from Noisy Deadlines

  • 🖥️ I’m in the middle of one of those crazy periods at work with two big deadlines at once. I do my best to make sure I wind down at the end of the day and don't carry all the stress into my personal life, but I still feel the consequences of a stressful work day: depleted energy so it's harder to make good choices for recovery afterwards. But overall, I'm doing the best I can. Going for a light walk right after work helps a lot.
  • 🎭 Stress at work means bubbling anxiety all day. I started drinking an espresso at work, and it’s visible that caffeine makes me feel more anxious. I can notice how it makes me jittery. My eyes start twitching. Instead of giving me energy, it exacerbates the stress. So no more coffee for me, it's not worth it.
  • 📠 I needed to renew my stomach medication this week, and I got a virtual consult with the same doctor that always renews it for me. All is great, he says he sent the prescription to the pharmacy. A few days later, I don't get any notification on the pharmacy app that the prescription is being processed. So I started a back and forth between the pharmacy and the clinic to make sure the prescription gets where it needs to go. I get on the phone, talk to the clinic, and they tell me I need to send an email for them to FAX the prescription again. I send the email, and I ask if they can just send me the PDF, and I'll print it and take it to the pharmacy, but they said they can't email me anything, but that they REFAXED it. The pharmacy gets nothing, and I reply the email, and they ask me to confirm the pharmacy's FAX number. Which I do, and they REFAX it again! Eventually, the pharmacy gets it, but at this point I don't know if it was really by FAX or some other form of communication. It's a mystery to me.
  • 📖 I'm really enjoying “Tiamat's Wrath” the 8th book of “The Expanse” series. It's tense, the stakes are super high, people die, there's a lot going on.
  • 🍄‍🟫 I've been having nightmares lately! I wake up between 3am and 4am in the middle of it. They are usually about me losing control of something (like while driving) or getting lost or loosing something.
  • ⌚ My partner got a Casio CA-53W-1, you know, the classic one with a calculator!
  • 🧩 We did some more of our “Starry Night” puzzle. It's a tough one!
  • 🎮 I started playing “Pillars of Eternity” again. I was missing a good RPG, and I never went too far in this game. My progress is extremely slow, because I have not been able to look at too many screens in my spare time and I like playing on my laptop (which, btw, runs great on Steam with Ubuntu).
  • 👏 I added to my Someday-Maybe list: Jailbreak my old Kindle Paperwhite and install KOReader as an experiment (thanks Joel for letting me know KOReader exists!)
  • I don't have the energy to make a list of videos or cool articles today, so maybe next time! 🙌

#weeknotes

 
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from SmarterArticles

On 6 April 2026, OpenAI dropped a thirteen-page document into the middle of an already feverish policy conversation and called it a starting point. Its title, “Industrial Policy for the Intelligence Age: Ideas to keep people first,” carried the hush of something self-consciously historic. Sam Altman, the company's chief executive, took to the airwaves and to his preferred medium of long, declarative blog posts to argue that the moment now demanded a new social contract on the scale of the Progressive Era and the New Deal. The proposals inside were the kind of ideas that, only a few years ago, would have made any Silicon Valley boardroom shudder. Robot taxes. A nationally managed public wealth fund seeded in part by AI companies themselves. Auto-triggering safety nets that activate when displacement metrics cross preset thresholds. A four-day work week financed by efficiency dividends. A reorientation of the federal tax base away from payroll and toward capital gains and corporate income, on the grounds that AI will hollow out the wages that fund Social Security.

It is, on its face, an extraordinary set of admissions. The company that has done more than any other to accelerate the present wave of labour disruption is now publicly conceding that the disruption is real, that it is large, that it cannot be left to the market to absorb, and that the welfare state as currently constituted will not survive the next decade without significant intervention. Coming from a firm valued at multiples that depend on continuing to deploy precisely the systems causing the disruption, the document reads less like a policy white paper and more like a confession with a list of conditions attached.

The Axios newsletter that broke the story gave it a fitting name. Behind the curtain, this was Sam's superintelligence New Deal. The framing matters. Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal was negotiated by an elected president and a Congress responding to a Great Depression that no private actor had volunteered to fix. The terms were set by the public, through its representatives, and imposed upon capital. Altman's New Deal arrives in a different order. Capital is at the table first. The terms are being drafted by the entity with the most to gain from a particular shape of settlement. The public, in this telling, is invited to refine, challenge, or choose among the proposals through what OpenAI describes as the democratic process.

Which raises the question that the document itself cannot answer. When the company engineering the disruption is also authoring the response, is the social contract that emerges meaningfully different from one negotiated by the public it affects? And if it is different, in what direction does the difference run?

