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Nearly seven in ten middle and high school students now say they believe artificial intelligence is eroding their critical thinking skills. They reported this in a December 2025 survey conducted by the RAND Corporation's American Youth Panel. They also reported, in the very same survey, that they are using AI for homework more than ever before, with usage climbing from 48 per cent to 62 per cent in barely seven months. The students, in other words, can see the problem clearly. They simply cannot stop participating in it.
This is an extraordinarily revealing paradox, and it deserves more scrutiny than the predictable hand-wringing it has generated. Because the most uncomfortable question here is not whether ChatGPT is making teenagers worse at thinking. It is whether the education system that ushered AI into classrooms with such breathless enthusiasm ever genuinely valued the kind of independent, rigorous, critical thought it now claims to be losing.
The answer, if you follow the evidence, is not encouraging.
The RAND data is striking in its internal contradictions. Among the 1,214 young people surveyed (aged 12 to 29, all enrolled in school during the 2025-26 academic year), 67 per cent endorsed the statement that “the more students use AI for their schoolwork, the more it will harm their critical thinking skills.” That figure had risen more than ten percentage points in just ten months. The concern was especially pronounced among female students, 75 per cent of whom agreed, compared with 59 per cent of male students.
Yet during the same period, the percentage of middle schoolers using AI for homework leapt from 30 per cent to 46 per cent, and among high schoolers it jumped from 49 per cent to 60 per cent. Most of these students (60 per cent) also expressed concern about using AI for school-related purposes. So they are worried and they are doing it anyway. This is not cognitive dissonance in any simple sense. It is something more structurally interesting: students have correctly diagnosed a systemic problem, but they exist within a system that gives them no rational incentive to behave differently.
Consider the logic from a student's perspective. Assignments are graded. Grades determine university admissions. University admissions determine (or are perceived to determine) life outcomes. If your peers are using AI and getting better grades, opting out is not a principled stand. It is a competitive disadvantage. The students are not confused. They are trapped.
Think of it another way. You are sixteen. You have five GCSEs to revise for, a personal statement to write, and a part-time job. Your classmates are producing polished coursework in half the time it takes you to write a first draft because they are running their ideas through ChatGPT. Your teachers, overwhelmed and under-resourced, cannot reliably tell the difference. The system rewards the output, not the process. In this environment, choosing not to use AI is not intellectual integrity. It is self-sabotage.
Meanwhile, faculty at the university level are sounding alarms with even greater urgency. A national survey conducted by the American Association of Colleges and Universities and Elon University's Imagining the Digital Future Centre in November 2025 found that 95 per cent of the 1,057 faculty respondents feared that generative AI would increase student overreliance on the technology. Ninety per cent said it would diminish students' critical thinking skills. Eighty-three per cent said AI would decrease student attention spans. And 78 per cent said cheating on their campuses had increased since these tools became widely available, with 57 per cent saying it had increased significantly.
The teachers see the same thing the students see. The difference is that teachers are surprised. The students are not.
Here is where the conversation gets genuinely uncomfortable. Long before ChatGPT existed, education reformers, cognitive scientists, and classroom teachers themselves were raising the alarm about a system that was systematically undermining higher-order thinking. The culprit was not artificial intelligence. It was standardised testing.
The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) represented, in the United States at least, the triumph of measurable outcomes over meaningful learning. Under its regime, schools were judged by their students' performance on standardised assessments. The consequences of poor scores were severe: funding cuts, staff dismissals, school closures. The entirely predictable result was what educators came to call “teaching to the test,” a practice in which classroom instruction was narrowed to the specific content and formats that would appear on state exams.
The effects were devastating and well-documented. Subjects not covered by standardised tests, including art, music, physical education, and social studies, were minimised or eliminated outright. Some principals eliminated recess to devote more time to test preparation. Science was replaced with additional maths drills. Social studies gave way to language arts worksheets. The phrase that captured this era most succinctly was “sit, get, spit, forget,” a cycle in which students received information passively, regurgitated it on an exam, and promptly forgot it, having never engaged with it at any depth.
The situation in the United Kingdom has followed a parallel trajectory. Successive reforms since the introduction of the National Curriculum in 1988, the expansion of league tables in the 1990s, and the intensification of Ofsted inspections have created an accountability culture that rewards measurable outcomes above all else. Teachers in England report spending enormous amounts of time on assessment preparation, data tracking, and administrative compliance, time that might otherwise be devoted to the kind of open-ended, inquiry-driven teaching that develops critical thinking. The Department for Education published expanded guidance on AI in education in June 2025, stressing that AI tools should support rather than replace subject knowledge and that students still need a strong foundation in reading, writing, and critical thinking to use these tools effectively. But guidance is one thing; structural reform is quite another.
Paulo Freire, the Brazilian educator and philosopher, would have recognised all of this instantly. In his seminal 1968 work “Pedagogy of the Oppressed,” Freire described what he called the “banking model” of education, in which teachers deposit knowledge into the passive receptacles of students' minds, and students are expected to receive, memorise, and repeat. Freire argued that this approach was fundamentally hostile to critical consciousness; the more students worked at storing deposits, the less they developed the critical thinking that would allow them to intervene in the world as transformers of that world. His alternative, critical pedagogy, was rooted in dialogue, in treating students as co-creators of knowledge rather than empty vessels to be filled.
NCLB was, in Freire's terms, the banking model with federal enforcement mechanisms. The UK's accountability framework achieved much the same outcome through different institutional channels. And while NCLB was eventually replaced by the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) in 2015, which offered states greater flexibility in assessment design, the deeper cultural damage had been done. An entire generation of teachers on both sides of the Atlantic had been trained in a system that rewarded compliance over curiosity, memorisation over analysis, and standardised answers over independent thought.
So when commentators now lament that AI is destroying students' capacity for critical thinking, the honest follow-up question is: which critical thinking? When, precisely, was this golden age of independent thought in schools? Because the evidence suggests it was already in serious trouble long before a single student typed a homework question into ChatGPT.
The cognitive science, meanwhile, tells a more nuanced story than either technophiles or technophobes would prefer. Research published in 2025 by Michael Gerlich of SBS Swiss Business School, in the journal Societies, investigated the relationship between AI tool usage and critical thinking through the lens of cognitive offloading, the well-established phenomenon in which humans delegate cognitive tasks to external resources to reduce mental demand.
Gerlich's study surveyed and interviewed 666 participants across diverse age groups and educational backgrounds, finding a significant negative correlation between frequent AI tool use and critical thinking abilities. The numbers were stark: cognitive offloading was strongly correlated with AI tool usage (r = +0.72) and inversely related to critical thinking (r = -0.75). Younger participants, those aged 17 to 25, showed higher dependence on AI tools and lower critical thinking scores compared to older age groups. However, and this is crucial, advanced educational attainment correlated positively with critical thinking skills, suggesting that education, when it works properly, can mitigate some of the cognitive costs of AI reliance. The implication is clear: the problem is not that education cannot protect against cognitive offloading, but that most education systems are not currently designed to do so.
A separate study from Microsoft Research, presented at CHI 2025 (the Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems), surveyed 319 knowledge workers about their experiences with generative AI. The findings revealed a telling dynamic: higher confidence in AI was associated with less critical thinking, while higher self-confidence was associated with more critical thinking. The research also identified a fundamental shift in the nature of cognitive work, from information gathering to information verification, from problem-solving to AI response integration, and from doing tasks to supervising them.
This matters enormously for students, who are still in the process of building the very cognitive capacities that adults are now choosing to offload. A knowledge worker who has spent twenty years learning to construct arguments, evaluate evidence, and synthesise information can afford to delegate some of those tasks to AI without losing the underlying skill. A teenager who has never fully developed those skills in the first place is in a fundamentally different position. For them, cognitive offloading is not a convenience. It is a developmental short-circuit.
This is not merely a problem of laziness or moral failure. It is a predictable consequence of how human cognition interacts with powerful tools. We have always offloaded cognitive tasks onto external supports, from written language to calculators to search engines. The question with AI is whether the offloading is so comprehensive, and so seamless, that it crosses the line from scaffolding (which is temporary and empowering) to substitution (which is permanent and diminishing).
The critical distinction, as cognitive scientists have noted, is whether AI operates as a scaffold or a substitute. Scaffolding is characterised by temporariness, adaptability, and the goal of strengthening internal capacities. Substitution simply does the thinking for you. And the educational system, in its rush to adopt AI tools, has devoted remarkably little attention to ensuring the former rather than the latter.
Any honest account of this situation must reckon with the position of teachers themselves, who are caught between contradictory demands with diminishing resources to meet any of them. Nearly half of teachers in the United States and the United Kingdom report chronic burnout. Teacher shortages are endemic. Class sizes in many state schools have grown. Administrative demands consume ever-larger portions of the working week.
Into this environment of exhaustion and scarcity comes AI, marketed to schools and teachers as a solution to the very problems the system has created. District leaders implementing AI tools report that teachers can reclaim an average of 5.9 hours per week by automating lesson planning, grading, and communication tasks. For a profession in crisis, this is not a trivial proposition. If a teacher can use AI to handle routine administrative work and spend more time on meaningful instruction, that sounds like progress.
But the reality is more complicated. Only about one in five teachers work at a school that has an AI policy. Teacher training on the pedagogical use of AI remains inconsistent and often superficial. The gap between the promise of AI as a teaching aid and the lived reality of its implementation is vast. Teachers are being asked to integrate a transformative technology into their practice while simultaneously meeting accountability targets, managing behaviour, differentiating instruction for diverse learners, and coping with the emotional demands of working with young people in an era of escalating mental health challenges.
The result is that AI adoption in schools is happening not through careful pedagogical planning, but through exhaustion. Teachers are adopting AI not because they have been trained to use it well, but because they are too stretched to do without it. And students are adopting AI not because they have been taught to use it critically, but because nobody has given them a compelling reason not to.
The speed at which schools reversed their positions on AI is itself a revealing story. In January 2023, New York City's Department of Education became one of the first major school systems to ban ChatGPT from its networks and devices. The ban was announced with the gravity of a public health measure, citing concerns about academic integrity and the tool's potential to provide students with answers that lacked critical thinking. Fairfax County Public Schools in Virginia and Austin Independent School District in Texas followed suit, citing child safety and academic integrity.
Within four months, New York City reversed its ban. The reversal came after convening tech industry representatives and educators to evaluate the technology's potential benefits. By 2024, more than three-quarters of educators reported that their districts had not banned ChatGPT or similar tools. The pattern, ban first, then embrace, played out across districts nationwide. Seattle Public Schools, which had initially banned ChatGPT and six additional AI writing assistance websites, similarly softened its stance.
This institutional whiplash is instructive. The initial bans suggested that schools understood, at least intuitively, that AI posed a genuine threat to the learning process. The rapid reversals suggested that this understanding was no match for the combined pressures of industry lobbying, parental expectations, competitive anxiety, and the sheer momentum of a technology that students were already using at home.
The AI in education market tells its own story of institutional capture. Valued at approximately 7 billion dollars in 2025, the sector is projected to grow to nearly 137 billion dollars by 2035, expanding at a compound annual growth rate of over 34 per cent. Major technology companies, including Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Pearson, have invested heavily in educational AI products. In July 2025 alone, Microsoft announced plans to invest over 4 billion dollars in AI education initiatives. These investments are not philanthropic gestures. They are strategic plays for long-term market dominance in an industry that touches every child in the developed world.
These are not neutral actors offering disinterested tools. They are companies with revenue models that depend on deep integration into educational infrastructure. When schools adopt their platforms, they are not just choosing a product; they are choosing a pedagogical philosophy, one that often prioritises efficiency, personalisation through algorithmic recommendation, and scalable delivery over the messy, slow, deeply human process of learning to think for oneself.
Not all educational AI is created equal, and the differences matter. Khan Academy's Khanmigo, launched in limited beta in 2023 and reaching approximately 1.5 million users across 130 countries by the end of 2025, represents a philosophically distinct approach to AI in education. Unlike ChatGPT, Khanmigo is designed not to give answers directly. Instead, it employs a Socratic method, offering hints and guiding questions intended to help students find answers themselves.
According to Khan Academy's own data, 68 per cent of students preferred Khanmigo's approach over ChatGPT for homework help, citing reduced anxiety about cheating. There is, students reported, a real psychological difference between “the AI gave me the answer” and “I figured it out with help.” This is a meaningful distinction. The student who works through a problem with Socratic guidance is still engaging in the cognitive labour that builds understanding. The student who pastes an essay prompt into ChatGPT and submits the output is not.
This distinction matters because it reveals that the problem is not AI per se, but how AI is designed and deployed. A tool built to scaffold learning is fundamentally different from a tool optimised to generate complete, polished outputs on demand. Yet in practice, most students are not using carefully designed educational AI. They are using general-purpose large language models, tools built for productivity, not pedagogy. And the education system has done remarkably little to shape how students interact with these tools.
The gap between what is possible and what is actually happening is enormous. Khanmigo demonstrates that AI can be designed to support critical thinking rather than replace it. But Khanmigo also requires institutional investment, teacher training, and a deliberate pedagogical framework, precisely the things that the current system, oriented toward rapid adoption and measurable outcomes, is least equipped to provide.
The temptation to draw neat historical parallels is strong, and partly justified. In 1986, the Christian Science Monitor reported on fierce debates over calculator use in schools, with one Oregon teacher of the year warning that “once you have a crutch, you rely on it more and more.” The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics had urged the integration of calculators at all grade levels, and maths teachers in Washington, D.C. picketed their meetings in protest.
The pro-calculator camp cited studies showing that students with calculators performed at least as well on tests as those without them (except, curiously, in the fourth grade). The anti-calculator camp warned of atrophied mental arithmetic skills and dangerous dependency. Eventually, calculators became ubiquitous, and the debate faded into the background noise of educational history.
The AI parallel writes itself, but it is also misleading in important ways. A calculator is a tool for performing a specific, well-defined operation. It computes. AI, by contrast, is a tool for generating language, analysing arguments, synthesising information, and producing written outputs that closely mimic (and sometimes surpass) the kinds of work that students are assessed on. The calculator could not write your essay. ChatGPT can. The calculator did not threaten the process by which students learned to construct arguments, weigh evidence, or develop original perspectives. AI does. The scope of the offloading is categorically different, and so the historical precedent offers less comfort than its proponents suggest.
The more honest historical parallel might be the introduction of television in the 1950s and 1960s, when educators initially hailed the new medium as a revolutionary learning tool before gradually recognising that passive consumption of information was not the same as active engagement with ideas. The lesson from that era was not that television was inherently bad, but that it was easy to confuse exposure to information with genuine understanding. AI presents the same confusion in a more insidious form: the output looks like understanding. It reads like comprehension. But the student who submits it may not have comprehended anything at all.
The global picture offers both cautionary tales and faint glimmers of hope. The OECD's PISA 2022 assessment, which for the first time evaluated creative thinking skills across 64 countries and economies, revealed enormous international variation in how well education systems prepare students for higher-order cognition. Singapore, South Korea, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Estonia, and Finland topped the creative thinking rankings, with Singapore's students scoring a mean of 41 points, well above the OECD average of 33. In Singapore, South Korea, and Canada, over 70 per cent of students performed at or above Level 4.
What distinguishes these high-performing systems is not the presence or absence of technology, but the pedagogical philosophy that underpins its use. Finland, consistently celebrated for its educational outcomes, emphasises teacher autonomy, minimal standardised testing, and a holistic approach in which children are encouraged to explore their interests rather than conform to rigid assessment frameworks. Finnish teachers enjoy the freedom to craft lessons tailored to their students' needs, a dynamic that fosters precisely the kind of critical and creative thinking that AI threatens to undermine elsewhere. Crucially, Finland has also launched national AI literacy programmes, including free online coursework, ensuring that citizens understand the technology rather than simply consuming it.
Singapore, meanwhile, has announced a national initiative to build AI literacy among students and teachers, with training to be offered at all levels by 2026. But Singapore's approach is embedded within its broader “Smart Nation” strategy, which explicitly aims to help teachers customise education for individual students rather than replace teacher judgement with algorithmic recommendation. The emphasis is on AI literacy, understanding what these tools are, what they can and cannot do, and how to use them critically, rather than mere AI adoption.
