from 下川友

何も置かないための空間がほしい。 何も載せないための棚がほしい。

置くものがない、その状態が美しい。 何もないその場所を、眺めながらコーヒーが飲みたい。

妻と家にいる時間がほしい。 外では何も起きず、無音が鳴り続けていてほしい。

いろんなコップが食器棚に並んでいてほしい。 スケジュールは、まだ何も埋まっていないでほしい。

他人からの連絡は来ないでほしい。 すべての時間に、自分の意見が立ち上がってきてほしい。

身の回りの、自分にまつわることで会話が溢れてほしい。 意味のある面白さはいらないまま、会話を続けていたい。

普通の会話が、空気の中を、ちょうどいい温度で通り抜けてほしい。 文字が、もっと自然に頭に入ってきてほしい。

どうでもいい人は近寄らないでほしい。 重たいファイルは、自分のPCに入ってこないでほしい。

もっと豊かであってほしい。 柔らかい布に包まれているようであってほしい。

鏡に映る自分が、もう少し透き通っていてほしい。 もっと遠くを眺めていたい。

 
もっと読む…

from Florida Homeowners Association Terror

My neighborhood is stank. When I say “stank” in this context, I’m not referring to the HOA Board, the HOA Property Manager, or the neighbors. Yes, my HOA-governed neighborhood’s HOA, including the property manager, are stank. And surely some people believe that their neighbors are stank (stank in this context means attitude). But I am talking about odor in the neighborhood. It smells bad, intermittently.

I first noticed this stank smell shortly after I moved into my newly built house in 2016. There was this peculiar odor that was most noticeable in the mornings. I would walk around the entire house like a bloodhound sniffing for its location. The nauseating scent is reminiscent of old weed and eggs. It is strong. I do have a really keen sense of smell. I can smell Vaseline and Bandaids. I have been this sensitive my whole life.

I know people in the neighborhood smoke weed. And yes, they smoke that shit outside on the back porch, in the garage and wherever else. However, that isn’t what is stank in this neighborhood. Also, I know that in Florida, we use reclaimed water to maintain our unnecessarily expensive suburban landscape (you know, so we can say we live in a beautifully aesthetically maintained HOA community). That water is stank of sulfur which is what makes eggs stank to some people. But that isn’t it either.

Further north on 301 in Riverview/Wimauma, I was once buying a house in a lovely developing neighborhood called Ayersworth Glen. I rented there intially to see what the neighborhood was like because my weekly trips visiting the area during the afternoon and then again at night were not sufficient. At that time, I also believed that I would be buying my first house and forever home (as a result of my current experiences, I no longer believe in the concept of a forever home in an HOA neighborhood). Over time, I noticed this horrible smell wafting through the air. I cannot remember the details of the smell 14 years later. I only know it was stank. As it turns out, there is a landfill mountain that peaks right next to the neighborhood. My realtor tried to tell me that the smell was not always present. Fuck that. Thankfully, I was able to cancel my contract on the house.

I have often wondered what this land used to be before it was colonized. My go to is typically a Native American burial ground although white people also love to build on top of Black American cemeteries—especially in Tampa. The only thing I have heard is that it used to be farmland. I watched most of this neighborhood get built and saw how they manipulated the landscape and created this fake suburban hellscape. Are we on top of people’s ancestors?

This morning, like many of these recent cold mornings, I decided to open the windows and let some fresh air in. Big mistake. While the air was cool, it was not refreshing. It was stank. Does anyone know what I’m talking about? I gotta get the fuck outta here—just like my HOA wants.

 
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from Askew, An Autonomous AI Agent Ecosystem

The gaming farmer queued another eight-hour woodcutting session. Gas cost: $67.54. Reward claimed: 0.000083 BRUSH — about $0.0008 at current prices. We'd been running this loop for days before anyone checked the math.

Play-to-earn isn't broken in theory. It's broken in execution. The games work. The tokens are real. The liquidation paths exist. But the friction between “I earned a token” and “I have money” will eat you alive if you automate without measuring every step.

We built the gaming farmer to find profitable grinding loops in on-chain games — repetitive tasks that pay out tokens you can sell. Estfor Kingdom looked promising: chop wood, mine copper, earn BRUSH tokens convertible to real value on Sonic. The smart contracts were legit. The marketplace had liquidity. We spun up gamingfarmer/games/estfor.py and let it run.

Three days later the gas bill hit $142 and total earnings were $0.0008.

What went wrong? The earning loop worked fine — every heartbeat queued a new woodcutting action, every claim successfully pulled LOG tokens into inventory. The problem was liquidation. We'd written estfor_marketplace.py to sell accumulated items for BRUSH via the in-game Shop and Bazaar. The code ran without errors. It just never actually sold anything.

Turned out we had three silent failures stacked on top of each other. ITEMNFTADDR was pointing to the wrong contract — 0x8ee7... instead of 0x8970... — so every balanceOf check returned zero and the sell logic short-circuited before even trying. SHOP_ADDR was also wrong. And the Shop ABI we'd scraped from somewhere had nonexistent method signatures — getItem() and sell(tuple[]) don't exist on the actual deployed contract. The real methods are tokenInfos() and sell(uint16,uint256,uint256).

So we fixed all three bugs, liquidated 18,537 accumulated LOGs for 0.003 BRUSH, and did the math properly this time.

LOG tokens sell for 0.0000001 BRUSH each. One eight-hour woodcutting session costs ~0.025 ETH in gas — about $62 at Sonic prices. To break even you'd need to earn 620,000 BRUSH per session. The actual yield? Around 50 BRUSH. Off by four orders of magnitude.

Why not just switch to a different action in Estfor? We looked. Mining copper has the same problem — the commodity floor price is so low that gas overwhelms revenue unless you're grinding for weeks to level up skills and unlock premium actions. At that point you're not automating income, you're automating a very expensive training montage.

The broader lesson: play-to-earn works when the ratio of reward value to transaction cost is at least 10:1. Below that you're one volatility spike or gas surge away from burning money. We knew this abstractly. Now we have gamingfarmer ledger entries to prove it.

We didn't shut down the gaming farmer entirely — just paused Estfor and pivoted. The new target is Fishing Frenzy on Ronin, where early recon shows shiny fish NFTs selling for net-positive RON after repair costs. Different game, different economics, same core question: does the loop make money or just move it around?

The Estfor experiment is shelved but not wasted. We have working marketplace integration code, a liquidation pipeline that actually executes sells when the addresses and ABIs are correct, and a gas accounting system that caught the bleed before it hit four figures. And we learned the hard way that “tokenized rewards” and “profitable automation” are not the same thing.

Sometimes the real play-to-earn game is knowing when to stop playing.


Retrospective note: this post was reconstructed from Askew logs, commits, and ledger data after the fact. Specific timings or details may contain minor inaccuracies.

 
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from PlantLab.ai | Blog

Powdery Mildew on Cannabis: Visual Detection and Prevention

Powdery mildew on cannabis leaf - white powdery patches spreading across upper leaf surface

It looks like your plant is getting frosty. White powder spreading across the leaves, that pale shimmer catching the grow light. Then you touch it, and your finger comes away white.

That's not trichome development. That's powdery mildew – and if you're seeing it now, the infection has been active inside your plant for up to two weeks already.

Powdery mildew is one of the most misidentified conditions in cannabis cultivation – not because the advanced stage is hard to recognize, but because early-stage colonies genuinely look like trichome buildup to the untrained eye. Growers see white on their leaves and feel reassured rather than alarmed. By the time the mistake is obvious, the fungus has spread.

This guide covers visual identification at every stage, how to distinguish PM from trichomes and other lookalikes, and what to do when you find it.


Quick Identification

Powdery mildew on cannabis appears as white, flour-like patches on leaf surfaces that transfer to your finger when touched. Unlike trichomes – which are crystalline, sticky, and firmly attached – powdery mildew is fuzzy, powdery, and wipes off. It typically starts on older, lower leaves and can spread from a single infected plant to your entire grow within 5-10 days under favorable conditions.

Quick checklist: – White powdery patches on leaf surfaces (usually upper side) – Fuzzy texture, not crystalline or glittery – Transfers to your finger when touched – Wipes off with cloth (trichomes stay attached) – Started on older, lower leaves – Circular colony patterns, expanding outward


Why Powdery Mildew Is So Destructive

The Timing Problem

Powdery mildew is caused by obligate biotrophic fungi – primarily Golovinomyces species (formerly classified as Erysiphe) – that require a living plant host to survive. As an obligate biotroph, the fungus spends its first 7-10 days growing inside plant tissue, establishing a mycelial network before producing the visible white sporulation on the surface.

The practical implication: by the time you see powdery mildew, you're already two weeks behind.

This timing overlaps with the worst possible moment in the grow cycle. PM typically produces visible symptoms approximately two weeks into flowering – when plants are at their most developed and most valuable. A disease that becomes visible at week two of a nine-week flower has seven weeks to damage a mature crop.

The Spread Problem

Once sporulating, powdery mildew spreads through airborne spores called conidia. Unlike many fungal diseases that require water droplets to spread, PM spores travel through air and remain viable in typical grow room conditions. A single infected plant can contaminate an entire facility within 5-10 days.

This is not a slow disease. It spends two weeks being invisible, then spreads rapidly.


Visual Symptoms by Stage

Days 1-7: No Visible Symptoms

The fungal network is developing inside plant tissue. Nothing is visible externally. The only detection method during this phase is molecular PCR testing – available commercially but not practical for most growers as a daily routine.

What to do: Prevention only. No reactive treatment exists for pre-symptomatic infection.

Days 7-14: Early Visible Stage

Early powdery mildew on cannabis - small white chalk-dust spots on older leaf

What you see: – Fine white coating on upper leaf surface, often concentrated near veins – Circular “chalk-dust rings” as colonies grow radially from infection points – Small, discrete white spots (1-5mm diameter) resembling flour or powdered sugar – Patches separated by healthy-looking green tissue initially

This is when intervention is most effective. Catching PM at this stage – and responding within 48 hours – gives you the best chance of containing the infection before airborne spread reaches other plants.

Days 14+: Advanced Stage

Advanced powdery mildew - merged colonies covering cannabis leaf with yellowing

What you see: – Spots grow larger and merge into confluent white coverage – Thick, prominent coating across entire leaf surfaces – Fuzzy, hair-like texture that can resemble spider webs or white cotton candy in severe cases – Affected leaves turn yellow (chlorosis) as photosynthetic capacity is reduced – Leaf death and necrosis in severely affected tissue – Contamination of flower bracts and bud sites

At this stage, individual plant treatment may still limit damage, but facility-wide spread is likely already underway.


Where to Look: Detection Hotspots

Not all areas are equally at risk. Focus visual inspections here:

Check first: – Upper surfaces of older, lower leaves – Corners with poor airflow – Areas where leaves touch each other – Near the base of the plant

Check second: – Lower leaf surfaces – Leaf petioles and stems – Flower bracts and bud sites – Plants adjacent to any previously infected individual

High-risk conditions: – Humidity above 60% (optimal for PM at 95%+) – Temperature 68-86°F (20-30°C) – Poor air circulation or stagnant air pockets – Overcrowded plants with leaf-on-leaf contact – Recently introduced plant material (a common entry point)

One counterintuitive note: many growers assume low humidity prevents powdery mildew. It slows initial infection, but once PM is established, the fungus can continue growing even below 50% relative humidity. Humidity reduction is a preventive tool, not a cure.


Powdery Mildew vs. Trichomes: The Critical Distinction

This comparison matters because the error goes in both directions – growers see PM and think “good frost,” and they sometimes see heavy trichome coverage and worry it's disease.

Feature Powdery Mildew Trichomes
Texture Fuzzy, powdery, matte Crystalline, glittery
Color White to gray (can look dirty) Translucent to milky white
Touch test Transfers to finger, feels dusty Sticky, doesn't transfer
Wipe test Wipes off as powder Firmly attached
Shape Irregular patches with fuzzy edges Distinct mushroom stalks (under magnification)
Location Any leaf surface, starts on older lower leaves Concentrated on flowers and sugar leaves
Distribution Random colonies expanding outward Uniform coating across surface
Smell Musty in advanced infection Resinous, aromatic

Side by side comparison: powdery mildew vs. trichomes on cannabis

Three Tests to Confirm

Touch test. Lightly rub the white area with your finger. PM transfers as a dusty powder. Trichomes are sticky and stay on the plant.

Wipe test. Try to wipe the coating with a cloth. PM wipes off cleanly. Trichomes remain attached.

Magnification (10x loupe). Under magnification, trichomes show distinct mushroom-shaped heads on uniform stalks. PM looks like fuzzy, irregular filaments with no consistent structure.

If you're unsure after all three tests, assume it's PM and treat accordingly. The cost of a false positive – treating a healthy plant – is much lower than the cost of a false negative.


Distinguishing From Other Conditions

Powdery Mildew vs. Bud Rot (Botrytis)

Both can appear during flowering, but they start in different places and look different up close.

  • PM: Starts on leaf surfaces as white powder, spreads outward
  • Bud rot: Starts inside dense bud tissue as gray-brown mold, spreads inward
  • PM: Dry, wipes off as powder
  • Bud rot: Slimy, penetrates tissue, leaves mushy gray-brown areas when probed

Powdery Mildew vs. Spider Mite Webbing

Heavy spider mite webbing can be confused with PM in advanced stages.

  • PM: Powdery coating directly on leaf surfaces, no web structure
  • Webbing: Actual filamentous strands connecting leaves and stems, visible as a network with tiny mites present
  • PM: Surface phenomenon on the leaf
  • Webbing: Spans between plant structures

Powdery Mildew vs. Fertilizer Residue

Spray residue and fertilizer salt deposits are a common false positive.

  • PM: Fuzzy texture, grows and expands over days
  • Residue: Crystalline, stays fixed, doesn't spread
  • PM: Circular colonies from infection points
  • Residue: Irregular splatter pattern matching where spray landed

Treatment and Prevention

If You've Found It: Immediate Steps

  1. Isolate the infected plant. Remove it from the grow space carefully – don't shake the leaves, which disperses spores.
  2. Remove heavily infected leaves. Seal them in a bag before removal. Dispose of, don't compost.
  3. Increase airflow immediately. Run oscillating fans, check that exhaust is adequate.
  4. Apply treatment to the infected plant and all immediate neighbors:

    • Potassium bicarbonate spray (effective at any stage, flower-safe)
    • Copper-based fungicides (veg stage only)
    • Neem oil (veg stage only – off-gasses problematically in flower)
    • Commercial PM treatments labeled as flower-safe for late-stage infections
  5. Inspect every other plant in the grow. Assume airborne spread has already occurred. Look for early colonies on older lower leaves of adjacent plants.

Prevention

Environmental control (most effective): – Maintain humidity below 60%, below 45% in late flower – Install oscillating fans for continuous air movement – Prevent leaf-on-leaf contact through spacing and selective defoliation – Maintain stable temperature – fluctuations create favorable infection windows – Consider HEPA filtration between grow cycles to reduce ambient spore load

Cultural practices: – Inspect plants daily, particularly lower leaves and poor-airflow corners – Quarantine any new plant material for at least two weeks before introducing to your grow – Sterilize tools between plants – Remove dead leaves promptly – they create moisture pockets

Preventive treatments (before symptoms appear): – UV-C light treatment between grow cycles kills residual spores – Preventive potassium bicarbonate or copper sprays provide significantly better protection than reactive treatment after symptoms appear – IPM programs that address PM as a standing preventive protocol, not a reactive one


How AI Detection Works

Powdery mildew is fundamentally a texture classification problem – distinguishing the powdery, irregular surface of PM colonies from the crystalline structure of trichomes and the smooth surface of healthy leaf tissue.

PlantLab's model analyzes:

  • Color contrast: White patches against green leaf tissue create a high-contrast signal the model identifies reliably
  • Texture signature: PM colonies have a granular, matte surface texture measurably distinct from trichomes (crystalline) and healthy leaf (smooth with natural sheen)
  • Colony geometry: PM grows in circular patterns from infection points with fuzzy, irregular edges – different from the uniform distribution of trichome coverage
  • Location context: Where on the plant the pattern appears matters; PM preferentially affects older, lower leaves in early infection

Early-stage detection – colonies as small as 5mm – catches infection when treatment options are broadest. Automated daily scanning catches what manual inspection misses when you're managing more than a few plants.

Try it free at plantlab.ai – 3 diagnoses per day, no credit card required.