The Document Itself

The blueprint sets out three stated goals. Distributing the prosperity of AI-driven growth broadly. Mitigating the risks associated with superintelligence. Democratising access to AI systems and to the broader AI economy. Each is the kind of phrase that has appeared in industry governance literature since ChatGPT's launch in November 2022, and each has the soft, familiar texture of a press release that has been workshopped through several rounds of communications review.

The mechanisms proposed underneath are sharper. The public wealth fund would give every American citizen a direct stake in AI-driven economic growth through a nationally managed vehicle that could invest in diversified, long-term assets capturing growth in both AI companies and the broader set of firms adopting and deploying AI. Seed capital would come, in part, from AI companies themselves. The automation taxes are described as taxes related to automated labour, with the explicit acknowledgement that the existing payroll-based revenue base cannot survive a transition to capital-intensive production. The auto-triggering safety net would scale unemployment benefits, wage insurance, and cash assistance upward as displacement indicators worsen, then phase the supports out as conditions stabilise. The four-day work week is presented not as a mandate but as a framework for employers and unions to use efficiency dividends to compress hours without compressing pay.

There are also sections on cyber and biological risks, which Altman has cited as the two most immediate threats from advanced systems, and on the need for a national industrial strategy to keep frontier model development inside the United States. These sit slightly oddly next to the labour and welfare proposals, although they share a common architecture. They are framed as urgent, as inevitable, and as requiring significant public investment in a direction that happens to align with OpenAI's commercial interests.

That alignment is not necessarily a mark against the substance of any individual proposal. A public wealth fund is a serious idea with a long intellectual history, from Norway's sovereign wealth model to the Alaska Permanent Fund to the academic work of economists like Anthony Atkinson. A four-day work week has been trialled in the United Kingdom, Iceland, and Spain with broadly positive results on productivity and worker wellbeing. Robot taxes have been debated since Bill Gates floated the idea in a 2017 interview with Quartz. Auto-triggering fiscal supports were a central feature of pandemic-era proposals from economists across the political spectrum. None of this is invented from nothing, and the document is careful to nod toward the lineage.

What is new is the source. These ideas, when they have appeared in the policy literature before, have come from think tanks, academics, trade unions, and the political left. They have not, as a rule, come from the firms whose business models would be most directly taxed by them. The sight of OpenAI publishing a blueprint that asks for higher capital gains taxes on people like Altman himself is genuinely unusual. Fortune drew the obvious comparison to JPMorgan Chase chief executive Jamie Dimon, who has periodically called for higher taxes on the wealthy as part of a broader argument about social stability. The intellectual honesty in both cases is real. So is the strategic logic.

The Strategic Logic of Pre-emptive Reform

There is a long tradition in political economy of capital-intensive industries authoring the rules that govern them. Standard Oil did it with the Interstate Commerce Commission. The major broadcasters did it with the Federal Communications Commission. Wall Street did it with vast tracts of the Dodd-Frank legislation. The pattern is well documented in the regulatory capture literature, most influentially by the late economist George Stigler in the 1970s, and the rationale is straightforward. When disruption is coming for an industry, or when the industry is causing disruption that threatens to provoke a public backlash, it is far better to be inside the room where the response is being drafted than to be the subject of someone else's draft.

OpenAI's blueprint fits this pattern with unusual precision. The labour disruption that Altman is now publicly acknowledging is not a hypothetical. It is already showing up in entry-level white-collar hiring data, in the contraction of contract translation work, in the restructuring of customer service operations, in the visible distress of junior coders and graphic designers and copywriters whose work has been automated faster than the labour market can absorb the displacement. By 2026 the political pressure for some form of response was already building. Unions had begun organising around AI displacement clauses in collective agreements. State legislatures had introduced bills targeting automated decision systems in hiring, lending, and benefits adjudication. The European Union had passed and then partially walked back, through the Digital Omnibus, several sections of the AI Act under industry pressure. The political ground was moving, and the question for any frontier AI lab was no longer whether there would be a regulatory response but what shape it would take.

In that context, getting in front of the conversation with a comprehensive blueprint is exactly what a sophisticated political operator would do. The document does several things at once. It signals seriousness, which inoculates against accusations of indifference. It frames the problem in terms that the company can live with, particularly the assumption that the underlying technology will continue to be developed and deployed at the current pace by the current players. It offers concessions on tax and welfare that are real but bounded, and that can be negotiated downward as the legislative process unfolds. It positions Altman personally as a statesman rather than a technologist, which has been a consistent feature of his public posture since the Senate testimony of May 2023. And it shifts the burden of proof onto critics who must now explain why the company's preferred solutions are insufficient, rather than arguing from scratch about whether any solutions are needed at all.

The critics noticed. Within hours of the blueprint's release, several prominent voices in AI policy were arguing that the document was a sophisticated exercise in what one called regulatory nihilism. The phrase, picked up by Fortune in its coverage, captures a particular concern. By proposing a vast and ambitious package of reforms that would require years of political work to enact, OpenAI was effectively pushing the response off into the indefinite future while continuing to deploy systems whose effects would compound in the meantime. The blueprint's own language about being a starting point for discussion was, in this reading, a way of ensuring that the discussion never quite reached a conclusion.