The contrast with the prevailing approach in the United States and United Kingdom is instructive. Where Finland and Singapore have invested in teacher preparation, pedagogical frameworks, and critical AI literacy, many anglophone systems have prioritised speed of adoption, market-driven solutions, and measurable outcomes, precisely the conditions under which AI is most likely to substitute for, rather than scaffold, genuine thinking. The PISA data suggests this is not a coincidence. Systems that invest in the conditions for critical thinking produce students who think critically. Systems that invest in accountability metrics produce students who are good at meeting metrics.
What emerges from all of this is not a simple story about technology corrupting youth. It is a story about institutional incentives, structural pressures, and a decades-long failure to prioritise the very capacities that AI now threatens.
Consider the chain of causation. Standardised testing regimes devalued critical thinking in favour of measurable performance. This created an educational culture oriented toward right answers rather than good questions. Into this culture arrived AI tools optimised to produce right answers at unprecedented speed. Students, trained since primary school to value correct outputs over thoughtful processes, adopted these tools with the perfectly rational logic of the system they inhabit. And institutions, pressed by market forces, parental expectations, and competitive dynamics, facilitated this adoption with minimal safeguards.
The students who told RAND researchers that AI is harming their critical thinking are not confused. They are articulating something that adults in the system have been reluctant to say: that the educational infrastructure was never really set up to produce independent thinkers. It was set up to produce compliant test-takers. AI simply automated the compliance.
This framing shifts the burden of responsibility from individual students (who are often blamed for laziness or moral weakness) to the system that shaped their incentives. A 15-year-old who uses ChatGPT to complete an essay is not failing the education system. The education system is failing that 15-year-old, not because it allowed access to AI, but because it created conditions in which using AI to generate a polished essay and submitting it for a grade is the most rational thing a student can do.
If the diagnosis is systemic, the treatment must be too. Banning AI, as the brief experiment of early 2023 demonstrated, is neither practical nor effective. Students will use these tools regardless of school policies, just as they use mobile phones in classrooms despite decades of prohibition attempts. The question is not whether students will interact with AI, but what kind of interaction the education system enables.
A genuinely transformative response would begin by acknowledging what the PISA data and international comparisons make clear: that systems emphasising teacher autonomy, reduced standardised testing, and inquiry-based learning produce students who are better equipped for creative and critical thought. This is not a new insight. It is a well-established finding that anglophone education systems have spent decades ignoring in favour of accountability frameworks and market-based reforms.
It would continue by investing in the kind of deliberate AI pedagogy that tools like Khanmigo gesture toward, in which AI is designed to support the development of thinking skills rather than bypass them. This requires not just better software, but better teacher training, smaller class sizes, and assessment reforms that reward the process of thinking rather than the product of having thought. It requires, in short, treating teachers as professionals with the autonomy and resources to teach well, rather than as data-entry operatives tasked with hitting numerical targets.
It would also require a fundamental rethinking of what education is for. If the purpose of schooling is to produce graduates who can pass standardised assessments and demonstrate competence on measurable metrics, then AI is not a threat; it is an upgrade. It does what the system was always asking students to do, only faster and more efficiently. If, however, the purpose of education is to cultivate human beings capable of independent judgement, ethical reasoning, creative problem-solving, and the ability to navigate complexity without algorithmic assistance, then the arrival of AI is not the crisis. It is the revelation that the crisis was already here.
The DfE's guidance in the United Kingdom acknowledges as much, at least implicitly. Its insistence that AI must operate under human oversight, that professional judgement and critical thinking remain essential, and that AI is a tool to inform decisions rather than make them, articulates a philosophy that is sound. Whether the institutional structures, the funding, the teacher training, and the assessment frameworks exist to make that philosophy real is an entirely different question.
The most provocative implication of the RAND data is not that AI is making students less capable. It is that the students themselves are more honest about the situation than the institutions that serve them. When 67 per cent of young people say AI is harming their critical thinking, they are not just reporting a technology problem. They are reporting a system problem. They are saying, in effect: we know this is making us worse at thinking, and we know the system gives us no reason to care.
That honesty deserves a response that is equally honest. Not more bans. Not more surveillance software. Not more hand-wringing opinion pieces from adults who themselves rely on AI for their professional work. What the moment demands is a structural reckoning with the values that education systems actually embody, as opposed to the values they claim in their mission statements.
The 95 per cent of faculty who fear student overreliance on AI are right to be concerned. But the overreliance they fear is not a new phenomenon introduced by ChatGPT. It is the logical extension of an educational philosophy that has been cultivating dependency on external authority, whether in the form of textbooks, standardised curricula, or high-stakes assessments, for generations. AI did not break the system. It revealed, with uncomfortable clarity, what the system was always building toward: a model of education in which the appearance of learning matters more than learning itself, and in which the correct output is valued infinitely more than the process of arriving at it.
The students, it turns out, were paying closer attention than anyone gave them credit for. They can see the trap. They can describe it with remarkable precision when asked. They just need the adults in the room to stop pretending it is not there.
RAND Corporation. “More Students Use AI for Homework, and More Believe It Harms Critical Thinking: Selected Findings from the American Youth Panel.” RAND Research Report RRA4742-1, March 2026. https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RRA4742-1.html
RAND Corporation. “Student Use of AI for Homework Rises as Concerns Grow About Critical Thinking Skills.” RAND Press Release, March 2026. https://www.rand.org/news/press/2026/03/student-use-of-ai-for-homework-rises-as-concerns-grow.html
Watson, C. Edward, and Rainie, Lee. “The AI Challenge: How College Faculty Assess the Present and Future of Higher Education in the Age of AI.” American Association of Colleges and Universities and Elon University, January 2026. https://www.aacu.org/newsroom/national-survey-95-of-college-faculty-fear-student-overreliance-on-ai-and-diminished-critical-thinking-among-learners-who-use-generative-ai-tools
Gerlich, Michael. “AI Tools in Society: Impacts on Cognitive Offloading and the Future of Critical Thinking.” Societies, 15(1), 6, 2025. https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/15/1/6
Lee, et al. “The Impact of Generative AI on Critical Thinking: Self-Reported Reductions in Cognitive Effort and Confidence Effects From a Survey of Knowledge Workers.” Proceedings of the 2025 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. https://dl.acm.org/doi/full/10.1145/3706598.3713778
Freire, Paulo. “Pedagogy of the Oppressed.” Continuum Publishing, 1968.
National Education Association. “Standardized Testing is Still Failing Students.” NEA Today. https://www.nea.org/nea-today/all-news-articles/standardized-testing-still-failing-students
CNN. “New York City public schools ban access to AI tool that could help students cheat.” CNN Business, January 2023. https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/05/tech/chatgpt-nyc-school-ban/index.html
NBC News. “New York City public schools remove ChatGPT ban.” NBC News, May 2023. https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/chatgpt-ban-dropped-new-york-city-public-schools-rcna85089
Education Week. “Students Are Worried That AI Will Hurt Their Critical Thinking Skills.” Education Week, March 2026. https://www.edweek.org/technology/students-are-worried-that-ai-will-hurt-their-critical-thinking-skills/2026/03
OECD. “PISA 2022 Results (Volume III): Creative Minds, Creative Schools.” OECD Publishing, June 2024. https://www.oecd.org/en/publications/pisa-2022-results-volume-iii_765ee8c2-en.html
Khan Academy. “Meet Khanmigo: Khan Academy's AI-powered teaching assistant and tutor.” 2025. https://www.khanmigo.ai/
Precedence Research. “AI in Education Market Size to Surge USD 136.79 Bn by 2035.” Precedence Research, 2025. https://www.precedenceresearch.com/ai-in-education-market
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Centre on Reinventing Public Education. “Shockwaves and Innovations: How Nations Worldwide Are Approaching AI in Education.” CRPE, 2025. https://crpe.org/shockwaves-and-innovations-how-nations-worldwide-are-dealing-with-ai-in-education/
Emerald Publishing. “AI policies in school education: a comparative study on China, Singapore, Finland, and the US.” Journal of Science and Technology Policy Management, 2025. https://www.emerald.com/jstpm/article/doi/10.1108/JSTPM-06-2024-0218/1302351/
Brookings Institution. “The Impact of No Child Left Behind on Students, Teachers, and Schools.” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 2010. https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/2010b_bpea_dee.pdf
Education Week. “Does Your District Ban ChatGPT? Here's What Educators Told Us.” Education Week, February 2024. https://www.edweek.org/technology/does-your-district-ban-chatgpt-heres-what-educators-told-us/2024/02
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Education Futures. “How did we get from 'schools kill creativity' to 'AI kills critical thinking in schools?'” Education Futures, 2025. https://educationfutures.com/post/how-did-we-get-from-schools-kill-creativity-to-ai-kills-creativity-in-schools/

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
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Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * A stange coincidence: as soon as the wife went to bed for her post-lunch nap. the home Internet went down. I checked with our ISP and they were aware of an Internet outage in our neighborhood and were working to have service restored. Three hours later, at almost the exact moment when the wife woke up, our home connection to the Internet was restored. Huh!
Anyway she's gone to play Bingo now, and I've found a baseball game to keep me company. Phillies are leading the Cubs 2 to 0 in the top of the 3rd inning.By the time the game ends I'll have worked through the night prayers and should be ready for bed.
Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night. Details of that regimen are linked to my link tree, which is linked to my profile page here.
Starting Ash Wednesday, 2026, I've added this daily prayer as part of the Prayer Crusade Preceding the 2026 SSPX Episcopal Consecrations.
Health Metrics: * bw= 232.81 lbs. * bp= 154/90 (68)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups
Diet: * 06:15 – 1 banana, coffee cake * 11:00 – 1 peanut butter sandwich, crackers and gravy * 12:15 – meat loaf and crackers, pineapple cake
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 05:00 – listen to local news talk radio * 06:00 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 07:00 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap. * 10:00 – listening to Jack in 60 Minutes * 10:30 – start my weekly laundry * 11:00 – listening to The Markley, van Camp and Robbins Show * 12:15 to 14:15 – watch old game shows and eat lunch at home with Sylvia * 14:30 – research sudden lack of home Internet * 15:15 – listening to OTA local radio while folding laundry * 17:33 – and... the Internet comes back up. * 17:45 – now that I've got access to the Internet again, I've found a baseball game to follow: Chicago Cubs vs Philadelphia Phillies.
Chess: * 17:30 – moved in all pending CC games
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from Faucet Repair
10 April 2026
Plastic bed: the first work in a while that is weightless, that doesn't really seem to triangulate to any obvious reference points (that I'm aware of). Maybe a bit of those Ken Price acrylic and ink on paper works that I saw in New York last fall. But otherwise its tether is loose. Reminds me of how it felt making a small gouache painting called Quarantine sunrise six years ago; it suddenly asked a lot of questions that seem like they'll lead to more questions, a crop field becoming larger and more fertile and perhaps more impenetrable. I'll have more to say about it, but for today I'm just going to enjoy the feeling.
from Faucet Repair
8 April 2026
Tonight on the way home from the gym I was one of two people on the 345 bus toward South Kensington. The other was a guy in tan cargo pants holding a long stick made of what looked like driftwood. He was sitting in the bottom section of the bus monologuing out loud when I got on, but I couldn't hear what he was saying because I had my noise cancelling headphones in. I went and sat in the top section and kept them in, but I could still faintly hear him going and going as we made our way through Battersea into Kensington. When my stop arrived (South Kensington Station), I removed my headphones as I was stepping off the bus and heard the man say: “You've got water in the earth? I'm jumping in.”
from Douglas Vandergraph
Before the city had fully woken, before tires started hissing over wet streets and before the noise of the day began pressing itself into every open space, Jesus knelt in quiet prayer near Mission Concepción. The old stone held the last of the night’s coolness. A faint breeze moved through the dark and brushed the hem of His shirt. He did not rush the silence. He bowed His head and stayed there while the sky slowly changed above Him, not with dramatic force but with the steady tenderness of Someone listening and Someone being heard. The city was still carrying its private sorrows in closed rooms and dim kitchens and parked cars, and He held all of it before the Father without hurry. He prayed for the people who had gone numb without meaning to. He prayed for the ones who were ashamed of how angry they had become. He prayed for the ones who had learned how to keep moving while something inside them quietly gave way. When He finally rose, the first birds had started to call from the trees and San Antonio was beginning to breathe again.
Across the city, Celia Navarro was standing barefoot in her kitchen with a final notice from CPS Energy in one hand and a pharmacy receipt in the other. The overhead light above the sink made everything look more tired than it already was. The linoleum had started to peel at one edge near the back door. One of the cabinet handles had been missing for so long that nobody in the house noticed it anymore. Her husband Rey was asleep in the recliner in the living room because his back had been bad again all week, and he said it was easier to stand up from there in the middle of the night than from their bed. The television was on mute, throwing blue light across his face while he slept with his mouth slightly open and one hand resting over the thin blanket on his lap. On the table sat two pill bottles, a half loaf of bread, an orange she had forgotten to eat the day before, and the kind of silence that made a person feel trapped in their own life.
She stared at the numbers on the paper until they blurred. She had enough money to keep the lights on or enough to refill the prescription they had been stretching for four days. Not both. The thought did not hit her like fresh grief. It landed like something old and familiar, which was almost worse. She folded the notice once, then again, then pressed it flat on the table with the heel of her hand. Her phone buzzed. It was a text from her daughter Maribel in Austin asking if she had called the insurance company yet about getting Rey more in-home help. Celia looked at the message, then turned the phone face down. She could not bear another conversation where someone who loved her spoke to her like she was failing a test she had never agreed to take.
From the living room Rey coughed and tried to push himself upright. She heard the effort in it and did not move right away. That was the part that scared her now. There had been a time when she would have been in the room before the second cough. There had been a time when her body moved toward need before her mind even formed a thought. Lately something in her had become slow and heavy. Need still came toward her from every direction, but inside, she had begun standing still. She walked in after a moment and found him grimacing with one hand on the armrest.
“You should have called me,” she said.
“You were already up.”
“That isn’t the same thing.”
He looked at her for a second, then away. “You look mad at me.”
“I’m not mad at you.”
It came out too fast, too flat. They both knew it was not true, and they both knew it was not the whole truth either. She was mad at the bills. Mad at the pills. Mad at the way every week required another small humiliation. Mad at the sound of people saying, “Have you tried this,” as if the problem was that she had not thought hard enough. Mad at her own thoughts. Mad at God some mornings and guilty for that by lunch. Mad at the way love could turn into labor and labor could turn into resentment if a person was not careful, and then mad at herself for even being able to think such a thing about a man who had once worked double shifts in July heat so their kids could have school shoes that fit.
“I made coffee,” she said.
He nodded, but he looked wounded anyway. She hated that she had done that before sunrise.
Jesus left the mission grounds and began walking north while the city loosened itself into morning. He followed the quiet along the river where the Mission Reach trail held the first pale light of day. Cyclists had not yet filled it. Dog walkers were only beginning to appear. The water moved with a low and steady sound, and along the path He noticed the kinds of things people often missed when they were trying to survive their schedule. A maintenance worker paused to stretch his back beside a cart full of tools. An older man stood at the rail and stared into the water with the look of someone postponing the moment he had to go home. A young woman in scrubs sat on a bench with her elbows on her knees, crying without sound before another shift. Jesus saw each one fully, not as passing scenery but as beloved people carrying invisible weight.
When He came near the woman in scrubs, she wiped her face quickly and stood as if she had been caught doing something shameful. He did not stop her with a speech. He only looked at her with such plain kindness that her shoulders dropped a little.
“You have not failed because you are tired,” He said.
That was all. No large moment. No crowd. No performance. Just words placed where they were needed. She pressed her lips together and nodded once. He kept walking, and she stood there long after He had gone, holding those few words as if they had weight.
Celia drove downtown in a silence that felt louder than traffic. Her old Corolla rattled when she hit certain patches of road, and the air conditioner had a sweet, stale smell she kept meaning to get checked. She worked at a café stall in Historic Market Square, and on good days she liked arriving before the crowd. There was something honest about getting there while the place was still half asleep. The shop gates were up but not all the way. Delivery trucks backed into loading spaces. Someone inside a nearby kitchen laughed too loudly at something that had probably not been very funny. Coffee began to move through the air. Spice. Bread. Bleach. Mop water. The city taking itself apart and putting itself back together before the tourists came to take pictures of what other people had to live inside.