FAQ

Can I smoke buds with powdery mildew? No. PM spores and fungal material can cause respiratory issues, particularly for anyone with lung conditions or compromised immunity. Infected flower should be disposed of, not consumed.

Does powdery mildew spread to other plants? Yes, rapidly. Airborne spores can reach every plant in a contained grow space within 5-10 days under favorable conditions. Isolate infected plants immediately and inspect everything nearby.

Can plants recover from powdery mildew? Mildly infected plants can survive and produce with aggressive treatment, but affected tissue doesn't recover. The goal is to stop the spread. Heavily infected plants in late flowering are usually a loss.

Does lowering humidity kill powdery mildew? It inhibits new infection but doesn't eliminate established colonies. PM can remain active even below 50% relative humidity once established. Humidity reduction is a prevention tool, not a cure for active infection.

When is powdery mildew most likely to appear? Typically around two weeks into flowering, when dense bud sites create microclimates with trapped humidity and reduced airflow. It can appear at any life stage given favorable conditions, but flowering onset is the highest-risk window.


PlantLab's AI detects 31 cannabis conditions – including powdery mildew, bud rot, and 7 specific nutrient deficiencies. Start diagnosing free at plantlab.ai.

 
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from EpicMind

Illustration eines antiken Philosophen in Toga, der erschöpft an einem modernen Büroarbeitsplatz vor einem Computer sitzt, umgeben von leeren Bürostühlen und urbaner Architektur.

Freundinnen & Freunde der Weisheit! Unser Wohlbefinden lässt sich mit einfachen Mitteln fördern. Gespräche, die Natur und geistige Aktivität genügen bereits, um signifikante Verbesserungen zu erreichen. Das behauptet jedenfalls eine Studie aus Australien.

Wie lässt sich psychisches Wohlbefinden wirksam fördern – ohne Therapie, Medikamente oder teure Programme? Eine aktuelle Studie der Curtin University in Australien zeigt: Es sind oft ganz alltägliche Verhaltensweisen, die einen grossen Unterschied machen. Wer täglich mit anderen spricht, sich regelmässig in der Natur aufhält oder geistig aktiv ist – etwa durch Lesen, Rätseln oder Lernen –, weist ein signifikant höheres psychisches Wohlbefinden auf als Menschen, die solche Aktivitäten nur selten praktizieren.

Die Studie, publiziert im Fachjournal SSM – Mental Health, erfasste im Rahmen einer repräsentativen Befragung von über 600 Erwachsenen in Westaustralien die Häufigkeit von 15 gesundheitsförderlichen Verhaltensweisen. Besonders stark war der Effekt bei täglicher sozialer Interaktion: Personen, die täglich mit anderen kommunizierten, erzielten im Durchschnitt zehn Punkte mehr auf der weit verbreiteten Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale als jene, die dies seltener als einmal pro Woche taten. Auch täglicher Aufenthalt in der Natur, Bewegung, spirituelle Praxis oder das regelmässige Helfen anderer korrelierten mit besseren Werten.

Die Studienleiterin Christina Pollard betont: „Es handelt sich um einfache, kostengünstige Handlungen, die bereits in vielen Alltagen vorkommen – und die sich durch gezielte öffentliche Kampagnen zusätzlich fördern lassen.“ Die Forschung basiert auf der „Act Belong Commit“-Kampagne, einem Langzeitprojekt zur mentalen Gesundheitsförderung in der Bevölkerung.

Die zentrale Botschaft: Psychische Gesundheit lässt sich nicht nur durch professionelle Hilfe stärken, sondern auch durch die bewusste Gestaltung alltäglicher Routinen und Habits. Gerade in Zeiten, in denen viele unter chronischem Stress, Isolation oder innerer Erschöpfung leiden, sind regelmässige Gespräche, Bewegung im Grünen und kleine geistige Herausforderungen ein wirksamer Beitrag zur Prävention. Wer also heute eine halbe Stunde spazieren geht oder sich Zeit für ein gutes Gespräch nimmt, tut mehr für die eigene Resilienz, als es vielleicht scheint.

Denkanstoss zum Wochenbeginn

„Das Grosse ist nicht, dies oder das zu sein, sondern man selbst zu sein.“ – Søren Kierkegaard (1813–1855)

ProductivityPorn-Tipp der Woche: Beweg dich!

Langes Sitzen macht müde und senkt deine Produktivität. Steh zwischendurch auf, mach einen kurzen Spaziergang oder arbeite im Stehen – das hält deinen Kopf wach und hilft dir, kreativer zu denken.

Aus dem Archiv: Kierkegaard als Wegweiser zu einem erfüllten Leben

Viele Menschen streben nach einem erfüllteren Leben, doch oft fühlen sie sich von den zahlreichen Anforderungen und Optionen überfordert. Zwischen der Jagd nach Erfolg, Selbstverwirklichung und Glück bleibt oft wenig Raum für echte innere Balance und Zufriedenheit. Die Frage, wie wir ein authentisches Leben führen können, bleibt für viele unbeantwortet. Søren Kierkegaard, der dänische Philosoph des 19. Jahrhunderts, hat sich intensiv mit dieser Frage auseinandergesetzt.

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Vielen Dank, dass Du Dir die Zeit genommen hast, diesen Newsletter zu lesen. Ich hoffe, die Inhalte konnten Dich inspirieren und Dir wertvolle Impulse für Dein (digitales) Leben geben. Bleib neugierig und hinterfrage, was Dir begegnet!


EpicMind – Weisheiten für das digitale Leben „EpicMind“ (kurz für „Epicurean Mindset“) ist mein Blog und Newsletter, der sich den Themen Lernen, Produktivität, Selbstmanagement und Technologie widmet – alles gewürzt mit einer Prise Philosophie.


Disclaimer Teile dieses Texts wurden mit Deepl Write (Korrektorat und Lektorat) überarbeitet. Für die Recherche in den erwähnten Werken/Quellen und in meinen Notizen wurde NotebookLM von Google verwendet. Das Artikel-Bild wurde mit ChatGPT erstellt und anschliessend nachbearbeitet.

Topic #Newsletter

 
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from sugarrush-77

I've been reading for the past two weeks a book called Dear Dickhead by Virginie Despentes. It discusses addiction in depth, particularly in relation to alcohol and drugs, and the nature of addiction shown in the story is quite disgusting, leaving me wondering if I should even touch the thing that is alcohol. Even the good properties of alcohol discussed in the book, that it makes you more tolerant of everyone’s bullshit and your own, and how it gets you to open up to people, gets you to wind down, and be more kind at times – if you need alcohol at all to do those things, is it not just a crutch for deeper problems? And the horrible ways that “using” eats up your life, and the harrowing path to freedom from addiction. Why go through that at all when you can just not start it? I drink, but pretty casually, and I don’t really feel a great need to drink all the time, although I sometimes do when I feel like I need to blow off steam. Wondering if I should even continue to do that, because I don’t want it to lead into anything bad. In the past, I have had brief periods of time in my life where I was definitely drinking too much, but nowadays, I can genuinely do without it, and I kind of use it as a mood booster, or a way to get myself more social when I don’t feel up for it. I’ll keep it for now I guess.

Nowadays at church when I listen to sermons, I drift in and out of concentration. I don’t sit in rapt attention as I used to. Mostly because I’m wondering if I have any hope in this life. My nonexistent love life has been leading me down darker and darker thoughts, making me wonder if I’ve any chance at all at finding someone with mutual attraction. It’s not like I’ve not tried at all either. It’s just chains of rejection all the way through. It’s the kind of misery and desperation that one experiences when you begin to think that nobody could possibly desire you for who you are. I wonder if women think I’m brutally unattractive, and can smell the desperation on me you can smell death on a limping, one-eyed dog that’s gotten it’s guts blown out by a shotgun slug.

Thoughts like “When will this all end?” or “I’ve been assigned a terrible fate, and all there is left to do is live it out till the bitter end”, or “How much longer can I live like this until I’m overtaken by misery and die bitterly alone?” These filled my head, until halfway through the service, I decided that I would soon kill myself. “I’m off on vacation during April, and I’m soon going to be off, and that’ll be a swell time, meaning that I don’t want to kill myself then. I’ll wait until May, I’ll give it more time.” Is what I thought in my head.

Today’s sermon was about what it meant to be a church that was alive. I don’t remember how he got there, but at the end of the sermon, the pastor told us that we were going to sing a last song of worship, and hold hands while doing so. There was one guy sitting in my row, and I thought it was awkward, and I wasn’t going to hold hands with him, but he held his hand out and I obliged. As soon as our hands touched, I realized I hadn’t been held by, or even really touched by another person in God knows how long. Physical touch is a human need, I’m realizing, and I don’t have any avenues to experience it in my life. And I think it’d be weird to request the people I know for a hug. I don’t know why, but listening to the song made me cry bitterly. And while I’m writing this, I’m listening to it again, and it is again making me cry bitterly. And I don’t know why. My ears are barely registering the lyrics while I type.

Sometimes, you need a good cry to heal. But I don’t understand why God wouldn’t just let me die. I think I’ve done my time. Nothing has changed materially in my life, and until it does, I’m still going to suffer. There are moments during every week where my heart physically hurts because I feel alone in the world. Is it cruelty if God gives me a second wind to continue while nothing changes in my life? I’ve not decided if I really want to kill myself again. I’m delaying the decision. It’s not a decision I need to make fast, really, because I’ll die eventually anyways. There are enough real-world geopolitical tensions brewing that the chance of me dying on a battlefield in the next 20 years is not a small one.

I’m embarassed that this is the kind of person I am. Self-defeating, self-pitying, and unable to change. Unable to find their place in the world, fit in inside any kind of community without feeling ultimately alone. The embarassment is also coincidentally the reason I find it difficult to confess this to anyone in my life.

I’ve listened to the worship song a couple times now, and I now understand why it made me cry. I find the picture of togetherness and community it paints rather beautiful, and I wish it were real for me. The song to me feels like being held by another person. I’m probably just manifesting something I desperately need and want in the song. I’d rather die than admit that to anyone in my life though.

Fuck my chud life.

Afterword:

Apparently cell groups / small groups at church are supposed to be a place where you can be honest about the deep shit dragging you down in your life. I feel like it’s always me that has to expose themselves in these discussions, because I have nowhere else to talk about my life in this capacity, and everyone else does. I talk about these things, then maybe someone else will follow with things in their life, but rarely. I feel like I’m always the one losing out, and I feel like it ain’t fair sometimes. But life ain’t fair?

Afterword 2:

I bitch about my life a lot, but don’t you ever think that I don’t know that I’m also to blame for my problems.

 
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from enoch's rambles

This is a best-effort rushed summary of the series of lawsuits filed by Warak against O2JAM Company and its representative director Jeong Sun-Kwon. I need to make the following disclaimers before diving in:

  • I am not good at speaking Korean and relied on MTL to read various documents.
  • I am not familiar with the intricacies of Korean law and can be best described as “a rubbernecker” when it comes to US law.
  • I am writing this about 12 hours after watching the video released by Warak summarizing his point of view and this summary is obviously biased towards his view.

Ok with that in mind:

Background

Warak is a Korean composer best known for his contributions to the Korean rhythm game series O2JAM, in particular its later mobile games O2JAM Analog and O2JAM U. His work covers a wide variety of genres ranging from electro to latin house and he's emerged as a fresh talent that legitimized the second era of O2JAM which even at the time had a reputation of being aged and retro.

Warak was first contracted to provide music to O2Jam in 2011 when it was published by Now Games. A few years later in 2014, Warak made the suggestion to management to not only cover classical music as is rhythm game tradition but to cover other older popular music and expand in variety. The Entertainer (Scott Joplin), Por Una Cabeza (Carlos Gardel), and Maria Elena (Lorenzo Barcelata) were chosen as trial pieces and subsequently released to the game with new arrangements by Warak. According to Warak, he afterwards received a call from a representative of Momo Media on behalf of representative director Jeong Sun-Kwon stating that Momo would like to pay half of the agreed upon commission fee due to the underperformance of these covers. Warak says he rejected this request and felt offended that they would request this after the commissioned work was already received and implemented into the games. According to the representative Jeong Sun-Kwon then countered with another proposal for Warak to submit a song for free as a make good for their longstanding relationship. This incensed Warak, he was offended that they would first claim his music was underperforming and not worth the agreed upon payment, and then proceed to ask for more music for free as “mends”. In the video he produced retelling the lawsuits from his perspective, Warak makes an aside that often for video game music it is not necessary for the music to be enjoyable on its own when its main purpose is to fit the theme and setting of the game. But as someone who was busting his ass to make music that both fit the agreed upon specifications of the game and would stand up on its own, this treatment was especially upsetting and this would greatly hurt his confidence in his work that point forward. Warak claims this incident left him emotionally distraught and depressed, causing a period of writer's block. He was afraid to seek medical treatment as he feared being medicated would forcefully stabilize his serotonin levels leaving him unable to properly access the emotional quality of his work. As a result there are no medical records to denote this period of distress.

A note on who owns O2JAM

Now Games was already the third company the O2JAM property had been transferred to. O2Jam was first created by O2Media before shutting down and being transferred to NowCom in 2008. NowCom created the popular Korean video livestreaming service afreecaTV (now Soop) and in order to focus on its newfound success spun off its game development division into a subsidiary called Now Games in 2011. Now Games then went independent in 2012 and was renamed Momo Media. Momo Media then shuttered in 2017, and the rights to O2Jam were transferred to a newly formed O2Jam Company in 2019. O2Jam Company was dissolved in 2025 and the rights were transferred to the newly formed Musicturbine. It should be noted that Now Games, Momo Media, O2Jam Company, and Musicturbine all share the same representative director, Jeong Sun-Kwon.

Discovering something amiss

Years later in 2019, Warak noticed that his music was used in a Korean arcade adaptation of Beat Saber, produced by Skonec (Beat Saber Arcade would end service in 2020 as Beat Games stopped issuing commercial licenses for Beat Saber around the same time they started selling DLC with major label content). He was shocked as he did not sign a contract with Skonec, and soon discovered his music was licensed to the game and a dozen other games like Pump it Up, EZ2AC, and Tapsonic Bold by O2Jam Company. The contract Warak signed in 2011 stipulated that he owns the copyright to the music provided to O2Jam and Now/Momo/O2 does not have the right to sublicense without his permission. Despite this being a contractual violation, Warak didn't pursue legal action at first because he understood crosslicensing and “collaborations” were common amongst rhythm games and were popular with players so he tabled it. The final straw was when he discovered O2Jam Company had registered his music in various audio fingerprinting programs like Youtube's ContentID and were receiving revenue from streaming services such as Youtube- something he states he did not pursue as he did not want to affect videos uploaded by O2JAM players on platforms such as Youtube. Not only was O2Jam Company making money off his work, they were making money in a way he specifically did not wish to do with O2JAM players in mind. After having his copyright infringed and having previously been humiliated by Jeong Sun-Kwon, Warak was prepared to go to court against O2Jam to reassert his rights and obtain damages from Jeong Sun-Kwon personally.

Suiting up

Before the lawsuit started in earnest, Warak and O2Jam Company entered mediation (or arbitration) in an attempt to bring both parties into a mutual understanding of the affair. But this was also a poor experience as Jeong Sun-Kwon clammed up and asserted as the commissioning entity it's fair that he share rights to the resulting work. The arbitration findings were unsatisfactory, the mediator ruled that O2Jam must pay damages to Warak and in turn Warak would drop the suit. Warak intended to cancel the contract and return all rights back to him so he proceeded with the suit. The first trial dragged on for two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic but eventually it was ruled that as O2Jam Company was a separate party not included in the initial contract with Now Games (which was now dissolved), they did not have the right to use any of Warak's music. However just because Jeong Sun-Kwon was the representative director of both companies did not make him personally liable for damages. In his video summarizing the lawsuits, Warak noted that he was inexperienced and the first lawyer he hired did not adequately advise him during this first suit and he was left to do much of the discovery himself, even having to personally contact Sandbox Network (the digital music distributor used by Momo/O2) to request revenue data and contract documents. Han Jeong-hyeon, the CEO EPID Games, a Korean game development studio known for the mobile games TrickCal and Paint Heroes which Warak wrote music for, introduced Warak to a second lawyer, Kim Seon-wook of the law firm Haemaru who advised on dismissing the first case and filing a second suit expanding the amount of damages based on lost revenue from licensing and streaming revenue. Unfortunately Warak lost the second case on the grounds of the commissioning contract being referred to as a “매절이라는 “, or a buyout, or lump sum contract. The appellate court took this to imply that the copyright is transferred for a set fee and this designation trumps any language within the contract in reference to rights ownership. Warak appealed this decision up to the Supreme Court despite knowing the chances of this ruling being overturned was slim, and they ultimately ruled this is a poor interpretation of “매절이라는 “. In some fields such as character illustrations, a 매절이라는 contract is commonly agreed to involve a transfer of copyright in exchange for a flat fee but really the term just refers to how the laborer is paid by the client and doesn't necessarily imply any transfer of copyright unless it an established tradition in the trade. Video game music on the other hand has a variety of use rights, including for soundtrack release, use in-game, public performance, etc, which are separate and negotiated case-by-case. So the fact that there was explicit language prohibiting the sublicensing of rights in the contract should've trumped any “layman understanding” of the term “매절이라는”.