There is a more charitable interpretation, and it deserves to be taken seriously. Altman and his colleagues may genuinely believe that the labour transition ahead is severe enough to require something like the New Deal, and that the political system as currently constituted is unlikely to produce such a response without significant prompting from the companies closest to the technology. On this reading, the blueprint is an attempt to use the company's platform and credibility to move a conversation that would otherwise drift. That this also happens to align with OpenAI's commercial interests is a feature, not a bug, because the alignment is what makes the proposal credible to other actors in the room. A blueprint authored by a hostile party could be dismissed. A blueprint authored by the company being asked to pay the new taxes is harder to ignore.

Both interpretations can be true at the same time. The history of progressive reform is full of cases where commercial self-interest and public interest converged on the same policy, and where the resulting legislation was better than either could have produced alone. The New Deal itself was negotiated with significant input from sympathetic capitalists who saw stabilisation as essential to their long-term interests. The question is not whether private interest is involved in public policy, because it always is, but whether the structure of the conversation allows other interests to enter on equal terms.

Who Is Not in the Room

This is where the analogy to the historical New Deal begins to strain. Roosevelt's coalition was assembled from organised labour, urban political machines, agrarian populists, civil rights activists, social workers, and reform-minded intellectuals as well as sympathetic business figures. The Wagner Act, which guaranteed the right to organise, was fought through Congress over the explicit objections of most of American industry. The Social Security Act was drafted by a committee that included the labour secretary Frances Perkins, the first woman to hold a cabinet position, and her staff of social insurance experts, many of whom had spent their careers studying European welfare systems. The terms were set by the public side of the negotiation and the private side accepted them because the alternative, in the depths of the Depression, was worse.

The OpenAI blueprint enters a very different room. There is no equivalent labour movement at the table, because the workers most affected by AI displacement are scattered across freelance markets and white-collar professions that have historically been weakly organised. There is no equivalent agrarian populism, although there are stirrings of an anti-AI politics in rural and small-town America driven by data centre siting disputes and energy costs. There is no Frances Perkins, no figure inside the federal government with both the expertise and the political authority to draft an alternative blueprint from the public side. The Biden-era executive order on AI was rescinded in January 2025. The current administration's approach has been characterised by a mix of industrial policy support for domestic frontier labs and a general scepticism of regulation. State-level initiatives like California's SB 53 have faced what critics have described as intimidation campaigns from industry, including, by some accounts, from OpenAI itself.

Into that vacuum, the blueprint arrives with the structural advantage of being the only fully developed document in the room. Other actors will respond, and the response will shape the eventual outcome, but they will be responding to a frame that OpenAI has already set. The choice of which proposals to discuss, which mechanisms to specify, which thresholds to use for the auto-triggering safety net, which assets to include in the public wealth fund, all of these have been pre-decided in ways that will be very difficult to undo as the conversation moves forward. This is the agenda-setting power that political scientists have studied for decades, and it is one of the most consequential forms of influence in any policy debate. The party that writes the first draft almost always wins more than the party that responds to it.

The democratic process to which OpenAI defers is not, in this context, a neutral arbiter. It is a political system in which lobbying spending by AI firms has roughly tripled since 2023, in which several former OpenAI employees now hold senior positions at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and the AI Safety Institute, in which the trade press is heavily dependent on access to frontier labs for the scoops that drive its business model, and in which the public's attention is fragmented across a hundred competing crises. In such a system, the actor with the most resources, the clearest message, and the earliest draft will tend to win, regardless of the merits of the underlying proposals. The blueprint's appeal to democratic deliberation is sincere in tone and structurally favourable to its author in effect.

The Substance of the Proposals

It is worth pausing on the proposals themselves, because the tendency to focus on the politics of who is speaking can obscure the question of whether what is being said is any good. Taken individually, the elements of the blueprint range from reasonable to genuinely impressive.

The public wealth fund is the most interesting. The Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global, often cited as the model, was built from oil revenues and now owns roughly 1.5 per cent of every listed company in the world, generating dividends that fund a significant portion of Norwegian public spending. The Alaska Permanent Fund pays an annual dividend to every Alaskan resident from the state's oil and mineral revenues. Both have endured across multiple political cycles and across changes of government. A US version seeded by AI companies would face significant constitutional and structural questions about taxing authority, about how the fund's investments would be governed, about whether the dividends would be paid as cash or held in trust, and about how the fund would avoid becoming a vehicle for political patronage. None of these questions is unanswerable, and the existence of working models elsewhere demonstrates that the basic concept is feasible. The blueprint is vague on the specifics, which is both a weakness and a strength. The vagueness leaves room for negotiation, and it also leaves room for the proposal to be hollowed out in implementation.

