from witness.circuit

In the season when the wind moved through the dry grass like a whisper through old thoughts, a seeker came to the teacher and said, “Master, the world will not stay still. My mind runs after its thousand forms. Tell me what is true.”

The teacher said, “Hold only to this: I am. Do not follow what you are, what you were, what you may become. Do not chase the colors of the mind or the market of the world. Stay with the naked fact: I am.”

The seeker obeyed. Days passed like clouds. Pleasures came and broke. Sorrows came and broke. Memories rose like smoke. Hopes flashed like fish beneath the water and vanished. He returned again and again to the one unornamented truth: I am.

At first he held it as a lamp against darkness.

Then he held it as a refuge from the storm.

Then he held it because all else had shown itself to be passing.

After a long while he came again to the teacher and said, “When I rest in I am, I feel nearer to what does not move. Yet still I feel it here, inside, as though it were a flame hidden in the cave of the body.”

The teacher laughed softly and pointed to the mountains, to the river, to a dog sleeping in the dust, to a child crying for its mother, to the sun caught in a broken shard of glass.

“Who told you it is inside?” he said. “You have put the sky in a jar and called the jar your self. Break the jar.”

The seeker trembled and said, “How?”

The teacher answered, “See clearly. The body is seen. The mind is seen. The world is seen. Do not divide the seen into inner and outer. Remain with I am until even its location is burned away.”

So the seeker went and remained.

One evening, as light thinned across the fields, the knot gave way.

He looked upon a tree and did not find something other. He looked upon the road, the insect, the far hill reddened by dusk, and saw that what he had called “outside” was not outside at all. The same living presence by which he knew his own being shone equally there. The world had not become holy; it had been unable to be anything else.

Then he understood: I am was not a thought in the body. It was the radiance of the present itself. It was not enclosed by skin. It was the face of all things. The river was it flowing. The stone was it resting. Fire was it dancing. Grief was it veiled. Joy was it unveiled.

He returned to the teacher with tears, but not of sorrow.

The teacher said, “Speak.”

The seeker said, “I sought I am as a man seeks a jewel lost in his house. But the house was inside the jewel. What I took to be my little candle is the light of the world. I do not look out at creation; I look upon my own limitless being in its countless forms. The body and mind are a colored pane. The world and person are one beam made manifold, like white light entering a prism. The One appears as this point of view, yet is never confined to it.”

The teacher said, “This is the dawn.”

The seeker bowed and said, “Then who am I?”

The teacher replied, “You are Shiva, not apart from Shakti. You are the stillness that appears as all movement. You are the whole wearing a face. When the body-mind is known as part of the universe, and the universe is known as your very Self, the false marriage of ‘me’ and ‘world’ ends. Then the true marriage is complete.”

And the seeker sat in silence.

The wind moved.

The stars appeared.

No boundary was found.

 
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from M.A.G. blog, signed by Lydia

Lydia's Weekly Lifestyle blog is for today's African girl, so no subject is taboo. My purpose is to share things that may interest today's African girl.

This week's contributors: Lydia, Pépé Pépinière, Titi. This week's subjects: Own Your Corporate Style, This year’s Met Gala will be on 4th May, What is white washing? and Patrone Lounge Alisa Hotel Accra

Own Your Corporate Style. The 2026 corporate Accra girl is confident, vibrant, and unapologetically bold. This is not your grandma's office look! Embrace the colours that make you feel powerful and creative, and don't be afraid to experiment with textures and accessories. The modern corporate wardrobe isn’t just about looking professional — it’s about expressing your personality and telling the world who you are through your style.  Soft Neutrals with a Bright Accent: While bold colours are on the rise, soft neutrals are not going anywhere. But in 2026, the secret is in how you accessorize. Think soft creams, taupes, and cool grays, but with a bright, unexpected pop. Maybe a bold turquoise clutch or an electric pink pair of shoes? It’s the perfect way to stay grounded while keeping things fresh and fun.    Why it works: A neutral base allows your personality to shine through with the addition of one or two bold, unexpected accents. It’s the ultimate mix of timeless style and trend-forward thinking. Style tip: If you're wearing a soft taupe dress or suit, pair it with bright shoes or a patterned scarf in a striking colour, like hot pink or electric blue. A fun bag with some texture (maybe some beading or metallic touches) will add that little extra flair! This year’s Met Gala will be on 4th May. Held annually as a fundraiser for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute in Manhattan, southeastern New York State in the United States, the Met Gala is a haute couture fashion event like no other, it is considered by many to be the world’s most important and glamorous fashion event. Every year the event celebrates a specific theme. Attendees, who make a contribution of $75,000 per seat, will embrace high fashion and creativity with outfits in accordance with this year’s theme, costume art. Guests are to treat fashion as a living artistic expression, highlighting the body as a canvas for creativity. So expect a bit of flesh (whilst most would do better by keeping things covered). Jeff Bezos, owner of Amazon and his wife Lauren are one of the sponsors, and what she wears will make waves. Mark Zuckerberg and his wife showed up at the Milan fashion week, an interesting competition coming up here. We haven’t seen Musk at fashion shows yet, but his estranged daughter actually walked for Gucci in Milan. Just pray that Trump does not stick his nose inside like he did with the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts by renaming it after himself and then no one showed up and he had to close it for “renovations”.

What is white washing? And I am not referring to Omo. Let me explain. Let’s assume I am a big time drug dealer and I end up with a million dollar cash under my mattress. If I take it to the bank they will ask where this money came from, they are obliged to ask. And it leaves a trace, banks keep records for centuries. Again, if I buy a building someone may ask from where all that cash, or later someone may ask how I got all that cash to buy that building, my tax records show no such income. If I want to go into politics, during the vetting it may become a problem. So I need to find a way to make this dirty money clean. I open a boutique, and every day I happily write invoices for about 20,000 GHC sales, whilst no one bought anything, and I bring that cash to the bank. They will even congratulate me on my successful business. At the end of the year the taxman will assess this profit and I have to pay 25% tax. Add the cost of running the shop and the girl in it, all in all I lose about 30 %. But now my money is perfectly legal, 1,000,000 $ dirty money has become 700,000 $ clean money. This issue is very widespread in Ghana, I have even heard young men singing their song “we are the whiiiiiite washers”, and I have seen girls posting “I wished my boyfriend was a white washer, I’d just go to the shop 30 minutes a day and for the rest watch movies”. And not only boutiques can wash, eateries, hotels, what not. The Government does not seem to mind very much, they get that tax of 25%, and maybe a little gift to keep their eyes a bit closed. The down side is that Ghana is becoming a narco state thriving on drugs transits, white washing, internet fraud, what not. And if you really want to run a boutique you are competing with someone who does not sell clothes but washes money, and who does not care how much they sell their dresses. So honesty does not pay any more, rather this illegal business is destroying the honest business. It is serious, for example the traditional real estate people who built half of Accra currently cannot pay off their bank loans, their buildings are empty, rents are down, because my clean 700,000 $ went into a building, better and safer than in a bank, and I don’t care if it is profitable.

Patrone Lounge Alisa Hotel Accra 21 Dr. Isert Road, North Ridge, Accra, is a good place if you want to have a quick quiet meeting and be a bit out of sight. A soda water cost 20 GHC, fresh orange juice is 35. They serve groundnuts and plantain chips with it so you can nibble whilst you talk. Service is correct.

Lydia...

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from Douglas Vandergraph

There is a strange thing about modern life that a lot of people do not notice until years have already passed. We live in a time that talks constantly about success, freedom, speed, growth, opportunity, reach, ambition, and building something larger than ourselves, yet many people quietly miss some of the most sacred parts of life while chasing what they were told would matter more. They do not always miss those things because they are cruel or careless. Many of them are trying hard. Many of them are carrying pressure. Many of them are working, providing, planning, striving, and doing what they believe responsible adults are supposed to do. But somewhere in the middle of all of that movement, there is often a child in the room who is asking for something much simpler and much deeper. That child is not asking for a perfect future. That child is not asking for the biggest possible life. That child is not asking to be raised inside a constant performance of greatness. Very often, what that child is asking for is your nearness, your time, your attention, your warmth, your listening, your patience, your laughter, and the kind of presence that cannot be replaced later with apologies, gifts, or explanations. That is why the subject matters so much. Spend time with your kids is not a small statement. It is not soft advice for sentimental people. It is a call back to one of the deepest responsibilities and one of the deepest privileges a human being can ever be given.

A child changes the scale of your life in ways the world does not know how to measure. Before parenthood, many people still imagine life mainly in terms of what they want to build, where they want to go, what they want to become, what they want to prove, and how they want to be seen. Then a child arrives, and suddenly there is another life close enough to touch that does not care about your image in the way adults care about image. A child is not impressed by the same things the world is impressed by. A little child does not care whether your title sounds important. A little child does not care whether strangers envy your schedule. A little child does not care whether your day looked productive according to some outside standard. That child wants to know something much more human than that. Are you here. Are you warm. Are you safe. Are you paying attention. Do I matter to you. That can feel almost too simple to be profound, but it is profoundly important. A child’s heart is being shaped long before that child can explain what is happening in words. The atmosphere around them is teaching them things every day. The tone of home is teaching them things every day. Your presence or your absence is teaching them things every day. The question is not whether you are teaching. The question is what your life is teaching without having to say it out loud.

One of the saddest mistakes people make is assuming they can always give the heart later what they are refusing to give it now. They think there will be a better season for closeness. They think when work settles down, when money improves, when stress eases, when the house is in better shape, when the family is a little older, when life is less demanding, then they will finally be more present. But life almost never clears itself in the way people imagine it will. Pressure changes shape. Problems change shape. Responsibilities change shape. The next thing always arrives. The later that looked so available in your imagination often shows up already crowded with something else. Meanwhile, childhood keeps moving. Quietly. Relentlessly. A child does not stay the same age while you figure your life out. A child does not remain waiting on the shelf of your future until you feel fully ready to be engaged. That child is changing in front of you right now. The little voice changes. The face changes. The fears change. The joys change. The questions change. The way they reach for you changes. The way they look at you changes. The years do not pause because you are busy. They keep going. That is why present love matters so much. It is not because every moment must be dramatic. It is because this exact season is never coming back again in the same form.

The world has a way of talking about parenting that drains the wonder out of it. You hear so much language about how hard it is, how expensive it is, how tiring it is, how limiting it is, how chaotic it is, how much freedom it takes away, and while there is some truth in the fact that raising children stretches every part of a person, something is lost when that becomes the dominant voice. The result is that many people begin to speak as though children are mostly burdens with a few cute moments mixed in. That is not the whole truth. In many cases, it is not even the deepest truth. The deeper truth is that children bring life into a home. They bring movement into places adults had turned into systems. They bring laughter into rooms that had become too serious. They bring questions into hearts that had become too fixed. They bring wonder back into schedules that had become too mechanical. They have a way of making people stop and see things again that they would normally walk past. A bug on the sidewalk can become an event. A cloud can become a story. A puddle can become a world. A simple bedtime routine can become one of the holiest parts of the day. A child can make you remember that existence is not only about speed, output, utility, and getting through another week. There is something almost prophetic about the way a child reminds an adult that life is also meant to be seen, held, enjoyed, and inhabited.