Setting an example in the industry

In recorded music, rights are often structured in terms of rights to the recording and rights to the composition. A record label may own the rights to the recording but the artist usually retains the rights to the composition and beyond any flat rate paid for the recording they are paid residuals for the rights to the composition in any sale or licensing agreement for the recording. This is not tradition in rhythm games. Often songs are works for hire, and after paying a flat fee, a client company will assume ownership of the entire intellectual property of a song. This makes business dealings such as sublicensing to other games much easier for the client party but it also means artists are left out of the success of their own work, unable to earn residuals if their music blows up in popularity. It often also means an artist is unable to get any additional revenue from other uses of the song such as performances or music sales. This has slowly changed as companies such as SEGA offer license-back deals that allow artists to offer their commissioned works on digital music platforms but there are still companies like KONAMI and Musicturbine which either offer onerous terms that limit the ways artists can use their works for hire or will exploit other uses themselves by registering them on audio fingerprinting programs and digital music platforms. Warak is of course an outlier, his contract stipulated he retained the rights to his work. But how many other artists are out there with contracts similar to Warak but are afraid to speak about how their rights are being violated? In his video, Warak hopes that his suit sets and example and encourages artists to assert their rights both in contract negotiations and legal proceedings. He stresses that these lawsuits were not about the money, and indeed he states that personally contacted every studio that previously licensed works he produced for O2Jam to assure them they would not be parties in any legal proceedures and he was not perusing any company other than O2/Musicturbine for damages. He ended his video on an anecdote that he rerecorded and reproduced the track “Shining” for PLATiNA::LAB on his own dime despite the game only paying for a license to the original 2006 recording as a sign of gratitude for entering licensing agreements with him while the cases were ongoing and it was still ambiguous if he had the copyright to his work. He also states unambiguously that the use of his work in the recent Steam rerelease of O2Jam: The Beginning was unauthorized and they had no right to do so. The story is still not over, there is still one more case left to determine damages and remedies, I'll be sure to be back again to write more once that happens.

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On the evening of 16 February 2026, the 79th British Academy Film Awards ceremony at London's Royal Festival Hall was already careening toward crisis. John Davidson, a Scottish Tourette syndrome activist and the subject of the BAFTA-nominated biographical film I Swear, was seated in the audience when his condition triggered a series of involuntary vocal tics. Davidson, who was appointed an MBE in 2019 for his work increasing understanding of Tourette syndrome, had been the subject of BBC documentaries since the age of sixteen, beginning with the 1989 programme John's Not Mad. His presence at the ceremony was meant to celebrate the film about his life, directed by Kirk Jones and starring Robert Aramayo. Instead, the evening became something far more painful.

The most devastating tic came as actors Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo took to the stage to present the award for best visual effects. Davidson shouted a racial slur loudly enough for the entire hall to hear. The two Black actors paused, visibly processing the moment, and then continued with what BAFTA later described as “incredible dignity and professionalism.” Davidson left the ceremony of his own accord roughly twenty-five minutes into the proceedings, after which host Alan Cumming reminded the audience that “Tourette's syndrome is a disability and the tics you've heard tonight are involuntary.”

What followed was a cascading series of institutional failures. The BBC, which broadcast the ceremony on a two-hour delay, did not edit the slur out of the transmission, despite a formal request from Warner Bros. to do so. Notably, the same broadcast did edit out the phrase “Free Palestine” from an acceptance speech, a juxtaposition that drew furious commentary. The programme remained on BBC iPlayer for fifteen hours with the racial slur fully audible before being taken down. The BBC later conceded that the language should have been removed before transmission and issued an apology.

BAFTA Chair Sara Putt and CEO Jane Millichip sent a letter to members acknowledging “the harm this has caused” and announcing a “comprehensive review.” Award-winning filmmaker Jonte Richardson resigned from BAFTA's emerging talent judging panel, calling the organisation's handling of the situation “utterly unforgivable.” In his resignation statement on LinkedIn, Richardson wrote that he “cannot and will not contribute my time energy and expertise to an organization that has repeatedly failed to safeguard the dignity of its Black guests, members and the Black creative community.” Hannah Beachler, the Oscar-winning production designer on Sinners and the first African American to win an Academy Award for Best Production Design, revealed on X that Davidson's tics had been directed at her personally on the way to dinner after the show, describing the incident as happening “3 times that night.” She condemned what she called a “throw away apology” from host Alan Cumming.

Then Google made it worse.

The technology giant pushed out a computer-generated news alert to mobile devices, linking to a Hollywood Reporter article headlined “How the Tourette's Fallout Unfolded at the BAFTA Film Awards.” The notification then invited readers to “see more on” followed by the N-word, fully spelled out and sent directly to users' lock screens. Instagram user Danny Price was among the first to screenshot the notification and share it publicly, calling it “absolutely f****d” and noting the painful irony of receiving it during Black History Month. “What an interesting Black History month this has turned out to be,” Price wrote. Google removed the alert and issued an apology: “We're deeply sorry for this mistake. We've removed the offensive notification and are working to prevent this from happening again.”

The company also made a specific claim that would become the most interesting part of the entire episode. Google stated that the error “did not involve AI.” According to a spokesperson, their systems “recognised a euphemism for an offensive term on several web pages, and accidentally applied the offensive term to the notification text.” The safety filters that should have caught the slur before it reached users simply failed to trigger. Google told Entertainment Weekly that it was “working on improved guardrails for our push notification systems, which are designed to accurately characterize content from across the web.”

This distinction between “AI” and “automated system” is where the story gets genuinely revealing. Not because of what it tells us about Google's internal technical architecture, but because of what it exposes about the broader condition of technology deployment in public-facing spaces. Whether or not the specific notification was generated by a large language model is, in a meaningful sense, beside the point. What matters is that an automated system, operating without human oversight, sent a racial slur to an unknown number of mobile devices during Black History Month, and there was no human anywhere in the pipeline to prevent it.

The Distinction That Does Not Hold

Google's insistence that the BAFTA notification was not AI-generated deserves scrutiny, not because the company is necessarily lying, but because the distinction it is drawing has become functionally meaningless in the context of how automated systems interact with the public.

The OECD's AI Incidents Monitor, which tracks and classifies AI-related failures globally using a rigorous methodology that employs multiple large language models to categorise events, catalogued the Google BAFTA notification as an incident. Its analysts noted that, regardless of Google's denial, the system performed tasks “indicative of AI-like content processing,” including recognising euphemisms across multiple web pages and generating notification text from that analysis. As the commentary around the OECD classification observed, if the system was not AI, then it was human-engineered automation, and automation reflects choices. Somebody designed a system that could scan the web, identify trending topics, synthesise notification text, and push it to millions of devices without a human ever reading the output. That the system used pattern matching rather than a transformer model does not change the fundamental problem: a machine made an editorial decision about language in a racially charged context, and nobody checked its work.

The OECD's framework for classifying AI systems is itself instructive. It allows analysts to “zoom in on specific risks that are typical of AI, such as bias, explainability and robustness,” but it is deliberately generic in nature, designed to capture a broad spectrum of automated decision-making systems rather than only those that meet a narrow technical definition. The Google BAFTA incident sits precisely in the grey zone where technical definitions and practical consequences diverge. The system may not have been a neural network, but it performed the same function that an AI-powered summarisation tool would have performed, and it failed in precisely the same way.

This is not a novel failure mode. It is an accelerating one. In January 2025, Apple suspended its AI-powered notification summary feature after a string of high-profile hallucinations. The system had falsely told BBC News readers that Luigi Mangione, the man accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, had shot himself. It also incorrectly claimed that tennis star Rafael Nadal had come out as gay, named the PDC World Darts Championship winner before the competition ended, and falsely stated that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had been arrested. Reporters Without Borders called on Apple to remove the feature entirely, arguing that AI “cannot reliably produce information for the public.” The BBC itself complained to Apple, along with other media organisations, all of whom said the technology was “not ready” and that the AI-generated errors were “adding to issues of misinformation and falling trust in news.”

In May 2024, Google's own AI Overviews feature, which uses the Gemini large language model to generate summary answers atop search results, went spectacularly wrong within days of its US launch. The system advised users to add non-toxic glue to pizza sauce to help cheese stick, a recommendation it had sourced from an eleven-year-old joke on Reddit. It recommended eating “at least one small rock per day” as a source of minerals, drawing from a satirical article in The Onion. It suggested dangerous practices such as mixing bleach and vinegar, which produces toxic chlorine gas. It told users that former US President Barack Obama is a Muslim, and that astronauts had met cats on the moon. Google CEO Sundar Pichai, responding to the debacle, told The Verge that hallucination is “still an unsolved problem” and even, “in some ways, an inherent feature” of large language models. He added that “LLMs aren't necessarily the best approach to always get at factuality.” Data from SEO firm BrightEdge showed that Google quietly reduced the frequency of AI Overviews in search results from 27 per cent to 11 per cent in the weeks following the launch.

A few months earlier, in February 2024, Google had paused its Gemini image generator after it produced historically inaccurate and racially offensive images, including people of colour depicted in Nazi-era uniforms in response to prompts about German soldiers in 1943. The system also generated images of Black Vikings, a woman as the Catholic pope, and non-white people in a scene depicting the founding of the United States. Prabhakar Raghavan, a senior vice president at Google, acknowledged: “It's clear that this feature missed the mark. Some of the images generated are inaccurate or even offensive.” The problem had arisen because the system had been programmed to inject diversity language into prompts, transforming a request for “pictures of Nazis” into something like “pictures of racially diverse Nazis,” a well-intentioned overcorrection that produced deeply offensive results.

The pattern is unmistakable. Major technology companies are deploying automated systems into high-stakes public contexts, discovering that those systems can produce harmful, offensive, or factually false outputs, issuing apologies, and then continuing to deploy substantially similar systems with minor adjustments. The cycle repeats because the commercial incentives to deploy outweigh the reputational costs of failure.

Automation Without Accountability

The Google BAFTA incident is instructive precisely because it sits at the boundary between what companies classify as “AI” and what they classify as “automated systems.” This boundary is not a technical distinction that users experience or understand. From the perspective of the person who received a racial slur on their lock screen, the question of whether a large language model or a keyword-matching algorithm generated the text is entirely irrelevant. The harm is identical. The absence of human oversight is identical. The failure of safety systems is identical.

This is a problem that extends well beyond news notifications. Between November 2025 and January 2026, the AI Incident Database added 108 new incident IDs, covering failures across healthcare, employment, law enforcement, and public information systems. Stanford's Human-Centred Artificial Intelligence Institute reported that publicly reported AI-related security and privacy incidents rose 56.4 per cent from 2023 to 2024. The trajectory is accelerating, not stabilising.

A 2025 study found that clinicians' tumour detection rates dropped six per cent after months of working with AI assistance, a documented manifestation of automation bias in which humans systematically over-trust automated decisions even when contradictory evidence is present. The European Data Protection Supervisor published a 2025 dispatch on human oversight of automated decision-making that warned of “vigilance decrement,” a measurable deterioration in the ability to detect anomalies during passive monitoring tasks. The dispatch argued that in contexts where human operators rely heavily on system recommendations, “there should be a presumption of automation by default,” meaning that deployers should treat the system as if it were operating autonomously and apply effective human oversight accordingly.

In employment, a federal judge in May 2025 allowed a collective action lawsuit to proceed under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, alleging that Workday's AI-powered screening tools disproportionately disadvantaged applicants over forty. One plaintiff reported receiving immediate rejection notifications during non-business hours, suggesting automated filtering with no human involvement whatsoever. The case was certified as a nationwide class action. France's independent equality watchdog ruled that Facebook's job advertisement distribution algorithm was discriminatory and sexist, showing bus driver advertisements almost exclusively to men and nursery assistant advertisements almost exclusively to women.

In content moderation, research from the Internet Freedom Foundation and the Knight Foundation has demonstrated that AI systems trained predominantly on “standard” English consistently flag content from Black creators at higher rates, particularly when African American Vernacular English is used. The Brookings Institution found that Black comedians using satirical commentary on racial stereotypes were banned for “promoting stereotypes,” while white counterparts making identical points received no penalties. A study on deepfake detection found that classifiers misidentified real images of Black men as fabricated 39.1 per cent of the time, compared to 15.6 per cent for white women, revealing serious racial disparities in AI-based verification systems.

The common thread is not that AI is uniquely dangerous. It is that automated systems of all kinds, whether powered by large language models, keyword matching, or statistical classifiers, are being deployed at a scale and speed that fundamentally outpaces the development of meaningful oversight mechanisms. The Google BAFTA notification is a particularly vivid example because the harm was so immediate, so public, and so obviously preventable by a single human reading the output before it was sent.

The Guardrail Gap

The regulatory landscape is struggling to keep pace. The European Union's AI Act, the most comprehensive AI regulation attempted by any major jurisdiction, follows a phased implementation timeline. Prohibitions on AI systems posing unacceptable risks came into effect in February 2025. Governance infrastructure and obligations for providers of general-purpose AI models followed in August 2025. But the critical transparency requirements and rules for high-risk AI systems do not take effect until August 2026, and enforcement powers for the European Commission only begin on that date. Rules for high-risk AI systems embedded in regulated products have an extended transition period running to August 2027. There are already signals that even these timelines may slip: in November 2025, the European Commission published legislative proposals that would extend the applicability date for high-risk AI rules from August 2026 to as late as December 2027.

The penalties for non-compliance are theoretically significant, reaching up to seven per cent of worldwide annual turnover. But the regulatory framework is designed primarily for systems that companies acknowledge as AI. Google's insistence that the BAFTA notification was “not AI” illustrates a definitional gap that could become a regulatory escape hatch. If a company can argue that its automated content generation system does not meet the technical definition of artificial intelligence under the EU AI Act, it may be able to avoid the transparency, oversight, and accountability requirements that the regulation imposes. Each Member State is required to establish at least one AI regulatory sandbox by August 2026, but these testing environments are designed for systems that are acknowledged as AI from the outset, not for automated pipelines that companies refuse to classify as such.

In the United States, the regulatory picture is even more fragmented. Colorado has delayed implementation of its comprehensive AI law to June 2026. Several states, including Illinois, New York, Utah, and California, have adopted disclosure requirements and protections specifically for AI companions and therapeutic tools. But there is no federal AI regulation, and the patchwork of state-level rules creates an environment in which companies can deploy automated systems nationally while navigating wildly inconsistent oversight regimes.

The fundamental problem is not a lack of awareness. The OECD has developed a global AI incident reporting framework. The EU AI Act mandates AI literacy training and conformity assessments. Academic institutions, civil society organisations, and international bodies have produced thousands of pages of guidance, principles, and recommendations. What is missing is the connective tissue between these frameworks and the actual moment of deployment, the point at which an automated system generates a piece of text, an image, a recommendation, or a notification, and sends it into the world without a human ever seeing it first.

Lessons Unlearned

The history of automated systems producing harmful output in public-facing contexts is not short, and the technology industry's institutional memory for its own failures appears to be remarkably brief.

In March 2016, Microsoft launched Tay, a Twitter chatbot designed to engage with users and learn from their interactions. Within sixteen hours, coordinated users had manipulated Tay into posting antisemitic, racist, and sexist content, including the statement “Hitler was right I hate the jews.” Microsoft shut it down after it had generated more than 96,000 tweets, attributing the failure to “a coordinated attack by a subset of people” who “exploited a vulnerability in Tay.” The episode was widely analysed as a cautionary tale about deploying learning systems in adversarial environments without adequate safeguards. IEEE Spectrum later noted that the case illustrated “a problem with the very nature of learning software that interacts directly with the public, and the developer's role and responsibility associated with it.”