Her boss, Alma, was already there when Celia walked in. That never meant anything good.
“Rosie called out,” Alma said without looking up from the register. “Her grandson is sick.”
Celia tied on her apron. “Of course he is.”
“Don’t start.”
“I’m not starting.”
Alma gave her one quick glance. “Then don’t sound like that.”
Celia opened the fridge harder than she meant to and began pulling what they would need for the morning. Eggs. Chorizo. Cheese. Containers of salsa. She moved quickly because she was good at her job and because speed was one of the few ways she still knew how to keep herself from crying. By eight-thirty the line had started to build. A man in a suit wanted three breakfast tacos and was annoyed the card reader had a delay. A mother with two small boys apologized for the mess they were making before there had even been a mess. A teenager with a visitor badge asked if they had anything without meat because his girlfriend had sent him for something “kind of healthy.” Celia answered everybody. She handed over plates. She wiped down counters. She filled coffees. She smiled when required, not because she felt warm toward the world but because she had become skilled at giving people a softer version of herself than the one she was living with.
Jesus entered Market Square without fanfare. He moved through the open walkways the way light moves into a room that has been dim too long. He was not dressed in anything that would have made a person stop immediately. Modern clothes. Dust on His shoes from walking. Calm in His face that did not look detached or superior. He carried Himself like Someone who had nowhere to prove Himself and no need to force His presence on anyone. He noticed the woman arranging embroidered dresses with hands that shook from arthritis. He noticed the dishwasher on break behind a back wall smoking too fast because his rent was due. He noticed the couple smiling for a photo while barely speaking between poses. He noticed Celia, too. He noticed the hard set of her mouth. The speed in her hands. The exhaustion hidden under competence. The part of her that still served people well while secretly beginning to hate being asked for anything more.
He came to the café counter near the end of the breakfast rush. Celia looked up, ready with the voice she used for customers.
“What can I get you?”
“Coffee, please,” He said. “And whatever you would give someone who has walked a long way.”
She reached for a cup. “That depends. Are you picky?”
“No.”
“That makes you rare.”
She meant it as nothing, just the kind of small line people tossed into the air while working. But He smiled like He had heard the deeper thing under it.
“Most tired people become picky,” He said.
Celia poured the coffee and slid it across. “You saying I look tired?”
“I’m saying you carry more than people know.”
Her hand stopped on the register keys. Customers were still behind Him. Alma was calling for more napkins. Somebody had dropped a tray two stalls over. It was not the moment for a stranger to say something that true.
“You don’t know me,” she said.
“No,” He said gently. “But I see you.”
She wanted to tell Him not to do that. Not here. Not while she had people waiting and grease on her wrist and anger sitting right behind her ribs. But the line moved. Someone stepped forward. She took the next order. When she looked up again, He had taken His coffee and sat at a table just outside the stall where He could see the square.
She tried not to think about Him after that. She failed.
Around ten-thirty her phone buzzed again in her apron pocket. She ignored it once, twice, then checked between orders. It was her brother Tomas. That alone tightened everything in her chest. Tomas had always had a gift for needing help at exactly the moment when she had nothing left to give. He was fifty-one and looked ten years older now. After their mother died, something in him had gone loose. Jobs came and went. Then apartments. Then promises. Then whole months where nobody heard from him. Lately he had been staying on and off at Haven for Hope, which was better than the years when he drifted through people’s couches and cheap motels and disappeared into whatever trouble he could find. Better did not mean easy.
The text said, I’m nearby. Need to talk to you for five minutes.
She stared at it until the words felt like an insult.
Another came. Not asking for money.
That one made her laugh, but not in a way that carried any humor. She put the phone away and kept working. Ten minutes later she saw him anyway, standing at the edge of the square near one of the pillars, thinner than the last time and trying to make himself look casual. He had a clean shirt on. That worried her more than if he had looked rough. Clean shirts on Tomas usually meant he was trying to gain trust quickly.
Alma saw her expression change. “Who is that?”
“My brother.”
“The one with the stories?”
“They’re not stories.”
Alma followed her eyes. “You want me to tell him to leave?”
Celia should have said yes. Instead she wiped her hands and stepped out from behind the counter.
Tomas gave her a weak grin. “You look good.”
“Say what you need to say.”
He glanced toward the stall. “You got one minute?”
“I have less.”
He shifted his weight. The grin fell away. “I’m going to the west side cemetery this evening. For Mom.”
Celia said nothing.
“I know what day it is,” he said quietly. “I’m not confused.”
“I didn’t say you were.”
“I just thought maybe you’d want to know.”
She crossed her arms. “You came here to tell me that?”
“No.” He looked down, then back at her. “I came because I’m trying to get into a work program, and they said I need my ID and some papers. I think I left the folder at your house the last time I was there.”
“The last time you were there you took Rey’s watch.”
He flinched. “I brought it back.”
“You sold it and bought it back after Maribel threatened to call the police.”
His face changed in that small way people’s faces change when shame and irritation hit at the same time. “I’m trying to tell you something real and you’re dragging out every bad thing I ever did.”
“Because every time you say you need five minutes, it turns into five more problems.”
“I said I’m trying.”
“And I’m tired.”
That landed between them harder than either of them expected. Tomas went still. For a moment he looked less like the family disappointment everybody had practiced bracing for and more like their mother’s son. Same eyes. Same sorrow when he was not hiding behind charm.
“I know,” he said. “I can see that.”
She hated hearing it from him.
A little girl ran past them chasing a bright paper pinwheel. Her father followed, laughing and apologizing as he squeezed by. Music drifted from somewhere deeper in the square. Somebody was calling out drink specials in English and Spanish. Life kept moving around them with almost offensive ease.
“What papers?” Celia asked.
“My birth certificate. Social. Some mail. They might be in that blue folder.”
“If they’re there, I’ll look.”
“Can I stop by tonight?”
“No.”
“I won’t come in. I’ll wait outside.”
“No.”
He took a breath and nodded like a man trying not to react. “Then can you bring them somewhere?”
She nearly said no again, just to stop the conversation from reaching any deeper place, but something in his face held her for a second.
“I work until four,” she said. “After that I need to get home.”
“I’ll be at Haven.”
“Then stay there.”
He gave a short, tired laugh. “That’s the plan.”
When she turned back toward the stall, she saw Jesus watching from His table. Not intruding. Not intervening. Just watching with eyes that held both her anger and her brother’s shame without mocking either one. She resented Him for seeing too much. She also felt, without wanting to, that the square had become harder to lie in.
The lunch rush came fast. By noon Celia had almost convinced herself the morning had already swallowed the strangest parts of itself. Then a tourist spilled a drink all over the counter and began apologizing in the frantic way embarrassed people do, and Celia heard herself say, “It’s fine,” with a gentleness she did not feel. A few minutes later Alma snapped at a young dishwasher for stacking plates wrong, and Celia stepped in more sharply than necessary. Then her daughter called. She answered because guilt had more power over her than peace ever seemed to.
“Hi, Mama.”
“I’m working.”
“I know. I just have two minutes.”
“Everybody always has two minutes.”
Maribel went quiet on the other end. Celia closed her eyes. There it was again. Another person hurt by the overflow.
“What is it?” she asked, softer.
“I called about Dad,” Maribel said. “The case manager says if he falls again and you don’t have support in place, you’re going to burn out.”
“I’m not burnt out.”
“Mama.”
“I said I’m not.”
“You sound angry all the time now.”
Celia looked toward the counter, where two more customers were waiting. “That’s because everybody wants something from me while I’m standing in the middle of frying pans.”
“That’s not fair.”
“No? You want me to fill out forms, call numbers, find papers, take him to appointments, answer Tomas, answer you, answer the bills, answer work, answer God maybe, because He’s gone quiet too, and I’m supposed to do it with a smile so nobody tells me my attitude is the problem.”
There was silence on the line. The kind of silence a daughter keeps when she has just heard her mother tell the truth in an ugly shape.
Maribel spoke first. “I’m trying to help.”
“I know.”
“Then let me.”
Celia pressed her fingertips to her forehead. “I can’t talk right now.”
“Will you call me tonight?”
“I’ll try.”
She hung up before hearing the reply. Her chest felt hot and hollow at the same time. Alma was giving her a look from the far end of the counter, not cruel but measuring.
“Take five,” Alma said.
“I don’t need five.”
“You need ten.”
Celia untied her apron and walked out before anyone could say another word.
She did not go far at first. She only crossed through the edge of the square and kept walking until the noise thinned and downtown opened around her in a different way. She passed a man unloading produce from a van. Passed a woman talking to herself while waiting at a light. Passed a city employee rinsing down a section of pavement. Without fully deciding to, she drifted toward San Pedro Creek Culture Park. She had not been there in months, though once, when Rey was still stronger, they used to walk there some evenings because the water and the stone and the open sky made the city feel less tight around them. Now the creek moved under the daylight with quiet certainty, and the paths beside it held people who looked like they had come there for very different reasons. Some were exercising. Some were sightseeing. Some were simply trying to breathe in a place that gave the illusion of room.
She stood at the rail and looked down into the water. It was cleaner than she remembered from years ago, but that was not what held her. What held her was the fact that the water kept moving without asking permission from the hard things built around it. She envied that. She envied anything that still knew how to move.
“You left because you were afraid of what would come out next.”
Jesus’ voice was close enough that she did not startle, which somehow startled her more. He stood beside her like He had always intended to meet her there.
“I left because I needed air,” she said.
“That too.”
She kept her eyes on the water. “Do you do this with everybody?”
“Do what?”
“Say the thing people are trying not to say.”
“Not always.”
“That’s comforting.”
A small smile touched His face. “You are not angry because people need you. You are angry because you have started to believe they only love what you can carry.”
She turned then, finally looking at Him without the barrier of a counter between them. His face held no accusation. That was almost unbearable. If He had sounded superior, she could have dismissed Him. If He had spoken like a preacher trying to corner her, she could have walked away. But there was no performance in Him. No eagerness to expose her. Only truth spoken the way a skilled hand removes a splinter, steadily and with full knowledge that pain is not the goal.
“That’s not true,” she said, though her voice had already weakened.
“Isn’t it?”
She laughed once and it broke in the middle. “You don’t know what my days look like.”
“I know you have become afraid to sit still because stillness lets you feel how alone you are in the work.”
Something in her gave way then, not in a dramatic collapse, just in the smallest failure of force. Her shoulders lowered. Her eyes filled. She hated crying in daylight. She hated crying where people might see. Yet there she was, a woman past fifty standing beside a creek in the middle of San Antonio with tears on her face because a stranger had spoken to the place she had been guarding even from herself.
“I don’t even know who I am when nobody needs something,” she said.
He let the words stand. A jogger passed behind them. Somewhere farther down, a child squealed at the sight of ducks. The city kept making its normal sounds while her hidden life came out into the open air.
“You were not made to survive by becoming smaller inside,” He said.
“What does that even mean?”
“It means love is not the same as being consumed.”
She wiped at her face impatiently. “That sounds nice. It doesn’t pay for medicine.”
“No,” He said. “But the lie that you must harden yourself to endure will cost you more than money.”
She looked away again. She was tired of wise sentences. Tired of truths that did not seem to come with groceries or sleep or repaired bodies. He seemed to know that too.
“I am not asking you to pretend you are not tired,” He said. “I am asking you not to build a home inside the tiredness.”
Celia stood in silence. She had no clean answer for that. No quick resistance. The creek moved below them with patient sound. She thought of Rey in the recliner. Maribel speaking too brightly because she was worried. Tomas in his clean shirt pretending not to be scared. Her own voice at dawn, flat and sharp. She had begun telling herself a story where she was the only adult left in a world of need. It gave her a kind of righteousness, but it was poisoning her all the same.
“My brother always comes when I have nothing left,” she said.
“He comes when he has reached the end of himself,” Jesus answered.
“He has been at the end of himself for twenty years.”
“That does not mean he cannot tell the truth now.”
“He has lied so many times.”
“Yes.”
She looked at Him, almost irritated by the calmness of that answer. “That’s it?”
“That is not a small thing,” He said. “But neither is mercy.”
She let out a long breath. “You make everything sound simple.”
“No. I make it clear.”
That should have annoyed her more than it did. Instead something inside her recognized the difference.
Her phone buzzed again. This time it was her neighbor, Mrs. Garza. Celia answered immediately.
“Mrs. Garza?”
“Celia, mija, don’t panic. Rey is okay.”
The word okay made her panic anyway.
“What happened?”
“He tried to stand up too fast and lost his footing. I heard it from next door. He didn’t hit his head. I’m with him now.”
Celia closed her eyes. “I’m coming.”
“He says finish work if you need to.”
“Put him on.”
There was a rustle and then Rey’s voice, irritated more than hurt. “I told her not to call you.”
“You fell.”
“I sat down hard. That is not the same.”
“Did you take your afternoon pills?”
A pause. That told her everything.
“Rey.”
“I was going to.”
“Don’t move. I’ll be there as soon as I can.”
When the call ended, she held the phone so tightly her hand hurt.
“I have to go,” she said.
“Yes.”
She took a step, then stopped. “Who are you?”
He looked at her with a steadiness that seemed to reach farther than the question.
“The One who has not stopped seeing you,” He said.
She stared at Him, and for one suspended moment the whole day seemed to lean toward something she could not yet name. Then somebody called out from farther down the path, and she turned by instinct. It was only a man asking if she had dropped a receipt. When she looked back, Jesus was already walking along the creek, not away in indifference but forward with the strange certainty of Someone whose presence could not be reduced to a single encounter.
Celia stood there another second with her pulse still high. Then she started back toward Market Square, faster than before, carrying worry for Rey, anger at herself, confusion over Jesus, and the painful sense that the life she had been enduring on autopilot was no longer going to let her stay half asleep inside it.
Back at the café, Alma took one look at her face and said nothing for once. She only handed Celia her apron and moved aside. The line had shortened. The lunch rush was beginning to taper. For the next hour Celia worked with her body while her mind moved elsewhere. She kept seeing Jesus beside the creek. Kept hearing, You are angry because you have started to believe they only love what you can carry. She hated how true it felt. She hated even more that, beneath the truth, there was another one she had not wanted to face. She had also started loving people that way. Measuring them by how much trouble they added or relieved. Deciding who was worth tenderness based on timing. Withholding softness not because she had none left, but because pain had made harshness feel efficient.
Around three-thirty, Tomas came back into her mind so strongly that she stopped in the middle of wiping a counter. The blue folder. Haven for Hope. Their mother’s death anniversary. Rey on the floor at home. Maribel waiting for a call. Too many threads. Too much unfinished human weight. The old version of her wanted to choose the hardest face possible and wear it until bedtime. But something had shifted, not enough to fix her, not enough to make the day easy, just enough to stop her from hiding behind the same hardness.
She finished her shift with trembling patience. When the last of the prep was done and Alma counted the drawer, Celia untied her apron and reached for her bag.
“You leaving quick?” Alma asked.
“My husband fell.”
Alma’s expression softened. “Is he all right?”
“I think so.”
“You think so?”
Celia let out a breath that sounded almost like a laugh. “That’s the kind of day it is.”
Alma hesitated, then opened the small office drawer where she kept personal things and took out forty dollars folded in half. “Take this.”
Celia stared at it. “No.”
“It’s not charity.”
“It feels like charity.”
“It feels like me not wanting you to drown in front of me.”
Celia’s throat tightened. “I’ll pay you back.”
“Maybe,” Alma said. “Maybe not. Go home.”
Celia took the money because pride had become too expensive. When she stepped back out into the afternoon, San Antonio felt warmer, louder, and somehow more exposed than it had that morning. She knew she needed to drive straight home. She also knew the blue folder, if it was where she thought, would still be in the hall closet by the vacuum. And she knew Tomas would be waiting somewhere at Haven, trying not to look like a man who had almost run out of ways to come back from his own life.
She stood for a moment at the edge of the square with her keys in her hand and the day pulling her in several directions at once.
For a second she almost got back in the old habit of resenting everybody at once. It would have been easier. Easier to blame Rey for falling, Tomas for appearing, Maribel for pressing, Alma for seeing too much, God for staying close enough to disturb her and quiet enough to feel hard to trust. But standing there with the folded forty dollars in her purse and the hot San Antonio afternoon pressing against her face, she knew that if she gave herself to that way of thinking again, she was going to become somebody she would not know how to come back from. So she got into the Corolla, drove home through streets thick with light and traffic, and prayed under her breath without planning to. The prayer was not polished. It did not sound like faith the way church people liked faith to sound. It sounded like a woman with a shaking grip on the wheel saying, “Lord, I do not know what to do next, but I know I cannot keep being this hard.”