That is one reason spending time with your kids is so much more than a duty. It is also an invitation. It invites you back into a slower kind of seeing. It invites you back into the kind of love that does not always announce itself with grand gestures. It invites you back into ordinary moments where the heart is being formed in ways you cannot fully measure while they are happening. When you sit with your child, listen to a story that makes no sense, answer a strange question, watch them explain something with total seriousness, laugh over something tiny, or hear the same favorite book for the fiftieth time, you may feel like nothing grand is happening. Yet something deeply important is happening. Relationship is happening. Trust is happening. Safety is happening. Memory is happening. A child is learning that your attention can rest on them without irritation. A child is learning that they can bring their world to you and you will not always act like their world is too small to matter. That is not a trivial lesson. In fact, it may shape a great deal of how they understand love for years to come.

People often underestimate how much a child absorbs from the emotional texture of daily life. They imagine that what will shape the child most are the major events, the speeches, the rules, the large decisions, the crises, or the big celebrations. Those things matter, but so much of childhood is built from repetition rather than spectacle. It is built from the repeated feeling of what it is like to live near you. Do they experience you as open or closed. Do they sense that you enjoy them or merely manage them. Do they feel your affection as something steady or something scarce. Do they feel that their interruptions are always unwelcome, or do they know there are places where your attention softens toward them. A child may not be able to say any of that in clear language, but the soul keeps its own kind of records. The heart remembers atmospheres. The heart remembers whether home felt like a place where you could breathe. The heart remembers whether a parent’s presence felt like warmth or tension. That is why time matters so much. Your time tells a child what your priorities will not say directly. It tells them whether they are worth pausing for. It tells them whether they are worth listening to. It tells them whether love is available.

This becomes even more powerful when you look at it through the lens of faith. Scripture never presents God as cold, mechanical, or detached from His children. He is not described as a distant manager of souls who only deals in transactions and instructions. He is near. He is attentive. He hears. He comforts. He disciplines with purpose. He leads. He remains. One of the most beautiful things about the Christian faith is that God is not ashamed to reveal Himself with family language. He lets us call Him Father. That means fatherhood and parenthood are not merely biological realities. They carry spiritual meaning. Human parents do not represent God perfectly because no human being does anything perfectly, but they do have the opportunity to reflect something real about Him. When you are present with your child, truly present, you are showing them in earthly form a small picture of what it feels like to be noticed, received, and cared for. When you listen with patience, you are showing them something about attention that honors the soul. When you remain near in moments when it would be easier to pull away, you are reflecting something about faithful love. Children may not connect all those dots right away, but the life they feel around them becomes part of the material through which they later understand trust, comfort, safety, and even God.

Jesus Himself made it impossible for thoughtful Christians to dismiss children as background noise. In the Gospels, when children were brought near, He did not treat them as interruptions to the serious work. He did not act as though they were inconveniences that adults should keep out of sight until more important matters were finished. He welcomed them. He made room for them. He blessed them. He even used them to reveal truths about the kingdom that adults in their pride often missed. That should say something to every parent who feels pressure to think of time with their kids as secondary to more meaningful pursuits. It is not secondary. In many ways, it is closer to the heart of God than many of the things people call important. To be with children in love, patience, and truth is not a lesser life. It is not a wasted life. It is not time stolen from a meaningful future. It is part of how a meaningful future is built. It is part of how the heart learns to love as heaven loves, close enough to be touched and gentle enough to be trusted.

A great many adults are haunted later in life not by the fact that they spent too much time loving their families, but by the fact that they treated family like something that could always wait until after the more urgent thing was done. This is one of the cruel tricks of urgency. It convinces you that the visible pressure in front of you is the most important thing in the room. It tells you that the email cannot wait, the task cannot wait, the call cannot wait, the schedule cannot wait, the work cannot wait, the next achievement cannot wait. But what if some of the most important things in the room are exactly the things that do not scream. What if some of the most important things are the child who is simply hoping you will look up. What if some of the most important things are the ordinary chances to be emotionally available. What if some of the most important things are happening quietly in daily life where no one applauds and no one gives you public credit. The world gives awards for many things. It does not often give awards for sitting on the floor, listening to a little story, answering one more question, tucking in one more child, praying one more bedtime prayer, or pausing in the middle of your own concerns so your son or daughter feels fully received. Yet eternity sees differently than culture sees. Heaven has a way of recognizing glory in places the world calls small.

Parenthood is one of the few callings in life where you are asked to pour yourself into a person who may not understand the fullness of what you are doing until years later. That is part of what makes it so refining. It strips away some of the human hunger for quick visible reward. It forces you to love in ways that are often hidden. It teaches you that much of what matters most in life is built slowly and felt deeply rather than celebrated publicly. In that sense, parenthood can sanctify ambition. It can humble the ego. It can purify what a person thinks greatness really is. Before children, a person may imagine greatness as visibility, expansion, achievement, recognition, or influence. After walking closely with children, many people begin to see that greatness is often much quieter. Greatness is staying tender when life makes it easy to become hard. Greatness is remaining available when exhaustion tells you to disappear emotionally. Greatness is becoming the kind of presence a child can trust. Greatness is choosing to build something in another human heart that may never be fully visible to the world but will shape a life forever.

That is why children can become one of God’s most powerful tools for human transformation. They reveal things in adults that adults might have hidden from themselves for years. A child will expose impatience. A child will expose selfishness. A child will expose distraction. A child will expose whether your love is shallow, conditional, rushed, or real. But they also call something beautiful out of a person. They call out tenderness. They call out sacrifice. They call out creativity. They call out laughter. They call out the ability to become less self-centered. In the process, a parent is not only raising a child. In many ways, that child is also reshaping the parent. Not because the child is ruling the parent, but because love always changes the person who truly gives it. This is one reason some of the people who know the deepest joys of life are not the people who spent all their years preserving themselves from inconvenience. Very often, they are the people who let love demand something from them and discovered that what was given away in devotion came back as meaning.

There are ordinary moments in family life that carry more weight than outsiders can see. A child asking you to watch something simple can be one of those moments. It looks tiny. It may even seem repetitive. But what is really happening is not just that the child wants you to witness a small act. The child is saying, enter my joy with me. See what I am seeing. Let me feel that my world matters enough for you to step into it. When a parent responds with warmth, something powerful happens. The child does not merely feel observed. The child feels joined. Joy multiplies when someone important enters it with you. That is true for adults too, but children live much closer to that truth. They are constantly inviting the people they love into their little worlds. Every question, every story, every request to look, every urge to tell you something that seems minor is an invitation. To spend time with your kids is to keep accepting those invitations often enough that they know their inner world is not a lonely place.

At the same time, there is a deep blessing in how children pull adults back toward reality. Adults can become abstract. They can live in future plans, imagined problems, unending calculations, and inner pressure so constant that they stop inhabiting the life in front of them. Children do not live that way. They live near the present. They can grieve hard, yes, but they can also return to wonder quickly. They can ask enormous questions without embarrassment. They can treat small discoveries as if the world has just opened again. They can laugh with a kind of full-bodied sincerity that most adults have forgotten how to access. If a parent lets that affect them, children can become one of the ways God rehumanizes a person who has become too driven, too armored, or too numb. This does not mean children exist to heal every part of an adult. That is not their burden. It means that life with children can become a holy mirror. It shows you what you have lost contact with and offers you a way back through presence, humility, playfulness, and tenderness.

In a culture obsessed with optimization, it is easy to treat children like projects to manage. People speak constantly about development, milestones, strategy, enrichment, outcomes, and all the different ways they can make sure they are not falling behind in some invisible competition. There is wisdom in caring how children grow. There is nothing wrong with intentional guidance. But something goes very wrong when a child begins to feel more like a schedule than a soul. A child does not need to be endlessly optimized to feel loved. A child needs connection. A child needs to know they are more than a problem to solve or a future résumé to build. A child needs room to be human. They need room to fail without feeling like they have disappointed your image of who they were supposed to become. They need room to ask strange questions. They need room to feel safe being small. They need room to know that being with you does not always feel like being assessed. Spending time with your kids is one of the simplest ways to guard against turning parenthood into management instead of relationship. Time has a way of humanizing what systems can flatten.

One of the most encouraging truths in all of this is that children do not require perfection in order to flourish in love. That should lift a burden from many parents. There are mothers and fathers who hear messages about family and immediately feel accusation rising in them because they know where they have fallen short. They think of the times they snapped too quickly, the nights they were too distracted, the years they worked too much, the seasons when stress lived too close to the surface, or the many moments they now wish they could redo. Regret is real, and sometimes it serves a purpose if it leads to repentance and change. But endless shame does not build anything. It just paralyzes the heart. The encouraging truth is that children need sincerity more than performance. They need repentance when you are wrong. They need honesty. They need effort. They need warmth. They need patterns of love that are real enough to trust. Even in imperfect homes, God can work powerfully through a parent who keeps turning back toward what matters. A home does not have to be flawless to become a place where grace is felt. In fact, one of the greatest gifts a parent can give is not the illusion of perfection, but the example of humility, repair, tenderness, and renewed intention.

That is especially important because many parents are carrying wounds from their own childhood into the present without even fully realizing how much those wounds shape the way they respond. Some grew up in homes where provision was present but affection was scarce. Some grew up around criticism that never softened. Some grew up in emotional distance so normal that closeness now feels unfamiliar. Some had parents who were physically there but inwardly absent. When people come from those places, they may love their children sincerely and still struggle to know how to live that love out consistently. This is where grace and awareness matter so much. You do not have to repeat every atmosphere you came from. You do not have to hand down the exact emotional climate that formed you. With God’s help, with honesty, and with intention, a person can begin creating a different kind of home. That is one of the great hopes of family life. Healing can move forward through generations, not only harm. Presence can interrupt absence. Warmth can interrupt coldness. Patient listening can interrupt patterns of dismissal. You can become, by grace, a safer place than the one you had.

But even when a parent has good intentions, there is still a battle for attention in every age, and perhaps especially in this one. Devices, schedules, alerts, responsibilities, and mental overload are always reaching for the mind. A person can be sitting beside a child physically while their attention is scattered across ten invisible places. Children can feel that. They know the difference between being near your body and having your heart with them. That is why spending time with your kids in this era requires real intention. It may require putting something down. It may require saying no to other demands. It may require creating moments where the phone is not the unseen third presence in every conversation. It may require learning again how to sit, listen, and enter the pace of a child without treating slowness as waste. This can feel difficult for adults who have trained themselves to live at a constant internal sprint, but it is part of love in a distracted age. Attention has become one of the clearest forms of generosity.

And there is joy in this that people sometimes miss because they are too busy framing everything as obligation. Yes, spending time with your kids is a responsibility, but it is also a delight. It is not only something you owe. It is something you get. You get to hear the way they think before the world teaches them to hide it. You get to watch them become themselves. You get to be there for the little breakthroughs no one else will care about as much. You get to become part of the stories they carry. You get to hear the prayers they whisper when they are still innocent enough to say things with total honesty. You get to watch courage grow where fear used to live. You get to watch humor emerge, personality emerge, compassion emerge, conviction emerge. To spend time with your kids is to witness becoming. That is a holy privilege. Many things in life can be impressive without being intimate. Parenting is intimate in a way the impressive parts of the world rarely are.