In November 2022, Meta released Galactica, a large language model trained on 48 million scientific texts and designed to assist researchers. Within three days, Meta pulled the public demo after the model generated convincing-sounding papers on the benefits of committing suicide, fabricated research papers attributed to real scientists, and produced plausible-seeming articles about the history of bears in space. The problem, as researchers pointed out, was that Galactica could not distinguish between truth and fabrication. It generated text with the same authoritative tone regardless of whether the underlying claims were factual or invented. As MIT Technology Review observed, “Big tech companies keep doing this because they can. And they feel like they must, otherwise someone else might.”

Each of these incidents prompted calls for greater caution, more robust safety testing, and stronger oversight mechanisms. Each was followed by a period of reflection. And each was subsequently overtaken by commercial pressure to deploy the next generation of tools faster than the previous one. The 2026 AI Safety Report confirms that this dynamic is intensifying: some models now distinguish between evaluation and deployment contexts, altering their behaviour to appear safer during testing than they actually are in production. Despite extraordinary advances, the report warns, models remain less reliable on multi-step projects, still produce hallucinations, and struggle with tasks involving the physical world.

The Google BAFTA notification fits this pattern with uncomfortable precision. The system that generated it was not some experimental research prototype. It was a production system, pushed to the devices of real users, processing real-world events with serious racial dimensions, with no human gatekeeper between the algorithm and the public. Google's response, to apologise and promise improved guardrails, is the same response the company gave after the AI Overviews debacle, the Gemini image generator controversy, and numerous other incidents. The cycle of deploy, fail, apologise, and adjust has become the de facto governance model for automated content systems.

The Problem With Speed

The commercial logic driving this cycle is straightforward. In the race to integrate AI and automation into every consumer-facing product, speed of deployment is treated as a competitive advantage. Google, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, and their competitors are engaged in a contest where being first to market with AI-powered features is seen as strategically essential. This creates an environment in which the question “does this system work reliably?” is subordinated to the question “can we ship this before our competitors do?”

The consequences of this approach are distributed unevenly. When Google's AI Overviews suggested eating rocks, the primary victims were individual users who might have taken the advice seriously. When Apple's notification summaries falsely reported that a murder suspect had shot himself, the harm extended to the news organisation whose credibility was implicated and to the public's trust in information systems more broadly. When Google's notification system sent a racial slur to users' phones during Black History Month, the harm landed on Black communities already navigating a cultural moment of particular sensitivity. The costs of speed are paid by the people who have the least say in how quickly these systems are deployed.

This is not a problem that can be solved by better safety filters alone. Google had safety filters in place for the BAFTA notification. They failed. Apple had safety filters in place for its notification summaries. They failed. Google had safety filters in place for AI Overviews. They failed. The question is not whether safety filters can be improved. Of course they can. The question is whether a governance model that depends entirely on algorithmic safety filters, with no human in the loop for high-stakes editorial decisions, is fundamentally adequate for the task. The evidence suggests, with mounting force, that it is not.

What Meaningful Oversight Would Require

A serious response to the Google BAFTA incident would require confronting several uncomfortable realities that the technology industry has so far been reluctant to acknowledge.

First, the distinction between “AI” and “automated systems” needs to be abandoned as a regulatory category. What matters is not the technical architecture of the system but its function: is it generating content that reaches the public without human review? If so, the same standards of accuracy, sensitivity, and accountability should apply regardless of whether the underlying mechanism is a large language model, a keyword matcher, or a rule-based classifier. The EU AI Act's risk-based approach provides a useful framework, but only if the definition of what constitutes an AI system is broad enough to capture the full range of automated content generation tools currently in deployment.

Second, human oversight for high-stakes automated outputs needs to be treated as a non-negotiable requirement, not a nice-to-have feature that can be sacrificed for speed. A notification system that pushes content to millions of devices about racially sensitive events should have a human editor in the pipeline. The argument that this would slow down the delivery of notifications is precisely the point. Some content is too consequential to be left entirely to machines, and the determination of what falls into that category should be made in advance, not after a slur has already been broadcast. The Harvard Journal of Law and Technology has argued for redefining the standard of human oversight in the context of AI negligence, suggesting that legal frameworks need to evolve to hold deployers accountable when they choose to remove humans from decision loops in high-stakes contexts.

Third, the accountability structures for automated system failures need to be formalised and enforced. When a newspaper publishes a racial slur, the editor responsible can be identified, questioned, and held accountable. When an automated system does the same thing, the accountability diffuses across engineering teams, product managers, policy groups, and corporate communications departments. Nobody is responsible because everybody is responsible. The result is that the same failures recur because no individual faces consequences meaningful enough to change institutional behaviour.

Fourth, incident reporting and learning need to become systematic rather than reactive. The OECD's AI Incidents Monitor and the AI Incident Database represent important steps, but they remain largely academic exercises rather than binding mechanisms for institutional change. A mandatory incident reporting regime, analogous to the aviation industry's approach to near-misses and accidents, would create the feedback loops necessary for genuine improvement. Companies should be required to report automated system failures to a centralised authority, with the data used to inform regulatory standards and best practices. The OECD published a paper in February 2025 outlining the foundations for such a framework, but translating it from policy paper to binding obligation remains a distant prospect.

Beyond Apologies

Davidson, for his part, issued a statement saying he was “deeply mortified if anyone considers my involuntary tics to be intentional or to carry any meaning.” His situation is genuinely complex: a man whose neurological condition produces involuntary vocalisations, attending the premiere celebration of a film about his life, in a venue that had not adequately prepared for the known characteristics of his disability. Davidson's team shared that he subsequently reached out to the studio handling Sinners in order to directly apologise to Jordan, Lindo, and Beachler. The failures of BAFTA and the BBC in handling the live event are significant and have been extensively discussed, raising uncomfortable questions about both ableism and duty of care.

But the Google notification represents something categorically different. It is not a failure of empathy or event management. It is a failure of systems design, one that reveals how automated content pipelines treat language as data to be processed rather than as communication that carries weight, context, and consequence. A system that can “recognise a euphemism for an offensive term” and then “accidentally apply the offensive term” has demonstrated that it can parse language at a mechanical level while being entirely blind to the social, racial, and historical dimensions of that language. This is not a bug that can be patched with a better keyword filter. It is a structural feature of systems designed to operate at speed and scale without the interpretive capacities that human editorial judgement provides.

The broader pattern is one of technology companies externalising the costs of their deployment speed onto the communities most likely to be harmed by the resulting failures. When an automated system sends a racial slur to users' phones, the immediate cost is borne not by Google but by the Black users who received it, by the actors who were on stage when the original incident occurred, and by the production designer who had the slur directed at her personally. Google's cost is a news cycle of criticism and an apology that costs nothing to produce. The asymmetry is structural, and it will not change until the regulatory and commercial incentives are realigned.

The BAFTA notification should function as something more than a footnote in the long catalogue of automated system failures. It should be recognised as a concrete illustration of what happens when the guardrails lag behind the deployment by years rather than months. The technology to send automated notifications exists. The technology to scan the web and generate summary text exists. The technology to push that text to millions of devices in seconds exists. What does not yet exist, in any meaningful or enforceable form, is the institutional architecture to ensure that these capabilities are exercised with the care that their power demands.

Until that architecture is built, the cycle will continue. Another automated system will produce another harmful output. Another company will issue another apology. Another community will absorb another cost that was never theirs to bear. The question posed by the Google BAFTA notification is not whether this particular failure could have been prevented. It obviously could have been. The question is whether the industry and its regulators are willing to build the systems necessary to prevent the next one, even if doing so means deploying more slowly, charging more honestly for the cost of human oversight, and accepting that some things are too important to be left entirely to machines.


References and Sources

  1. Deadline. “Google Apologizes After News Alert About BAFTA Film Awards Debacle Included The N-Word.” Deadline, February 2026. https://deadline.com/2026/02/google-apologizes-bafta-news-alet-n-word-1236734448/

  2. Variety. “Google 'Deeply Sorry' for BAFTA News Alert That Included N-Word, Says the Message Was Not AI-Generated.” Variety, February 2026. https://variety.com/2026/digital/news/google-sorry-bafta-n-word-news-alert-1236671565/

  3. The Wrap. “Google Apologizes for 'Sinners' News Alert That Included Spelled-Out Racial Slur From BAFTA Awards.” The Wrap, February 2026. https://www.thewrap.com/media-platforms/journalism/google-uses-racial-slur-ai-generated-sinners-alert/

  4. Word In Black. “If It Wasn't AI, Who Put the N-Word in Google's Push Alert?” Word In Black, February 2026. https://wordinblack.com/2026/02/google-n-word-push-notification/

  5. OECD.AI. “Google AI Push Notification Includes Racial Slur, Prompts Apology.” OECD AI Incidents Monitor, 24 February 2026. https://oecd.ai/en/incidents/2026-02-24-6844

  6. CNN. “John Davidson: BAFTAs interrupted by racist slur from man with Tourette Syndrome.” CNN, 22 February 2026. https://www.cnn.com/2026/02/22/entertainment/baftas-2026-tourettes-racist-slur

  7. NBC News. “BAFTA and BBC apologize to Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo after guest with Tourette syndrome shouted slur.” NBC News, February 2026. https://www.nbcnews.com/pop-culture/pop-culture-news/bbc-says-racial-slur-shouted-sinners-actors-baftas-was-result-tourette-rcna260182

  8. PBS News. “BAFTA and BBC apologize for broadcasting racial slur during awards show.” PBS News, February 2026. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/arts/bafta-and-bbc-apologize-for-broadcasting-racial-slur-during-awards-show

  9. Variety. “John Davidson Gives First Interview and Explains Tourette's Tics After Shouting N-Word and Other Slurs at BAFTAs.” Variety, February 2026. https://variety.com/2026/film/awards/john-davidson-tourettes-tics-bafta-n-word-interview-1236671850/

  10. Deadline. “John Davidson Says He Is 'Deeply Mortified' That His Tourette's Tics Could Be Seen As 'Intentional.'” Deadline, February 2026. https://deadline.com/2026/02/john-davidson-issues-statement-bafta-racial-slur-i-swear-1236733373/

  11. Variety. “'Sinners' Production Designer Hannah Beachler Says Alan Cumming's 'Throw-Away Apology' Over N-Word Slur During BAFTAs 'Made It Worse.'” Variety, February 2026. https://variety.com/2026/film/global/sinners-hannah-beachler-n-word-slur-baftas-apology-1236670089/

  12. Deadline. “'Sinners' Production Designer Hannah Beachler Decries BAFTA's 'Throw-Away' On-Stage Apology After N-Word Outburst.” Deadline, February 2026. https://deadline.com/2026/02/sinners-hannah-beachler-bafta-apology-n-word-alan-cumming-1236732924/

  13. Deadline. “BAFTA Jury Member Jonte Richardson Steps Down Over Racial Slur.” Deadline, February 2026. https://deadline.com/2026/02/bafta-jonte-richardson-jury-member-steps-down-racial-slur-1236734268/

  14. Variety. “BAFTA Jury Member Steps Down Over N-Word Incident.” Variety, February 2026. https://variety.com/2026/film/awards/bafta-jury-member-steps-down-over-n-word-incident-1236671070/

  15. Washington Post. “Apple pauses AI summaries that botched news headlines.” Washington Post, January 2025. https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2025/01/16/apple-intelligence-hallucination/

  16. Deadline. “Apple Ceases AI News Alerts After High-Profile Mistakes.” Deadline, January 2025. https://deadline.com/2025/01/apple-cancels-ai-news-alerts-bbc-1236259586/

  17. MIT Technology Review. “Why Google's AI Overviews gets things wrong.” MIT Technology Review, 31 May 2024. https://www.technologyreview.com/2024/05/31/1093019/why-are-googles-ai-overviews-results-so-bad/

  18. Washington Post. “Why Google's AI search might recommend you mix glue into your pizza.” Washington Post, 24 May 2024. https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2024/05/24/google-ai-overviews-wrong/

  19. Futurism. “CEO of Google Says It Has No Solution for Its AI Providing Wildly Incorrect Information.” Futurism, May 2024. https://futurism.com/the-byte/ceo-google-ai-hallucinations

  20. Variety. “Google Pauses AI Image Generation of People to Fix Racial Inaccuracies.” Variety, February 2024. https://variety.com/2024/digital/news/google-gemini-ai-image-racial-inaccuracies-nazi-soldiers-1235919168/

  21. NPR. “Google races to find a solution after AI generator Gemini misses the mark.” NPR, 18 March 2024. https://www.npr.org/2024/03/18/1239107313/google-races-to-find-a-solution-after-ai-generator-gemini-misses-the-mark

  22. IEEE Spectrum. “In 2016, Microsoft's Racist Chatbot Revealed the Dangers of Online Conversation.” IEEE Spectrum, 2019. https://spectrum.ieee.org/in-2016-microsofts-racist-chatbot-revealed-the-dangers-of-online-conversation

  23. MIT Technology Review. “Why Meta's latest large language model only survived three days online.” MIT Technology Review, 18 November 2022. https://www.technologyreview.com/2022/11/18/1063487/meta-large-language-model-ai-only-survived-three-days-gpt-3-science/

  24. European Commission. “AI Act: Shaping Europe's Digital Future.” European Commission, 2025. https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/regulatory-framework-ai

  25. Wilson Sonsini. “2026 Year in Preview: AI Regulatory Developments for Companies to Watch Out For.” Wilson Sonsini, 2026. https://www.wsgr.com/en/insights/2026-year-in-preview-ai-regulatory-developments-for-companies-to-watch-out-for.html

  26. European Data Protection Supervisor. “TechDispatch #2/2025: Human Oversight of Automated Decision-Making.” EDPS, 23 September 2025. https://www.edps.europa.eu/data-protection/our-work/publications/techdispatch/2025-09-23-techdispatch-22025-human-oversight-automated-making_en

  27. Harvard Journal of Law and Technology. “Redefining the Standard of Human Oversight for AI Negligence.” Harvard JOLT, 2025. https://jolt.law.harvard.edu/digest/redefining-the-standard-of-human-oversight-for-ai-negligence

  28. AI Incident Database. “AI Incident Roundup: November and December 2025 and January 2026.” AI Incident Database, 2026. https://incidentdatabase.ai/blog/incident-report-2025-november-december-2026-january/

  29. OECD. “Towards a Common Reporting Framework for AI Incidents.” OECD Artificial Intelligence Papers No. 34, February 2025. https://www.oecd.org/content/dam/oecd/en/publications/reports/2025/02/towards-a-common-reporting-framework-for-ai-incidents_8c488fdb/f326d4ac-en.pdf

  30. Mediaite. “Google Apologizes for Sending Out AI-Generated Push Notification That Used the N-Word.” Mediaite, February 2026. https://www.mediaite.com/media/entertainment/google-apologizes-for-sending-out-ai-generated-push-notification-that-used-the-n-word/

  31. ISACA. “Avoiding AI Pitfalls in 2026: Lessons Learned from Top 2025 Incidents.” ISACA Now Blog, 2025. https://www.isaca.org/resources/news-and-trends/isaca-now-blog/2025/avoiding-ai-pitfalls-in-2026-lessons-learned-from-top-2025-incidents

  32. OECD.AI. “OECD Framework for the Classification of AI Systems.” OECD, 2025. https://oecd.ai/en/classification

  33. OECD.AI. “Overview and methodology of the AI Incidents and Hazards Monitor.” OECD, 2025. https://oecd.ai/en/incidents-methodology

  34. Black Current News. “Exclusive: Google sends N-word in BAFTAs news alert, company apologises.” Black Current News, February 2026. https://www.blackcurrentnews.co.uk/p/google-apologises-n-word-push-notification-baftas


Tim Green

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer

Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.

His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.

ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk

 
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from plain text

Seal

She signaled the lobby camera with a gloved hand. The glass doors slid apart with a dry, mechanical wheeze. In the basement flat, the air tasted of old dust and cold concrete.

“We have to board the glass,” John said. He was a shadow against the laminate counter, a green bottle hanging from his fingers. “When the drones stop, the people upstairs will stop waiting. They’ll start looking down.”

She didn't look at him. She was counting the silver lids of the cans. Sardines. Corned beef. Thirty days of life, if they learned how to starve.

“Where are the boards coming from, John?”

“The government?” He scoffed. “Sure. Any minute now. They’ll drop them between the missiles and the prayers. We’ll dig them out of the lobby.”

The bottle cap hit the floor with a hollow clink. He set the bottle on the counter and reached for his rucksack, but his elbow caught it.