Mrs. Garza met her at the door before she could even get the key fully turned. The older woman had flour on one sleeve from whatever she had been cooking at home, and her mouth was set in the practical line of somebody who had lived long enough to stop dramatizing ordinary crises. “He is embarrassed,” she said quietly. “So be kind first and mad later.”
“I was not planning to be mad.”
Mrs. Garza lifted one eyebrow in a way that said she had known Celia too many years to believe that. “He is in the recliner. I made him drink water. He tried to tell me he was fine, which is how I knew he was not.” Then her face softened. “And you, mija, look worn down to the stitching.”
Celia gave the smallest laugh she had made all day. “That makes two of us.”
“Three,” Mrs. Garza said. “I have my own knees.” Then she touched Celia’s arm. “There is soup on the stove. Do not argue with me.”
Inside, Rey looked smaller than he had that morning, and the sight of that undid something in Celia before either of them spoke. He was not a cruel man. He had never been a lazy one. He was simply a man whose body had started betraying him before his pride knew how to surrender, and the distance between those two things had been wounding both of them for months. His hair was flattened on one side from the recliner. There was a red mark on his forearm where he must have caught himself on the edge of the side table. When he saw her, shame crossed his face so quickly it was almost gone before she could name it.
“I told them not to make a big thing out of it,” he said.
She set her bag down slowly. “You fell.”
“I sat down badly.”
“You keep changing the name. It is still the same event.”
He looked away. “I do not want you looking at me like that.”
“Like what?”
“Like I am one more thing breaking in this house.”
The sentence hit her in the chest. She had not said those words, but she had been carrying that feeling so close to the surface that it must have been showing in ways she did not mean. She knelt in front of him and checked his knees, his wrists, the side of his head, the old habits of care returning before her bitterness could block them. He winced when she pressed his left hip. She made a note of that. Then she looked up at him. He was blinking fast, trying not to let his own emotion get loose.
“I am sorry,” he said. “Not for the fall. For the rest of it. For what this has become for you.”
Celia sat back on her heels. The room was quiet except for the hum of the refrigerator and the faint simmer of Mrs. Garza’s soup in the kitchen. She had wanted an apology from him before. Many times. She had imagined it would feel satisfying, like a scale finally balancing. Instead it made her want to cry again.
“This is not all you,” she said.
“I know that. But it is not none of me either.”
She stood and went to the kitchen because standing close to tenderness felt more dangerous than conflict. She turned down the burner under the soup and braced both hands on the counter. On the far end of it sat the pharmacy receipt she had left that morning. Her purse felt suddenly heavier. Forty dollars from Alma. Not enough for everything. Enough for something. That was how mercy often arrived now. Not as rescue from the whole storm but as one dry place to stand while the rain kept falling.
When she opened the hall closet, the blue folder was exactly where Tomas must have left it weeks earlier, shoved behind a stack of old mailers and a tote bag full of winter scarves nobody had touched since January. She pulled it out and leafed through the papers. Birth certificate. Social Security card. A wrinkled bus pass. A sheet from a work readiness program with Haven for Hope printed across the top. There was also an old photo tucked in the back, so worn at the edges it looked like it had been kept in a pocket. She stared at it longer than she meant to. It was from years ago, before their mother died, before Tomas started dissolving into himself. Their mother stood between them on a church picnic day, holding paper plates and laughing at something off camera. Celia looked younger and fierce in the photo, already carrying herself like somebody who expected to be useful. Tomas had one arm draped over their mother’s shoulder, grinning without shame. For one painful second Celia saw not the man who had stolen, lied, drifted, and returned with empty hands, but the brother who used to walk on the outside edge of the sidewalk when they were kids because he said cars always jumped curbs when people least expected it.
She slid the photo back in the folder and shut the closet door. Then she went into the bedroom, sat on the side of the bed, and called the pharmacy. After ten minutes of hold music and transfer buttons, she found out the refill could be partially filled that day if she paid enough to start it. Not ideal. Not complete. Enough for four days. Again that word, enough. She closed her eyes when the clerk told her the amount. Alma’s forty would cover most of it. Celia would find the rest in the jar above the microwave where they kept emergency cash that was never enough to be called an emergency fund.
Rey watched her from the recliner when she came back out with the blue folder. “That for Tomas?”
“Yes.”
“He called earlier.”
She stopped. “You did not tell me.”
“I thought you had enough.”
There it was. The whole house had begun arranging itself around her pressure, everyone trying not to add to it while still relying on her to absorb it. The thought might have angered her again if Jesus’ voice had not still been living close inside her. You have started to believe they only love what you can carry. Love is not the same as being consumed.
“What did he say?” she asked.
“That he is trying to get into some program. That he knows today is hard. That if you do not want to see him, he understands.” Rey shifted painfully in the chair. “He also cried, which I am only telling you because he would hate that.”
Celia looked down at the folder in her hands. “He still owes us more than tears.”
“Yes,” Rey said. “But sometimes tears are the first honest thing a man can afford.”
She looked up sharply. “Where did that come from?”
He gave a tired half smile. “From getting old enough to know it is true.”
Mrs. Garza left after making them each promise to eat. Celia fed Rey the soup at the small table because moving him hurt and she did not want him balancing a hot bowl on his lap. He was quiet through most of it. So was she. It was not an angry quiet this time. It was the kind that comes when two people have reached the edge of pretending and are sitting together in what remains. Afterward she helped him take his pills, then stood at the sink washing the bowls while the late afternoon sun slanted through the window over the counter.
“You should go,” Rey said from behind her.
She kept washing. “I already went to work.”
“No. To your brother.”
Celia dried one bowl and set it aside. “I do not know that I have anything for him.”
“You have his papers.”
“That is not the same.”
He was silent long enough that she turned to look at him. He was watching her with that familiar mixture of stubbornness and softness that used to make arguments with him impossible when they were younger.
“You still think mercy means saying everything is okay,” he said. “It does not. Go tell the truth. Take the folder. See what happens.”
She leaned back against the sink. “And if he is lying again?”
“Then you will know that too.” Rey lowered his eyes for a second. “Celia, I know I have made your world smaller lately. I know some days all I hand you is another need. But do not let this house become the place where your heart goes to die.”
The room went very still around that sentence. She thought of Jesus by the creek. She thought of Rey on the floor. She thought of Tomas standing in the square trying not to look desperate. She thought of her own daughter waiting in Austin with concern dressed up as competence. Then she crossed the kitchen, took her keys from the table, and picked up the blue folder.
The pharmacy was on the way if she cut north and then back west. She got the partial refill, paid with Alma’s money and the jar cash, and stood at the counter for a moment after the bag was handed to her, feeling the strange humiliation of being grateful for four days of medication that should have been simple to keep in a house. Outside, the light had started turning warmer. San Antonio was moving toward evening in that way it does when heat loosens a little and people begin shifting from obligation into whatever scraps of life they still have energy for. She drove toward Haven for Hope with the medicine on the passenger seat and Tomas’ folder tucked beneath it.
The campus was familiar to her in the way places become familiar when you do not want them to be. She had been there before with extra socks, with forms, with anger, with lectures she later regretted, with rides she swore would be the last. The buildings stood in the fading light with a mixture of order and ache that belonged to places trying to hold more brokenness than any system ever quite can. Men stood in small groups talking. A volunteer in a bright shirt wheeled a cart of bottled water across one open area. Somebody laughed too hard at something ordinary. Somebody else sat alone with both elbows on his knees and stared at the ground as if he had misplaced the rest of himself.
Tomas was near the fence by a patch of shadow, exactly where a man would stand if he wanted to be visible without looking eager. When he saw her car, he straightened too quickly. She parked, left the medicine in the seat, and got out with the folder in her hand. The first thing she noticed was that he had shaved badly. The second was that he looked frightened beneath all the effort to appear normal.
“I found it,” she said.
His eyes went to the folder, then back to her face. “Thank you.”
She handed it over. He took it carefully, almost reverently, and ran his thumb along the edge like he was confirming it was real.
“I did not think you would come,” he said.
“I almost did not.”
“I would have earned that.”
She stood there waiting. Old instincts wanted to keep this short, transactional, safe. But somewhere beyond the fence she saw Jesus. He was seated on a low wall near a cluster of men and women, not speaking loudly, not gathering attention to Himself, simply present in the middle of them with that same steady nearness that made people seem more visible than they had been a moment before. One older man was talking with both hands while Jesus listened as if nothing else mattered in the world for that minute. A younger woman with a plastic bag full of belongings stood nearby, not interrupting, yet staying close enough to hear. There was no spotlight on Him, no unnatural stillness around Him, and yet the whole space seemed somehow more honest because He was in it.
Celia looked back at Tomas. “What is the program?”
He opened the folder and showed her the sheet. “Maintenance training. Grounds work first, maybe facilities after if I stick with it.”
“If?”
He swallowed. “When. If I meant if, I would have stayed away.”
That was not charming, not polished, not manipulative. Just plain. She saw how much it cost him to say it like that.
“What changed?” she asked.
He let out a breath and glanced past her toward the parking lot. “I got tired of disappearing. I know that sounds cheap. Everything sounds cheap when you have said too much over too many years. But I woke up three mornings ago on a cot with a man crying in the dark on one side of me and another man cursing in his sleep on the other, and I realized I do not even know what kind of man I have become. Not really. Just a collection of excuses and emergencies.” He looked down at the folder. “And I thought of Mom. I thought of how she used to say, ‘You boys and girls can come home dirty, but you better come home honest.’ I have been dirty a long time. Honest is harder.”
Celia nearly corrected him out of habit, nearly said he was still making it sound pretty, still arranging his remorse into words that would land well. Then she saw his hands. They were trembling.
“You need money?” she asked.
He gave a weak smile. “There she is.”
“That is not an answer.”
“I need bus fare tomorrow, but I can ask inside for vouchers. I did not ask you here for money. I asked because if I do get in, I need somebody to know I tried for something besides surviving one more night.”
The sentence sat heavy between them. Celia looked again toward Jesus. He had risen from the wall and was now standing with the older man, one hand resting lightly on his shoulder as they prayed. Not for show. Not loudly. Just the two of them with evening settling over the campus.
“Tomas,” she said, and her brother looked up immediately because she almost never said his name gently anymore. “I am still angry.”
“I know.”
“I do not trust you yet.”
He nodded. “That is fair.”
“I am tired of being the landing place for the wreckage.”
His jaw tightened but he did not argue. “That is fair too.”
She inhaled slowly. “But I do not want fair to be the only thing left between us.”
His eyes filled before hers did this time. He looked away in embarrassment and pressed one hand to his mouth. “I do not know what to do with that,” he said quietly.
“Start by not lying to me.”
“I can do that.”
“Start by staying where you said you would stay.”
“I can do that.”
“Start by showing up tomorrow.”
“I can do that.”
She studied him for a long moment. “And if you fail?”
He gave a hollow little laugh. “Then I fail in daylight where somebody can see me, not in some alley where I pretend I am unreachable.”
It was such a bleak, honest answer that she had to look down. The old photo was still in the back of the folder. She knew it. She could feel its presence like a small forgotten pulse.
“You kept a picture of Mom in there,” she said.
His face changed. “I forgot that was in there.”
“No, you did not.” She met his eyes again. “You put it there because you needed somebody to remember who you were before all this.”
He did not answer. He only cried without making noise, the way grown men often do when their dignity and their grief are both still trying to survive. Celia stepped closer before she had fully decided to, then placed her hand behind his shoulder. Not a grand embrace. Not a cinematic reconciliation. Just contact. Just proof that family had not entirely burned away.
When she drew back, Jesus was closer than He had been a moment before. Celia had not seen Him cross the space. He stood beside the fence with the evening light behind Him and looked from sister to brother with that same deep, unspectacular authority that never pushed and never yielded to falsehood either.
“Mercy is not forgetfulness,” He said. “It is the refusal to let the worst thing be the final thing.”
Tomas lowered his head. Celia looked at Jesus with tears still drying on her face.
“I do not know how to do that every day,” she said.
“You do not have to do tomorrow’s mercy tonight,” He answered. “Only tonight’s.”
She let that settle. It was so simple she almost missed how freeing it was. She had been living as if every failure ahead of them had to be solved before she could offer one drop of tenderness now. But tomorrow’s fear had been stealing even the small faithfulness available in the present hour.
A volunteer called Tomas’ name from farther inside the campus. He wiped his face roughly and straightened.
“I have to go check in,” he said.
Celia nodded. “Go.”
He hesitated. “Will you tell Rey I asked about him?”
“Yes.”
“And Maribel?”
That surprised her. “Why Maribel?”
“Because I owe her an uncle too.”
Celia gave him the faintest smile. “Show up tomorrow first. Then we can talk about the rest.”
He laughed through the last of his tears, then clutched the folder and headed toward the building. Halfway there he turned back and lifted one hand, not dramatically, just enough to say he knew the moment mattered. Then he disappeared through the door with the other men.
Celia stayed by the fence a little longer. Jesus stood beside her, looking across the campus where so many lives hung in the thin space between damage and hope.
“Why here?” she asked softly. “Why do You keep showing up where people are this frayed?”
His answer came without hesitation. “Because people think I avoid ruined places.”
She let out a breath that trembled on the way out. “And the people who love them? The ones who are tired of carrying, tired of hoping, tired of cleaning up the wreckage?”
He turned toward her. “I do not avoid them either.”
The evening moved around them with all its ordinary human sounds. A bus sighed at a stoplight. Someone rolled a cart across concrete. A woman on the far side of the lot was telling a child to stay close. No thunder broke. No choir rose. Yet Celia felt more seen in that moment than she had in years.
“You asked who you are when nobody needs something from you,” Jesus said. “You are still Mine then too.”
Her eyes closed. She had not realized how much of her identity had become welded to usefulness until He separated them. She had been living as if love had to be earned through output, maintained through sacrifice, proven through depletion. But He was naming something older and steadier than service. Something that existed before she met anybody’s need and would remain when she no longer could.
When she opened her eyes, He was already moving again, walking along the edge of the campus toward the west, where the sun was lowering over the city and turning windows to fire. She wanted to call after Him, to ask how to keep hold of this clarity once bills and bodies and forms and failures came crashing back in. But she knew the answer before she formed the question. Stay present. Tell the truth. Take tonight’s mercy and do not demand tomorrow’s strength before morning comes.
She drove from Haven to San Fernando Cemetery No. 2 because some part of the day still needed finishing and because Tomas had said where he meant to go before he lost courage and asked for papers instead. The cemetery was quieter than the rest of the city, though the sound of traffic still moved around its edges like distant surf. She parked, walked among the markers, and found her mother’s grave with surprising ease. She had not come on this date in three years. There was always some reason. Work. Rey’s appointments. Tomas’ chaos. Weather. Money. The real reason sat lower and uglier. Grief asked more softness than she thought she could spare.
The flowers there were old and sun-faded. Someone had come before her at some point, but not today. Celia stood with her hands at her sides and looked at her mother’s name cut into the stone. All the old emotions did not arrive at once. What came first was memory. Her mother laughing at the sink. Her mother fixing hems at the kitchen table. Her mother praying while sweeping. Her mother refusing to flatter anybody’s self-pity. Her mother crying once in the garage where she thought the children would not hear. Then came the ache.
“I am tired, Mama,” Celia said out loud, and the sound of her own voice in the cemetery almost startled her. “I got mean in places I did not mean to.”
Tears came again, but quieter now. She stood there and let them come. After a while she spoke about Rey. About Maribel. About Tomas. About the house. About the bills. About the part of herself she had almost abandoned. When she finished, the sky had shifted toward evening blue, and she felt emptied in the clean way, not the hopeless way. A man trimming grass in a far section shut off his machine, and sudden stillness settled over everything.
She went home through La Villita and the downtown streets that were easing into night. Restaurants were filling. People were walking along the River Walk with that peculiar mixture of joy, distraction, and loneliness cities hold so well. Lights reflected on the water. Laughter rose from patios. Somewhere a violin was playing for money. Somewhere else a couple was fighting under their breath while pretending not to. San Antonio looked alive, beautiful in places, bruised in others, and wholly human from edge to edge.