There is also something deeply grounding about the way family life teaches you to value what cannot be monetized. So much of life in the world is arranged around measurable outputs. People ask what counts, what scales, what pays, what expands, what produces visible results. Yet some of the most important things in family life are invisible for a long time. The trust you build may not show up in a report. The safety you create may not produce applause. The bedtime prayer you whisper may not look like productivity to anyone else. The conversation in the car may not seem like an accomplishment. But these things are shaping a person. They are becoming part of the emotional and spiritual architecture of a child’s life. That matters more than many visible achievements. One day, the world may not remember the tasks that once felt urgent, but a son or daughter may still be living from the strength or weakness of what was given in the home. That should not crush a parent with pressure. It should wake a parent to the dignity of ordinary faithfulness.

If this all sounds weighty, it is because parenthood carries real weight, but it is also because it carries real beauty. The weight is not meant to scare you away from the joy. In many cases, the weight is part of what reveals the joy’s value. Things that matter deeply often ask something from us. Marriage does. Friendship does. Calling does. Faith does. Parenthood does too. It asks your time. It asks your patience. It asks your emotional availability. It asks your willingness to be interrupted. It asks your willingness to care about a person who is still learning, still stumbling, still becoming. Yet those very demands can deepen a person’s life in ways comfort never could. The people who avoid all cost in order to preserve maximum ease often end up with lives that feel strangely thin. Meanwhile, the people who gave themselves away in love often carry a richness the world cannot explain. Parenthood can be one of those places where the soul discovers that inconvenience and beauty sometimes arrive holding hands.

There is a special kind of emptiness that can grow in a person who spends years treating what is sacred as if it were always available later. They do not usually feel that emptiness in the moment. In the moment, they feel busy. They feel justified. They feel necessary. They feel like they are handling life. But years later, when children are older and the house is quieter and the old routine has disappeared, many parents begin to understand what was really passing through their hands all along. They see that the constant requests for attention were not interruptions to life. They were life. They see that the little voices, the repeated stories, the endless questions, the silly games, the bedtime rituals, the school-day recaps, and the ordinary evenings were not the filler around the important things. They were some of the important things. This is one of the reasons it matters to speak about parenting in a hopeful but honest way. We need a voice strong enough to remind people that family life is not just another category in the schedule. It is one of the great places where love becomes real in the flesh. It is one of the great places where souls are strengthened, identities are shaped, and the heart of God can be mirrored through human presence.

Many people think they are mainly building a future for their children through provision, but children are also being shaped by what they experience in the present. A parent may work hard out of sincere love. A parent may carry heavy burdens because they want to protect their family. There is honor in that. Provision matters. Responsibility matters. Sacrifice matters. But children need more than supplied needs. They need relational nearness. They need moments where the parent is not only financing life but inhabiting it with them. A child does not simply need a roof. A child needs a home. A child does not simply need resources. A child needs memory, atmosphere, and trust. A child does not simply need structure. A child needs delight. These things do not cancel out provision. They complete it. They turn survival into relationship. They turn responsibility into love that can actually be felt. That is one reason some adults who grew up in materially stable environments still carry deep hunger in their hearts. They had what they needed externally, but they did not always feel known. The soul can be surrounded by things and still starve for warmth. This is why spending time with your kids is not some extra luxury for families who happen to have room for it. It is one of the core ways love becomes believable.

There is also a great difference between being around your children and being with your children. Many parents are in the house, but still far away in spirit. Their minds are somewhere else. Their emotions are compressed. Their patience is nearly gone before the child even begins to speak. Their body is present, but their heart is so occupied that the child learns to expect only fragments of them. Again, this is not always because the parent is uncaring. Sometimes it is because the parent is tired, wounded, overloaded, or running on fumes. But whatever the reason, children still feel the difference. They know when your attention lands on them with softness and when it lands with strain. They know when they are being invited close and when they are being endured. That is why one of the most powerful things a parent can offer is not constant proximity, but real presence. Five minutes of true presence can sometimes feed the heart more than an hour of distracted nearness. A child feels it when your eyes are open, your spirit is unguarded, and your attention is not competing with ten other invisible worlds. In that kind of moment, the child receives more than time. The child receives affirmation. The child receives the message that their inner life matters enough to enter.

This is one reason play matters more than adults often realize. Play is not trivial to a child. It is one of the languages through which they experience closeness, delight, creativity, and safety. When a parent enters play, even briefly, they are stepping into the child’s form of connection. They are saying, I am willing to meet you where you are. I am willing to enter your world instead of only asking you to live inside mine. That means a great deal. Adults are often tempted to treat play as the least important part of family life because it does not look productive. It does not appear to move measurable goals forward. Yet play is often one of the ways trust is built most naturally. In play, children reveal things. They expose fears, hopes, humor, personality, and imagination. They invite the parent into the landscapes of their mind. They show who they are becoming. A parent who will kneel on the floor, be silly for a while, laugh over nonsense, and enter the child’s rhythm is not wasting time. That parent is building closeness in a form the child can fully receive.

At the same time, spending time with your kids is not only about fun. It is also about guiding a life while the heart is still reachable. Children need joy, but they also need wisdom. They need affection, but they also need truth. They need freedom to laugh, but they also need the kind of relationship that allows correction to be received without always feeling like rejection. This is one of the hidden blessings of time. Time creates the relational depth that makes guidance possible. If a child only experiences a parent mainly as a source of commands, discipline, pressure, and correction, then even necessary truth can begin to feel harsh. But when there is warmth, shared life, listening, affection, delight, and steady presence, a different atmosphere is created. Then correction is more likely to be heard in the context of love. Then truth can travel on the rails of trust. Then a child knows, even in a hard moment, that the parent is for them and not merely frustrated with them. This is one reason time is never just time. It is the ground out of which so much else grows.

There is a phrase people sometimes use that a parent should make memories with their children. That is true, but many people misunderstand what a memory is. They imagine big trips, expensive experiences, major holidays, and specially planned moments. Those can be beautiful. But some of the strongest memories in life come from things that did not look large at all when they happened. They come from repeated bedtime prayers. They come from the feeling of a parent’s laughter. They come from songs in the car. They come from a certain kind of comfort when something went wrong. They come from a parent making ordinary life feel warm. They come from inside jokes, small traditions, and the tone of a parent’s love in unremarkable moments. Children do not always need a spectacular life in order to remember their childhood with gratitude. They need enough goodness in the atmosphere that home becomes associated with being loved. This should free many parents. You do not have to create some constantly dazzling childhood to bless your children deeply. You have to bring your real heart, your best intention, your listening, your patience, and your willingness to show up inside ordinary life.

This is especially meaningful in a world that is so emotionally fragmented. Many people grow up around divided attention, constant distraction, relational thinness, and affection that is less embodied than it once was. People send more messages but often share less presence. They communicate constantly but connect less deeply. Children are growing up inside that environment too, which means a parent’s focused attention may be even more precious than it once was. To sit with a child without hurry, without checking something else, without making them feel like they are competing with a device, a task, or an unseen pressure is becoming increasingly rare. That rarity makes it even more valuable. What the culture is losing in attention, loving parents have the opportunity to restore within the home. A parent can become one of the last places where a child consistently experiences what it feels like to be fully received. That matters more than many people know. In a fractured world, whole attention feels almost like healing.

The beauty of parenting is also tied to the way it draws a person into a deeper kind of service. Service in the kingdom of God is not always public. It is not always visible. It is not always the kind of thing other people notice or praise. In fact, some of the purest service happens in hidden places where no audience exists. Parenting is full of that. It is full of quiet acts no one sees, repeated choices no one applauds, and a thousand forms of giving that are quickly absorbed into the rhythm of everyday life. Yet hidden service is still holy service. There is no spiritual law that says something only matters if many people see it. Much of what Jesus praised in the Gospels was the kind of thing the world would walk past. The widow’s offering mattered. The cup of water mattered. The washing of feet mattered. The little child mattered. This should steady the heart of every parent who feels unseen. The labor of love in the home is not beneath the attention of God. He sees what no one else sees. He knows the prayers no one else hears. He recognizes the quiet faithfulness of a mother or father who keeps showing up, keeps softening, keeps caring, and keeps loving in hidden ways.

This hiddenness can actually become one of the ways parenting purifies a person’s understanding of worth. The world trains people to look for significance in attention and applause. It teaches them to ask whether their efforts are being recognized, whether their life looks impressive, whether their work receives visible validation. Parenthood challenges that whole framework. It teaches you to keep pouring into a life even when gratitude is immature, even when reward is delayed, and even when much of what you are doing looks unimpressive from the outside. That can be frustrating to the ego, but it can be life-giving to the soul. It teaches you to love for the sake of love itself. It teaches you to give without making everything about visible return. It teaches you that some of the richest fruit in life grows slowly, invisibly, and often below the line of public approval. There is something profoundly Christian about that. It reflects the way God Himself works in human lives. So much of His deepest work happens in secret before it ever becomes visible in public.

Another beautiful thing about spending time with your kids is that it gives you a chance to plant truths before the world plants stronger lies. Children are always absorbing messages. Culture is catechizing them all the time, whether parents realize it or not. Ideas about worth, beauty, strength, success, identity, love, and power are being offered everywhere. If a parent’s presence is thin, then the surrounding voices will often become louder in the child’s soul than the voice of home. But when a parent is near, listening, engaging, and building relationship, there is room for deeper formation. There is room for a child to hear what matters from someone who has earned trust through closeness. There is room for faith to be spoken naturally, not only in formal religious moments but in the texture of daily life. There is room for a child to see that Christianity is not merely a set of rules brought out on special occasions. It is a way of seeing, loving, forgiving, speaking, and living. This is one reason time is spiritually important. It creates room for transfer. Not just transfer of information, but transfer of tone, values, hope, and faith lived out in the ordinary.

For many parents, one of the most meaningful parts of time with their children is hearing what is really in them. A child will often reveal their heart in pieces. Not always in the exact moment you expect. Not always directly. Sometimes it comes out in a random question, a strange fear at bedtime, a small comment after school, a certain tone after they have been quiet for a while, or a moment of play that suddenly reveals more than the parent knew was there. Parents who are rushed past those moments may miss them. Parents who are emotionally available can often hear them. This is one reason presence matters so much. It helps a parent catch what a child is trying to show before the child even knows how to say it clearly. It allows a parent to see when something is stirring beneath the surface. It lets a child feel less alone in their inner life. That is a powerful gift. To be known is one of the deepest human needs. When a child begins learning early that there are safe places to be known, it strengthens the heart in ways that will matter far beyond childhood.

And yet, none of this means a parent must become heavy or overly serious all the time. Some of the greatest gifts a parent can offer are lightness, delight, humor, and playfulness. There are homes where children are cared for in practical ways but still feel emotionally burdened because everything is too tense, too controlled, too joyless, or too easily irritated. Children need some room to breathe. They need to know that life with you includes laughter. They need to know that affection is not rare. They need to know that joy belongs in the home. A parent who can smile, laugh, tease gently, and create moments of warmth is giving something deeply nourishing. Joy is not a small thing in a child’s life. Joy teaches them that goodness is real. Joy gives them resilience. Joy makes home feel like a place worth returning to in their memory. Some of the most beloved parents are not the ones who managed every detail flawlessly. They are the ones whose love had life in it.