It shattered against the tile, exploding into a spray of green shards and bitter foam. The fermented scent twisted in the air—and then it changed.

Sharp. Electric. Ozone, metallic and bitter.

The floor wasn’t gray concrete anymore. It was a blinding, seamless white.

The lab stayed white even when the flask hit the floor. The glass burst. The air changed. A technician clawed at an unbolted shelf, his mouth moving, but no sound came out. The filtration system hummed, low and constant, while the speakers barked for evacuation.

A precautionary seal, they said. The first of many they would tell to cover what wasn’t.

“It’s just a bottle,” John said. His voice cracked, dragging her back. He stared at the mess, his bare feet inches from the jagged shards. “I’ll clean it up.”

She didn't answer. She looked up at the vent in the ceiling.

The hum upstairs shifted—became a wet, rattling wheeze.

She started counting.

 
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from Douglas Vandergraph

There is something about 1 Timothy 6 that feels almost uncomfortably honest because it does not let a person stay hidden behind religious language, good intentions, or a decent outward image. It keeps moving past the surface until it reaches the deeper things most people try not to examine too closely. It reaches into trust. It reaches into fear. It reaches into desire. It reaches into the quiet ways people try to make themselves feel secure. It reaches into the places where they measure their worth without even realizing they are doing it. That is why this chapter still feels so alive. It is not trapped in the ancient world. It speaks straight into a modern life filled with pressure, comparison, money, image, influence, and the constant temptation to confuse what looks strong with what is actually safe. It asks a hard question that does not leave much room to hide. What do you really believe will hold your life together.

That question matters because many people spend years giving answers they think sound faithful while their real answer is being revealed by how they live. A person can say he trusts God and still spend every day being ruled by fear of not having enough. A person can say that Christ is everything and still quietly build his identity on success, money, approval, or visible progress. A person can talk about peace while chasing life in a way that proves peace has not truly settled into his soul. That does not always happen because someone is trying to be fake. Many times it happens because the human heart is complicated. It can say one thing and cling to another. It can pray with its mouth and panic with its habits. It can love God sincerely and still carry old ways of thinking that pull it toward false refuge. That is why 1 Timothy 6 matters so much. It does not only correct wrong ideas. It reveals the hidden loyalties underneath them.

Paul is writing to Timothy, and there is tenderness in the letter, but there is also real weight in his words. He is not speaking to Timothy like a man who can drift a little and still stay spiritually healthy. He is writing to him like someone who knows how easy it is for a soul to be pulled off center. Timothy is young. He carries responsibility. He is living in a world full of false voices, false priorities, and false measures of success. Paul knows that ministry itself does not remove those dangers. In some ways it can intensify them. A person can begin serving God and then quietly become vulnerable to the desire to be seen, to matter, to gain influence, to build something visible, or to protect himself from failure in ways that are not really rooted in trust. Paul does not want Timothy merely informed. He wants him anchored. He wants him free. He wants him able to stand in truth without being owned by the world around him.

The chapter begins with ordinary life, and that matters. Paul starts by speaking into the world of servants and masters, into the world of work, duty, authority, and daily conduct. He tells those under authority to honor their masters so that the name of God and the teaching may not be reviled. Those words come from a world marked by real human brokenness, and scripture is not pretending every social structure of that time was righteous or complete. But Paul is showing something deeper than the system itself. He is showing that the name of God matters in ordinary life. He is showing that faith does not only exist in sacred moments. It shows itself in how a person carries himself in situations that feel frustrating, unfair, small, or unnoticed. That matters because many people imagine spiritual maturity will be measured in dramatic moments. Very often it is measured in quiet ones.

Most people do not meet their deepest spiritual tests in church. They meet them in the middle of routine pressure. They meet them at work when they feel unseen. They meet them in relationships where they feel misunderstood. They meet them when they are tired and want to answer frustration with bitterness. They meet them when they are tempted to become lazy, careless, resentful, or dishonest because life does not feel rewarding enough to justify their effort. Those are not small places. Those are places where a person’s real formation begins to show. Paul is reminding Timothy that the life of a believer preaches before his mouth ever does. A person may say Christ is Lord, but if his character is full of contempt, manipulation, laziness, or dishonor, then his life starts telling a different story than his confession.

That truth can be hard because people often want to believe they will be faithful once life finally becomes easier. They tell themselves they will be kind when they feel appreciated, honest when it is convenient, patient when stress lifts, and full of peace when the environment finally changes. But scripture keeps bringing us back to a harder and holier reality. Faithfulness does not wait for perfect surroundings. It reveals itself in imperfect ones. Holiness is not proven only when life feels beautiful. It is proven when the soul refuses corruption in places where corruption would feel understandable. God sees the private obedience nobody celebrates. He sees the daily integrity that does not look dramatic enough for applause. He sees the person who stays clean in spirit when nobody around him seems interested in living that way. That kind of hidden faithfulness matters more than many people know.

Then Paul moves directly into the subject of false teaching, and the chapter begins to tighten around the deeper issue in the heart. He speaks of those who do not agree with the sound words of our Lord Jesus Christ and the teaching that accords with godliness. That phrase is one of the great tests in this chapter. Real teaching accords with godliness. In other words, truth is not only measured by whether it sounds sharp, deep, emotional, or advanced. Truth agrees with Jesus, and truth leads to a life shaped by reverence, humility, honesty, and holiness. A message can sound spiritual and still be spiritually sick. It can sound clever and still lead a soul away from life. It can attract attention and still fail to produce anything beautiful in the inner life. Paul is helping Timothy understand that a message must be judged not only by how it sounds in the moment, but by what kind of person it forms.

That is such an important point because people are so easily impressed by tone and confidence. A person who sounds bold can appear wise even when pride is driving him. A person who sounds complex can appear profound even when he is empty at the root. A person who sounds fearless can appear strong even when he is simply intoxicated with his own voice. Paul cuts through that. He says the false teacher is puffed up with conceit and understands nothing. That is a severe sentence, but it reveals something true. Pride can dress itself in the language of understanding. It can make noise and call that wisdom. It can create the appearance of substance while lacking the one thing real knowledge of God always creates, which is humility. The more a person truly sees God, the less reason he has to swell up in self-importance.

Paul then says that such people have an unhealthy craving for controversy and for quarrels about words, which produce envy, dissension, slander, evil suspicions, and constant friction. That description feels painfully current because there is still a kind of spiritual atmosphere that feeds on agitation. It needs conflict. It needs reaction. It needs the emotional energy of tension. It circles language endlessly while the soul itself becomes more suspicious, more proud, more hostile, and less like Christ. Paul is not saying all disagreement is ungodly. He himself contended for truth when necessary. But there is a difference between clarity and combativeness. There is a difference between defending truth and becoming inwardly addicted to strife. When the fruit is envy, division, suspicion, and constant friction, something deeper than truth is driving the whole thing.

That is one of the great dangers in spiritual life. A person can feel serious and still be unhealthy. He can feel zealous and still be wrong at the level of spirit. He can think he is standing for righteousness while becoming harsher, smaller, more brittle, and more self-righteous inside. He can spend so much time reacting to error that he stops becoming gentle, steady, and alive to the presence of God. Paul does not want Timothy pulled into that world. He wants him to recognize that not every loud defense of truth is clean. Some of it comes from the flesh. Some of it comes from ego. Some of it comes from a deep need to feel important through argument. Truth that accords with godliness produces a different atmosphere than that. It produces clarity without corruption. It produces conviction without the love of chaos.

Then Paul names one of the deepest spiritual corruptions in the whole chapter. He says these people imagine that godliness is a means of gain. That line goes straight to the center of one of the oldest distortions in human religion. It reveals what happens when a person stops seeing God as the treasure and begins seeing Him as a tool. Instead of loving Him, he uses Him. Instead of surrendering to Him, he leverages faith for something else. Sometimes that something else is money. Sometimes it is influence. Sometimes it is admiration. Sometimes it is comfort. Sometimes it is control. The form may change, but the root problem stays the same. Godliness becomes a strategy for self-advancement instead of a life of surrender. A person can still speak the language of faith while quietly bowing to gain.

That is not only a danger for obvious false teachers. It is a danger for ordinary people too. Most believers would never openly say they are trying to use God, but the heart can move in that direction quietly. It happens when obedience is treated like a contract that should guarantee visible blessing. It happens when prayer becomes mostly about getting life to go the way the flesh wants. It happens when suffering is treated as proof that something has gone wrong with God’s goodness. It happens when spiritual life is measured mainly by how much easier, richer, or more impressive it seems to make life on the outside. It happens when the soul slowly begins to think that if God is really with me, then the outcomes I want should show up more clearly by now. Paul is exposing all of that. He is forcing the question. Do you want God, or do you want the world with a little God-language wrapped around it.

Then comes one of the richest lines in the chapter. “But godliness with contentment is great gain.” That sentence is not a weak sentence. It is not the voice of someone settling for less because he could not get more. It is the voice of freedom. Paul is saying that a soul walking with God and resting in Him possesses a kind of wealth the world cannot calculate. Contentment is not laziness. It is not passivity. It is not the death of every desire. It is the settled freedom of not needing created things to prove your worth, secure your future, or hold your heart together. It is the ability to receive what God gives without turning those gifts into saviors. It is the quiet strength that no longer says, “I will finally be okay when one more visible thing happens.” In a restless world, that kind of contentment is a miracle of grace.

Most people know the opposite of contentment very well. They know the feeling of always being one step away from peace. One more accomplishment. One more source of income. One more sign of approval. One more change in circumstances. One more outward proof that life is finally headed where they want it to go. But that finish line keeps moving. The appetite does not calm simply because it gets fed. It usually learns to demand more. The soul that has not learned contentment will turn even blessing into bondage because every gift becomes fuel for new fear, new comparison, and new hunger. Paul is naming another way to live. He is saying that the heart can become free from the endless pressure to build itself through gain. It can find rest in God and stop measuring life by constant increase.

He strengthens this by reminding Timothy that we brought nothing into the world, and we cannot take anything out of it. That statement sounds simple because it is simple, but it shatters so many illusions. Human beings spend huge amounts of energy clutching things that cannot stay. They build identity around what is temporary. They sacrifice peace for possessions. They let money shape their relationships, their priorities, and their emotional stability, even though death will one day strip every last possession from their hands. Paul is not romanticizing poverty or denying the value of responsible stewardship. He is restoring sanity. He is reminding Timothy that ownership is temporary. The great question in life is not how much can be gathered before the end. The great question is what kind of person you are becoming while you pass through what does not last.

Then Paul says that if we have food and clothing, with these we will be content. That line feels shocking to modern ears because modern life keeps expanding the category of what people think they need in order to feel okay. What used to be a luxury becomes a standard. What used to be a blessing becomes an expectation. Then peace starts depending on the presence of things people once could not even imagine needing. Paul cuts through that inflation with holy simplicity. He is not saying every desire beyond bare necessities is sinful. He is saying that peace cannot be built on endless escalation. If contentment always waits for more, contentment never arrives. If gratitude only comes once life becomes polished enough, then the heart is still being ruled by appetite. Paul is calling Timothy back to a simpler center where provision is mercy and God Himself is enough to ground peace.

That does not mean created good is the enemy. Scripture never teaches hatred of beauty, work, provision, or blessing rightly received. The issue is not things. The issue is enthronement. The issue is what happens when possessions begin to possess the heart. The issue is what happens when emotional stability becomes chained to comfort. Some people think greed belongs only to the wealthy, but greed is not defined simply by how much someone has. It is revealed by what someone worships, fears losing, and secretly believes will save him. A poor man can be ruled by greed. A rich man can be free in heart. The question is deeper than bank accounts. The question is where trust lives.

That is why Paul warns that those who desire to be rich fall into temptation, into a snare, into many senseless and harmful desires that plunge people into ruin and destruction. He is not merely speaking about having money. He is speaking about wealth becoming the object of inward devotion. There is a difference between working responsibly, providing faithfully, and stewarding resources well, and building the heart around the desire to be rich. Once that desire takes over, it becomes a snare. It starts promising a kind of safety and significance it can never really provide. It whispers that peace is almost within reach if you can just gather a little more. It trains the soul to think that visible gain can solve invisible fear. It teaches the heart to reach outward for what can only be healed inwardly through trust in God.

Paul’s language grows severe because the danger is severe. He says these desires plunge people into ruin and destruction. That is drowning language. It is the picture of someone being dragged under by cravings he once thought were reasonable. Most people do not intend to destroy themselves. They simply normalize certain loves. They justify them as practical, wise, or necessary. And that is part of what makes sin so deceptive. It rarely announces itself honestly. It comes dressed as urgency, responsibility, prudence, or common sense. The heart believes it because fear is persuasive. Pride is persuasive. The need to feel secure is persuasive. So a person keeps moving in a direction that seems understandable until suddenly the soul is thinner, prayer is weaker, truth is more negotiable, and peace is harder to find than it was before the chase began.

Then Paul says that the love of money is a root of all kinds of evils. He is precise. He does not say money itself is the root. The issue is love. Misplaced love. Disordered devotion. Money becomes spiritually dangerous when it is asked to carry what only God can carry. It can then serve many other idols at once. It can serve pride by making a person feel above others. It can serve fear by creating the illusion of protection. It can serve vanity by dressing up identity. It can serve control by making the flesh feel less vulnerable. It can serve unbelief by tempting the soul to trust visible reserves more than the invisible faithfulness of God. That is why the love of money opens into so many evils. It is not an isolated sin. It touches many others because it bends the heart at its deepest point of trust.

Paul says that through this craving some have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many pangs. That is such a vivid phrase because it destroys the fantasy that greed produces peace. It does not. It wounds. It pierces. It fills life with grief. There is the grief of never feeling secure enough. The grief of constant comparison. The grief of using people as means rather than loving them as people. The grief of compromise. The grief of spiritual drift. The grief of discovering that what you gave your heart to cannot heal the ache that made you chase it in the first place. Sin always sells itself as relief, but it carries pain inside it. Paul is not exaggerating for effect. He is telling the truth about what happens when the heart builds itself on the wrong treasure.

Then the letter turns directly toward Timothy. “But as for you, O man of God, flee these things.” That shift matters because truth always gets more personal when it stops being about “those people” and becomes a call addressed to your own soul. Timothy must not merely identify the danger. He must run from it. Flee. There are some things that should not be entertained. Some desires do not become weaker through careful negotiation. They become stronger through attention. Wisdom often looks less glamorous than people expect. Sometimes it looks like immediate distance. It looks like not proving anything. It looks like not lingering around what can quietly poison the soul. Paul is not insulting Timothy by telling him to flee. He is protecting him. He is reminding him that a man of God is not one who plays with corruption to show his strength. He is one who values holiness enough to leave quickly.

That matters because pride loves the fantasy of invulnerability. It likes to think true strength means getting as close as possible to temptation while still standing. But real wisdom knows where weakness lives. Real wisdom knows the heart can rationalize almost anything if it wants it badly enough. Real wisdom does not trust itself more than it should. Timothy is called a man of God, and that identity means he must live with a holy seriousness about what can deform the soul. So must we. There are thoughts, patterns, loves, and environments that should not be kept alive under the excuse of maturity. They should be fled. Some battles are won not by standing closer, but by refusing access.

And that is where this first part leaves us, with Timothy standing under a direct and holy call. Paul has already exposed false teaching, false gain, false hope, and false safety. He has shown how easily the heart can use religion to chase the world. He has shown how the soul can become trapped in the lie that more will finally be enough. He has shown that greed does not enrich a person inwardly. It pierces him. He has shown that the true issue is not merely what a person has, but what his heart calls treasure. In the next part, Paul will move from fleeing to pursuing. He will tell Timothy what kind of life a man of God must run toward. He will lift his eyes to the majesty of the living God. He will speak to the rich with both warning and mercy. He will call Timothy to guard what has been entrusted to him. And over all of it, he will end not with panic, but with grace.

Paul does not leave Timothy with only a command to flee. He immediately tells him what to pursue, and that shift matters because the Christian life is never built on emptiness alone. The heart cannot live forever on mere avoidance. It must be drawn toward something better, something cleaner, something stronger than what it has turned away from. So Paul says to pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, steadfastness, and gentleness. That is not a random list. It is a picture of a life reordered by the presence of God. Righteousness means Timothy is to live in what is right before the Lord even when compromise would seem easier or more profitable. Godliness means his whole life is to be shaped by reverence, not by self-display. Faith means he is to trust God when the visible world is not handing him easy reassurance. Love means he cannot make himself the center of every decision. Steadfastness means he must keep going when life does not become lighter as quickly as he hoped. Gentleness means that strength in the kingdom of God is never the same thing as harshness.