The automation tax is more contested. Economists are divided on whether taxing capital substitution for labour is an efficient way to fund welfare or whether it distorts investment in counterproductive ways. A 2017 analysis by the European Parliament's legal affairs committee proposed and then dropped a robot tax after concluding that it would be administratively complex and economically uncertain. The South Korean government has effectively implemented a soft version by reducing tax incentives for automation investment. The blueprint's framing in terms of taxes related to automated labour is loose enough to encompass several possible designs, from a direct levy on revenue produced by automated systems to a broader shift in the tax base toward capital gains. The latter is the more economically defensible approach and the one that several mainstream economists, including the late Atkinson and the more recent work of Daron Acemoglu and Pascual Restrepo at MIT, have argued for in the context of AI displacement.

The auto-triggering safety net is the proposal closest to existing welfare state design. Several countries already have automatic stabilisers that scale unemployment benefits with macroeconomic conditions. The novelty in the blueprint is the proposal to use AI displacement metrics, rather than general unemployment, as the trigger. This raises a thorny measurement problem. There is no agreed-upon way to attribute job losses to AI specifically, as opposed to broader economic conditions, offshoring, demographic change, or business cycle effects. The Bureau of Labor Statistics has been working on improved measures, and academic work by economists at the Brookings Institution and the International Labour Organization has proposed several methodologies, but none is yet robust enough to serve as a legal trigger for benefit increases. The blueprint glosses over this difficulty.

The four-day work week is the most popular proposal in opinion polling and the most difficult to implement in practice. The 4 Day Week Global trials run in the United Kingdom in 2022 and 2023 reported productivity gains and worker satisfaction improvements, and similar pilots in Iceland from 2015 to 2019 produced comparable results. The challenge is that compressing hours without compressing pay requires either productivity gains large enough to absorb the cost or employer willingness to accept lower margins. The blueprint's framing in terms of efficiency dividends is a bet that AI productivity gains will be large enough to make the math work. Whether they are, and whether the gains will be shared with workers rather than captured by capital, is precisely the question that the rest of the blueprint is trying to address. There is a circularity here that the document does not quite acknowledge.

Taken together, the substance is serious. A version of this blueprint produced by a left-leaning think tank would be celebrated as a comprehensive progressive vision. The fact that it is being produced by OpenAI does not make the substance worse. It does, however, change what the substance means.

The Meaning of a Privately Authored Social Contract

A social contract, in the tradition that runs from Hobbes through Locke and Rousseau to John Rawls, is not primarily a set of policies. It is a story about legitimacy. It explains why the people governed by a particular set of institutions accept those institutions as binding upon them. The classical answer is that they accept the institutions because they would have agreed to them under fair conditions of deliberation, behind what Rawls called the veil of ignorance, where no one knew in advance which position they would occupy in the resulting society. The legitimacy of the contract depends on the fairness of the process by which it was negotiated.

A blueprint authored by a private company and offered for public ratification is a different kind of object. It may contain perfectly sensible policies. It may even be more progressive than what the political system would produce on its own. But it cannot, by its nature, satisfy the legitimacy criterion that the social contract tradition requires, because the process by which it was produced was not one of fair deliberation among equals. It was one in which a single actor, with enormous resources and a direct stake in the outcome, sat down and wrote what it thought the response should be, and then invited everyone else to react.

This matters even if the resulting policies are good. The legitimacy of welfare state institutions in the twentieth century rested in significant part on the fact that they were won through political struggle by the people who would benefit from them. The Wagner Act was legitimate because workers fought for it. The National Health Service in the United Kingdom was legitimate because it was the product of a Labour government elected on a manifesto that promised it. Social Security was legitimate because it was passed by a Congress responding to mass unemployment and political mobilisation. When the beneficiaries are the authors, the institutions feel like theirs. When they are the recipients of someone else's plan, even a generous one, the relationship is different. It is closer to charity than to right.

There is also a more practical concern. A social contract written by a private company can be revised by that company at will. It is not embedded in democratic institutions in a way that constrains future behaviour. If OpenAI's commercial interests change, or if the political climate shifts, the blueprint can be quietly walked back, the proposed taxes can be diluted, the safety nets can be conditioned on requirements that the company finds acceptable. The history of corporate social responsibility commitments is full of such revisions. The Business Roundtable's 2019 statement on the purpose of the corporation, which committed signatory chief executives to consider stakeholders beyond shareholders, has been studied extensively in the years since, and a 2022 paper by law professors Lucian Bebchuk and Roberto Tallarita at Harvard found little evidence that the signatories had actually changed their behaviour. Voluntary commitments from powerful actors tend to remain voluntary in practice, even when they are framed as binding in principle.