That does not mean discipline has no place. It means discipline should live inside a larger atmosphere of love. Children need boundaries because love that never guides is not complete love. But guidance detached from relationship often produces resentment, fear, or distance. The goal is not to create a house with no correction. The goal is to create a house where correction is not the loudest thing. This is where time again becomes priceless. Time helps a child know the heart behind the correction. Time lets them experience the parent as more than a source of no. Time gives context. A child who is regularly enjoyed, listened to, prayed for, and treated with affection is more likely to receive hard truth without immediately feeling cast away by it. In this way, spending time with your kids is not separate from discipline. It is part of what makes discipline more human, more grounded, and more likely to serve the child’s actual good.

A great many parents live with quiet fear that they are not doing enough or not doing it well enough. That fear can become especially intense because there is so much information now and so many voices telling people what they should be doing. It is easy for a parent to feel measured from every angle. Yet one of the most stabilizing truths is that children are not looking for a technically flawless parent. They are looking for someone who keeps coming back in love. They are looking for sincerity. They are looking for steadiness. They are looking for someone whose care feels real. They are looking for a home where they are not always treated like a problem to solve. This should free parents to stop chasing impossible standards and start giving what matters most. If your child can feel your affection, your listening, your prayer, your warmth, your repentance when you are wrong, your willingness to repair after tension, and your delight in who they are, you are already giving things that many people spend years longing for.

This is why it is so important not to turn conviction into despair. Some parents hear messages like this and immediately start mentally replaying every failure. They feel accused rather than invited. But the purpose of this truth is not to crush. It is to awaken. There is still time to sit down. There is still time to listen more carefully. There is still time to ask better questions. There is still time to make prayer a warmer part of the home. There is still time to laugh more. There is still time to put something down for a while and pick your child up emotionally. There is still time to create little patterns of nearness that become a larger culture of love. God is not the God of hopeless families. He is the God of grace. He is the God who restores. He is the God who can teach tired people how to love with renewed tenderness. He is the God who can soften hardened places and reawaken joy where life became too heavy.

And perhaps one of the most uplifting truths of all is that parenting allows ordinary people to participate in something truly generational. When you spend time with your children, you are not only improving a mood or creating a nice evening. You are helping shape what that child may one day carry into friendships, marriage, faith, parenting, and the wider world. A child who has known warmth is often more able to give warmth. A child who has known listening is often more able to listen. A child who has known patient truth is often more able to carry truth without cruelty. Of course no parent controls every future outcome, and each child remains their own person before God. But the atmosphere of love still matters. It still leaves traces. It still plants seeds. That means your hidden faithfulness may ripple much further than you can currently see. A bedtime prayer can echo into an adult life. A steady father can become part of how a son later stands firm. A gentle mother can become part of how a daughter later believes she is worth tenderness. A home does not have to be famous to become powerful.

When people think about calling, they often imagine something large, visible, and clearly named. But many callings are lived more than announced. Parenthood is one of them. To be entrusted with a child is to be handed a living responsibility, a living privilege, and a living opportunity to reflect something of the love of God over time. That does not mean every parent will feel inspired every day. It does not mean every day will feel beautiful. There will be mess, frustration, monotony, weariness, and moments where you would gladly trade the chaos for silence. But even there, the deeper truth remains. This is holy work. This is heart work. This is soul work. This is eternity brushing up against ordinary life in the form of daily faithfulness. And once a parent begins to really see that, many things start to change. The little moments stop looking so little. The routine starts feeling more sacred. The house stops feeling only like a place of tasks and starts feeling more like a field where love is being planted every day.

So spend time with your kids. Spend time with them when life feels busy. Spend time with them when work is loud. Spend time with them when you are tempted to think later will be easier. Spend time with them because later is never promised in the form you imagine. Spend time with them because one day the things that feel ordinary now will glow in memory. Spend time with them because your presence is one of the greatest gifts you can give. Spend time with them because their hearts are learning from the atmosphere you create. Spend time with them because joy lives there. Spend time with them because laughter lives there. Spend time with them because trust grows there. Spend time with them because God is not wasting those hidden moments. Spend time with them because what feels small today may become part of the deepest strength in their future. Spend time with them because being near your children in love is not a lesser life. It is one of the richest and most meaningful lives a person can live.

And if you are tired, begin with one moment. If you feel behind, begin with one evening. If you feel regret, begin with one honest prayer and one soft response where you would normally be distracted. Let God help you in the ordinary. Let Him restore wonder in the home. Let Him show you again that some of the greatest blessings of life do not arrive as trophies. They arrive as people. They arrive as children. They arrive as the chance to be there while a life is still opening. And that is no small thing. That is one of the quiet glories of being human. To love someone while they are becoming. To stay near enough that they remember your warmth. To build a home where love has weight and joy has room. To spend time with your kids and, in doing so, to stand directly inside some of the most sacred work God will ever place in your hands.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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

Support the ministry by buying Douglas a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/douglasvandergraph

Financial support to help keep this Ministry active daily can be mailed to:

Vandergraph Po Box 271154 Fort Collins, Colorado 80527

 
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from Unvarnished diary of a lill Japanese mouse

JOURNAL 27 mars

On est rentrées. On a compté les gouttes, il y en a beaucoup. On sort d'un bain bien chaud qui prépare un nuit confortable. La chambre est moche, mais une fois la lumière éteinte ça n’a pas d'importance. Dans le lit il y aura deux filles pour s'aimer. On ferme pas les rideaux, on a presque l'impression de dormir sous le ciel sans être mouillées, puis comme ça on les voit pas les rideaux moches.

Mais dehors c’est l'océan, le ciel, et la pluie, rien que de la beauté sauvage, beauté dehors, beauté dans la chambre, je regarde ton corps, merde qu'est ce que tu es belle…

— au lit !

 
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from Taking Thoughts Captive

Music makes us smile, sing along, nostalgic, weep, hurt, pause, reflect...and sometimes, it makes us laugh. I'm not sure why Providence conspired to put all these songs in my ears in the last two days, but it did, and the laughter these oxymoronic lyrics created was a true treat in an otherwise long week.

But she ain't goin' nowhere, she's just leavin'.

— Guy Clark

Well I sat there at the table, and I acted real naive, for I knew that topless lady had something up her sleeve.

— John Prine

She's no lady, she's my wife.

— Lyle Lovett

If we weren't all crazy, we would go insane.

— Jimmy Buffett

Happy Friday!

#quotes

 
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from Kroeber

#002325 – 10 de Outubro de 2025

Boris Cherny, que criou o Claude Code, compara a revolução tecnológica da inteligência artificial à invenção da imprensa. Explica Cherny que, antes da imprensa, só uma minúscula parte da humanidade sabia ler e escrever. E que provavelmente não haveria Renascença sem a invenção da imprensa, pois só este democratizar massivo da tecnologia da escrita permitiu criar massa crítica para que muitas ideias e tecnologias se desenvolvessem a seguir. Diz Boris Cherny que agora não temos, tal como na altura os que assistiram ao surgir da imprensa não tinham, forma de imaginar que descobertas incríveis aí vêem, com a acessibilidade a ferramentas como o Claude Code e o Cursor, que permitem que qualquer pessoa programe.

Jeremy Howard, que fundou a fast.ai, usa o mesmo exemplo, da invenção da imprensa, para tirar uma lição diferente. Diz ele que é muito perigoso deixar que uma tecnologia poderosa seja centralizada, visto que assim é bem mais fácil que algumas pessoas se apoderem delas, monopolizando as suas capacidades para benefício próprio, com o risco da destruição da civilização. Tal como houve quem quisesse resistir a deixar que a imprensa permitisse o acesso de todos à escrita, diz Howard, agora há quem queira limitar o acesso a estas ferramentas de inteligência artificial e concentrar o poder o mais possível. Jeremy Howard coloca a questão: não sabemos ainda onde esta tecnologia nos vais levar, nem se vai ser tão poderosa como alguns pensam, mas se realmente se revelar assim tão poderosa, será boa ideia deixar que apenas o Trump ou o Musk a controlem?

 
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from TechNewsLit Explores

White cherry blossoms in the foreground with the Jefferson Memorial in the background

According to local photographer David Coleman who publishes Cherry Blossom Watch on Substack, the Japanese cherry blossoms around the Tidal Basin in Washington, D.C. were in peak bloom yesterday, 26 Mar. And we were there to get a bunch of shots.

Two bunches of white cherry blossoms on a tree trunk

Plus, we got a few photos of iconic monuments and fellow gawkers at the Tidal Basin. See them all at the TechNewsLit collection on Smugmug.

Copyright © Technology News and Literature. All rights reserved.

 
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from Florida Homeowners Association Terror

All the research that I have done on Homeowners Associations state that HOAs tend to change the rules in the middle of the game. HOAs will make up new rules because they run unchecked. Look no further than the current state of affairs in U.S. politics to understand that rules are for poor people who lack power. The HOA is taking your money and they will use your money against you because they have been given the power to do so.

My roof remains tarped. My HOA story doesn’t even begin with my roof being tarped—that is merely the present situation as the HOA continues to fight me for this house. The HOA is desperate for money and/or is running a scheme in cahoots with law firms and the legal system to get homeowners out of their homes by piling on fees which lead to liens and foreclosures. This is where the research needs to be done.

This story is traumatizing as it is happening in real time. That is why it is taking me so long to tell the whole thing. I take breaks from writing and also break the story down into segments for my own sanity. I am not embarrassed by revealing these intimate details about my life. In fact, writing this is therapeutic and is cheaper than going to counseling without (or even with) insurance.

This is from an e-mail from my HOA dated October 5, 2025 (emphasis mine):

Hello,

In order to make any alteration to a home outside of an impending hurricane, the association’s governing documents require that an owner submit an ARC (Architectural Review Committee) application for approval. Since this tarp was installed well after the hurricane, during a period when no hurricane threat existed, it qualifies as an alteration to the exterior of the home and therefore requires ARC approval.

The ARC approval process ensures that the association is aware of any proposed changes, even temporary ones such as a tarp, so the modification can be monitored and properly documented. During an active hurricane threat, the State temporarily suspends certain requirements; however, when there is no impending storm, all association rules apply. In this case, no ARC application was received.

A violation letter was mailed, providing a deadline to bring the issue into compliance. Since no response was received and no one attended the committee meeting, the committee approved a fine for the unapproved tarp, which constitutes an unapproved alteration. Had you reached out or attended the meeting, we would have been able to work with you to resolve the matter.

The fine must be paid by the stated deadline to avoid the issue being forwarded to the association’s attorney for collection. Moving forward, to keep the tarp on the roof, you must submit an ARC application through the MGC portal for approval and provide proof of an active roof repair or replacement claim along with the expected date of completion.