At the house, Rey was awake and sitting straighter. She handed him the pharmacy bag before he could ask. He looked inside and exhaled with relief he tried not to show too openly.
“You got them.”
“Four days’ worth.”
“That is four more than this morning.”
She nodded. “Tomas got his papers.”
Rey watched her carefully. “How did it go?”
“He told the truth.”
“That bad, huh?”
Despite herself, she laughed. It was the first real laugh of the day, small but unmistakable. “Something like that.”
He studied her face a little longer. “You look different.”
“I feel different and exactly the same.”
“That is usually how real change starts.”
She made them both something simple to eat because soup alone was not enough. Toast, eggs, the last of the beans, slices of avocado that needed to be used. While they ate, she finally called Maribel. Her daughter answered on the second ring, too quickly for a person trying to sound casual.
“Mama?”
“I should have called earlier.”
A pause. “Is Dad okay?”
“He is sore. Not broken.”
“Okay.” Maribel’s voice softened. “And you?”
Celia leaned against the kitchen counter and looked out the darkening window over the sink. “I was not doing as well as I pretended.”
That silence on the line changed at once. It no longer held tension. It held room.
“Thank you for saying that,” Maribel said.
“I am sorry for earlier.”
“I know.”
“No, let me say it right. I have been talking to you like your help is pressure when really it is love arriving in a way I do not always know how to receive.”
Maribel started crying then, quiet at first, then openly. Celia closed her eyes with her own tears returning.
“I am coming this weekend,” her daughter said. “I do not care if you say no.”
“I was going to say yes.”
That made both of them laugh through the tears. They talked longer than they had in weeks, not because the problems were solved but because honesty had made it possible to stand on the same side of them again.
Later, after Rey had gone to bed with pain eased enough to let sleep try its hand, Celia stepped outside onto the small patch of concrete behind the house. The neighborhood had gone mostly quiet. A dog barked once in the distance. Somebody’s television murmured through a wall. A breeze moved warm against her face and carried the faint scent of earth and cut grass. For the first time all day, nobody needed anything from her in that exact minute. No ringing phone. No customer. No form. No spill. No fall. No emergency. Just the night.
She might once have felt panic there in the stillness, the old fear of meeting herself without tasks between them. But the fear was not ruling the space tonight. She stood with empty hands and did not disappear. She thought about Jesus in the square, by the creek, at Haven. She thought about the way He had seen through her anger without humiliating her. The way He had not excused failure or minimized exhaustion, yet had refused to let either become her identity. She had spent so long believing that the only sacred life was a useful one that she had nearly forgotten that being loved by God was not a reward for efficiency.
Without fully meaning to, she whispered, “I am still Yours when I am tired.”
The words settled into her more deeply than she expected.
Across the city, beyond the lit patios and highways and late shifts and hospital rooms and shelters and apartments where people were ending their day with relief or resentment or hunger or gratitude or numbness, Jesus had gone back to quiet. He knelt in prayer again near the Mission Reach where the river carried the night sky in broken reflections. The city that had opened around Him at dawn now rested in layers of darkness and electric light. He bowed His head and spoke to the Father of the people He had carried through the day. For the woman in scrubs who had almost mistaken weariness for failure. For the older man by the water delaying the ache of home. For the workers in Market Square who kept serving while their own hearts ran low. For Alma with her hidden drawer of mercy. For Mrs. Garza and her practical kindness. For Rey learning how to be weak without surrendering love. For Maribel waiting in concern from another city. For Tomas walking into one honest tomorrow. And for Celia, who had spent years being needed and one long day remembering that before all of it, beneath all of it, and after all of it, she was seen.
The breeze moved through the reeds. Traffic sounded faint in the distance. Jesus remained there in stillness, not detached from the city but holding it fully, its noise and need and private grief gathered into prayer. He prayed for the tired who had started mistaking hardness for strength. He prayed for those who had disappointed the people who loved them and no longer knew how to come back. He prayed for houses where resentment had begun speaking louder than tenderness. He prayed for every person still awake under the weight of bills, addiction, loneliness, regret, fear, or the dull ache of being unseen. And when He lifted His head again, the night over San Antonio was quiet enough to hear the river moving, steady and unafraid, carrying what it carried beneath the moon.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from
Notes I Won’t Reread
I went to the movies yesterday. tragic. I know I rarely get out of my house. It was great, though I would say I do hate noisy people. And I’ve surely mentioned that more than once in my writings so far, I hate noisy people. I hate humans in general, but that specific, disturbing, unnecessary noise makes me lose my mind and thoughts. People have very unnecessary things to talk about and still do as if it were a competition on who’s louder and more suffocating to be around.
I don’t understand what humans find so funny about talking loudly as if they were awarded for it. It’s unnecessary, and it needs to get to an end, but still, we are talking about humans. The least understandable thing in humanity. They get awfully stupider and louder as our generation continues.
Speaking of the movie, it was great.
I have nothing in addition to write about. I’m awfully tired. exhausted I hate noisy people.
sincerely, Ahmed
from Patrimoine Médard bourgault
Médard a été réduit à ce qu'il a laissé — pas à ce qu'il était.
Cette réduction vient de partout. Des artistes qui ont repris ses formes. Du regard extérieur qui a photographié ses outils. Des institutions qui ont nommé une tradition d'après lui. Tout le monde, avec les meilleures intentions, a construit une image de Médard à partir des traces — pas à partir de la démarche.
Ce texte ne défend pas Médard de façon nostalgique. Il ne dit pas qu'on a oublié un grand homme. Il dit quelque chose de plus difficile : on a mal compris ce qu'il faisait. Et cette incompréhension a des conséquences concrètes sur tout ce qui a suivi.
La démarche de Médard — regarder un sujet jusqu'à le comprendre, puis trouver la forme qui rend cette compréhension visible — elle existe encore aujourd'hui. Elle n'appartient pas au bois. Elle n'appartient pas au XIXe siècle. Elle n'appartient pas à Saint-Jean-Port-Joli.
Elle appartient à quiconque fait ce travail-là, avec n'importe quel outil.
Quand on dit que Médard est le premier sculpteur sur bois de Saint-Jean-Port-Joli — celui qui a initié ce qui allait devenir une tradition reconnue, une identité pour le village entier — on dit quelque chose de vrai. Les historiens s'accordent là-dessus. Avant lui, il n'y avait pas de tradition de sculpture sur bois à Saint-Jean-Port-Joli. Après lui, le village est devenu l'un des centres les plus connus de cet art au Québec. Ce fait est réel et il est important.
Mais voilà le problème : on s'arrête là. On le définit comme le fondateur d'une tradition, et cette définition devient son identité complète. On décrit ce qu'il a produit, où il vivait, ce qu'il a mis en mouvement. On ne dit rien sur pourquoi ses figures tiennent, pourquoi elles ont une présence, pourquoi elles ne ressemblent pas à ce que d'autres ont fait avec les mêmes outils dans le même village.
La matière et la tradition sont réelles. Mais elles ne sont pas la cause. Elles sont le cadre.
La matière, les outils et la tradition sont visibles. Ils sont transmissibles. Ils peuvent être reproduits. Mais ce caractère visible ne doit pas masquer leur statut : ils sont en grande partie des résultats.
Ce qui agit réellement se situe ailleurs — dans un regard, dans une exigence, dans une manière de comprendre un sujet. C'est à ce niveau que se prennent les décisions. C'est là que se construit la cohérence.
Médard n'a pas choisi le bois parce que le bois était la bonne réponse abstraite à une question artistique. Il a travaillé le bois parce que c'était la matière disponible, accessible, ancrée dans son milieu. Le bois est une conséquence de sa situation — pas le principe de sa démarche. De la même façon, la tradition qui porte son nom est une conséquence de ce qu'il a produit — pas ce qui l'a rendu possible.
Ce qui produit réellement la qualité du travail, c'est invisible. C'est la façon dont il regardait un visage. La façon dont il décidait que telle expression était juste et telle autre ne l'était pas. Cette capacité-là ne se voit pas dans les outils. Elle se voit dans le résultat — mais seulement si on sait quoi chercher.
Prenons deux sculpteurs. Le premier travaille le bois avec les mêmes outils que Médard — la gouge, le maillet, le bois de tilleul. Il reproduit les formes : les visages arrondis, les épaules carrées, les mains noueuses des travailleurs. Il maîtrise le geste. Mais ses figures restent en surface : les visages sont corrects, les poses sont stables, rien ne pèse.
Le deuxième travaille en numérique, avec ZBrush — un logiciel de sculpture utilisé aujourd'hui dans la quasi-totalité des grands jeux vidéo et productions cinématographiques. Il sculpte un Wolverine. Il passe des heures à comprendre la tension dans la mâchoire de ce personnage, la douleur enfouie sous la rage, le poids d'un corps qui a trop vécu. Sa figure tient. Elle est habitée.
Lequel est le plus proche de Médard ? La réponse est dans la question.
Chez Médard, la sculpture ne commence pas par la matière. Elle commence par l'observation — observer la figure, comprendre l'expression, chercher une forme lisible, respecter la dignité du sujet. Ces opérations ne relèvent pas d'une simple technique. Elles impliquent une capacité à voir, à juger, à choisir. La technique permet de produire, elle ne suffit pas à comprendre. Une forme peut être maîtrisée sans être juste. Elle peut être efficace sans être habitée.
Dans son journal, Médard écrit à propos du Christ en croix qu'il a devant lui — sculpté dans le noyer : ce beau regard tourné vers le ciel et ses bourreaux, ses deux bras qui cherchent à se détendre et à s'élargir sous l'effort de l'amour divin, ces lèvres entrouvertes et un peu frémissantes. Ce n'est pas une description de technique. C'est une lecture d'un corps dans un état précis. Médard ne décrit pas comment il a taillé les bras — il décrit ce que les bras font, ce qu'ils expriment, ce qu'ils portent. La forme vient après. Elle est la conséquence de cette lecture.
Pour chacune des sept paroles du Christ en croix, il note le changement dans l'expression — comment la tête se déplace, comment les traits se transforment d'une parole à l'autre. À la quatrième parole — Mon Dieu, pourquoi m'avez-vous abandonné — il écrit : sa tête est relevée, renvoyée un peu à l'arrière. Sur ses traits, une poignante souffrance. Un pli affreux se creuse sur l'arcade sourcillière. La bouche entrouverte. La lèvre supérieure semble frémir. C'est de l'observation anatomique au service d'un état intérieur. Pas de la décoration. Pas du style.
Chez Médard, un forgeron n'est pas un corps en position de travail. C'est un homme dont les épaules portent quelque chose — la fatigue, la fierté, la résignation ou la force. Cette lecture précède le geste. Elle conditionne tout ce qui suit.
Chez certains sculpteurs, la forme existe pour elle-même. On cherche une belle courbe, un volume équilibré, une surface bien travaillée. La forme est la fin. Elle n'a pas besoin de justification extérieure. Chez Médard, ce n'est pas comme ça que ça fonctionne. La position des épaules, l'angle de la tête, la profondeur d'un creux dans un visage — tout ça existe parce que ça dit quelque chose sur le sujet. Parce que c'est juste pour cet homme-là, dans cette condition-là. Pas parce que c'est beau en soi.
En d'autres mots : si tu enlèves le sujet, la forme n'a plus de raison d'être ce qu'elle est. Elle dépend de ce qu'elle représente. Elle est la conséquence d'une compréhension — pas d'une décision esthétique.
Le bois résiste. Le geste à la gouge ralentit, oblige à décider, à simplifier. Le maillet engage le corps et rend certaines décisions irréversibles. Ces contraintes ne sont pas neutres. Elles orientent la forme. Mais elles ne constituent pas à elles seules la démarche, et la difficulté matérielle ne garantit pas la justesse.
Ce que ça veut dire concrètement : un menuisier habile affronte les mêmes contraintes. Un artisan qui fabrique des meubles depuis vingt ans connaît le bois aussi bien qu'un sculpteur. La difficulté de la matière ne produit pas automatiquement une présence dans la figure. Ce qui produit la présence, c'est ce que le sculpteur cherche à dire — et sa capacité à le traduire malgré les contraintes, ou grâce à elles.
Un sculpteur sur pierre peut passer dix ans à maîtriser le ciseau et produire des formes techniquement irréprochables qui ne disent rien. Un sculpteur numérique peut travailler avec une tablette et ZBrush — cent millions de polygones disponibles, aucune décision irréversible — et produire une figure qui tient, qui pèse, qui regarde. L'outil ne décide pas. Le regard décide.
Former un regard, ça veut dire apprendre à voir des choses que la plupart des gens ne voient pas. Pas des choses cachées — des choses présentes, mais que l'œil non formé ne distingue pas. L'apprentissage ne consiste pas seulement à acquérir un savoir-faire. Il consiste à observer, comparer, évaluer — reconnaître ce qui tient et ce qui ne tient pas, distinguer une expression construite d'une expression approximative. Ce travail précède la main. Il conditionne tout le reste. Sans lui, la technique devient un moyen de reproduction.
Dans son journal, Médard décrit comment il a appris l'anatomie pour sculpter son grand crucifix grandeur nature — celui qui se trouve aujourd'hui dans le cimetière de Saint-Jean. Il monte deux tréteaux dans une chambre en haut de sa maison. Il installe un grand miroir à la bonne hauteur. Il place le crucifix en face. Et il se déshabille. Il pose devant le miroir, prend les mouvements du Christ, et avec sa gouge, il creuse pour faire sortir les muscles et les os. Il s'excuse devant le Seigneur avant de commencer — mais il le fait quand même, parce que il le fallait. Plus tard, pour étudier les muscles des jambes et des bras, il retrousse ses vêtements, prend le mouvement voulu, observe dans le miroir. Il assiste des mourants dans sa famille et profite de ces moments pour étudier les expressions — celles qu'il utilisera ensuite pour ses christs souffrants.
Ce n'est pas de l'improvisation. Ce n'est pas de l'instinct. C'est un programme d'apprentissage rigoureux, autodidacte, construit par quelqu'un qui n'a jamais reçu de leçons formelles — il écrit lui-même que le premier sculpteur ou peintre qu'il a rencontré, ça faisait dix ou quinze ans qu'il pratiquait le métier.
Ce programme ressemble trait pour trait à ce qu'on enseigne aujourd'hui dans les meilleures formations de sculpture figurative pour le cinéma et le jeu vidéo. Anatomie du corps humain. Étude du mouvement et de ce que les muscles font sous la peau selon la position. Observation des expressions dans des états réels — pas copiées d'autres figures. Construction des volumes à partir de la compréhension de la structure, pas de la surface. Cohérence entre la posture, l'expression du visage, la tension des mains. Ces formations exigent des étudiants qu'ils dessinent des centaines de fois le même corps dans des positions différentes avant de toucher à un outil de sculpture. Elles exigent qu'ils comprennent pourquoi une épaule monte quand le bras se lève, pourquoi la mâchoire se serre d'une certaine façon sous la douleur, comment le poids d'un corps se distribue différemment selon qu'un homme est épuisé ou en colère.
Médard faisait exactement ça. Seul. Sans école. Sans maître. Avec un miroir et ses morts.
Un sculpteur qui a formé son regard de cette façon voit la différence entre une épaule qui porte un poids et une épaule qui simule un poids. Il voit quand une expression est construite à partir de la compréhension d'un état intérieur, et quand elle est copiée d'une autre figure sans être comprise. Cette capacité ne s'acquiert pas en apprenant des techniques. Elle s'acquiert en regardant longtemps, en comparant, en se trompant, en recommençant.
Rafael Grassetti est l'un des sculpteurs numériques les plus reconnus au monde. Né au Brésil, autodidacte, il a travaillé pour Marvel, DC, Ubisoft, BioWare — puis est devenu directeur artistique de God of War chez Sony Santa Monica. Il a sculpté des dizaines de personnages : Kratos, Wolverine, Hulk, des créatures de la mythologie nordique. Ce qui distingue son travail n'est pas la maîtrise de ZBrush. C'est la rigueur avec laquelle il lit un sujet avant de le sculpter. Dans ses présentations publiques, il revient constamment sur le même point : comprendre la structure, les volumes, les tensions dans un corps avant de commencer. La technique suit. Elle ne précède jamais. C'est exactement ce que faisait Médard.