The OpenAI blueprint is not, formally speaking, a commitment at all. It is a set of recommendations addressed to policymakers. But the framing is such that the company gets credit for the proposals regardless of whether they are enacted. If they are enacted, OpenAI can claim authorship. If they are not enacted, OpenAI can claim that it tried, and that the failure lies with the political system. Either way, the company has shifted the moral terrain in its favour without taking on any actual obligation. The asymmetry is structural and difficult to reverse.

What a Public-Side Response Would Look Like

It is easy to criticise the blueprint and harder to say what a more legitimate process would produce. But the outlines are not impossible to sketch. A public-side response would begin with the question of who should be at the table and would expand the conversation accordingly. It would include trade unions, particularly the new generation of unions organising in tech, retail, and platform-mediated work. It would include civil society organisations that have been working on welfare state reform for decades. It would include academic economists across the ideological spectrum, not just those whose work is congenial to the AI industry. It would include representatives of the workers whose labour is being displaced, in forums designed to give them meaningful voice rather than ceremonial input. It would include international perspectives, given that the labour disruption is global and the policy responses in Europe and Asia are already further developed than in the United States.

It would also start from a different question. Rather than asking how to manage the transition that the AI companies are creating, it would ask what kind of transition the public actually wants, and at what pace, and with what safeguards. The answers might converge on some of the same proposals that the OpenAI blueprint contains. Or they might not. They might include more restrictive measures, such as mandatory disclosure of AI use in employment decisions, or moratoria on the deployment of certain systems in sensitive sectors, or stronger collective bargaining rights for workers in AI-exposed industries. They might include proposals that the blueprint does not contain, such as public ownership of frontier model training infrastructure, or mandatory licensing of foundation models on terms set by public authorities, or international treaties on the labour effects of AI deployment.

The point is not that any particular alternative is necessarily better. The point is that the deliberative process matters, and that a process in which the affected parties have genuine power to shape the outcome produces different results than one in which they are presented with a finished document and asked to react. Democratic legitimacy is not a property of policies. It is a property of the process by which policies are made.

The OpenAI blueprint, for all its sophistication and all its substantive merits, is the product of a process that does not meet that standard. It is closer to a corporate prospectus than to a constitutional moment. The use of New Deal language is not accidental. It is an attempt to borrow the legitimacy of a historical settlement that was won by very different means, and to apply it to a present settlement that is being authored on very different terms.

The Asymmetry That Will Not Resolve Itself

None of this is to say that OpenAI should not have published the blueprint, or that Altman is wrong to argue for the proposals it contains, or that the substance is not worth taking seriously. The document is a meaningful contribution to a conversation that needed to happen, and the company deserves some credit for being willing to put taxation of itself on the agenda. The criticism is not about intent. It is about structure.

The structural problem is that the actors who have the most information about what AI systems can do, the most capacity to model their effects, and the most resources to shape the policy response are the same actors whose commercial success depends on a particular shape of that response. There is no way to remove this conflict of interest without either nationalising the industry, which is not on the political horizon in any major economy, or building public capacity to match the private capacity, which would require sustained investment in regulatory expertise, academic research, and civil society infrastructure of a kind that has not been seen in the United States since the 1970s. Neither option is immediately available, which means that the conversation will continue to be shaped, for the foreseeable future, by documents like the OpenAI blueprint.

What can be done in the meantime is to be honest about what is happening. The blueprint is not a neutral contribution to a deliberative process. It is a strategic intervention by a powerful actor with a direct stake in the outcome. Treating it with the seriousness its substance deserves does not require pretending that the politics are anything other than what they are. A social contract negotiated by a private company is meaningfully different from one negotiated by the public it affects, not because the private actor is necessarily acting in bad faith, but because the conditions of fair deliberation are not met when one party writes the first draft and the others are asked to react.

The question, then, is not whether to engage with the blueprint. It is whether to engage with it as a final document or as a provocation. Treated as a final document, it threatens to lock in a particular framing of the AI labour transition that will be very difficult to revise later. Treated as a provocation, it could be the starting point for a much broader conversation in which the affected parties get a real seat at the table and the policies that emerge carry the legitimacy that comes from genuine democratic authorship. Which of these two things it becomes will depend less on the content of the blueprint itself than on whether other actors have the capacity and the will to mount a serious response.

So far, the signs are mixed. Trade unions have begun to organise around AI displacement, but they are starting from a weak position in the white-collar sectors most affected. Academic economists are producing important work, but it is fragmented and underfunded relative to industry-sponsored research. State legislatures are experimenting, but they are vulnerable to pre-emption by federal law. Civil society organisations are engaged, but their resources are tiny compared to the lobbying capacity of the major AI firms. The European Union has the regulatory capacity, but the Digital Omnibus has shown that even that capacity can be rolled back under sufficient industry pressure.