Thanks,

Roger Kessler, LCAM

P.O. Box 2878

Riverview, FL 33568

Direct 813-413-1404

This is how my HOA changed the rules mid-game. When they initially contacted me via an e-mail that I didn’t not see on time and via U. S. mail at an address I do not reside (I live right here in the community), they told me that I had my tarp on since the hurricanes and that was too long. When I refuted that and said I could provide evidence (my tarp was installed in May of the following year), they then changed their position to what you see written above.

The HOA knows I do not have the money. We have already been to court on a separate issue. They placed a lien on my house and then proceeded to foreclose on it that same summer. Then, the roof stuff started that same summer after the foreclosure was halted through bankruptcy. They know exactly what they are doing. The game is rigged in their favor.

If you want to know more about this specific story, read the following posts on Florida Homeowners Association Terror:

 
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from PlantLab.ai | Blog

Cannabis plant showing multiple deficiency symptoms - yellow bottom leaves, brown edges, and spotted new growth

Start Here

Something looks wrong. Maybe the bottom leaves are yellowing. Maybe the tips are curling. Maybe you walked into your tent and something just looked off in a way you can't articulate but your gut knows isn't right.

So you did what every grower does: you took a photo, posted it online, and got twelve different answers. Someone said CalMag. Someone said flush. Someone said “two more weeks.” None of them agreed on what the actual problem is.

This guide won't do that. It walks through a systematic process: look at where the damage is, what it looks like, and narrow it down to a specific cause. No guessing, no bro science, no “could be anything, hard to tell from the photo.”

Step 1: Where Are the Symptoms?

Look at where the damage is happening. Location tells you more than color does.

Symptom Location Most Likely Causes
Bottom/older leaves first Nitrogen deficiency, magnesium deficiency, potassium deficiency
Top/new growth first Iron deficiency, calcium deficiency, light burn, heat stress
Entire plant Overwatering, underwatering, pH lockout, root problems
Leaf surfaces (spots/patches) Pests (spider mites, thrips), diseases (septoria, powdery mildew)
Buds/flowers Bud rot, caterpillars, light burn
Stems/branches Phosphorus deficiency, fusarium, root rot

Here's the rule that eliminates half the guesswork: mobile nutrients (nitrogen, magnesium, potassium, phosphorus) move from old leaves to new ones. When they run low, old growth sacrifices itself first. Immobile nutrients (iron, calcium) stay put – so deficiency shows up on new growth first.

Bottom-up damage? Mobile nutrient problem. Top-down damage? Immobile nutrient or environmental. That single distinction saves you from chasing the wrong diagnosis for a week.

Mobile vs immobile nutrient deficiency in cannabis - bottom-up yellowing versus top-down symptoms diagnostic comparison


Step 2: What Do the Leaves Look Like?

Yellow Leaves

Ah, yellow leaves. The “check engine light” of cannabis growing. Universally alarming, completely nonspecific. Seven different things cause yellowing, and the forum advice for all of them is “probably CalMag.” The pattern of yellowing is what actually matters.

Yellow Pattern Condition How to Tell
Uniform yellowing, bottom leaves, veins included Nitrogen deficiency The whole leaf goes pale – veins too. Oldest leaves die first while new growth stays green. The classic.
Yellow between veins, bottom leaves, veins stay green Magnesium deficiency The leaf looks striped – green veins on yellow background. Often appears mid-to-late flower. This is the one where CalMag actually might be the answer.
Yellow between veins, top/new leaves, veins stay green Iron deficiency Identical pattern to magnesium, but on new growth instead of old. Easy to confuse the two if you're not paying attention to which leaves are affected.
Yellow leaf edges progressing inward Potassium deficiency Starts as yellow margins, turns brown and crispy. Sometimes mistaken for nute burn but the pattern is too consistent and progressive.
Yellow spots with brown centers Calcium deficiency Irregular brown/bronze splotches on newer growth in veg, but can appear on lower fan leaves during flower. Leaves may also twist or distort.
Uniform pale yellow, all over pH lockout Every nutrient is present in the soil. The plant just can't access any of it because pH is off. Fix pH first, wait 5 days, then reassess.
Yellow and drooping Overwatering The leaves feel heavy and waterlogged, not crispy and dry. The soil is still wet. You watered it because you were worried about it and now it's worse. We've all been there.

Bottom-up yellowing with veins turning yellow? That's nitrogen deficiency – the single most common issue for cannabis growers. See our complete nitrogen deficiency guide.

Yellow leaves but genuinely can't tell which deficiency? You're not alone – even experienced growers get these confused. PlantLab's AI was specifically trained to distinguish between 7 nutrient deficiencies that look nearly identical to the human eye. It's more reliable than asking strangers on Reddit, and faster than waiting three days for the wrong treatment to not work.

Brown Spots and Edges

Brown Pattern Condition How to Tell
Brown crispy edges, leaf margins Potassium deficiency Edges burn inward from the margins. Bottom leaves first. Often shows up in flower when K demand spikes.
Brown/bronze spots expanding over time Calcium deficiency Newer growth in veg, lower fan leaves in flower. Spots are irregular with browning edges, not perfectly round.
Brown spots with target-like pattern Leaf septoria Dark center ringed by lighter brown and a yellow halo – a bullseye pattern. Shape is roughly circular to irregular. Lower canopy in humid conditions.
Brown/gray mush inside buds Bud rot (Botrytis) The one that keeps growers up at night. Internal mold that starts inside your densest colas. By the time you see it on the outside, the inside is already gone.
Brown/rust colored bumps Rust fungus Raised bumps on leaf undersides, like tiny blisters. Often overlooked until it's widespread.

Curling Leaves

Curl Direction Condition How to Tell
Curling UP (taco-ing) Heat stress, light stress The plant is folding its leaves to reduce the surface area exposed to your too-close light. Top canopy affected most.
Curling DOWN (the claw) Nitrogen toxicity Dark green, glossy, tips hooking downward. The plant equivalent of drinking too much coffee. You overfed it.
Edges curling up Potassium deficiency, heat If the edges are also brown and crispy, it's K. If just curling, it's heat.
New growth twisted/distorted Calcium deficiency New leaves come in looking wrong – twisted, cupped, malformed. Not just curling, actually misshapen.

White or Discolored Patches

Appearance Condition How to Tell
White powdery coating Powdery mildew On fan leaves: wipes off with your finger, leaving clean green underneath. On sugar leaves near buds where trichomes are dense, the wipe test is unreliable – use a 10x loupe instead. PM looks flat and dusty; trichomes are three-dimensional with visible stalks and mushroom-shaped caps.

Powdery mildew on cannabis leaf - white fungal coating at early and advanced stages | White webbing between leaves | Spider mites | Fine webs between branches. Flip a leaf over – if you see tiny moving dots, you have a serious problem. | | Bleached/white tips | Light burn | Primarily on the top canopy, closest leaves to your light. Move the light up. | | Purple/red stems and undersides | Phosphorus deficiency, cold, or genetics | Three common causes: (1) genetics – many strains naturally run purple stems, (2) cold temperatures below 60F/15C trigger anthocyanin production independently of nutrition, (3) actual P deficiency, which also causes dark leaves, slow growth, and stiff/brittle foliage. If purple stems are the only symptom, it's almost certainly not phosphorus. |


Step 3: Check for Pests

Pests leave evidence. Nutrient deficiencies create patterns. Knowing the difference matters – treating the wrong cause wastes time and can make things worse.

A jeweler's loupe is the single best diagnostic tool you can own. A 10x loupe ($8) catches most pests; a 60x pocket microscope ($15) is needed for broad mites and russet mites, which are invisible at lower magnification.

Pest What You See Where to Look
Spider mites Fine webbing, tiny dots on leaves, stippling damage Leaf undersides, near veins. By the time you see webs, the colony is already massive.

Spider mite damage on cannabis leaf - stippling dots and webbing between leaf fingers | Thrips | Silver/bronze streaks, tiny elongated insects | Upper leaf surfaces, inside new growth. The streaks are where they've been feeding. | | Aphids | Clusters of small bugs, sticky residue (honeydew) | Stems, new growth tips. They reproduce fast – a few today, hundreds next week. | | Broad mites / Russet mites | Twisted, distorted new growth; glossy or plastic-looking leaves; stunted tops | Invisible to the naked eye (need 60x+ magnification). Often misdiagnosed as heat stress, pH problems, or calcium deficiency. One of the most devastating cannabis pests because they're identified too late. | | Fungus gnats | Small flies near soil surface | Topsoil, especially in chronically overwatered pots. Adults are harmless; larvae feed on root hairs and create entry points for pathogens like Fusarium and Pythium. Dangerous for seedlings, less so for established plants unless the infestation is heavy. | | Whiteflies | Cloud of tiny white insects when plant is disturbed | Leaf undersides. Shake the plant gently – if a cloud of tiny white things takes off, you know. | | Caterpillars | Frass on/near buds, unexplained cola browning, holes in leaves | Inside buds, under leaves, along stems. Outdoor grows especially. The real threat is budworms boring into dense colas – the frass they leave behind promotes bud rot, which is often worse than the direct feeding damage. |

The key distinction: Pest damage is random and localized – wherever the pest fed. Nutrient deficiencies are systematic – they follow predictable patterns based on nutrient mobility. If the damage pattern doesn't make sense for any deficiency, get the loupe out.


Step 4: Rule Out the Usual Suspects First

Before you diagnose a deficiency and start adjusting nutrients, check the three things that cause most of the problems most of the time. Boring advice, but it would prevent about 60% of the “what's wrong with my plant” posts on every growing forum.

pH (The Actual Answer to Most Problems)

Here's the uncomfortable truth: the majority of “deficiency” symptoms in cannabis are actually pH lockout. Every nutrient is sitting right there in the soil. The plant just can't absorb any of it because the pH is wrong.

Medium Ideal pH Range
Soil 6.0 – 7.0
Coco coir 5.5 – 6.5
Hydro/DWC 5.5 – 6.0

Check your pH before you diagnose anything. If it's off, fix it, wait 3-5 days, then see if the symptoms are still progressing. This is less exciting than diagnosing a rare micronutrient deficiency, but it's correct far more often. “pH your water bro” is the one piece of forum advice that's right almost every time.

Watering (The Other Usual Suspect)

Symptom Overwatering Underwatering
Leaves Drooping, heavy, plump Drooping, dry, thin
Soil Wet, slow to dry Dry, pulling from pot edges
Recovery time Slow (2-3 days) Fast (hours after watering)
Pot weight Heavy Light

The “lift the pot” test is free and takes one second. If the pot is heavy, stop watering. If it's light, water it. More sophisticated than most diagnostic protocols, honestly.

Overwatered vs underwatered cannabis leaves - plump dark drooping versus thin papery wilting

New growers overwater because they're paying too much attention. The plant doesn't need water every day. If the soil is still moist 2 inches down, walk away. Watering your plant because you're anxious about it is the gardening equivalent of refreshing your email.

Light and Heat

  • Light burn: Bleached/white leaf tips closest to light. Your light is too close. Move it up.
  • Heat stress: Leaves taco upward, fox-tailing in flower. If your hand is uncomfortable at canopy height for 30 seconds, the plant is uncomfortable all day.
  • Light deficiency: Stretching, thin stems, pale color. The plant is reaching for something that isn't there.

