempted to hide again. I hope it stands beside you in the ordinary places, in the kitchen, in the car, in the bedroom late at night, in the moment after another disappointment, in the silence after another hard day. I hope you begin to notice that Jesus is not only Lord over your future. He is gentle enough for your present.
You do not need to become less needy before you come close. You do not need to become less complicated before you are loved. You do not need to become less human before grace applies. The whole point is that Jesus meets people in the place where they cannot rescue themselves. That is not where His love stops. That is where it begins to feel most necessary. And maybe that is what makes it so beautiful in the end. He does not only love the cleaned-up life you wish you could show Him. He loves you in the real place. He loves you in the unfinished place. He loves you in the place where you are still learning how to believe that could possibly be true.
So let this stay simple now. Let it stay close to the ground. Let it be something you can carry into an ordinary day and not just admire from a distance. Jesus loves you. He loves you when your thoughts are heavy. He loves you when you are disappointed in yourself. He loves you when the old shame tries to return. He loves you when prayer feels easy and when prayer feels hard. He loves you while you are healing. He loves you while you are still untangling old pain. He loves you while you are learning how to stop running. He loves you while you are still becoming. He loves you in the places where you still feel hardest to love.
And that is not a small thing. That is not sentimental. That is not weak. That is the kind of truth that can keep a person from collapsing under the weight of their own inner life. That is the kind of truth that can help someone breathe again. That is the kind of truth that can bring a weary heart back into the light one honest step at a time. The love of Jesus is not fragile. It is not passing through. It is not confused. It is not temporary. It is strong enough to hold the truth about you and still remain love.
So the next time that old fear rises and tells you that you have become too much, too late, too damaged, too disappointing, too stuck, too hard to reach, answer it with something steadier than your feelings. Answer it with the heart of Christ. Answer it with the mercy that has already outlived every failure you can remember. Answer it with the cross. Answer it with the quiet but stubborn truth that Jesus already knows everything and stayed anyway.
Maybe that is the sentence your soul has needed all along.
He already knows everything and stayed anyway.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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fromjunia
Unitarian Universalism teaches of the interdependent web. That every action revibrates widely to every other person, that no action is isolated either in cause or effect. In other words, responsibility is distributed, and there are no bystanders.
If I am caught in this web, how responsible can I be for my anorexia? I have felt that I am completely responsible. I chose to go along with it.
This teaching challenges me to reconsider that feeling. What was everyone else doing? How did society fail to protect me? How did it encourage me? How did my family contribute? What strings attached to me pulled me to Ana? I walked some of the way, but I was pulled too.
I do not feel I can care about being pulled, because I cannot control that. If responsibility is distributed then it is not mine, and if most of my life is me being pulled then my primary response is to feel and respond to those feelings. That strikes me as useless, because I become a responder and not an agent. The interdependent web is the rejection of my agency as articulated through atomistic models. But the trauma-informed—the factual—account is that my body is not a primary agent, and that it acts at a magnitude that dwarfs my ego. My ego seeks safety through agency. I’ve seen how that safety plays out.
The weird thing is that my ego-safety is not the important safety. It matters, but not as much as bodily-felt safety. And, unfortunately, I can’t independently act to secure my way to body-safety. I have to rely on others. I am vulnerable. That’s a fact that my body feels, no matter what my ego wants.
Maybe it’s self-confirming, but the interdependent web seems like another mark for pessimism. I need safety, and I cannot secure it on my own. I am vulnerable to the actions of others, no matter what I do, same as everyone else. We need things we cannot guarantee. And we’re an ego stapled to an animal body, where most the happenings occur in the body and the ego constantly struggles to find its place. The reality of being a human is bleak.
But pessimism is the truth that sets us free from the idolatry of the future, and it does so again here. There is no future where I can be invulnerable. Ana is an optimist: She says there can be a secure future through metering intake and narrowing the scope of the world to control of my body. No, that’s a lie. Ana can’t provide me safety. I am interdependent with every other soul. I am now, and always will be, vulnerable, and nothing I do can change that. I can only respond to it.
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Turbulences
Hé, boule à facette ! Aurais-tu perdu la tête ?
Mais où est-il donc passé, ton sens de la fête ?
Fractures, tourments, dérives des continents,
Et puis, tout ces murs, qui séparent tes enfants…