The blueprint, in this context, looks less like a New Deal and more like a new equilibrium. It is the moment at which the AI industry, having produced a labour disruption that it could not deny, moved to author the terms of the response. Whether that response becomes a genuine social contract or a managed concession will depend on whether the rest of the political system can rouse itself to insist on something more. The democratic process to which OpenAI defers is the only mechanism that can produce a different outcome, and it is precisely the mechanism that has been weakened by decades of corporate consolidation, declining union membership, regulatory capture, and the fragmentation of public attention. The blueprint is an artefact of that weakness as much as it is a response to the technology it describes.

History will record what happens next. The current moment may be remembered as the beginning of a new social settlement, comparable in scale to the one Altman invokes. Or it may be remembered as the moment when the language of the New Deal was borrowed by the very actors that the original New Deal was designed to constrain, and used to legitimate a settlement that the public had no real hand in writing. The difference between these two outcomes is not a matter of policy substance. It is a matter of who is in the room, who holds the pen, and whether the process by which the contract is negotiated is one that the people governed by it can recognise as their own.

For now, the pen is in Altman's hand. The room is the one that OpenAI has built. And the contract on the table is the one the company has written. The democratic process is being invited to refine, challenge, or choose among the options provided. Whether it will do anything more than that is the question that the next several years will answer.


References & Sources

  1. Altman, S. and OpenAI. “Industrial Policy for the Intelligence Age: Ideas to Keep People First.” OpenAI, 6 April 2026. https://openai.com/index/industrial-policy-for-the-intelligence-age/
  2. OpenAI. “Industrial Policy for the Intelligence Age” (full PDF). https://cdn.openai.com/pdf/561e7512-253e-424b-9734-ef4098440601/Industrial%20Policy%20for%20the%20Intelligence%20Age.pdf
  3. Allen, M. “Behind the Curtain: Sam's Superintelligence New Deal.” Axios, 6 April 2026. https://www.axios.com/2026/04/06/behind-the-curtain-sams-superintelligence-new-deal
  4. The Hill. “OpenAI's Sam Altman Releases Blueprint for Taxing, Regulating Artificial Intelligence.” 6 April 2026. https://thehill.com/policy/technology/5817906-openai-ai-policy-recommendations/
  5. TechCrunch. “OpenAI's Vision for the AI Economy: Public Wealth Funds, Robot Taxes, and a Four-Day Workweek.” 6 April 2026. https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/06/openais-vision-for-the-ai-economy-public-wealth-funds-robot-taxes-and-a-four-day-work-week/
  6. Fortune. “Sam Altman Says AI Superintelligence Is So Big That We Need a 'New Deal.' Critics Say OpenAI's Policy Ideas Are a Cover for 'Regulatory Nihilism.'” 6 April 2026. https://fortune.com/2026/04/06/sam-altman-says-ai-superintelligence-is-so-big-that-we-need-a-new-deal-critics-say-openais-policy-ideas-are-a-cover-for-regulatory-nihilism/
  7. Fortune. “Sam Altman's Big Pitch to Fix the Big AI Mess Sounds Like Jamie Dimon's.” 6 April 2026. https://fortune.com/2026/04/06/sam-altmans-capital-gains-taxes-4-day-workweek/
  8. Newsweek. “Sam Altman Proposes Robot Tax as American Economy Transforms.” 6 April 2026. https://www.newsweek.com/sam-altman-proposes-robot-tax-as-american-economy-transforms-11788200
  9. Decrypt. “OpenAI Calls for Global Shift in Taxation, Labor Policy as AI Takes Over.” 6 April 2026. https://decrypt.co/363431/openai-global-shift-labor-taxation-ai-sam-altman
  10. The Next Web. “OpenAI Calls for Robot Taxes, a Public Wealth Fund, and a Four-Day Week.” 6 April 2026. https://thenextweb.com/news/openai-robot-taxes-wealth-fund-superintelligence-policy
  11. The Tech Portal. “OpenAI Proposes AI Driven Economic Change Including Robot Taxes, Public Wealth Funds and a Four Day Work Week.” 6 April 2026. https://thetechportal.com/2026/04/06/openai-proposes-ai-driven-economic-change-including-robot-taxes-public-wealth-funds-and-a-four-day-work-week
  12. eMarketer. “OpenAI Moves to Shape AI Policy Debate.” 6 April 2026. https://www.emarketer.com/content/openai-moves-shape-ai-policy-debate
  13. Stigler, G. J. “The Theory of Economic Regulation.” Bell Journal of Economics and Management Science, 1971.
  14. Bebchuk, L. A. and Tallarita, R. “The Illusory Promise of Stakeholder Governance.” Cornell Law Review, 2020, with follow-up empirical work published 2022.
  15. Acemoglu, D. and Restrepo, P. “Robots and Jobs: Evidence from US Labor Markets.” Journal of Political Economy, 2020.
  16. Atkinson, A. B. “Inequality: What Can Be Done?” Harvard University Press, 2015.
  17. 4 Day Week Global. UK Pilot Programme Results, 2023. https://www.4dayweek.com/
  18. Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global, Norges Bank Investment Management public reporting. https://www.nbim.no/
  19. Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation public reporting. https://apfc.org/
  20. European Parliament Committee on Legal Affairs. Report on Civil Law Rules on Robotics, 2017.
  21. Gates, B. Interview with Quartz on robot taxation, February 2017.