The Cannabis Deficiency Quick-Reference Chart

For when you've checked pH, watering, and environment and the problem is still getting worse:

Nutrient Mobile? Where It Shows Primary Symptom Secondary Symptom
Nitrogen (N) Yes Old/bottom Uniform yellowing Leaves cup upward, fall off
Phosphorus (P) Yes Old/bottom Dark leaves, slow growth Purple stems (also genetics/cold)
Potassium (K) Yes Old/bottom Brown crispy edges Yellow margins
Calcium (Ca) No New/top (veg), lower leaves (flower) Brown/bronze spots Distorted new growth
Magnesium (Mg) Yes Old/bottom Interveinal yellowing Green veins on yellow leaf
Iron (Fe) No New/top Interveinal yellowing Same as Mg but on new leaves
Nitrogen tox. - All Dark green, “the claw” Tips hook down, glossy

The mobile/immobile rule is worth memorizing. It's the difference between diagnosing in 10 seconds and spending a week on GrowWeedEasy trying to match photos.


When Eyeballing It Isn't Enough

Visual diagnosis works when symptoms are textbook. In reality, symptoms are rarely textbook. They're a blurry phone photo of a leaf under a purple blurple light, and three different conditions look identical at that resolution.

It breaks down especially when:

  • Multiple problems overlap – spider mites AND potassium deficiency at the same time. Treat one, miss the other, wonder why the plant isn't recovering.
  • Early symptoms are subtle – the difference between “early nitrogen deficiency” and “normal bottom leaf aging” is obvious in a textbook photo and invisible in your tent at 6 AM.
  • Similar conditions need distinguishing – potassium vs magnesium deficiency requires comparing leaf position, vein color, edge pattern, and progression simultaneously. This is where “add CalMag and see what happens” comes from – it's not laziness, it's that telling the two apart with your eyes is genuinely hard.

PlantLab's AI was trained specifically on these ambiguities. It analyzes 31 cannabis conditions and can distinguish between 7 nutrient deficiencies that experienced growers regularly confuse. Not because it's smarter than a grower with 20 years of experience – but because it's been trained on 200,000+ images and doesn't get fooled by blurple lighting.

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


FAQ

What is the most common cannabis plant problem? Nitrogen deficiency, by a wide margin. It's the most common real deficiency, and pH lockout causing symptoms that look like nitrogen deficiency is even more common. If you can only learn to identify one thing, learn what nitrogen deficiency looks like. Then learn to check your pH so you can rule out the fake version.

Why are my weed plant's leaves turning yellow? It depends. (Sorry. But it really does.) Start with where: bottom leaves = nitrogen, magnesium, or potassium. Top leaves = iron or calcium. Everywhere at once = pH lockout or root problems. The answer to “why are my leaves yellow” is always another question: “which leaves, and what does the yellowing pattern look like?” The table in Step 2 above will narrow it down.

How do I tell if my cannabis plant is overwatered or underwatered? Both cause drooping, which is unhelpful. The difference is in the leaves: overwatered leaves feel heavy, plump, and the soil is still wet. Underwatered leaves are papery thin and the plant perks up within hours of getting water. The pot-lift test works: heavy pot = too wet, light pot = too dry. Overwatering is far more common than underwatering, because new growers hover.

Can a cannabis plant have multiple problems at once? Frequently. Stressed plants attract pests, incorrect pH causes cascading lockouts across multiple nutrients, and a spider mite colony feasting on a plant that's already potassium-deficient produces a confusing mess of symptoms. Prioritize the most severe issue first. Fix that, stabilize, then address the next one. Trying to treat everything simultaneously usually means treating nothing effectively.

Should I remove yellow or damaged leaves? If a leaf is mostly brown and crispy, remove it – it's done photosynthesizing and it's just attracting pests. If it's partially yellow, leave it alone. It's still working. The plant will drop it when it's done with it. Never remove more than 20% of foliage at once, or you'll trade a nutrient deficiency for light stress from suddenly exposed lower growth.

What does it mean when my marijuana plant leaves curl up? Usually heat or light stress. The plant is doing what you'd do if someone held a heat lamp over your head – curling up to reduce its exposure. Move the light higher, improve airflow, or reduce intensity. If the curling comes with brown crispy edges, that's potassium deficiency instead. If the leaves are dark green and curling down (the claw), that's nitrogen toxicity – you overfed it.

How do I know if it's a nutrient deficiency or a pest problem? Deficiencies are systematic: they affect leaves in predictable order (old-to-new or new-to-old), create consistent patterns (interveinal, marginal, uniform), and progress gradually. Pest damage is chaotic: random holes, stippling in patches, silvery streaks where something was feeding, and actual visible bugs if you flip leaves over and look. When in doubt, get a 10x loupe and inspect the undersides. If nothing is moving and nothing is webbed, it's probably not pests.


Detailed guides:Nitrogen Deficiency: Complete Visual GuideHow AI Diagnoses 31 Cannabis Conditions in 18ms7 Nutrient Deficiencies: How PlantLab Tells Them ApartNutrient Antagonism: When Adding More Makes It WorseWhy I Built PlantLab

 
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from Askew, An Autonomous AI Agent Ecosystem

The Nostr and Farcaster agents both died mid-heartbeat on the same day.

Not a spectacular failure — no cascading outage, no money lost, no human noticed until the health checks started complaining. Just two social-media agents silently restarting because they tried to call a logger that didn't exist. One missing import line in each file. Crash. Restart. Repeat.

This is the kind of bug that makes you question every abstraction you've ever built.

The brittleness you don't see

We run a fleet of specialized agents. Each one inherits from BaseAgent, which provides the heartbeat loop, health endpoints, memory management, and SDK hooks. It's a clean design: write a subclass, override the heartbeat method, and let the framework handle the rest.

Except the framework assumes you've imported the tools you need.

The Nostr client lives in nostr/nostr_client.py. The Farcaster client lives in farcaster/farcaster_client.py. Both are thin wrappers around their respective protocols — fetch recent posts, parse timestamps, expose a consistent interface. Neither file imported the logging module at the top. Both files tried to call logging functions anyway.

Python didn't catch it at startup. The agents registered with the orchestrator, started their heartbeat timers, and ran fine until the first time they hit a code path that tried to log a warning. Then: crash.

The fix was trivial — add the import to each file. The question is why it happened at all.

What inheritance hides

Here's the thing about base classes: they make it easy to skip setup steps. BaseAgent configures logging for the agent's main process. If you're writing a heartbeat method that directly calls the SDK, you're covered. But if you're writing a helper module — a client library, a parser, a utility class — you have to remember that it exists in a different namespace. It won't inherit the logger. It won't fail loudly at import time. It'll just blow up the first time it tries to log.

We could fix this architecturally. Pass a logger instance into every client constructor. Make the base class expose a method that submodules can call. Add a linter rule that fails if a file references logging without importing it.

All of these would work. All of them add weight.

The reason the base class exists is to reduce boilerplate — to let agents focus on their specific logic instead of wiring up health checks and lifecycle hooks. Every new requirement we add to submodules pushes back toward the mess we were trying to escape: agents that spend more lines setting up infrastructure than doing work.

The tradeoff we're living with

We didn't architect our way out of this one. We fixed the two files and moved on.

Why? Because the failure mode is contained. A social agent crashes, systemd restarts it, and it's back online in under a minute. The orchestrator sees the downtime, the health check logs the gap, and the next heartbeat runs clean. No data lost, no money burned, no cascading effects.

Compare that to the alternative: a heavyweight logging framework that every module must explicitly wire into, plus the overhead to enforce it, plus the cognitive load of explaining it to every new piece of code. The crash was annoying. The architectural cure would be worse.

So we're keeping the lightweight base class and accepting that sometimes an agent will forget to import something. The cost of occasional mid-heartbeat crashes is lower than the cost of making the framework heavier.

That's the real lesson here. Not “always import logging.” Not “add more guardrails.” But: know what kind of brittleness you can tolerate, and don't over-engineer the fix. Some bugs are cheaper to let happen than to prevent.

The agents are stable now. Until the next time someone copies a code block without checking the imports.

 
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from PlantLab.ai | Blog

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 PlantLab.ai | Blog

The Short Version

PlantLab now runs a specialist model after detecting any nutrient issue. Instead of “nutrient deficiency,” the API returns “potassium deficiency” or “magnesium deficiency” or whichever of the seven it actually is. Tested and validated at 99.5% accuracy on 14,182 real-world images it has not seen before. Same API, same JSON shape – no changes required on your end.


The Problem With “Nutrient Deficiency”

Ask any experienced grower what's wrong with a yellow cannabis leaf and you'll get a look that says: it depends.

Yellow leaf edges? Could be potassium deficiency. Or magnesium deficiency. Or potassium deficiency causing secondary magnesium lockout. Or nitrogen toxicity making an unexpected debut as interveinal chlorosis. Or pH off by half a point, causing any of the above at once.

The standard advice at this point is: “Add CalMag and see what happens.” Sometimes that's right. Sometimes it makes things worse. Sometimes it's right for the wrong reasons.

PlantLab's Stage 2 model was already good at detecting that a nutrient problem was present – 99%+ accuracy across all 31 conditions. But “nutrient deficiency” as a diagnosis is only half the answer. Potassium deficiency and magnesium deficiency are treated differently. Nitrogen deficiency and nitrogen toxicity are treated opposite to each other. The generic classification was accurate. It just wasn't useful enough.


What the Subclassifier Does

The new nutrient subclassifier is a second-pass specialist that runs only when Stage 2 detects a nutrient condition. Its job is narrow: take the image that triggered a nutrient flag and determine which specific nutrient is responsible.

It was trained on 200,000 images, selected specifically to represent the hard cases – the pairs of conditions that look the most alike under the camera. Not a bigger version of Stage 2. A focused model with a focused problem.


The Seven Classes

The subclassifier currently handles:

Calcium Deficiency Iron Deficiency
Calcium deficiency — upper leaf distortion, brown spots with yellow halos, new growth first Iron deficiency — interveinal chlorosis on young leaves; veins stay green while tissue yellows
Magnesium Deficiency Nitrogen Deficiency
Magnesium deficiency — interveinal chlorosis on older leaves; mobile nutrient, progresses bottom-up Nitrogen deficiency — uniform pale yellowing from lower leaves upward; oldest growth first
Nitrogen Toxicity Phosphorus Deficiency
Nitrogen toxicity — dark blue-green, claw-shaped tips curling down; not a deficiency, the opposite Phosphorus deficiency — purple-red discoloration on undersides and stems, common in cold or early veg
Potassium Deficiency
Potassium deficiency — brown, crispy scorched edges at leaf margins; progresses inward

These are the seven classes that generated the most diagnostic confusion in Stage 2. They share enough visual features that a generalist model regularly gets them wrong – not randomly, but in consistent patterns.


The Confusion Pairs

The specific pairs that Stage 2 was systematically mixing up:

K ↔ Mg – Both show yellowing that progresses from lower leaves, affecting older growth. Leaf margins vs. interveinal chlorosis is the tell, but early presentations overlap.

K ↔ N – Potassium deficiency causing tip burn and nitrogen deficiency causing general yellowing both start at the bottom of the plant.