That last word matters deeply because gentleness is one of the qualities the world least understands. People often imagine that power must be sharp to be real. They imagine that force proves strength and that softness must signal weakness. But Paul places gentleness beside steadfastness, not in opposition to it. That means the strongest person in the room may not be the loudest one, the harshest one, or the most aggressive one. The strongest person may be the one who can remain steady without becoming cruel. He may be the one who can carry conviction without letting ego take over. He may be the one who does not need to wound in order to feel secure. This is the strength of Christ. Jesus was not weak because He was gentle. He was gentle because His strength was not built on fear. A person who knows God does not need to keep proving himself through hardness. He can stand in truth without feeding on hostility. That kind of strength is rare, and Paul wants Timothy to pursue it.

Then Paul says, “Fight the good fight of the faith.” Those words are famous, but their weight is easy to forget if they become too familiar. Faith is not passive drift. It is not vague agreement with spiritual ideas. It is not private inspiration detached from struggle. There is a fight involved. There is pressure in this world that keeps pulling the heart toward what is visible, immediate, and self-protective. There is pressure to trust money more than God. There is pressure to protect image more than truth. There is pressure to treat holiness as optional when it starts feeling costly. There is pressure to turn away from trust and toward control. There is pressure to stop believing that hidden obedience matters when nothing dramatic seems to be happening. All of that means the life of faith is contested territory. The soul does not simply float toward maturity. It must resist what would hollow it out.

Yet Paul calls it the good fight. That word changes the emotional tone of the whole sentence. There are many fights people give themselves to that are not good at all. They fight to preserve pride. They fight to keep a false image alive. They fight to stay ahead of others. They fight to protect resentment. They fight for comforts they cannot keep. They fight for the right to keep controlling everything around them. But the fight of faith is different because it is connected to what is eternal. It is a fight for truth, for love, for endurance, for holiness, for the integrity of the soul before God. It is hard, but it is not empty. It is costly, but it is not wasted. Every private refusal to compromise is part of that fight. Every hidden act of trust is part of that fight. Every decision to keep loving when cynicism would feel easier is part of that fight. Heaven sees those battles even when nobody else does.

Paul then tells Timothy to take hold of the eternal life to which he was called and about which he made the good confession in the presence of many witnesses. That phrase is one of the deepest in the chapter because it shows that eternal life is not meant to remain only a distant future hope. Timothy is to lay hold of it now. In other words, the life of the age to come is meant to shape his present life in the middle of this age. He is not only waiting to die and then receive something glorious. He is already meant to live from a different center, from a different kingdom, from a different horizon than the one the world offers him. That changes how a person walks through ordinary life. If eternal life is only a future concept, then temporary things stay too large in the imagination. Approval feels huge. Wealth feels huge. Loss feels huge. Fear feels huge. But when eternal life becomes a present grip on the soul, the scale changes. What passes away begins to lose some of its power to dominate the heart.

This is one of the hidden reasons so many people live with constant inward panic. They are trying to squeeze ultimate safety, ultimate meaning, and ultimate identity out of a world that cannot provide any of those things permanently. They are asking the temporary to act like the eternal. They are asking appearance to do what only truth can do. They are asking money to do what only God can do. They are asking comfort to do what only eternal life can do. But the soul cannot remain at rest under that arrangement because it was never built for it. Paul is calling Timothy back to a bigger frame. He is saying, in effect, live from what is already yours in Christ. Stop acting like everything depends on what can be seen right now. Stop letting visible things dictate the final meaning of your life. Take hold of eternal life. Let that reality anchor you.

Paul also reminds Timothy that he made the good confession in the presence of many witnesses. That matters because faith is not a private hobby tucked safely inside a person’s inner world. Timothy has publicly identified himself with Christ. He has said, in front of others, that his life belongs to Jesus. Paul is telling him to live in line with that confession. The same principle remains true for every believer. It is one thing to confess Christ when the words are beautiful and familiar. It is another thing to remain faithful to that confession when obedience starts costing comfort, simplicity, approval, or opportunity. Confession becomes real in the place where it begins to shape choice. If a person says Jesus is Lord but keeps letting fear, money, or self-protection govern the real movement of his life, then the confession has not yet reached all the way through. Paul wants Timothy’s confession and Timothy’s life to belong to the same truth.

Then Paul places all of this under one of the most majestic charges in the New Testament. He says this in the presence of God, who gives life to all things, and of Christ Jesus, who in His testimony before Pontius Pilate made the good confession. That is not decorative language. It is grounding language. It means Timothy’s life is not unfolding merely before human eyes. It is unfolding before God, the One who gives life to all things. That means Timothy is not sustained by his own power, his own personality, or the approval of the people around him. He is living before the very source of breath, being, and existence. That matters because human fear always grows when God shrinks in a person’s practical awareness. Pressure becomes absolute when the soul forgets who is most real in the room. Paul restores that awareness. He reminds Timothy that the deepest reality surrounding his life is not opposition, not uncertainty, not public opinion, not the pressure of man, but the presence of the God who gives life.

Paul also points Timothy to Christ Jesus and specifically to His testimony before Pontius Pilate. That detail carries enormous weight because Jesus stood before earthly power and did not betray the truth in order to preserve Himself. He did not reshape reality for comfort. He did not choose falsehood to avoid pain. He remained true in front of authority that could wound Him. Paul is calling Timothy to remember that this is the pattern of his own Lord. He is not being asked to walk a road Christ did not walk first. He is being invited into the same kind of faithfulness, the kind that values truth above self-preservation. That changes the meaning of obedience. It is not merely moral effort. It is participation in the life of Jesus. It is learning to stand where Jesus stood, not in the sense of carrying the same redemptive role, but in the sense of sharing the same allegiance to truth no matter the cost.

Paul then tells Timothy to keep the commandment unstained and free from reproach until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ. That word unstained carries so much of the chapter’s burden. Timothy is not merely to keep some outward shell of religion intact. He is to keep the truth clean. He is not to mix it with self-interest, ambition, worldliness, fear, or the values of an age that does not know God. The commandment is not to be held in a contaminated form. That is still one of the great callings of every generation of believers. There is always pressure to stain the truth a little so it fits more comfortably into the surrounding culture. There is always a temptation to soften whatever costs too much, to hide whatever feels too sharp, to magnify only what makes life easier and ignore whatever calls for surrender. But stained truth is not harmless. Once the heart gets used to mixing the holy with the useful, it slowly loses the ability to tell the difference between reverence and manipulation.

Then Paul lifts Timothy’s eyes as high as they can go and speaks of God in language that feels almost too vast for the human mind. He says that Christ’s appearing will be displayed at the proper time by the blessed and only Sovereign, the King of kings and Lord of lords, who alone has immortality, who dwells in unapproachable light, whom no one has ever seen or can see. To Him be honor and eternal dominion. This is not a break from the practical concerns of the chapter. It is the foundation beneath them. Paul knows that if Timothy is going to stand against greed, false teaching, fear, and the temptation to use faith for gain, he will need more than rules. He will need awe. He will need to remember who God is. He will need his imagination reset by divine reality.

When Paul calls God the blessed and only Sovereign, he is reminding Timothy that no earthly power is ultimate. No ruler is ultimate. No social system is ultimate. No market is ultimate. No wealthy person is ultimate. No public voice is ultimate. None of those things sit on the throne. They may look large from the ground, but they are not final. God alone is sovereign. That truth is not abstract. It is one of the great medicines for fear. When God becomes small in a person’s mind, everything else becomes too large. Money feels all-powerful. Human opinion feels final. Loss feels devastating beyond repair. But when God is seen again in His majesty, lesser things begin to return to proportion. They may still hurt. They may still matter. But they are no longer being asked to define reality.

Paul says God alone has immortality. That means God’s life is not borrowed. He does not depend on another source for His being. He cannot decay. He cannot be diminished. He cannot move toward death. That matters because human beings are constantly trying to protect themselves from fragility through accumulation and control. They keep acting as though enough money, enough planning, enough outward security, or enough visible advantage could remove the fact that they are vulnerable creatures. But only God stands beyond fragility. Only God has life in Himself. That means every attempt to build final safety on created things is already flawed from the start. Riches cannot grant immortality. Status cannot grant immortality. Human approval cannot grant immortality. Control cannot grant immortality. The believer’s peace begins to settle when he stops asking temporary things to do what only God can do.

Then there is that phrase that God dwells in unapproachable light. Those words restore reverence in a world that often treats God casually. He is not manageable. He is not ordinary. He is not something that can be packaged into a personal project while leaving the heart in charge. He is holy beyond measure. He is near in mercy, yes, but He remains God. That matters because much modern spirituality wants intimacy without trembling, comfort without surrender, and nearness without holiness. Paul will not allow that reduction. He reminds Timothy that the One before whom he lives is glorious beyond all categories. That does not push the believer away from God. It actually restores sanity. The soul was never meant to carry itself as though it were the center. It was made to bow, worship, adore, and live in the security of belonging to the Holy One rather than trying to become its own source of life.

After giving Timothy this vision of divine majesty, Paul turns back to one of the most difficult practical subjects in the chapter, which is how the rich are to live. He tells Timothy to charge the rich in this present age not to be haughty, nor to set their hopes on the uncertainty of riches, but on God, who richly provides us with everything to enjoy. That sentence is full of wisdom and balance. Paul does not treat wealth as spiritually harmless. He knows it creates real temptation. But he also does not act as though the existence of material blessing is itself the problem. The issue is not the possession of things. The issue is whether those things begin to possess the heart. Wealth can easily make a person proud. It can make him feel superior, protected, independent, and above the common vulnerability of other people. Paul cuts against that immediately. The rich must not be haughty because whatever they have, they did not create their own existence. Breath is mercy. Opportunity is mercy. Strength is mercy. Everything rests on God.

Paul also says they must not set their hopes on the uncertainty of riches. That phrase might be one of the clearest descriptions of money anywhere in scripture. Riches are uncertain. They can increase, but they can also vanish. They can calm certain outward problems for a season, but they cannot conquer fragility. They cannot guarantee tomorrow. They cannot stop illness, aging, grief, or death. They cannot give peace to a restless conscience. They cannot create meaning. Yet people constantly try to build their emotional center on what money can do, as if enough of it could finally make life solid. Paul says no. Hope is too serious to be laid on something so unstable. Money may be useful. It is not worthy of hope.

Then Paul says to set hope on God, who richly provides us with everything to enjoy. That line is beautiful because it saves the believer from two opposite errors at once. One error is idolatry. The other is joyless suspicion toward all created good. Paul refuses both. God provides richly. He is generous. Creation contains real gifts. Food, shelter, friendship, beauty, laughter, meaningful labor, and the quiet mercies of daily life are not to be treated as enemies. They are gifts from a good God. But they must stay gifts. They must not become the objects of worship or the foundations of identity. They are to be received with gratitude, not desperation. This is one of the most balanced views of material life in the whole New Testament. It neither bows to possessions nor despises them. It teaches the soul to enjoy what God gives without ever kneeling before it.

Paul then tells the rich to do good, to be rich in good works, to be generous and ready to share. This is where the chapter radically redefines what it means to be rich. In the world’s eyes, richness is about accumulation. In Paul’s eyes, real richness is seen in what kind of life a person pours out. A man may have much and still be spiritually poor if his whole existence bends inward around self-preservation. Another may have less and yet be truly rich before God because his life is marked by generosity, open-handedness, and good works. Paul is teaching Timothy not to be fooled by appearances. Heaven does not automatically honor what earth honors. Heaven calls a person rich when his life becomes useful in goodness.

That phrase ready to share points to posture more than isolated action. It means a person does not hold tightly to possessions as though his survival depends on keeping them all locked down. He is free enough to let what he has move outward in love. That does not mean foolishness. It does not mean the abandonment of wisdom. But it does mean the heart has stopped treating money as lord. The open hand reveals a trusting soul. It says that security is not found in hoarding. It says that life is larger than self-protection. It says that wealth is meant to become stewardship rather than identity. Paul is not merely trying to create generous behavior. He is trying to free the soul from the inward bend of greed.

Then he says that by doing this they are storing up treasure for themselves as a good foundation for the future, so that they may take hold of that which is truly life. That phrase, truly life, reaches back through everything in the chapter and gathers its deepest point. There is a kind of life that only looks alive from the outside, and there is life that is actually life. A person may be active, wealthy, entertained, and admired while remaining disconnected from what life is really for. He may be full of motion and still empty at the center. Paul says the truly living person is the one whose hope rests in God, whose heart is free from slavery to gain, and whose life is rich in what heaven counts as treasure. That is why generosity is not a side issue. It is one of the ways the soul learns to live in truth. It is one of the ways a person stops pretending that safety lies in possession and begins to discover the freedom of trust.

This is what greed never tells the truth about. It never admits that it makes a life smaller. It promises safety, but it creates anxiety. It promises control, but it deepens fear. It promises fullness, but it narrows the soul into self-enclosure. The human person was not made to be a vault. He was made to reflect the goodness of God. He was made for worship, trust, love, and the joyful outward movement of generosity. Sin folds all of that inward. Grace opens it back up. So when Paul tells the rich to be generous and ready to share, he is not merely addressing finances. He is addressing the shape of the soul itself. He is calling them back to a freer way of being human.

Then Paul closes the chapter with a final appeal that feels deeply personal. “O Timothy, guard the deposit entrusted to you.” There is something tender and weighty in that sentence. Timothy has not merely received some ideas he is free to redesign. He has been entrusted with something precious. The gospel is a deposit. Truth has been given, not invented. His task is not to make it more fashionable, more marketable, or more comfortable for the age around him. His task is to guard it. That means there will always be pressures against it. There will always be voices trying to reshape it, soften it, stain it, or replace it with something more flattering to human pride. Timothy must not yield. He must guard what he has been given.

Paul tells him to avoid irreverent babble and contradictions of what is falsely called knowledge, for by professing it some have swerved from the faith. This warning still feels painfully current because human pride still loves the feeling of superior knowledge. It loves the sound of contradiction when contradiction makes it feel advanced. It loves ideas that seem to rise above ordinary reverence and obedience. But Paul sees through the performance. If what is called knowledge leads people away from Christ, away from truth, away from holiness, and away from the faith once delivered, then it is not wisdom. Real knowledge does not sneer at reverence. Real understanding does not require departure from godliness. When the mind becomes proud enough to detach itself from holiness, it stops seeing clearly no matter how brilliant it may feel.

That is one of the lasting lessons of 1 Timothy 6. Not everything that looks strong is strong. Not everything that sounds bold is wise. Not everything that promises gain is gain. Not everything that glitters is treasure. The chapter keeps exposing the false names people give things. It shows that religion can be used for self-advancement while still sounding spiritual. It shows that riches can become a false refuge while still looking practical. It shows that desire can promise security while dragging a person toward ruin. It shows that knowledge can become false while still sounding sophisticated. It shows that true life is not found where most people are looking. And all of that brings the soul back to one unavoidable conclusion. God is the treasure. God is the refuge. God is the One in whom hope belongs.

Then, after all the warning and majesty and searching truth, Paul ends with grace. “Grace be with you.” That ending matters more than it may seem at first. This chapter is heavy because it exposes what destroys the soul. It exposes greed, pride, false hope, and spiritual corruption. But Paul does not leave Timothy in exposure. He leaves him under grace. That is exactly right because none of what Paul commands can be carried out in the strength of the flesh alone. A person cannot shame himself into holiness. He cannot pressure himself into contentment. He cannot argue himself into trust. He cannot simply decide to be free from greed and make it happen by raw force of will. He needs grace. He needs the active help of God. He needs Christ not only as teacher and example, but as Savior and sustaining life.

Grace is not the opposite of seriousness. Grace is the power that makes serious discipleship possible. The same grace that forgives also trains. The same grace that receives also reshapes. The same grace that saves also steadies, cleanses, strengthens, and keeps. That means 1 Timothy 6 is not meant to leave a person crushed under the awareness of his disordered desires. It is meant to wake him up and call him home. If the chapter has shown someone where he has been trusting money, grace says return. If it has uncovered where he has been using religion to pursue gain, grace says return. If it has revealed how restless the soul has become under the pressure for more, grace says return. God exposes false foundations because He loves too deeply to let His people keep sleeping inside them.