Certains apprentissages contemporains — notamment dans la sculpture figurative pour le cinéma ou le jeu vidéo, en argile ou en numérique — reposent sur une exigence comparable à celle de Médard. Ils imposent une compréhension de l'anatomie, une construction des volumes, une traduction de l'expression, une cohérence d'ensemble. Dans ces contextes, l'erreur est immédiatement perceptible — et c'est instructif de comprendre pourquoi.
Le spectateur, même sans formation, reconnaît instinctivement quand un corps humain sonne faux. Nous avons tous passé notre vie entière à lire des corps, des visages, des postures. Quand un personnage de jeu vidéo a les épaules mal placées, quand une expression ne correspond pas à la situation, quand un poids ne se distribue pas correctement dans un corps — le joueur le sent. Il ne sait pas nécessairement pourquoi. Mais quelque chose ne va pas. C'est une pression que Médard connaissait aussi. Ses figures étaient regardées par des gens qui connaissaient les marins, les forgerons, les paysans — des gens qui savaient immédiatement si une figure sonnait juste ou faux.
God of War (2018) en est un exemple documenté. Les personnages ont été sculptés dans ZBrush par une équipe dirigée par Grassetti. Kratos — personnage central du jeu — devait incarner une transformation : d'un guerrier brutal à un père. Cette tension devait être visible dans le corps, dans le visage, dans la posture. Pas dans le texte. Pas dans la narration. Dans la forme. C'est une exigence du même ordre que celle que Médard s'imposait face à un marin ou un paysan de Charlevoix.
On peut alors formuler une hypothèse. Un travail figuratif contemporain, lorsqu'il est conduit avec rigueur, peut parfois se rapprocher davantage de la démarche de Médard que certains travaux inscrits dans un cadre plus traditionnel, lorsque ceux-ci se limitent à la reproduction de formes ou de techniques. Ce rapprochement ne dépend pas du médium. Il dépend de la capacité à comprendre un sujet, à en construire la forme, à en maintenir la lisibilité. Un travail peut être contemporain et juste. Un travail peut être traditionnel et rester en surface.
Grassetti a sculpté Wolverine à plusieurs reprises — personnage Marvel connu pour sa violence contenue, sa douleur chronique, son impossibilité à vieillir et à mourir. Sculpter ce personnage avec rigueur, c'est comprendre ce que signifie porter cette condition dans un corps. La mâchoire serrée. Les épaules légèrement rentrées. Les mains qui ne se ferment jamais tout à fait. Ce n'est pas une démonstration technique. C'est une lecture. C'est le même geste que Médard décrivant la quatrième parole du Christ — cette tête renversée, ce pli sur l'arcade sourcillière, cette lèvre qui frémit.
Cette hypothèse ne vaut qu'à condition d'être maintenue dans ses limites. Les pratiques contemporaines peuvent elles aussi devenir académiques, répétitives, démonstratives. Le spectaculaire peut masquer une absence de compréhension. La complexité peut dissimuler le vide.
ZBrush permet de générer des détails à une vitesse et une densité impossibles à atteindre à la main — des pores de peau, des veines, des micro-textures de tissu. Cette capacité peut produire des œuvres impressionnantes qui ne sont que de la surface. Un visage couvert de détails peut ne rien exprimer. Un visage simplifié peut tout dire. Aucune pratique n'échappe à cette possibilité.
Ce n'est pas uniquement vrai pour le numérique. Un travail traditionnel peut être tout aussi démonstratif — démonstratif de sa maîtrise technique, de son appartenance à une école, de sa fidélité à un style. La démonstration remplace alors la compréhension. La forme prouve quelque chose au lieu de dire quelque chose. Ce n'est pas parce qu'un travail est difficile, ancien, ou inscrit dans une lignée reconnue qu'il échappe à cette limite. Médard lui-même le voyait. Dans son journal, il écrit avec colère à propos des crucifix de son époque : pourquoi ces christs plantés droits comme des soldats au garde à vous? Pourquoi ces statues sans mouvements? Pourquoi ces figures taillées en caricatures? Il regardait des œuvres produites par des artistes reconnus, signées, dans des matériaux nobles — et il n'y voyait que démonstration sans compréhension.
L'abstraction engage une autre forme d'exigence. Elle ne peut pas s'appuyer sur le réel, elle ne dispose pas de référence extérieure. Elle demande une cohérence interne, une précision des relations, une nécessité des formes — chaque élément doit être justifié par l'ensemble. Cette exigence est réelle. Mais elle ne porte pas sur le même objet.
Une sculpture abstraite réussie est juste dans ses relations internes — chaque volume, chaque tension, chaque vide est à sa place par rapport à l'ensemble. C'est un travail d'organisation, de cohérence, d'équilibre. Mais cette justesse ne dit rien sur un homme debout sous la pluie. Elle ne dit rien sur ce que pèse la fatigue. Elle ne dit rien sur la dignité d'un corps qui travaille. Ce n'est pas un défaut de l'abstraction. C'est simplement un objet différent.
Un sculpteur peut passer des années dans l'abstraction géométrique — formes épurées, relations précises, matériaux nobles — et n'avoir jamais eu à se demander ce que ressent un corps debout sous la pluie, ou ce que pèse la fatigue sur des épaules de forgeron. Ce n'est pas une critique. C'est une distinction.
Médard a travaillé. Il a produit des figures. D'autres artistes ont regardé ces figures et ont tenté de s'en approcher — en reprenant la matière, les outils, les types de personnages, le style reconnaissable. C'est un processus normal. C'est ainsi que les traditions se constituent.
Mais ce faisant, quelque chose s'est déplacé.
Ces artistes n'avaient pas accès à ce qui précédait la forme chez Médard — le regard, la lecture du sujet, le programme d'apprentissage autodidacte qu'il s'était imposé, le travail intérieur qui rendait chaque forme nécessaire. Ils avaient accès au résultat : les visages arrondis, les épaules caractéristiques, les mains des travailleurs, la gamme des types humains. Alors ils ont travaillé à partir du résultat. La tradition de Saint-Jean-Port-Joli, telle qu'elle s'est développée, est en grande partie une interprétation de ce que Médard a laissé — pas une continuation de ce qu'il faisait. Ce n'est pas la même chose.
Quand on définit Médard à partir de cette tradition, on le définit à travers le filtre de ceux qui l'ont interprété. On ne revient pas à lui. On revient à l'image qu'on a construite de lui. Un sculpteur qui apprend à tailler le bois selon les formes de Médard, qui reproduit les postures, les types de personnages, les gammes de tailles — peut produire un travail reconnaissable, vendable, identifiable comme appartenant à une tradition. Il ne fait pas nécessairement ce que faisait Médard. Il fait ce que Médard a laissé — tel que d'autres l'ont compris.
Quand un journaliste, un historien d'art, ou un visiteur du musée tente de comprendre Médard, il part de ce qu'il voit. Les figures. Les outils exposés. Les photos de l'atelier. Il construit une explication à partir de ces éléments visibles. Cette explication est souvent cohérente. Elle n'est pas fausse. Mais elle reconstruit une logique à partir des traces — elle ne décrit pas le processus réel. C'est comme essayer de comprendre comment un cuisinier travaille en regardant les plats finis sur la table. On peut faire des déductions. Mais on ne voit pas la façon dont il goûte, ajuste, recommence, décide que quelque chose n'est pas encore juste.
Le regard extérieur privilégie ce qui est visible — la matière, les outils, le style — et reconstruit une explication à partir des formes. Ce processus est compréhensible. Mais il simplifie. Il transforme une pratique en image.
Quand on montre une photo de l'atelier de Médard — les gouges alignées, les copeaux au sol, les figures à demi terminées sur l'établi — on montre quelque chose de vrai. Mais ce qu'on ne voit pas dans cette photo, c'est le moment qui précède : Médard dans la chambre du haut de sa maison, devant le grand miroir, prenant les mouvements du Christ sur la croix pour comprendre comment les muscles travaillent dans cette position. Cette partie-là ne se photographie pas. Et c'est elle qui importe.
Les figures que Médard sculptait — marins, forgerons, paysans — s'inscrivaient dans un monde structuré. Elles incarnaient des fonctions, des tensions, des réalités. Ces figures ne sont pas propres à une époque. On les retrouve aujourd'hui, sous d'autres formes, dans certains univers contemporains — vastes, structurés, largement diffusés — qui participent activement à l'imaginaire actuel.
Un guerrier épuisé qui refuse de plier. Un vieillard qui porte le poids de ce qu'il a fait. Un homme seul face à quelque chose de plus grand que lui. Ces figures existent chez Médard. Elles existent aussi dans God of War, dans les comics Marvel, dans des centaines de récits contemporains.
Dans Dark Souls, André le Forgeron est l'un des personnages les plus aimés de la série. Il est là, dans son sanctuaire, marteau à la main, dans un monde en ruine où tout s'effondre autour de lui. Il forge. Il répare. Il tient. Quand le joueur lui rapporte un vieux morceau de métal ayant appartenu à un ami disparu, André dit simplement : il me manque, ce vieux machin. Vraiment. Ce n'est pas un forgeron décoratif. C'est un homme qui a choisi de rester à son poste quand tout le reste a lâché.
Dans The Witcher 3, Hattori est un maître forgeron — un elfe qui a fui la guerre, abandonné son art, et qui vit caché. Convaincre ce personnage de reforger est toute une quête. Pas parce qu'il n'a plus les mains pour le faire. Parce qu'il n'a plus la raison de le faire. Sa dignité est liée à son travail. Quand il recommence à forger, quelque chose en lui se remet debout.
Ce sont exactement les mêmes figures que Médard sculptait. Pas les mêmes vêtements. Pas la même époque. Pas le même médium. La même condition humaine. Les formes changent. Les structures persistent.
Ce qui rapproche ou éloigne d'une démarche comme celle de Médard ne relève ni du médium, ni du contexte. Cela relève de la rigueur — et la rigueur n'est pas de la sévérité. Ce n'est pas travailler lentement ou longtemps. Ce n'est pas multiplier les détails ou affronter des matières difficiles. C'est ne pas accepter une forme qui ne dit pas ce qu'elle est censée dire. C'est recommencer jusqu'à ce que ça tienne. C'est refuser la facilité d'une expression approximative quand on sait qu'elle n'est pas juste. Une œuvre peut être difficile sans être juste. Elle peut être simple et pourtant tenue. La rigueur ne se mesure pas à la complexité du geste, mais à la cohérence de l'ensemble.
Médard l'avait. Grassetti l'a. Ce n'est pas lié au siècle, au village, ou à l'outil.
Médard travaillait dans un village de pêcheurs, avec des outils simples, des modèles tirés de sa vie quotidienne. Grassetti travaille à Los Angeles, avec un logiciel primé aux Oscars techniques, pour des franchises évaluées à des milliards. La distance entre ces deux mondes est totale. L'exigence est la même.
Si la matière, les outils et la tradition ne suffisent pas à définir une démarche — si ce qui agit se situe dans le regard, dans la compréhension du sujet et dans la rigueur — alors la question reste ouverte : qu'est-ce qui, aujourd'hui, permet réellement de s'en approcher ?
Cette question n'est pas rhétorique. Elle est réelle. Elle s'adresse à quiconque veut travailler dans la continuité de ce que Médard a fait — non pas en reproduisant ses formes, non pas en utilisant ses outils, non pas en s'inscrivant dans sa tradition telle qu'elle a été interprétée. Mais en faisant ce qu'il faisait : regarder un sujet jusqu'à le comprendre. Puis trouver la forme qui rend cette compréhension visible.
Médard mérite mieux que l'image qu'on a construite de lui.
Raphael Maltais Bourgault
from
laxmena
Bell Labs invented the transistor, the laser, and information theory. They also invented a way of thinking. Here are nine mental models from The Idea Factory by Jon Gertner.
1. Multi-Disciplinary Critical Mass
Don't just hire the best expert. Hire the best physicist, the best chemist, and the best mathematician — then put them in the same room. Mervin Kelly believed different fields create a chain reaction that no single mind can. When you're stuck, the answer is probably in someone else's domain.
2. The Architectural Collision
Bell Labs built 700-foot hallways. On purpose. Physical space is organizational policy. Hallways force random meetings. Random meetings move ideas. If you work in a silo, you're not just isolated — you're making yourself less creative by design.
3. The Problem-Rich Asset
The hardest problems are the best problems. Bell Labs treated the growing phone system as a “problem-rich environment.” Difficult problems sharpen focus and concentrate talent. Don't avoid the hard ones. They contain the most valuable opportunities.
4. The Economic Filter
Every idea must pass one test: is it better, cheaper, or both? If not, it's worthless. Mervin Kelly used this filter to kill projects before they consumed resources. Apply it ruthlessly. Stop building solutions looking for problems.
5. Missing-Piece Investigation
Before solving a problem, find what you don't know. Kelly forced his staff to locate the missing puzzle piece before starting any work. Most wasted effort comes from working on things you already understand. Define the gap first.
6. The Full-Cycle Innovation
Discovery without production is a hobby. Jack Morton argued that a breakthrough isn't an innovation until it's manufactured and sold. The “boring” work of production matters as much as the “exciting” work of discovery. Build the whole cycle or you haven't built anything.
7. First Principles Understanding
Bell Labs abandoned Edison's “cut-and-try” approach. They learned why things work — and why they fail. Understanding the fundamental laws of a system lets you improve it by orders of magnitude. Whenever you face a recurring failure, stop guessing. Learn the rules.
8. Functional Impurity
Perfect materials make poor transistors. Bell metallurgists discovered silicon only worked with a tiny amount of boron — a deliberate flaw. The deviation from the norm is often the breakthrough. Look for the well-placed impurity.
9. Circumscribed Freedom
Bell Labs gave researchers freedom to explore, but only within a mission: improve human communication. This “circumscribed freedom” let people wander without getting lost. Give yourself permission to follow curiosity — but keep it tethered to something real.
From The Idea Factory by Jon Gertner.
from
wystswolf

There is little as beautiful as comely feet.
Awake! Awake! Clothe yourself with strength, O Zion! Put on your beautiful garments, O Jerusalem, the holy city! For no more will the uncircumcised and unclean one enter into you.
Shake off the dust, rise and take a seat, O Jerusalem. Loosen the bonds on your neck, O captive daughter of Zion.
For this is what Jehovah says: “You were sold for nothing, And without money you will be repurchased.”
For this is what the Sovereign Lord Jehovah says: “At first my people went down to Egypt to live there as foreigners; Then Assyria oppressed them without cause.”
“What, then, should I do here?” declares Jehovah. “For my people were taken for nothing. Those ruling over them keep howling in triumph,” declares Jehovah, “And constantly, all day long, my name is treated with disrespect.
For that reason my people will know my name; For that reason they will know in that day that I am the One speaking. Look, it is I!”
How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of the one bringing good news, The one proclaiming peace, The one bringing good news of something better, The one proclaiming salvation, The one saying to Zion: “Your God has become King!”
Listen! Your watchmen raise their voice. In unison they shout joyfully, For they will see it clearly when Jehovah gathers back Zion.
Become cheerful, shout joyfully in unison, you ruins of Jerusalem, For Jehovah has comforted his people; he has repurchased Jerusalem.
Jehovah has bared his holy arm before the eyes of all the nations; All the ends of the earth will see the acts of salvation of our God.
Turn away, turn away, get out of there, touch nothing unclean! Get out from the midst of her, keep yourselves clean, You who are carrying the utensils of Jehovah.
For you will not depart in panic, Nor will you have to flee, For Jehovah will go ahead of you, And the God of Israel will be your rear guard.
Look! My servant will act with insight. He will be raised up high, He will be elevated and greatly exalted.
Just as there were many who stared at him in amazement —For his appearance was disfigured more than that of any other man And his stately form more than that of mankind—
So he will startle many nations. Kings will shut their mouths before him, Because they will see what they had not been told And give consideration to what they had not heard.
Who has put faith in the thing heard from us? And as for the arm of Jehovah, to whom has it been revealed?
He will come up like a twig before him, like a root out of parched land. No stately form does he have, nor any splendor; And when we see him, his appearance does not draw us to him.
He was despised and was avoided by men, A man who was meant for pains and was familiar with sickness. It was as if his face were hidden from us. He was despised, and we held him as of no account.