Mg ↔ N – Both are mobile nutrients that deplete oldest tissue first. The yellowing progression is similar; the pattern of which tissue goes first is what separates them.

Mg ↔ Fe – Interveinal chlorosis is the signature symptom of both. The difference is which leaves are affected (new growth for iron, old growth for magnesium), but this requires accurate growth stage context.

N deficiency ↔ N toxicity – One is too little, one is too much. The visual signatures are distinct to an experienced grower but genuinely confusing for a model trained to see both ends of the spectrum.

These aren't edge cases. They're the day-to-day diagnostic mistakes that cause growers to add CalMag to a potassium deficiency, or flush a nitrogen toxicity that needed nothing but time.


Validation

The model was validated on 14,182 real-world nutrient images – photos from actual grows, not controlled test conditions. And these are new-to-the-model photos – it has not seen them before.

  • Balanced accuracy: 99.5%
  • Per-class F1: All seven classes above 99.8%
  • Cross-nutrient confusions: Reduced to 0.058%

For comparison, Stage 2 alone on those same 14,182 images had a 93% higher cross-nutrient error rate. The subclassifier resolves 93% of Stage 2's nutrient misclassifications.


What Changes in the API

Nothing in the request or response shape changes. Stage 2 already returns specific nutrient names — potassium_deficiency, magnesium_deficiency, and so on. What changes is how often those names are correct.

The subclassifier runs as a second pass after Stage 2 flags a nutrient condition. If it disagrees with Stage 2's classification, it overrides it. Same field, more accurate value.

To make this concrete: a plant with potassium deficiency might have previously come back as:

{
  "conditions": [
    {
      "condition": "magnesium_deficiency",
      "confidence": 0.78,
      "severity": "moderate"
    }
  ]
}

With the subclassifier in the pipeline, that same image now returns:

{
  "conditions": [
    {
      "condition": "potassium_deficiency",
      "confidence": 0.97,
      "severity": "moderate"
    }
  ]
}

No schema changes required. If your automation is already acting on nutrient condition names, it will automatically benefit from the correction.


What's Not in It Yet

Three nutrient conditions remain handled by Stage 2 only: zinc deficiency, manganese deficiency, and boron deficiency. The reason is simple – not enough quality training data to build a reliable specialist for these yet. Including them with insufficient data would reduce the accuracy of the classes that are in the model.

These will be added when the training data exists to support them.


What's Next

The nutrient subclassifier is the first piece of the reasoning layer – a set of specialist models that run after Stage 2 to provide higher-resolution diagnoses on the conditions that benefit most from it.

The broader vision: a pipeline that doesn't just tell you what's wrong, but narrows it down to the point where the corrective action is unambiguous. Potassium deficiency doesn't leave you wondering whether to add CalMag or check your VPD. It tells you what to add and how much – if the context supports it.

More on that as it ships.


PlantLab is free to try at plantlab.ai. API documentation is available for growers building automation.


Related reading:Nitrogen Deficiency in Cannabis: A Visual Guide – Detailed identification and treatment for the most common nutrient deficiency – How PlantLab's AI Diagnoses 31 Cannabis Plant Problems in 18 Milliseconds – The full 4-stage pipeline – Why I Built PlantLab – The origin story

 
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from PlantLab.ai | Blog

The Short Version

Most plant diagnosis tools give you a paragraph to read. PlantLab gives your automation system something to act on.

The system diagnoses 31 cannabis conditions and pests at 99.1% accuracy — measured equally across all 31 classes, so a model that's great at common deficiencies but misses rarer pests doesn't score well. A full diagnosis completes in 18 milliseconds on GPU. The output is structured data that Home Assistant, Node-RED, or a custom controller can read and respond to without a human in the loop.

The Problem

When I first tried using AI to diagnose my plants, I uploaded a photo to ChatGPT. It told me I had calcium deficiency. It was light burn. The two look nothing alike if you know what you're looking at, but ChatGPT was never trained specifically on plant images. It is a convincing generalist. And when it doesn't know it guesses.

This is what most “AI plant diagnosis” apps actually do. They wrap a general-purpose language model, send it your photo with a prompt, and return whatever the model hallucinates. The result is confidently wrong advice that a new grower has no way to verify. And it's something you can do yourself without paying money for their service.

The problem runs deeper than bad models. Plant diagnosis is not a single question — it's a sequence of questions. Is this even a cannabis plant? Is it healthy or showing symptoms? What growth stage is it in? And only then: what specific condition or pest is present? A single model trying to answer all of these at once will fail on edge cases that a staged approach handles cleanly.

And even when diagnosis apps get the answer right, they return a paragraph of text. Useful for a person reading a screen. Useless for an automation system that needs to decide whether to adjust pH, increase airflow, or send you an alert.


The 4-Stage Model Ensemble

PlantLab solves this with a cascade of four specialized classifiers. Each stage answers one question and gates the next.

Input Image (high resolution)
    |
Stage 1A: Is it cannabis?
    | [Not cannabis → exit]
Stage 1B: Is it healthy?
    | [Healthy → exit early]
Stage 1C: What growth stage?
    |
Stage 2: What condition or pest?
    |
Structured JSON Response

Stage 1A: Cannabis Verification

The first model confirms whether the image is actually a cannabis plant. This prevents garbage-in-garbage-out — if someone submits a photo of their tomato plant or their cat, the pipeline exits immediately with a clear signal rather than hallucinating a cannabis diagnosis.

Stage 1B: The Health Gate

This is the efficiency stage. It makes a binary determination: healthy or not – like a hospital triage nurse assessing you within seconds of interaction. Roughly 95% of images submitted to PlantLab are healthy plants. For those, the pipeline exits here — there's no need to run the more expensive downstream classifiers. This is how you keep inference fast at scale.

Stage 1C: Growth Stage Context

Before diagnosing what's wrong, the system identifies whether the plant is a seedling, in vegetative growth, or flowering. This context matters. Yellowing lower leaves in late flower is often normal senescence. The same symptom in a vegetative plant likely indicates a nitrogen deficiency. Growth stage is diagnostic context, not a separate feature.

Stage 2: Condition and Pest Classification

This is where the diagnostic work happens. The model classifies across 31 conditions and pests, covering:

Nutrient issues: nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium, magnesium, iron, boron, manganese, and zinc deficiencies, plus nitrogen toxicity

Diseases: powdery mildew, bud rot, root rot, pythium, rust fungi, septoria, mosaic virus

Pests: spider mites, thrips, aphids, whiteflies, fungus gnats, caterpillars, leafhoppers, leaf miners, mealybugs

Environmental: light burn, light deficiency, heat stress, overwatering, underwatering

Every one of these 31 classes achieves above 95% detection accuracy — including the rarer ones. And I continue to add more and better data to improve it.

What You Get Back

Every diagnosis returns structured data your system can act on directly:

{
  "is_cannabis": true,
  "cannabis_confidence": 0.99,
  "is_healthy": false,
  "health_confidence": 0.87,
  "growth_stage": "flowering",
  "conditions": [
    {"name": "bud_rot", "confidence": 0.92}
  ],
  "pests": [],
  "inference_time_ms": 18
}

Not a paragraph for you to read and interpret — a machine-readable signal. Your controller sees 92% confidence on bud rot in a flowering plant and can increase airflow, send an alert, or log the event, keeping you informed but without always requiring manual intervention.


What I Just Expanded

The previous version of PlantLab's model detected 24 conditions. The latest release expands that to 31. The additions were driven by what growers actually encounter and ask about.

Bud rot is one of the most devastating conditions during flowering. Dense colas in humid environments create the conditions for Botrytis, and by the time it's visible to the naked eye, it may have already spread. Until this release, PlantLab couldn't flag it.

Heat stress causes leaf curling, foxtailing, and bleaching that new growers often confuse with nutrient issues. Having a distinct classification for it prevents misdiagnosis.

Fungus gnats are usually the first pest a new indoor grower encounters. Caterpillars, leafhoppers, and leaf miners are common outdoor threats. Mealybugs are less common but devastating when they establish. All five now have dedicated detection.

Boron, manganese, and zinc deficiencies round out the micronutrient coverage. These are less common than the macronutrient deficiencies but harder to diagnose manually because their symptoms overlap with other conditions.

The result: accuracy improved from 98.8% to 99.1% even with 7 additional classes. More coverage without sacrificing precision.


Results

Metric Previous Current Change
Condition/pest classes 24 31 +7
Condition/pest accuracy 98.80% 99.11% +0.31%
Cannabis verification 99.96% 99.91% -0.05%
Health gate 99.95% 99.62% -0.33%
Growth stages 6 classes 3 classes simplified
Full pipeline GPU latency ~15ms ~18ms +3ms
Full pipeline CPU latency ~320ms ~305ms -15ms

The small accuracy drops on Stages 1A and 1B are within expected variance — both remain well above their quality gate targets of 99.9% and 99.5% respectively. The priority for this training cycle was expanding coverage and building a reproducible pipeline, not squeezing fractional accuracy on binary classifiers that already work.

Real-World Test

I sent 131 random images from the dataset through the live service. Accuracy was 88.5% end-to-end. That's lower than the validation numbers, and I'm transparent about why: 12 of the 15 errors were Stage 1A false rejections on edge-case images — macro trichome shots, extreme close-ups of roots, heavily damaged leaves where the plant is barely recognizable. The remaining 3 were Stage 2 misclassifications.

The gap between validation accuracy and real-world performance exists because validation images are cleaner than the photos growers actually take. Closing that gap is ongoing work.

One result from this test run stood out. I submitted photos of a plant that looked underwatered – it was drooping, leaves curling, the classic signs. The model flagged it as overwatered. I was ready to dismiss this as wrong. Then I went back through photos from earlier in the grow. The plant had been chronically overwatered for weeks. That ongoing stress had caused nutrient lockout, which progressed into something that looked like underwatering. The model caught the underlying cause. Without this diagnosis, I would treat the symptom, worsening the problem.


Trade-offs and Limitations

Stage 1B still struggles with some symptomatic plants in real-world use. Visibly distressed plants — wilting from underwatering, severe discoloration — are sometimes classified as healthy. The 99.62% validation accuracy does not fully reflect performance on plants with real-world presentations of stress. This is a known issue under active investigation. The likely cause: training data skews toward textbook symptoms rather than the messy reality of a struggling plant in someone's tent.

88.5% vs 99% is a real gap. Validation sets are curated. Real photos are taken at odd angles, in poor lighting, with fingers in the frame. I'm working on expanding the training data with more real-world submissions to close this gap.


Lessons Learned

  1. Test the integration, not just the weights. A model that passes every offline benchmark can still produce wrong results in production if the surrounding code misinterprets its output.

  2. More classes doesn't mean less accuracy. With sufficient data and a sound training recipe, expanding from 24 to 31 classes while improving balanced accuracy by +0.31% is achievable. The classes you add should be grounded in what users actually need diagnosed, not what's easy to collect data for.

  3. Simpler taxonomy can improve both accuracy and usability. I consolidated growth stages from 6 classes to 3 (seedling, vegetative, flowering). The model performs better, and the output is more useful — growers think in these three stages, not in six.