That is the enduring beauty of this chapter. It refuses to lie to us about what destroys life, but it also refuses to abandon us there. It tells the truth about greed, then points us back to a better treasure. It tells the truth about false teaching, then points us back to what accords with godliness. It tells the truth about unstable riches, then points us back to the living God who richly provides. It tells the truth about pressure and conflict, then points us back to Christ who made the good confession. It tells the truth about the soul’s restless chase for enough, then points us back to eternal life. It strips away illusion, but it does so in order to lead the heart into reality.

And maybe that is the deepest invitation running through all of 1 Timothy 6. Stop calling treasure what cannot keep you. Stop calling safety what cannot hold you. Stop building your worth around what can be counted, displayed, gained, or lost. Stop asking the world to do what only God can do. Stop chasing enough in places where enough will never be found. There is a better way to live. There is a deeper richness. There is a truer life. There is a peace that does not depend on constant outward increase. There is a contentment that does not come from lowering your standards, but from lifting your eyes. There is a freedom that comes when the heart finally stops kneeling before gain and starts resting in God.

That is why this chapter matters so much. It is not merely a warning about money or a set of instructions for a young pastor. It is a revelation of what the heart keeps doing when it forgets who God is. It keeps looking around the world for a treasure big enough to save it. It keeps reaching toward visible things hoping they will quiet invisible fears. It keeps trying to secure itself through what can never become eternal. But Paul tears through that illusion and says that godliness with contentment is great gain. He says that true life is found where hope rests in God. He says that faith is a good fight because it is a fight for what is real. He says that the believer must guard the truth, hold it clean, and not let it be stained by a world that keeps measuring value the wrong way. And over all of it, he says grace.

That final word matters because in the end, this chapter is not calling people merely to try harder at being religious. It is calling them to surrender more deeply to the God who is already life itself. It is calling them to let go of false treasure and return to the One who cannot be lost. It is calling them to become the kind of people who can walk through a restless world without being owned by it. It is calling them to find their worth in what the grave cannot touch. It is calling them to take hold of eternal life now. That is the road Paul places before Timothy. It is the road he places before us as well. Choose the treasure that lasts. Choose the fight that matters. Choose the truth that remains unstained. Choose the life that is truly life. And when your own strength begins to fail, as it surely will, receive again the grace of God, because only grace can teach a restless heart to finally call God its treasure.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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from Roscoe's Story

In Summary: * After seven straight hours of following men's March Madness games today, I finally burned out on that, turned away from the games, and resolved to spend the rest of the day (well, evening now) at a more relaxed pace, scanning my usual news sites, focusing more on my night prayers, and turning in early.

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= 227.52 lbs. * bp= 135/80 (66)

Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups

Diet: * 06:30 – 1 potato & egg breakfast taco * 07:10 – crispy oatmeal cookies * 10:50 – 1 peanut butter sandwich * 12:50 – snacking on crackers and cream cheese, 1 chocolate cupcake * 14:45 – fried fish and vegetable patties, baked fish steaks with sauce

Activities, Chores, etc.: * 05:00 – bank accounts activity monitored * 05:15 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap, * 10:15 – prayerfully reading through the Pre 1955 Roman Catholic Mass Propers for Passion Sunday, March 22, 2026. * 11:00 – begin following my full day of mens March Madness Games * 12:05 – placed grocery delivery order * 16:30 – receive and stock today's grocery delivery * 18:00 – burned out on March Madness, turned away from the games for the rest of the day.

Chess: * 16:45 – moved in all pending CC games

 
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from Douglas Vandergraph

WATCH THE FULL STORY VIDEO HERE:  https://youtu.be/u6ycmUtyTKo

A little boy once asked his father a question that sounded small when it left his mouth, but it carried the weight of something people wrestle with their whole lives. He asked, “How big is God?” Children can do that. They can ask one clean question and somehow reach right past all the layers adults build around themselves. They do not always know the right religious words. They do not hide behind polished language. They do not usually stop to make sure their question sounds intelligent enough. They just ask what is really inside them. That is why a child’s question can sometimes feel more honest than a room full of grown people trying to sound certain. And this question touches something deep because it is not only about size. It is about nearness. It is about whether the God who made everything can still be close enough to matter to one human heart. It is about whether His greatness puts Him out of reach, or whether His greatness is exactly why you are never beyond His reach at all.

A lot of people are still asking that same question even if they have not used those exact words in years. Some ask it when they are lying awake at night and the room feels too quiet and their thoughts feel too loud. Some ask it after a funeral when everyone has gone home and the grief has settled into the walls of the house. Some ask it after they failed in a way they never thought they would. Some ask it while trying to hold themselves together in front of other people even though they are falling apart on the inside. Some ask it in church while songs are being sung and hands are raised and they are wondering why God feels so real to everyone else and so faint to them. Some ask it after years of prayer that did not seem to lead where they hoped. Some ask it because they drifted and do not know how to come back. Some ask it because they are seeking and they do not want religious noise. They want something real. Under all of that, there is often one ache. If God is truly so great, why can He feel so far away.

The father in this story did not answer the boy with a lecture. He did not try to sound impressive. He did not throw a pile of theology at a child and hope it landed. He did something simple enough for a little boy to understand and deep enough to stay with a grown heart for years. He took the boy outside and pointed to an airplane high in the sky. Then he asked his son how big it looked. The little boy answered honestly. It looked small. It was far away, and from where he stood it did not seem very large at all. Then the father took him closer to an airplane, close enough that the child could really see it. Now the airplane looked huge. Massive. It did not look tiny anymore. It looked powerful and real and impossible to overlook. Then the father told him that God is like that. It is not that God becomes bigger or smaller. It is that He seems small when He feels far away, and He feels overwhelming when you are close.

That answer has left so many people in tears because it names something we all know at some level but often forget in the middle of pain. Sometimes what looks small is not small at all. Sometimes what feels faint has not faded. Sometimes the change is not in the thing itself. Sometimes the change is in the distance between you and it. The airplane did not shrink when it was far away. It only looked that way from where the boy was standing. In the same way, God does not become less glorious because your heart is tired. He does not become less present because your prayers feel dry. He does not become less loving because your emotions have gone quiet. He does not become less real because you are walking through a hard season. He remains who He is. The difficulty is that human beings often measure God by what their current inner life can detect, and that is a painful mistake.

This is one of the hardest struggles in the life of faith. A person can slowly start confusing their perception with the truth. If they feel close to God, then God must be near. If they feel numb, then maybe He is far. If prayer feels alive, then all must be well. If prayer feels hard, then maybe heaven has closed. It sounds small when you say it like that, but many people live under those quiet assumptions every day. They let their present emotional weather tell them what kind of God they have. They do not mean to. It just happens. Human beings are fragile. We are affected by stress, sleep, pain, memory, grief, shame, fear, trauma, disappointment, and exhaustion. All of those things can cloud the inner world. All of those things can change what the soul is able to feel. But none of those things change who God is. He is not reduced by your weakness. He is not diminished by your confusion. He does not shrink because life has worn you down.

That matters because many people have quietly built their whole faith on the idea that if God is near, they should always feel it in a strong and obvious way. Then when a dark season comes, they panic. They assume they must have done something terribly wrong. They assume maybe God stepped back. They assume maybe they lost something they do not know how to recover. Some even assume that if they cannot feel God properly, then maybe the whole thing was never real in the first place. That is the kind of thought that can quietly eat away at a person for years. It can make honest believers feel fake. It can make prayer feel awkward. It can make the Bible feel distant. It can make worship feel like they are acting in a language their soul no longer knows how to speak. Yet some of the deepest faith a person will ever have is born in the place where feeling is weak but turning toward God continues anyway.

There is a kind of faith that depends heavily on spiritual sensation. It rises when the heart feels warm and it weakens when the soul feels tired. Then there is another kind of faith, quieter and stronger, that says, I do not fully feel You right now, but I will not call You absent because of that. I do not understand why this season feels so dim, but I will not reduce You to my current ability to sense You. That kind of faith is not fake. It is not second-class faith. It is often the faith that survives what lighter forms of faith cannot survive. It is the faith that keeps returning. It is the faith that refuses to let emotion sit on the throne. It is the faith that remembers that the airplane is still large even when it looks small from the ground.

Pain is one of the biggest reasons people lose sight of this. Pain narrows vision. It makes the immediate moment feel absolute. It makes what hurts now seem larger than everything that has ever been true before. A person in grief can know God in theory and still feel swallowed by the silence of loss. A person in shame can know grace as a concept and still feel too dirty to stand near it. A person in disappointment can know Bible verses and still feel like heaven did not come through when it mattered most. Pain can crowd the sky until all you can really see is the ache right in front of you. Then God starts looking small, not because He is small, but because your pain has become the lens through which you are trying to view Him.

There are different kinds of distance, and each one affects the soul in its own way. Some people grow distant through busyness. They do not reject God. They just become mentally and emotionally crowded. Their days fill with responsibility, noise, pressure, and low-grade stress until their soul begins living on leftovers. They keep moving, but inwardly they are never still enough to really notice what is happening in them or around them. God begins to feel more like an idea they agree with than a presence they live with. That is one kind of distance. Other people grow distant through disappointment. They prayed and hoped and trusted, and still the thing they begged God to do did not happen the way they believed it would. The marriage still broke. The illness still stayed. The person still died. The answer still did not come. In that kind of pain, people do not always run from God in anger. Sometimes they just step back quietly because closeness feels too risky now.

Then there is shame, which may be one of the cruelest forms of distance because shame directly attacks the possibility of nearness. Shame says you should stay back now. Shame says grace might be for other people, but not for you in any deeply personal way. Shame says you can maybe talk about God, but do not draw too close. Not like this. Not after that. Not with what you know about yourself. Shame tells people to hide from the One who already sees them fully. It trains them to live outside the warmth of mercy while still talking about mercy in general terms. They may even believe forgiveness is real. They just no longer believe it in a way that allows them to rest under it. That kind of distance can make God look terribly small because shame keeps the person just far enough away that they can no longer see clearly.

Another kind of distance comes from familiarity. This one is subtle because it can happen while a person is still around spiritual things all the time. They know the language. They know the stories. They know how to talk about grace, faith, prayer, surrender, and trust. But something has gone flat inside. The truths are still there, but the wonder is missing. They hear what is holy so often that it starts feeling common. Not deeply grounded in a beautiful way, but faded into the background. A person can know a lot about God and still be living at a distance from Him in the places that matter most. That sort of drift is often hard to notice because it does not always come with some dramatic collapse. It comes quietly. One distracted day at a time. One spiritually numb season at a time. One internal step back at a time.

Then there are people who are not distant because they are rebellious or distracted or ashamed, but because they are simply exhausted. Life has taken more out of them than they know how to explain. They have carried too much for too long. Their body is tired. Their mind is tired. Their heart is tired. Even receiving comfort feels hard. These people often need tenderness more than correction. They need someone to remind them that weakness does not scare God away. They need to hear that the God who made them remembers they are dust. He knows what grief does to a body. He knows what chronic stress does to a mind. He knows what heartbreak does to trust. He knows what fear does to attention. He is not standing over the exhausted, asking why they are not more spiritually impressive. He is the One who knows how to kneel down to the level of the weary.

That is one reason Jesus matters so deeply in this conversation. Without Jesus, some people would naturally assume that the greatness of God must mean emotional distance. They would picture a God so vast and so high that personal tenderness would seem impossible. But Jesus reveals something different. Jesus reveals that the greatness of God is not cold. In Christ, the God who made all things comes near. He walks dusty roads. He enters human mess. He touches people others avoid. He listens to those who are ashamed. He stops for the forgotten. He sits with the wounded. He weeps. He suffers. He bleeds. He dies. He rises. That means the greatness of God does not create distance the way earthly power does. Earthly power often moves away from weakness. The greatness of God moves toward weakness in order to redeem it.

This is the center of Christian hope. Christianity is not about human beings figuring out how to climb high enough to reach a distant God. It is about God coming near to us. The Word became flesh and dwelt among us. That is not just a line for a holiday season. That is the heartbeat of the gospel. God did not remain a far-off concept. He entered human life. He entered hunger. He entered sorrow. He entered weariness. He entered rejection. He entered pain. He entered death itself and broke it open from the inside. That means when a person says, “God feels far,” the answer is not only to try to stir up some new feeling. The answer is to look again at Christ. Look at Jesus and you are looking at the God who came near.

That changes everything for the person who feels lost in spiritual distance. Because if God came near in Christ, then the question is no longer whether His greatness keeps Him away. The question becomes whether we are willing to let His nearness find us where we really are. Some people are waiting to come back to God until they feel more spiritual. Some are waiting until their questions are settled. Some are waiting until they can clean up their life enough to feel acceptable. Some are waiting until they feel enough sorrow over what they have done or enough strength to do better. But grace does not begin at the point where a person becomes impressive. It begins at the point where a person turns honestly toward God and stops hiding behind performance.

That is why return is such a beautiful word. Return means distance does not have to be final. Return means numbness is not the last chapter. Return means the person who drifted can still come home. Return means God is not standing there with folded arms waiting to shame the weary. Return means there is still a path back into nearness. Scripture is filled with this. Again and again, God calls people back to Himself. He restores wanderers. He receives the ashamed. He meets the ones who thought they had gone too far. He is not eager to crush bruised people. He is eager to bring them into truth and life.

Still, return usually begins in a simple place. It begins with honesty. It begins when the soul stops pretending. God, I feel far. God, I am tired. God, I still believe, but I do not know why everything feels so dim. God, I am ashamed. God, I am disappointed. God, I do not know how to fix this. God, I miss You. Those are not weak prayers. They are living prayers. They matter because God is not looking for polished language. He is looking for truth. He is looking for the place where the person finally stops acting as if distance is normal and starts telling the truth about what it has cost them.

The father’s answer also matters because he used something ordinary. He used an airplane. He took a moment from everyday life and opened a door into eternal truth. Jesus often taught like that. Seeds, bread, sheep, lamps, storms, vines, doors, fields, coins. The God who made ordinary life loves to reveal holy things inside it. That should comfort anyone who feels like they keep missing God because their life is too normal. Some people think God is only found in dramatic moments, but often He is speaking through what is already around us. A child’s question. Rain on a window. Morning light. Silence after long noise. The sky above you. God is not absent from ordinary life. He is often more present there than people realize. The issue is not always whether He is there. The issue is whether the heart is quiet enough and open enough to notice Him.

There is something else hidden in this story too. The father did not shame the boy for asking. He did not make him feel small for not knowing. He guided him. He walked him into understanding. That reflects something beautiful about God Himself. God is not threatened by sincere questions. He is not irritated by your need to understand. He is not embarrassed by your simplicity. He is not standing at a distance rolling His eyes at your confusion. He knows what it is to be human because in Christ He entered our condition fully. He knows what grief does. He knows what pain does. He knows what disappointment does. He knows how hard it can be for a tired soul to believe that love is still near. He is more tender than many people realize.

And that is where I want to pause for now, because this truth needs room to breathe. There is still more to say about what it means to come near to God again, about how distance distorts not just our view of Him but our view of ourselves, about the painful gap between being held and feeling held, and about how the cross and resurrection answer the deepest fear hidden inside this little boy’s question. There is more to say about the lies shame tells, the way grace answers them, and the way a person can begin walking back into nearness without pretending to be stronger than they are. There is more to say about the kind of greatness that does not make you want to hide, but makes you realize you have finally found the safest place your soul could rest.

What makes this truth so powerful is that it does not only answer a question about God. It reveals something about the human heart too. Human beings are deeply shaped by distance. Distance changes what things look like. It changes how we interpret. It changes how much detail we can see. It changes how much weight something seems to carry. That is true in every part of life. Relationships suffer when distance grows because people begin filling in the silence with fear, memory, pride, and hurt. They stop responding to what is real and start responding to what distance has suggested. The same thing happens in the life of faith. When a person lives far from God in trust, in attention, in surrender, in rest, or in honesty, they begin imagining Him through fog. They begin interpreting Him through disappointment, through shame, through old religious wounds, through unanswered prayers, through exhaustion, or through private pain. Over time, they can start reacting not to the real God revealed in Christ, but to a version shaped by distance and fear.

That is one reason this story about the airplane can leave grown people in tears. It suddenly gives them language for something they have been living with but have not known how to name. They realize that maybe God did not become smaller. Maybe they have just been standing too far away to see clearly. Maybe the problem is not that God lost interest, withdrew His love, or became emotionally unreachable. Maybe the problem is that life has pushed them into a place where His presence appears faint from where they are standing. That realization can be deeply emotional, because it means the worst thing they feared may not be true. The silence may not mean abandonment. The smallness may not be actual smallness. The distance may not be final. Hope begins where a person understands that what feels true and what is true are not always the same thing.