Truly he himself carried our sicknesses, And he bore our pains. But we considered him as plagued, stricken by God and afflicted.
But he was pierced for our transgression; He was crushed for our errors. He bore the punishment for our peace, And because of his wounds we were healed.
Like sheep we have all wandered about, Each has turned his own way, And Jehovah has caused the error of us all to meet up with him.
He was oppressed and he let himself be afflicted, But he would not open his mouth. He was brought like a sheep to the slaughter, Like a ewe that is silent before its shearers, And he would not open his mouth.
Because of restraint and judgment he was taken away; And who will concern himself with the details of his generation? For he was cut off from the land of the living; Because of the transgression of my people he received the stroke.
And he was given a burial place with the wicked, And with the rich in his death, Although he had done no wrong And there was no deception in his mouth.
But it was Jehovah’s will to crush him, and he let him become sick. If you will present his life as a guilt offering, He will see his offspring, he will prolong his days, And through him the delight of Jehovah will have success.
Because of his anguish, he will see and be satisfied. By means of his knowledge the righteous one, my servant, Will bring a righteous standing to many people, And their errors he will bear.
For that reason I will assign him a portion among the many, And he will apportion the spoil with the mighty, Because he poured out his life even to death And was counted among the transgressors; He carried the sin of many people, And he interceded for the transgressors.
from Douglas Vandergraph
There is a quiet kind of sadness that a lot of believers carry, and it does not always look dramatic from the outside. It is not always the kind of pain that makes people cry in public or fall apart where everyone can see it. A lot of the time it looks like a normal day. It looks like getting out of bed and doing what you have to do. It looks like answering messages, handling work, driving somewhere, cleaning something, making dinner, paying attention when someone is talking to you, and moving through the hours like a person who is technically functioning. Underneath all of that, though, there can be this low steady feeling that joy is for other people and that peace is something you are always almost about to have but never quite seem to get. Some believers live like they are allowed to survive the day, but not allowed to really receive it. They live like gratitude is fine in theory, but not for them. They live like a good day has to be justified first.
I think one of the reasons this happens is because a lot of people who love Jesus are still carrying a very tired heart. They believe in grace, but they do not always live like grace has reached all the way into their actual life. They know the right words. They know the verses. They know the language. Still, when morning comes, they face the day like they are stepping into something they have to drag themselves through instead of something that might still carry goodness from God. They do not always say that out loud, but you can feel it in the way they talk. You can hear it in the way they describe their life. There is almost a quiet apology built into the way they move through the world. They are here. They are doing their best. They are staying faithful. Yet somewhere deep inside, they still act like they need permission to enjoy being alive.
That is a painful way to live, and I think more people live there than they realize. They are not rejecting God. They are not turning away from Jesus. They are simply living with an inner heaviness that has been around for so long it now feels normal. They wake up and they do not expect much from the day except responsibility. They do not expect delight. They do not expect warmth. They do not expect the kind of calm that lets a person breathe all the way down into their chest. They do not expect God to meet them in something as ordinary as a morning drive or a quiet cup of coffee or a small laugh they did not see coming. They have become so used to living under pressure that they no longer know how to recognize a day as a gift before it proves itself useful.
When I say that as a believer in Jesus you should have a good day, I am not talking about pretending your life is easier than it is. I am not trying to hand you a thin slogan and call it hope. I am not saying that a good day is a day where nothing breaks, nobody disappoints you, every emotion stays calm, and all your plans fall into place. That is not real life, and most people know it. What I am talking about is something quieter and stronger. I am talking about the possibility of receiving this day from the hand of God instead of treating it like a burden you are already defeated by before noon. I am talking about letting the love of Christ become more real to you than the anxious habit of bracing for disappointment. I am talking about the kind of life where a person starts to understand that because Jesus is with them, the day already contains more goodness than their fear wants them to believe.
Sometimes the greatest theft in a person’s life is not that pain came. Pain comes for everyone. Trouble comes. Loss comes. Delays come. Disappointment comes. Sometimes the deeper theft is that after enough hard seasons, a person stops knowing how to be open. They become guarded with joy. They become suspicious of peace. They start to act as if hope is dangerous because it might leave them embarrassed. This is one of the quiet inner conflicts many believers carry without ever naming it. They still want God. They still trust Jesus. They still mean every prayer they pray. At the same time, there is a part of them that has become very careful not to feel too much expectation. They can handle duty. They can handle routine. They can handle carrying the load. What they are not as sure how to handle anymore is the possibility that today might actually be good.
That is such an honest place to admit, and maybe that honesty is where healing begins. Maybe the first step is not trying to force yourself into some brighter mood. Maybe the first step is telling the truth about the way your heart has been living. Maybe you have been faithful, but not free. Maybe you have been showing up, but not receiving. Maybe you have been thankful in public while feeling closed off in private. Maybe you love God, but somewhere along the way you started relating to your own life like it is mostly a problem to manage rather than a place where the presence of Jesus is still active and near. That kind of inward fatigue can sneak into a believer’s soul and make everything feel dull. It can make even mercy feel familiar in the wrong way. It can make a new morning feel like a repeated burden instead of a fresh moment with God.
One of the deepest reasons you should have a good day as a believer in Jesus is not that the world has become easier. It is that your life is no longer held together by the world’s ability to be kind to you. That is a very different foundation. If your day rests on circumstances behaving themselves, then your peace will always be weak. If your hope rests on people doing what you want, then your heart will stay fragile. If your ability to receive joy rests on nothing going wrong, then you will keep postponing joy until some future life that never quite arrives. Jesus gives you something better than that. He gives you Himself. He gives you the nearness of God in a life that still contains unfinished things. He gives you a place to stand that is deeper than mood, deeper than pressure, deeper than the tone of the news, deeper than the unpredictability of people, and deeper than the low tired voice in your own head that keeps saying maybe tomorrow will feel more livable.
There is something beautiful that starts to happen when a person really lets that become personal. Not theoretical. Not church-shaped. Personal. It changes the emotional weather inside them. They begin to realize they do not wake up abandoned. They do not start the morning spiritually empty. They do not begin the day trying to get God interested in their existence. The love of Christ is already there before the day has gone well. The grace of God is already there before they have done anything impressive. The care of heaven is already there while the sink is still full, the inbox is still crowded, the bank account is still what it is, and the future still has unanswered questions in it. A person who knows this deeply starts to move differently. They may still have responsibilities. They may still feel the weight of real life. Yet underneath it there is a steadier current. There is a growing awareness that their day is not empty space between problems. Their day is inhabited by God.
I think many believers have never fully given themselves permission to let ordinary life be touched by that truth. They reserve God for the serious moments. They reserve Him for crisis, confession, major decisions, and big prayers. Then the rest of life gets lived in this half-conscious fog where they are technically Christian but emotionally exhausted in the same way everyone else is exhausted. They forget that Jesus did not come only to rescue the dramatic parts of your story. He came near to your real life. Your actual life. The one that includes laundry, waiting rooms, bills, texts, body aches, quiet drives, and all the little moments that feel too small to mention when someone asks how you are doing. The nearness of Christ belongs there too. When that truth starts to settle in, a day becomes more than a stretch of obligations. It becomes a lived place of communion. It becomes a place where peace can arrive in ordinary clothes.
And that is one reason a believer should have a good day. Not because every day will feel exciting, but because no day is spiritually empty. No day is just bare time you have to get through until something bigger happens. Some people are always waiting for the main event of their life. They are always looking over the shoulder of the present moment toward some future answer they believe will finally allow them to breathe. They tell themselves they will relax when the finances change, when the door opens, when the relationship heals, when the body gets better, when the child comes back around, when the prayer is answered in a way they can point to. Until then, they live like today does not deserve warmth. They live like the current day is only useful if it helps them get somewhere else. That way of living quietly drains the soul because it teaches a person to miss their own life while they are in the middle of it.
Jesus does not call you to miss your life. He does not call you to move through the day like someone locked outside of grace until circumstances become more pleasing. He does not teach you to despise ordinary moments while waiting for larger ones. He teaches you to abide. He teaches you to remain. He teaches you to stay connected to Him in a way that changes how reality feels from the inside. That does not mean every hour feels easy. It does mean every hour can become inhabited by meaning. It means a believer has reason to wake up and say there is goodness available to me today because Christ has not withdrawn from my life. The day in front of me may not be dramatic, but it is not godless. It may not be perfect, but it is not empty. It may not answer every question, but it can still carry mercy, peace, guidance, restraint, gratitude, and that strange calm that sometimes shows up when you realize God is far more present than your mind has been acting like He is.
There is also something deeply human and deeply spiritual about letting yourself enjoy what God gives without feeling guilty for it. Many sincere believers have a harder time with this than they realize. They have learned how to endure. They have learned how to sacrifice. They have learned how to stay committed when life is hard. Those are good things. Yet some of them have not learned how to receive good things cleanly. They do not know how to take in a peaceful moment without immediately reminding themselves of everything that is still unresolved. They do not know how to feel relief without bracing for the next disruption. They do not know how to enjoy a good conversation, a beautiful sky, a little stillness, or the pleasure of being alive in a body that is breathing because they have been trained by pain to stay on guard. The result is that even when goodness arrives, they only half receive it. Part of them is already pulling away.
That guardedness can become so normal that a person thinks it is wisdom. They think they are simply being realistic. They think they are protecting themselves from disappointment. In truth, sometimes they are protecting themselves from joy, and they do not even see it. They are so committed to not being let down that they have accidentally become unavailable to the smaller gifts through which God often carries a soul. This is not a shallow issue. It touches the inner life in a deep way because when a person becomes unavailable to goodness, they slowly lose some of their ability to feel how loved they are. They may still believe the doctrine. They may still say the right thing. Still, their lived emotional posture toward life becomes narrow and defended. That is not the freedom Jesus died to give. Christ did not save you merely so you could grit your teeth in a more spiritual way. He came that your life might be full of Him, and where He is deeply received there is room for peace, room for gratitude, room for quiet gladness, and room for the kind of good day that does not need to be flashy to be real.
I think this lands hardest for people who are used to carrying a lot. The responsible ones. The steady ones. The ones people lean on. The ones who keep going when they are tired because someone has to. The ones who know what it feels like to push through. A person can become so identified with holding everything together that they begin to believe their highest form of faithfulness is constant tension. They start to feel almost disloyal to reality if they relax too much. They start to act as if a soft heart would mean a careless heart. Yet Jesus never asked you to prove your devotion by becoming inwardly hard. He never asked you to carry yourself like a clenched fist in order to be holy. There is a kind of strength that is gentler than that. There is a kind of faith that does not always look intense. Sometimes real faith looks like receiving the day instead of resisting it. Sometimes it looks like letting your shoulders drop. Sometimes it looks like deciding that because God is near, you do not need to live as if your own strain is what keeps the universe from collapsing.
That is where a lot of the hidden healing begins. It begins when a believer stops treating peace like laziness and starts seeing it as trust. It begins when a person stops acting like their anxiety is proof that they care deeply and starts realizing that God can care for their life more fully than they ever could. It begins when they stop using internal pressure as a form of self-protection and start allowing the presence of Jesus to become more real than the old habit of carrying the day in their own chest. You do not have to wake up and immediately become the manager of every possible outcome. You do not have to hold your whole life in your head before breakfast. You do not have to act like your concern is what keeps your family safe or your future alive. You are allowed to be a person under God. You are allowed to live from belonging instead of pressure. You are allowed to believe that the Lord who saved you knows how to walk with you through this day without needing your panic in order to do it.
There is another quiet reason a believer in Jesus should have a good day, and it may be one of the most tender ones of all. You are not unloved in the ordinary parts of your life. You are not merely loved in the dramatic parts. You are not loved only when you are praying hard, fighting hard, preaching hard, giving hard, or suffering in some visibly noble way. You are loved while you are tired. You are loved while you are simple. You are loved while you are doing small things that nobody else will remember. You are loved in rooms where no one is clapping for you. You are loved in the middle of errands, in the middle of dishes, in the middle of traffic, in the middle of unfinished conversations, and in the middle of those strange quiet pockets of the day when your mind drifts and you remember how much life you are carrying. The love of Jesus does not visit you only in exceptional spiritual weather. It stays with you in real life.
When a person starts to believe that more deeply, something softens. They do not need every day to prove itself worthy before they call it good. They begin to understand that a good day is not always a dramatic day. Sometimes it is simply a day where the heart remains open. Sometimes it is a day where a believer remembers they are already being held. Sometimes it is a day where they stop measuring the worth of their life by visible progress and begin receiving the quiet goodness of being with God in the middle of ordinary living. That kind of day may look small from the outside. It may not impress anyone. Still, it can be rich with the kind of peace many people spend years chasing in louder places.
Maybe this is where the conversation gets more personal than people expect. Some believers have become so used to inner tension that they no longer know how to imagine a life where goodness is not rare. They think of joy as an event. They think of peace as a break. They think of a good day as an exception. They do not yet understand that in Christ, goodness can become more normal than they know. Not because trouble vanishes, but because the presence of God begins to reorder the heart. There is a difference between a life with no pain and a life where pain is no longer the only thing your soul knows how to notice. Jesus can teach a person how to notice mercy again. He can teach a person how to notice warmth again. He can teach a person how to sit in a moment without mentally running ahead to ruin it. He can teach a person how to receive life like someone who is truly loved.
And I think that is where I want to leave this first part, because this is where the issue becomes very honest. A believer can know God and still need to relearn how to live like a beloved person. A believer can know scripture and still not know how to unclench internally. A believer can be faithful and still have a hard time letting the day be good. That does not make them a bad Christian. It makes them human. It means there is still a tender place in them that Jesus wants to meet more deeply. It means there is still a place where grace is trying to become lived reality instead of mere right language. It means there is still room for something beautiful to change.
If part of you has quietly believed that a good day must be earned, justified, or delayed, then maybe this is the beginning of a different way of living. Maybe Jesus is not only trying to get you through life. Maybe He is also teaching you how to receive it.
That is not always easy to learn, especially if you have spent years living like you have to brace yourself for life before it even begins. A person can become so used to carrying tension that they mistake it for maturity. They think staying wound up means they are being responsible. They think if they relax too much, something will slip through their fingers. They think if they let joy in too quickly, they will only end up embarrassed by it later. So they keep a lid on themselves. They stay careful. They stay guarded. They keep one hand on the door in case disappointment walks back in. What they do not realize is that this way of living slowly drains color out of the soul. It makes even good things feel far away. It makes a person present in body while inwardly absent from their own life.
Jesus has a way of confronting that gently. He does not always begin by removing every burden. A lot of the time He begins by meeting the burdened person inside the burden. He begins by coming close to the tired place. He begins by showing a person that what they have called realism has often become fear in a wiser sounding voice. Then little by little He teaches them something they never really knew how to do. He teaches them how to let the love of God into an actual Tuesday. He teaches them how to let the heart breathe in the middle of unfinished things. He teaches them how to stop talking themselves out of peace before the day has even had a chance to unfold.
That may sound small, but it is not small at all. The way you step into a day shapes far more than you think. If you step into it expecting only weight, you tend to miss the quiet ways God is already holding you. If you step into it acting like goodness must prove itself to you before you let yourself feel any gratitude, you usually end up overlooking the small mercies that were already there. But if you step into the day like someone deeply loved by Jesus, something changes in the way you carry time. You stop moving like a hunted person. You stop treating every hour like a test you are already failing. You begin to notice that the Lord is not asking you to survive your life as a stranger to His nearness. He is offering to walk with you through it.
That matters because most people do not lose a whole life all at once. They lose it in pieces. They lose it in the habit of never letting themselves be where they are. They lose it in constant mental absence. They lose it in the reflex that turns every morning into pressure and every evening into recovery. They lose it in the belief that the next answer will finally permit them to feel settled. This is one reason the invitation of Jesus is so precious. He does not merely promise some distant future reality. He brings the life of God near enough to transform the feel of the present moment. He brings peace into rooms that look ordinary. He brings steadiness into places where the mind used to spin. He brings a kind of warmth that cannot be manufactured by circumstances because it comes from a Person, not a setup.