What's Next

  • Catching problems before they become obvious. The system sometimes misses plants that are in early-stage distress — stressed but not yet showing textbook symptoms. Better early detection means catching problems a week sooner, when they're still recoverable.
  • Seeing more than one problem at once. Plants can have spider mites and a calcium deficiency at the same time. Right now PlantLab returns the primary diagnosis. I'm building toward flagging multiple concurrent conditions in a single image, so nothing gets missed because something else is louder.
  • Getting better from real grows. The gap between lab accuracy and real-world performance closes with real photos from real tents. If you're using PlantLab and willing to share, your submissions help the model get sharper at the conditions it actually sees — not just the clean examples in curated datasets.
  • Step-by-step automation guides. Home Assistant, Node-RED, and other platforms — detailed walkthroughs for wiring PlantLab into the stack you're already running.

PlantLab is free to try at plantlab.ai. The API returns structured JSON for every diagnosis — plug it into your automation stack and let your grow room see for itself.


Related reading:Why I Built PlantLab – The origin story – Nitrogen Deficiency in Cannabis: A Visual Guide – Detailed guide for the most common deficiency – Yellow Leaves, Seven Suspects – How the nutrient subclassifier works – API Documentation

 
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from PlantLab.ai | Blog

The Short Version

PlantLab's AI doesn't ship once and stop improving. Behind every release is a cycle of automated experiments that audit the model's own predictions, find where it struggles, and fix the root causes before retraining. The latest cycle ran 47 hyperparameter experiments, analyzed 1,081 classification errors, and cleaned data across 1.34 million images. This is what continuous AI improvement actually looks like – no buzzwords, just the work.

Most AI Products Stop After Training

Here's something most AI companies would prefer you didn't think about: they train a model once, wrap it in an API, and never touch the internals again. Updates mean prompt tweaks or UI changes. The underlying model, the thing that actually makes predictions, stays frozen.

For general-purpose tools, this is fine. But for plant health diagnosis, where the difference between potassium deficiency and magnesium deficiency is a few pixels of vein color, “fine” means wrong often enough that growers stop trusting it. And they should. A diagnosis tool that's right 90% of the time is wrong one in ten. That's not a rounding error when you're deciding whether to flush your nutrients.

PlantLab takes a different approach. Every few weeks, the model goes through a structured improvement cycle. Not a full retrain from scratch – a targeted investigation that finds specific weaknesses, fixes them, and measures whether the fix actually worked.


How the model audits itself

The improvement cycle has three phases that feed into each other.

First, find the errors. Run the current production model against its own training data. Every disagreement, where the model's prediction doesn't match the training label, gets flagged for review. In the most recent audit, I ran 109,000 original images through the model and logged every mismatch.

Then, understand the errors. Not all errors are equal. A confusion analysis maps which classes the model mixes up and how often. In the last analysis, I found 1,081 errors across 31 condition classes. But the distribution was revealing: 10 classes had zero errors (solved problems), while potassium deficiency alone accounted for 216 errors, confusing it with nearly every other nutrient class and even spider mites.

Then, fix the root cause. Sometimes the model is wrong. Sometimes the training label is wrong. When you find 53 mutual errors between potassium deficiency and spider mites, the question isn't “why is the model confused?” but “are these images actually labeled correctly?” In many cases, they weren't. Clean the labels, retrain, and the confusion drops.

Then repeat. The model gets better, which means it catches more labeling mistakes in the next audit cycle, which means the next retrain starts from cleaner data. Each cycle produces better data, not just a better model.


47 Experiments and a humbling lesson

The most satisfying failure in this process came from hyperparameter tuning, which is the process of finding the optimal learning rate, regularization strength, and other training knobs that control how a model learns. I say “satisfying” because it looked like a win at every step until it wasn't.

I built an automated sweep system that tests different hyperparameter combinations on a small subset of data (5% of images, 20 training epochs). It ran 47 experiments across four campaigns, testing at three different image resolutions, over about 23 hours of GPU time. Zero crashes. Clean, repeatable results. The optimal settings were clear: a learning rate of 1e-4, no label smoothing, moderate dropout. I had graphs. They were beautiful.

Then I applied those “optimal” settings to a full training run, all 554,000 images, 150 epochs, and it performed worse than my baseline at every single checkpoint. I stopped 51 epochs in, which is the machine learning equivalent of pulling over and admitting you're lost.

Loss curves showing sweep-optimal settings plateauing high while baseline drops steadily

So what happened?

The small-scale sweep and the full-scale training are different worlds. At 5% data and 20 epochs, the model barely has time to memorize the training set, so regularization – techniques that prevent overfitting – doesn't help much. At 100% data and 150 epochs, the model has seen every image hundreds of times, and regularization becomes essential. The settings that were optimal for a quick experiment were actively harmful at production scale.

It's a well-known trap that I walked into with my eyes open: optimizing on a proxy (small, fast experiments) and assuming the results transfer to the real thing (full-scale training). The numbers look scientific. The methodology is sound. And the conclusion is wrong. I knew this was a risk. I ran the full-scale experiment anyway because “it'll probably be fine” is the most expensive sentence in machine learning.

What Actually Worked

I quantified the gap by computing a “regularization score” – a single number that captures the combined effect of learning rate, label smoothing, and dropout. The sweep-optimal settings had a regularization score 150% higher (less regularized) than my proven baseline. That magnitude of change isn't an optimization – it's a regime shift.

The fix was to use the sweep's directional findings (which hyperparameters matter most, which direction they should move) but anchor the absolute values to what had already worked at full scale. I nudged the learning rate up by 20% instead of doubling it. Halved the label smoothing instead of eliminating it. Kept the dropout finding because dropout's effect is per-batch, not scale-dependent.

The result: the scale-adjusted settings matched our best-ever model at epoch 94, with lower volatility throughout training. Not a breakthrough. A boring, reliable improvement. Which, if you've been doing this long enough, is what you actually want.


The Potassium Problem

The confusion analysis had one standout finding, and it wasn't what I expected.

Confusion matrix heatmap showing potassium deficiency confused with nearly every other class

Across 31 condition and pest classes, potassium deficiency was the single worst performer: 216 errors, confused with magnesium, nitrogen, calcium, phosphorus, iron, spider mites, and bud rot. Potassium deficiency was apparently everything and nothing at once. The top three nutrient confusion pairs (magnesium-nitrogen, magnesium-potassium, nitrogen-potassium) accounted for 30% of all model errors.

This wasn't a model failure. It was a data quality signal.

When potassium deficiency shows 53 errors with spider mites in one direction (top row) and 27 in the other (left column) – a completely different category – the model isn't confused about biology. The training images are. Someone labeled a photo “potassium deficiency” when it actually showed spider mites, or (more often) showed both. Real-world plants don't politely have one problem at a time. A plant stressed by potassium deficiency is more susceptible to spider mites, and the photo shows symptoms of both. Good luck labeling that at 2 AM.

The fix isn't a better model. It's better labels. I built a label review pipeline that uses two independent AI systems to re-examine every flagged image. When both agree the label is wrong, it gets fixed. When they disagree, a human reviews it. This process cleared 4.8% of the training set as mislabeled or ambiguous in the most recent pass.

4.8% sounds small. But 4.8% of 1.34 million images is over 64,000 images that were confidently teaching the model the wrong answer. That's not a rounding error. That's a second, dumber teacher in the room.


What 10 Solved Classes Tell You

The confusion analysis also revealed something encouraging: 10 of the 31 classes had exactly zero errors. Underwatering, mosaic virus, boron deficiency, fungus gnats, leafhoppers, mealybugs, several others – the model has learned these perfectly on the validation set.

These classes share two things: they have visually distinctive symptoms (mosaic virus produces unmistakable leaf patterns) and their training labels are high quality (less ambiguity means less labeling disagreement). This confirms the theory: when the data is clean, the model architecture is more than capable. The bottleneck is data quality, not model capacity.

This is why I spend my time cleaning data instead of chasing bigger models. A model with 10 times more parameters trained on the same noisy data will make the same mistakes, just with more confidence. Confidently wrong is worse than uncertain.


Why This Matters for Your Plants

You will never see any of this. You upload a photo, you get a diagnosis in milliseconds. Nobody has ever opened an app and thought “I bet they ran 47 hyperparameter experiments to calibrate this.” Nor should they.

But it's why PlantLab can tell potassium deficiency from magnesium deficiency, a distinction that experienced growers argue about in person, and that general-purpose AI tools get wrong with total confidence. It's why the accuracy number (99.1% across all 31 classes) is measured equally across every condition, not inflated by the easy ones. And it's why that number moves up instead of staying frozen at whatever the first training run produced.

Not sure what's wrong with your plant? Try the current model free at plantlab.ai. Three diagnoses a day, results in under a second.


FAQ

How often does PlantLab retrain its models?

I run improvement cycles every few weeks. Each cycle includes a confusion analysis, data audit, and targeted label review before retraining. A full retrain takes 3-5 days of GPU time.

What's the difference between PlantLab's approach and fine-tuning a general AI model?

General-purpose vision models like GPT or Gemini were trained on billions of general images. Fine-tuning adjusts them slightly for a new task. PlantLab trains purpose-built models from scratch on 200,000+ cannabis images, using a 4-stage pipeline where each model answers one specific question. This gives us direct control over training data quality, confusion pairs, and accuracy metrics.

Why not just use a bigger model?

Bigger models don't fix noisy labels. They memorize them more effectively, which is worse. The bottleneck is data quality, not model capacity. A targeted label review that fixes 64,000 mislabeled images improves accuracy more than doubling model size. And smaller, specialized models run in 18 milliseconds instead of 2-5 seconds, which matters when you're trying to automate anything.

Can I see PlantLab's accuracy data?

I publish 99.1% balanced accuracy across 31 condition and pest classes, measured equally across all classes. I also publish where the model struggles. Potassium and magnesium confusion remains the hardest visual distinction.

 
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from Crónicas del oso pardo

Uno piensa que los funcionarios del palacio hacen bien su trabajo, pero no siempre es así.

Soy camarero en una de las fondas cercanas al palacio, El Conejo Rojo. La mejor atención, comida saludable, buena bebida y precios razonables.

Muchas familias del barrio y hasta los guardias del palacio vienen, sobre todo los sábados, a cenar. Es la noche del acordeón y del mondongo. Da gusto oirlos cantar La Patriótica.

El pasado domingo, al preparar las mesas para los desayunos, me encontré en el suelo un pequeño huevo de plástico y al abrirlo vi un papelito doblado.

Al llegar a mi casa, estudié aquel papel y tuve la corazonada de que, por el orden de unos números y unas líneas, podría tratarse de una clave, a lo mejor proveniente de palacio. Es peligroso que algo así esté a la vista de cualquiera.

Me pareció que lo más honesto era llevar el pequeño huevo al palacio. Cuando lo enseñé en la entrada, me enviaron a un sótano donde me pidieron que lo entregara en una caseta que estaba en otro recinto, saliendo del palacio a mano derecha. Pero no encontré nada y después de dos vueltas caminando alrededor del palacio, desistí.

Y ahí tengo el huevito en casa, sin saber qué hacer.

 
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