Tim Green

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer

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

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

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

 
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from Douglas Vandergraph

Before the sky over Denver had fully turned from black to gray, Jesus was alone in quiet prayer near the edge of Cheesman Park. The city had not opened its eyes yet, but it was already carrying weight. A bus sighed somewhere far off. A siren passed and faded. The cold had a clean bite to it, and the trees held still as if they were listening. Jesus knelt without hurry. He did not pray like a man trying to force heaven open. He prayed like One who lived there and still loved the earth enough to stand inside all its grief. He lifted the tired, the hidden, the angry, the ashamed, the people who could no longer tell the difference between surviving and disappearing. When He finally opened His eyes, He turned not toward the skyline first, but toward a small silver car parked crooked along the curb, where someone inside was trying very hard not to make a sound.

The woman in the car had both hands wrapped around her phone, though the screen had already gone dark. She was not scrolling. She was holding it the way people hold bad news after they have read it too many times. The driver’s seat was leaned back farther than it should have been. A fast-food napkin sat crumpled in the cup holder. There was a grocery receipt on the dash. A child’s hoodie lay in the passenger seat. She had the look of somebody who had not chosen sleep in that car so much as failed to find anywhere else to fall apart. Jesus walked over and stopped a few feet away. He did not knock on the window right away. He let the silence make room for itself. When she finally saw Him, she startled hard, wiped her face with the heel of her hand, and straightened like shame had just caught her doing something illegal.

“You don’t have to fix your face before you open the door,” Jesus said.

She stared at Him through the glass. Most men would have made her more afraid. Something about Him made pretending feel harder instead. She cracked the door but did not get out.

“I’m fine,” she said, and even she looked tired of hearing herself say it.

Jesus rested a hand on the roof of the car and looked at her gently. “You have been sitting here for almost an hour with the key in your hand because going home feels heavier than staying cold.”

That landed so directly that she looked away. Her throat moved, but no words came. After a moment she gave a humorless laugh.

“Do you just do this to strangers before sunrise?”

“Only to the ones who are almost out of strength and still trying to act like they are not.”

Her name was Veronica Salas. She was thirty-nine. She worked payroll for a small contractor downtown. She had a seventeen-year-old son named Eli who had stopped believing her whenever she said everything would work out. She had a kitchen light that flickered because the bill had been late too many months in a row. She had a landlord who had gone from patient to formal. She had a younger brother who texted only when his life was on fire. She had slept in her car because the night before, Eli had stood in the hallway of their apartment and said, “I need you to stop talking like things are normal when they are not.” She had slapped the wall beside him, not him, but close enough to hear the sound afterward and hate herself for it. Then she had grabbed her keys and left because she did not trust what would come out of her mouth if she stayed.

She looked at Jesus as if she did not know whether to be angry or relieved. “I should go,” she said. “I have to get downtown.”

“You do,” He said. “But you do not need to go alone.”

She should have laughed again. She should have told Him no. She should have asked who He was. Instead she got out, shut the car door, and hugged her coat around herself like she had just stepped into weather she had been denying all winter. He walked beside her as she headed toward Colfax, and after a block she said, “I need to stop at the library before work. I have to print some things.”

Jesus nodded as if He already knew.

“I’m applying for help,” Veronica said, the words scraping on the way out. “Emergency rent help. I already hate saying that.”

“You hate needing what you cannot control.”

“No,” she said quickly. “I hate that I used to be the person people called when they needed help. I hate that I know what it sounds like now. I hate all the forms. I hate proving I’m desperate enough.”

Jesus looked at her, and His voice stayed quiet. “Need is not humiliation. But shame is loud, so it tries to rename everything.”

She said nothing to that. The truth of it made her jaw tighten. They kept walking. Morning spread slowly over the city. Delivery trucks started showing up. A man unlocked a storefront and immediately lit a cigarette like he needed smoke before speech. Veronica’s phone buzzed twice. She did not check it.

By the time they reached the Denver Central Library, the city had crossed into full morning, though it still felt to Veronica like the day had not asked her permission to begin. She stood outside for a second looking at the building as if it were a courtroom instead of a library. Jesus waited without pressing her. People moved in and out with backpacks, tote bags, headphones, strollers, rolled-up papers, tired eyes, and ordinary reasons for being there. Veronica hated that her reason felt like failure. She finally pushed through the doors and headed toward the public computers with the stiff, practiced speed of someone hoping confidence might become true if she moved fast enough.