Sometimes people hear words like joy, peace, hope, and gratitude so often that they stop hearing them as living things. They start hearing them as religious wallpaper. Still, when those things begin to move from language into experience, a believer starts to feel the day differently. They begin to understand that it is possible to live under the care of God instead of merely talking about it. They begin to understand that a good day is not an unrealistic dream. It is a day received instead of resisted. It is a day where the soul remains open enough to let God be good to it in ways that may not even be dramatic. It is a day where Christ is not kept at the edges of life, but welcomed into the center of how the hours are actually lived.
I think one of the holiest things a believer can do is let the grace of God become practical. There are many people who believe grace in principle but still live with a hidden punishment mindset. They may not call it that, but you can see it in the way they move through the day. They are hard on themselves without even noticing. They do not allow for weakness. They do not allow for slowness. They do not allow for ordinary human limitation. They make every tired moment mean something alarming. They make every imperfect response into evidence against themselves. They make every hard day into a quiet argument for why they should not feel peaceful yet. In their mind, a good day always belongs to a better version of them, one that is more organized, more healed, more disciplined, more emotionally clean, more visibly victorious. Until then they live as if joy must wait outside.
That is not grace. That is pressure wearing spiritual clothing.
Jesus does not relate to you that way. He is not standing over your life withholding goodness until you finally become easy to be pleased with. He is not giving out peace only to the emotionally polished. He is not offering daily mercy only to the version of you that never gets tired, never hesitates, never needs to start over. He comes close to the real you. The you who is still growing. The you who still feels things deeply. The you who still has days when the mind gets loud. The you who still has to remember the same truths more than once. He does not love some future cleaner version of you more than He loves the person reading this right now.
When that becomes more than an idea, it starts to loosen things inside. The person who has lived for years in quiet self-pressure begins to feel another way of being. They begin to realize they can have a good day without first becoming flawless. They begin to realize that rest is not betrayal. They begin to realize that a soft heart is not carelessness. They begin to realize that it is possible to be serious about God and still receive joy. It is possible to be faithful and still laugh. It is possible to carry responsibility without letting responsibility consume your inner life. It is possible to live attentively without living clenched.
That last part touches a very deep place in a lot of people. There are believers who are so used to being inwardly clenched that they do not even know they are doing it. They wake up ready for impact. Their jaw is tight before breakfast. Their shoulders are carrying what has not even happened yet. Their thoughts move ahead of the day trying to prevent every possible problem. They call it preparation, but most of the time it is fear trying to feel useful. Then by the time evening arrives, they are spent from fighting battles the day never actually brought. That is an exhausting way to live, and it slowly convinces a person that peace is for lighter lives than theirs.
Yet Christ speaks into that place with such tenderness. He does not shame the anxious heart for being anxious. He does not despise the overburdened mind for trying too hard. He comes near and shows a better yoke. He shows what it means to live carried. He shows what it means to let trust begin where control has been ending in fatigue. He teaches a soul that it does not need to preview every pain in order to survive it. He teaches a heart that it does not need to tense against possible disappointment in order to be safe. The safety of a believer was never supposed to come from self-protection. It comes from belonging to God.
That is one of the clearest reasons a believer in Jesus should have a good day. You belong to God. I know that can sound like familiar language, but sit with it personally. You belong to God while your life is still in progress. You belong to God while your prayers are still midair. You belong to God while some things in you are still being healed. You belong to God when the day feels light and when it feels ordinary and when it feels more demanding than you hoped. Your belonging is not moody. It is not unstable. It is not suspended until you become more impressive. The Lord has placed His love on you, and that means you do not enter today as a spiritual orphan trying to make your own peace from scratch.
People who feel orphaned inside often move through life trying to earn what can only be received. They try to earn rest. They try to earn worth. They try to earn the right to breathe. They try to earn permission to enjoy the day. Even when they know Jesus, they can still live emotionally like people who have to justify their existence through productivity, resilience, helpfulness, or endless internal effort. That way of living is lonely. It makes a person feel separated from tenderness, even if tenderness is being offered all around them. This is why it matters so much to let the gospel move out of theory and into your daily emotional posture. The gospel does not only change your eternal future. It changes the way you stand inside a morning.
It tells you that you are not on probation with God. It tells you that mercy is not an emergency measure for your worst days only. It tells you that Christ came near because love moved first.
When those truths start to land inside the actual rhythms of a person’s day, they change more than doctrine. They change atmosphere. A man starts driving differently when he knows he is loved. A woman starts walking through a hard afternoon differently when she knows she is held. A tired parent begins to carry the home differently when they remember they are not doing life alone. A lonely person experiences even the silence differently when they begin to recognize that the nearness of Jesus does not depend on visible company. This is not fake inspiration. This is what happens when grace becomes inhabitable.
I think this is part of why some of the best days in a believer’s life are not the most impressive from the outside. Sometimes the deepest goodness arrives quietly. It arrives when a person stops arguing with reality and starts receiving help in it. It arrives when they stop resisting the idea that God could be kind to them today even if major things remain unresolved. It arrives when they stop making the entire emotional value of the day depend on one phone call, one outcome, one person’s response, one shift in circumstance. The soul gets lighter when it no longer puts all of life’s weight on one thing. Christ gathers the scattered pieces of your day and teaches your heart to live from something deeper.
That deeper place matters because life will always contain interruption. It will always contain moments that do not go the way you hoped. A person who can only have a good day when nothing bends will not have many good days. A person who can receive the presence of God in a bent day has discovered something far more durable. They have discovered that the goodness of a day does not always disappear just because one piece of it hurts. They have discovered that an unexpected frustration does not own the whole sky. They have discovered that a hard hour does not have the right to rename the entire day. This kind of steadiness is not denial. It is maturity. It is what begins to happen when a believer’s emotional life is anchored in the Lord rather than whipped around by every shift in circumstance.
That is a very beautiful freedom. It means you do not have to hand your peace over every time life touches something tender. It means you do not have to spend the rest of the day in the emotional shape of the first hard moment. It means you can feel disappointment without becoming swallowed by it. You can feel concern without surrendering your center. You can acknowledge that something hurt and still keep your heart open to the goodness God may be bringing into the next hour. Some believers have not yet realized how much of their exhaustion comes from surrendering whole days to single moments. They let one frustration become the lens through which everything else is seen. Then they wonder why life feels so heavy.
Jesus invites you into another way. He invites you to stay with Him inside the day as it unfolds. He invites you to remember that His presence is not fragile. He does not vanish because the schedule changed. He does not withdraw because your mood dipped. He does not stand at a distance because one thing went wrong. His steadiness remains, and your good day can remain rooted in that steadiness even when the day itself contains very human imperfections. This is not a call to emotional numbness. It is a call to a deeper center. It is a call to live as a person who knows that the love of God is not so weak that a small disruption can cancel it from experience.
There is also a very personal kind of healing that happens when a believer lets themselves notice beauty again. Not borrowed beauty. Not staged beauty. Real beauty in ordinary life. The sound of the house before anyone else is awake. The sun on a wall. The relief of a deep breath. A moment of stillness in the car before walking into something demanding. A familiar voice. A simple meal. The way peace can arrive for a second without fanfare and somehow remind you that you are not abandoned in the middle of your responsibilities. God often reaches people through things like that. Not because those things are God in themselves, but because He is the giver of daily bread, and daily bread often comes in forms people overlook because they are waiting for fireworks.
A person who can no longer notice beauty usually has not become more mature. They have become more burdened. Their eyes have narrowed. Their inner world has tightened. Their soul has learned to scan for threat more quickly than it receives gift. This is one reason it matters to speak honestly about the reasons a believer should have a good day. A good day is not merely about emotion. It is about agreement. It is about agreeing with the truth that this life, though unfinished, is still being held together by the goodness of God. It is about agreeing with the truth that Christ has not left you to make meaning alone. It is about agreeing with the truth that heaven has not withdrawn its care from the little places where you actually live.
Sometimes I think believers are afraid that if they let themselves feel too much gladness, they will lose their seriousness. They think gravity and holiness belong together in a way that leaves little room for delight. There is a seriousness that is beautiful, and there is also a seriousness that is simply unresolved sadness trying to sound mature. Jesus was not shallow, and He was not joyless. He was not detached from sorrow, and He was not imprisoned by it either. The life of God in a human being has room for tears, room for strength, room for compassion, and room for a kind of gladness that remains alive even when the world is not easy. If you belong to Jesus, you do not honor Him by moving through every day like a person under permanent gray skies. You honor Him by trusting His nearness enough to receive the life He gives.
That does not mean every day will feel the same. There will be days that are more tender. There will be days where the soul feels slower. There will be days when you are carrying concern for people you love and you can feel that concern sitting right under the surface of everything. A good day is not always loud joy. Sometimes it is quieter than that. Sometimes it is the deep relief of knowing you do not have to carry the whole world in your own chest. Sometimes it is the gentle strength of remembering that your life is in the hands of God and that this alone gives the day a steadiness circumstances cannot create. Sometimes it is not exuberant at all. It is simply grounded. It is simply open. It is simply a day where your heart is not closed against grace.
That kind of goodness is worth more than people know. It is worth more than performance. It is worth more than appearance. It is worth more than the version of life that looks impressive online but feels hollow in private. A good day with Jesus may look almost unremarkable to anyone else. Yet inside, something holy is happening. A person is learning to live loved. A person is learning to stop treating their own life like an enemy. A person is learning to receive the care of God without pushing it away through constant inward resistance. A person is learning that trust can become a way of inhabiting time, not merely a statement they repeat when things are hard.
This changes how a believer sees the future too. Someone who is able to receive today starts to loosen their grip on tomorrow in healthy ways. They stop acting like the future will only be survivable if they mentally rehearse it enough. They begin to understand that the God who is present in this hour will also be present in the next one. The Lord who gave grace for this morning will not become absent by evening. The Christ who held them through one season does not misplace them in another. That slowly builds a stronger internal world. Hope becomes less like effort and more like atmosphere. A person begins to live with a softer face. They begin to move with less hidden argument against reality. Their life becomes more available to joy because it is less enslaved to prediction.
I think one of the most touching transformations in a believer’s life is when they stop being suspicious of goodness. They stop asking whether they are allowed to feel okay before everything is solved. They stop apologizing internally for moments of joy. They stop assuming every peaceful moment must soon be corrected by some fresh disappointment. They stop living in emotional flinch mode. That is not weakness. That is healing. It is what happens when the soul starts to believe that God’s care is not a theory and that daily life is not outside the reach of His tenderness.
Maybe that is the simple invitation in all of this. Maybe as a believer in Jesus, you should have a good day because the Lord who saved you did not intend for you to live unreachable by your own blessings. He did not come near so you could spend your life constantly braced against it. He did not fill your life with mercy so you could remain emotionally unavailable to it. He is not asking you to manufacture excitement. He is inviting you to receive what is already true. He is with you. You are loved. You are held. This day is not empty. This life is not godless. The ordinary places of your life are still being touched by the care of heaven.
So when morning comes, maybe the shift is smaller and deeper than people expect. Maybe it is not a dramatic speech. Maybe it is just this. Maybe it is choosing not to begin the day in argument with your own life. Maybe it is refusing to call the day dead before you have even lived it. Maybe it is letting your first inner movement be gratitude instead of dread. Maybe it is lifting your head and remembering that because Jesus is with you, the day in front of you already contains more possibility, more peace, and more hidden beauty than your tired mind first believes.
If you can begin there, something changes. The day may still have responsibilities. It may still have effort. It may still bend in unexpected ways. Yet underneath it there is a stronger current. You know whose you are. You know you are not alone. You know grace did not run out overnight. You know God is still active in the ordinary. You know a good day is not a reward for finally becoming flawless. It is a gift that can be received by a person who knows they are loved.
That is where I want to leave this. Not in pressure, but in permission. Not in performance, but in truth. Not in some polished version of inspiration, but in something quieter and more human than that. If you belong to Jesus, you do not have to earn the right to receive this day as good. You do not have to wait until everything in your life becomes easy. You do not have to stand outside of joy until all the unfinished parts of your story become settled. Christ is with you now, and because He is with you now, goodness is not far from you. Peace is not far from you. Hope is not far from you. The life of God is not far from you.
Receive the day.
Let it be touched by gratitude.
Let it be steadied by trust.
Let it be warmed by the simple truth that Jesus is near, and that His nearness is enough to make even an ordinary day carry more life than you can fully see.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from gry-skriver
Store språkmodeller, LLMer, kan lage sammenhengende og godt strukturerte tekster. Hvis du er god nok på prompting kan du også få resultatet til å se ut for det utrente øye som et menneske kunne ha skrevet det. Mange føler nok at de ikke kan lage like gode tekster selv. Det er ikke bare på jobb jeg mottar meldinger som helt klart er forfattet med god hjelp fra ChatGPT eller Claude. Det er da fristende å spørre en chatbot tilbake om å oppsummere for meg essensen. Så hvorfor skal vi skrive når maskinen kan gjøre det for oss og hvorfor skal vi lese når maskinen kan oppsummere?
Jeg har tatt universitetspedagogikk og et av kursene jeg tok handlet om å skrive for å lære. En viktig bruk av tekstskaping er å hjelpe oss rydde i tankene, finne sammenhenger og avdekke hva vi kan og hva vi bør lære. Som naturviter skrev jeg ikke fryktelig mange stiler eller essays, men matematiske utlendinger og lignende er også en form for skriving. Når vi overlater alt skrivearbeidet til maskinen får vi ikke brukt hjernen. Hvis du vil utvikle dine ferdigheter, bør du derfor gjøre deler av skrivearbeidet selv. Strukturer selv, be om kritikk. Skriv selv, be om forslag til forbedringer. Jeg kunne ha overlatt skrivingen til min venn, Claude, men jeg vil ikke bli for ukritisk. Jeg skriver fortsatt selv fordi jeg liker å holde hjernen i gang.
Når vi skriver er det også en slags sosial aktivitet. Vi ser for oss en mottaker eller publikum når vi skriver. Leseren ser for seg en avsender eller forfatter når de leser. Selv når vi skriver tørre, faglige tekster som vitenskapelige artikler eller tekniske rapporter, så er det en del av det å bygge en fagkultur. Hva skjer med den kulturen når du ikke lenger kan stole på at avsenderen er et menneske og heller ikke er sikker på at ledere vil være mennesker?
Jeg pleide å hate å skrive så andre kunne lese det jeg skriver. Etter å ha delt tekster mange nok ganger har jeg vent meg til det og jeg liker nesten å skrive så andre kan lese hvis de vil. Hvor mange kommer til å lese tekster på nett om et års tid? Aktiviteten på nett er litt døende. Men hvis vi mennesker slutter å skrive og lese på nett, vil internett slik vi kjenner det garantert dø. Og det er jo litt trist om vi bare sitter igjen med agenter og andre typer roboter som kommuniserer. Jeg liker fortsatt drømmen om verdensveven hvor vi kommuniserer oss mennesker imellom.
from davepolaschek
My sweetie sometimes asks what I’m doing in the shop, and sometimes I tell her.
Today, I did the preliminary turning on four cholla and resin pen blanks I poured a week ago. Since then, I repaired one of the blanks that broke coming out of the mold, drilled holes through the middles of them, glued in the pen tubes, and repaired another that broke as I was squaring up the end, and trimmed all four to the proper lengths. One had a bubble right next to the end of the pen tube, so I fixed that with a tiny bit of resin.
The blanks generally break when I start messing with them before they’ve had a chance to fully cure, because the slow hardener I’m using takes 3-4 days to finish curing. Before that, parts are brittle, and other parts are still soft and sometimes sticky.
After a weekend of zero shop time, but it was ok (I didn’t wait for the last patch to fully cure), I did the preliminary turning on the blanks today, and patched some bubbles in the resin with a contrasting color and CA glue, then sanded the blanks to 400 grit, and applied a coat of tung oil to protect the cholla canes.
That will cure overnight, and tomorrow I’ll sand to 800 or 2000 grit with wet-dry paper and deal with any remaining imperfections, and apply another coat of tung oil. Thursday (a couple more days with no shop time are coming this week), I can maybe finish polishing the blanks and assemble the pens, and have them ready on Friday.

Yeah, they’re pretty, but I always forget just how involved these things are, and just how long it takes to go from raw materials to something I can give away, because nobody would pay what I would need to ask for them to make a decent wage making these things, and I need to remember that when folks at the senior center tell me I should sell my pens, because everyone will want one!
Plus, my sweetie doesn’t ask what I’m up to in the shop as often any more. ;–)