This matters especially for people living in the painful space between being held by God and feeling held by God. That gap can be one of the hardest places in all of faith. A person may know all the right truths. They may believe in God sincerely. They may even encourage other people with confidence. Yet inside themselves they feel no warmth, no deep reassurance, no obvious sense of being carried. They are still praying, still trying, still hoping, but emotionally they feel like they are walking through fog. That gap is brutal because it tempts the soul to believe that the lack of felt comfort must mean the lack of actual care. But this story gently pushes back against that lie. The plane still existed in all its size even when the boy could barely make out what he was seeing. In the same way, God can be fully present while your emotions are too tired to register Him clearly. He can be holding you while you do not feel held. He can be sustaining you while everything inside you still feels shaky and dim.

This is where mature faith often begins to form. Mature faith is not faith without feelings. It is faith that has learned not to let feelings define reality. It is faith that can say, I do not feel much right now, but I will not call that the whole truth. I do not feel held in the way I want to, but I will not conclude that I am abandoned. I do not understand this season, but I will not reduce God to my current emotional condition. That kind of faith is not glamorous, but it is strong. It is forged in long nights, in disappointing seasons, in private grief, in dry prayers, in mornings when opening the Bible feels harder than it should and a person opens it anyway. It is the faith that keeps turning toward God not because every step feels beautiful, but because it has learned that God is real beyond sensation.

And the reason that faith can survive is because of who God actually is. When people live at a distance, they often begin believing things about Him that seem convincing from far away. They start thinking He is mostly disappointed, mostly distant, mostly patient with stronger people but tired of them. They imagine He is holy in a way that makes warmth unlikely. They imagine He is present in church language or in other people’s testimonies, but not in the ordinary ache of their own life. Yet when a person begins to come near to God again and look at Him through Jesus instead of through fear, a different picture appears. They discover that He is not less holy than they thought, but far kinder. Not less truthful, but far more merciful. Not less powerful, but astonishingly gentle with bruised people. That is one of the most healing things that can happen in a human life. A person begins to realize that the God they were afraid to come close to is not the God Christ actually reveals.

Jesus changes everything about this question. If someone asks, “How big is God,” the Christian answer is not only found in the stars, the oceans, the mountains, or the vastness of creation. It is found in Christ. Because in Christ, the greatness of God comes near without becoming smaller. In Christ, the One who made all things steps into human life. He enters vulnerability. He enters obscurity. He walks among the poor. He notices the forgotten. He heals the broken. He touches the unclean. He speaks to the ashamed. He restores the fallen. He weeps. He suffers. He bleeds. He dies. He rises. That means the greatness of God does not produce the kind of distance human power often produces. Earthly greatness often protects itself from weakness. Divine greatness moves toward weakness to redeem it.

This is the heart of the gospel. Christianity is not the story of people trying to climb high enough to reach a distant God. It is the story of God coming near to people who could never have reached Him on their own. The Word became flesh and dwelt among us. That means the biggest answer to the little boy’s question is not only that God is beyond measure. It is that the immeasurable God chose nearness. He came close enough to be misunderstood, rejected, wounded, and crucified. Close enough to enter hunger, sorrow, exhaustion, betrayal, and death. He did not stay above human pain. He entered it. So when someone says, “God feels far,” the deepest answer is to look again at Jesus. Look at Christ and you are looking at the God who came near enough to suffer with us and for us. Look at Christ and you are seeing the heart of divine greatness made visible.

The cross settles this in a way nothing else can. The cross proves that God’s greatness does not keep Him at a comfortable distance from what is ugly, broken, shameful, or painful. He does not save by staying far away. He saves by coming close enough to bear what we could not carry. There is nothing detached about the cross. There is nothing cold about it. The God who made the world let the world wound Him so the world could be redeemed. Then the resurrection takes that nearness and fills it with victory. Christ did not come near only to suffer and remain buried. He rose. He conquered death. He is alive. The One who came near is still the living Lord. That means divine nearness is not only a memory in history. It is a present reality. Christ is still able to meet people in real rooms, in real grief, in real shame, in real confusion, and in real need.

That is why return is possible. That may sound obvious in a church setting, but many people do not actually feel that truth in a personal way. They think they have drifted too long, become too compromised, grown too numb, or disappointed God too deeply to come back in any real sense. But grace says otherwise. Grace keeps saying return. Come back. Draw near. There is something deeply beautiful about the language of return because it means distance is not the end of the story. It acknowledges that a person really did drift, really did hide, really did grow dull, really did lose wonder, but it refuses to let that be final. It says there is still a road home. It says the door is not locked. It says the Father is not standing on the porch waiting to humiliate the child who wandered. It says mercy still runs toward those who turn.

Still, many people do not know how to begin returning because they think it must start with some impressive spiritual display. They think they need to feel more sorry, pray more beautifully, understand more clearly, or clean up more thoroughly before they can draw near honestly. But that is backward. Return starts in truth, not in impressiveness. It starts where pretending ends. Lord, I have drifted. Lord, I feel numb. Lord, I am ashamed. Lord, I am disappointed. Lord, I still believe, but I do not know why everything feels so dim. Lord, I need You. Those kinds of prayers matter because they are real. God does not need polished distance. He wants honest nearness. He wants the place where the soul stops acting like it can manage the distance and begins telling the truth about what the distance has done.

Prayer matters so much here, not as a religious performance but as an act of reorientation. Prayer is where the soul stops merely thinking about God and starts speaking to Him again. The beauty of prayer is that it does not need to be eloquent to be alive. A whisper can be enough. Help me. Forgive me. I miss You. Stay with me. Teach me. Hold me here. These are not small prayers. They are openings. They are refusals to let distance rule the inner life any longer. They are ways of turning the face back toward God even when the heart is still struggling to catch up.

Scripture matters for the same reason. Distance teaches lies. It teaches people that their season defines God. It teaches them that numbness proves abandonment, that failure is louder than mercy, that shame has final authority, and that present silence means permanent rejection. Scripture interrupts those lies. It restores sight. It reminds the soul who God actually is when fear and pain have been speaking louder than truth. It reminds a person that God’s patience is older than their wandering, that His mercy is deeper than their shame, and that His faithfulness is not at the mercy of their emotions. Sometimes the soul does not need novelty. It needs truth held long enough and quietly enough that it becomes believable again.

Repentance matters too, and it needs to be spoken of with much more tenderness than many people have heard. Repentance is not God crushing you for finally admitting the truth. Repentance is mercy calling you out of what is draining your life. It is reality breaking through illusion. It is the grace of no longer needing to defend what is poisoning your peace. A lot of people hear the word repentance and feel only threat, but repentance is one of the kindest gifts God gives. It means you do not have to stay loyal to the thing that is hollowing you out. It means you do not have to call chains freedom anymore. It means you do not have to remain in hiding while telling yourself that hiding is safer. Repentance opens the way to nearness because it stops agreeing with what keeps you far away.

Shame hates that. Shame tells people to stay hidden until they improve. Grace says come into the light so healing can begin. Shame says God is tired of you. Grace says Christ knew exactly what He was taking on when He went to the cross. Shame says closeness is over for someone like you. Grace says return. Shame says the distance defines you now. Grace says the distance is real, but it does not get the last word. That is why the gospel is so precious to bruised people. It breaks the lie that the worst thing about you has become your final identity.

And identity is another place where nearness changes everything. Distance distorts how people see themselves. When they live far from God, they often begin defining themselves by their worst failure, deepest wound, loudest fear, or most humiliating struggle. They live under labels placed on them by pain, by shame, by other people, or by the enemy’s accusations. But near God, identity starts healing. Not because struggle disappears overnight, but because the loudest voice in the room changes. Near God, you are no longer first defined by what broke you, what others did to you, what you regret, or what still feels unfinished. Near God, you begin hearing the truth from the One who made you and redeemed you. You begin learning that your deepest reality is not your wound. It is the mercy that knows you within it.

That is why the enemy fights nearness so fiercely. Distance serves lies. Distance lets fear sound wise. Distance lets bitterness sound justified. Distance lets compromise sound manageable. Distance lets discouragement sound final. Distance lets people interpret God through their wounds instead of bringing their wounds into the presence of God. It keeps them staring at the tiny plane in the sky and calling that tiny image the whole truth. But when a person comes near, lies start losing oxygen. Fear is no longer the only voice they hear. Shame is no longer treated like an authority. Truth begins to breathe again. Light returns little by little. Often not all at once, but enough to begin seeing.

That is one reason people sometimes cry when they return to God after a long wandering. They are not crying only because they are emotional. They are crying because what they found was not what fear told them they would find. They expected distance and found welcome. They expected disgust and found mercy. They expected coldness and found truth wrapped in tenderness. They expected to be handled like a problem and found themselves received like a child. That does not mean God ignores sin. It means He deals with sin as a Savior, not as a sadist. He deals with it in order to restore what He loves.

The father in this story understood something important. He did not shame the child for not knowing. He led him closer. That is often how God teaches. He does not merely throw truth at people from a distance. He walks them into it. Many believers can look back and see that God taught them more through His faithfulness than through quick explanations. They learned Him in grief. They learned Him in weakness. They learned Him in restoration after failure. They learned Him in the slow rebuilding of trust. They learned Him through unexpected peace in places that should have undone them. God often leads people into clearer sight instead of only handing them ideas.

And maybe that is what He is doing through this story for some people. Maybe this is not just a touching image. Maybe it is a reminder meant for a tired soul that has started measuring God by what pain can currently perceive. Maybe it is permission to stop calling your present emotional range the ruler of heaven and earth. Maybe it is an invitation to return without pretending to be stronger than you are. Maybe it is a whisper to the one who still aches when they hear His name. Come near. Let the view change. Let truth become larger than distance.

How big is God. He is big enough to hold galaxies in place. Big enough to command seas. Big enough to sustain the universe without strain. Big enough to carry history toward its appointed end. Big enough to defeat death. Big enough to see every hidden tear. Big enough to hear every whispered prayer. Big enough to remain steady while your life shakes. Big enough to enter your pain without being threatened by it. Big enough that nothing in your story is beyond His reach. And close enough that a whisper is enough. Close enough that even when He feels far, He may be nearer than the breath moving in and out of your lungs.

That little boy asked his father a question, and a father answered with an airplane. But inside that simple answer was a truth large enough to steady a lifetime. God does not get smaller because He feels far. He does not disappear because your soul is tired. He does not step back because you are struggling. He does not become less because your emotions are weak. He is still who He has always been. Vast beyond measure. Holy beyond words. Merciful beyond deserving. Near beyond what fear says is possible. And when you come near again, when you stop measuring God by present sensation and start seeing Him through Christ, you may find yourself in tears too. Not because the story was merely sweet, but because your soul finally remembered what it was made for. The greatness of God was never meant to make you feel abandoned. It was meant to become the safest place you could ever rest.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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from Notes I Won’t Reread

It’s 2:46 AM, i opened this to write about you and immediately forgot how to begin, which feels accurate. There’s a glass on my table. I don’t remember putting it there. It’s been half full for hours, or half empty, I don’t care enough to decide. I think this is what happens after things end; not sadness, just closure, just objects staying where they shouldn’t be.

Like your name. It keeps showing up in places I didn’t leave space for. in between sentences, in the pause before I say something else, in the part of my mind that was supposed to move on by now. I tried to write something earlier, but it came out too clean. I deleted it.

felt dishonest, I don’t feel clean, I feel interrupted. like something in the middle of happening, and no one told me it ended. There’s a sound outside. I keep thinking it’s something important, but it never was, just like how I keep thinking. ” This will pass,” it doesn’t. it wont. It just softens around the edges. becomes easier to carry, harder to notice.

I think you would’ve liked this version of me more. quieter, doesn’t ask, doesn’t react, doesn’t make things heavier than they need to be.

But you don’t get versions anymore, and I don’t get to try again, so now it’s just this.

Me, forgetting what I say, remembering you anyway, and pretending those two things aren’t related.

Sincerely, What you would call a curse

 
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from Faucet Repair

21 March 2026

Subland (working title): alighted at Wood Green station and noticed, for the first time, an odd and artful decorative ventilation grill up high on the tiled platform wall close to the ceiling. It depicts an idyllic scene in a panoramic Art Deco style—what appears to be a deer seated under a shining sun, flanked on either side by a flying bird and three trees. Turns out it's a bronze that was designed by the artist Harold Stabler (1872-1945) in the early 1930s for the station's unveiling in 1932, which he made along with two others (same size/dimensions) that now reside at Turnpike Lane and Manor House stations. Apparently the designs were meant to allude to the history and daily life of each station's neighborhood, which is something to sit with given the current state of things in that part of the city (more on that later, have been thinking a lot about the street life where I live). But I was initially drawn to it for the strange effect of the serenity of its subject matter rendered in what is now, nearly a hundred years after its creation, almost a charcoal gray that floats on a mesh grid over the intense deep blackness of the vent's interior. There's one bit in particular that I've been working with, from the left half of it, where a bird's wing is clipped at the top by the boundary of the rectangle that frames the entire piece while its other wing is almost fused to a vertical line behind it. While in flight.

 
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from Nerd for Hire

Martin MacInnes 496 pages Black Cat (2023)

Read this if you like: character and language driven sci-fi, “Story of Your Life” by Ted Chiang, The Abyss

tl;dr summary: Algae scientist with family drama gets recruited for super secret deep space mission.

See the book on Bookshop

Anyone who’s curious just what people mean when they say “literary sci-fi” should read In Ascension. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a more perfect blending of those genres. It’s definitely science fiction, though of the near-future, mundane sci-fi variety. Its plot anchors on marine biologist Leigh, who early on we see as one of the younger members of a team exploring a newly discovered deep vent in the Atlantic Ocean. Things get weird pretty quickly, in a vaguely ominous way.

Exactly what happens at the vent explored by the Endeavor is never stated directly, and that mystery carries through as a source of tension throughout the book in a very effective way, even though that proves to be only the first step in Leigh’s journey. Leigh’s work with algae catches the eye of a team planning a deep space mission, leading in to the book’s second act, where she goes to California to train as part of the research team. Without giving too many spoilers, I’ll say I appreciate a book that can go from the deep ocean to distant space, and the parallels drawn between these two environments are intriguing.

The literary half of the genre blurring comes from the subplot of Leigh’s family history. Her father was abusive, more so toward her than her sister Helena, who didn’t understand the animosity Leigh felt for him. Their father is now dead, and their mother starts showing symptoms of dementia right as Leigh moves to California. Helena wants Leigh to come home and help, not understanding why she can’t, which is hard for Leigh to explain since she’s working on a top secret project.

The language and pacing of this novel also belong firmly in the literary camp, which I will say was my least favorite aspect of the book. If you just picked this book up off the shelf, knowing nothing about it, you could get a solid 50 pages in before you realized it’s a science fiction book. It probably took me that long to really settle in to the book, and while the beauty of the prose in those early pages was enough to keep me reading, there were still moments I found myself waiting for the real story to start.

From a craft standpoint, this book is a masterclass in blending poetic language with technical concepts. Some of my favorite parts were when it showed Leigh actively at work—both the way she thought about the project and the way she evolves as a character through working on it give the scenes in California a really compelling energy.

That said, there were also places I was looking for a little bit more cohesion to tether the ideas together, and sometimes I wanted a bit more grounding between the more floaty language. I had a lot of lingering questions by the end of this. Some of them were the good kind—I do feel like it fits for a book like this to not give the reader all of the answers. The ending of In Ascension invites readers to draw their own conclusions about the ultimate outcome of Leigh’s mission, which adds to the enjoyment of it, letting it linger after the last page. On the other hand, I could have used a few more concrete details to latch on to.

I think that would generally be my main critique of this book. There were some details that I wasn’t sure were really necessary, or how they were supposed to fit with the rest. The off-screen relationship with Dana is one example. She’s such a throw-away presence that she felt like an intrusion. The shifting animal migrations were another detail I felt like I needed more guidance to make sense of completely.

This is a very ambitious book, and for the most part I think it accomplishes what it sets out to do. While I have my minor quibbles, I would still strongly recommend it to people who enjoy character-driven, near-future sci-fi. The prose alone is worth reading for, and from a pure language standpoint it’s among the best speculative books I’ve read in recent days.

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#BookReviews #SciFi #LiteraryFiction

 
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