Inside, the lights were kind in the way public places sometimes are. Not warm exactly, but steady. Veronica signed in for a computer and pulled up the rental assistance portal she had abandoned twice already. Every page asked for another proof of trouble. Income. bank statements. notice. ID. explanation. She felt exposed by the language. She could handle suffering better than paperwork about suffering. Jesus stood near enough to be present and far enough not to crowd her. Two computers down, a man in a dark work jacket kept opening a blank email and closing it again. He was maybe in his late fifties. Broad hands. Gray in the beard. A lunch sack at his feet. The subject line on the email had been the same every time: I know this is late. He would type three words, stop, erase them, and rub the back of his neck as if the sentence itself hurt.

Veronica noticed him because people in pain have a way of recognizing each other even when neither one wants to. She looked back at her screen. Her balance was lower than she had let herself see in one place. Her stomach dipped. She felt dizzy and angry all at once. Jesus leaned down slightly, not to read over her shoulder, but to bring His voice to where her panic had risen.

“You keep looking at the number like it is your name,” He said.

She swallowed. “It might as well be.”

“It tells you what is in the account. It does not tell you what is in you.”

“That sounds nice,” Veronica said, still staring at the screen. “Nice does not cover rent.”

“No,” Jesus said. “But truth keeps despair from becoming your landlord.”

She let out a breath that almost turned into a sob and stopped halfway. Her eyes burned. She hated crying in public. She hated almost crying even more.

The man in the work jacket stood up so suddenly his chair rolled back. He picked up his lunch sack and started to leave, but Jesus turned toward him before he got three steps.

“You do not need a better first sentence,” Jesus said. “You need an honest one.”

The man froze. Veronica looked up.

“I wasn’t talking to you,” the man said.

“You were,” Jesus answered, “just not out loud.”

Something in the man’s face folded. He stood there with one hand on the strap of the lunch sack. “I’ve been trying to write my daughter for six months.”

“Then stop trying to sound like a man who has been good for six months.”

The man’s mouth twitched, and for a second Veronica thought he might get offended. Instead he looked wrecked.

“I don’t know what to say to her.”

Jesus motioned toward the empty chair. “Sit down. Say the truest thing first.”

The man sat. His hands hovered over the keyboard. He stared at the screen for so long Veronica thought he might bolt again. Then he typed, slowly this time. He did not hide the words, and Veronica could not help seeing them when she glanced up.

I have rehearsed this apology so many times that I almost missed the truth. The truth is I was proud, and it cost me you.

He stopped there and wiped his eyes with his wrist in the rough, embarrassed way men often do when grief catches them in a place with fluorescent lights. Jesus did not praise him for starting. He just stayed. The man breathed differently after that, like someone who had finally stopped trying to outrun the room.

Veronica turned back to her application. Her hands still shook, but something in her had unclenched a little. Not because her problem was smaller. It was not. The rent was still due. Eli was still angry. Her brother Tomas was still somewhere in the city sending messages she did not want to open. But the room had quietly changed shape. She was no longer the only person in it failing to hold herself together.

When she reached the section that asked her to describe her hardship, she froze again. The blank box seemed crueler than the numbers had. She thought of all the versions she could write that would make her sound responsible, sympathetic, unlucky, respectable. Every one of them felt dishonest in some small way. Jesus stood beside her and said, “Write it without defending yourself.”

She gave Him a tired look. “That is not how people survive.”

“It is how people begin to come back.”

She stared at the blinking cursor, and then she typed: I kept telling myself this was temporary until temporary became the way we live. I have been paying part of everything and all of nothing. My son does not trust my reassurances anymore. I am asking for help because pride has not kept us housed.

She stopped after that and leaned back. It was raw. It was also true. She hated how relieved she felt seeing the truth in plain text.

When they left the computer area, the man in the work jacket was still writing. His lunch sack remained unopened. He looked up once as they passed, and he did not smile exactly, but he gave Jesus a small nod that held more gratitude than a speech would have. Veronica and Jesus walked deeper into the building for a moment because she needed space before going back outside. Near a row of chairs by the windows sat a young woman with a little boy asleep across her lap. The child’s shoes were untied. The woman kept refreshing her phone as if willing a reply to appear. Beside her was a manila envelope with a folded paper labeled FINAL NOTICE peeking out. Jesus slowed, not because she called out, but because desperation does not always sound like a voice.

The woman looked up at Him first, then at Veronica, then down again like she regretted being visible. “Do you know if there are outlets over here?” she asked, though her phone still had charge. She was asking for contact, not electricity.

“There are,” Veronica said. “Around the corner.”

The woman nodded but did not move. Up close she looked very young, though exhaustion had added years around her mouth. “I’m waiting for my sister,” she said, unprompted. “She said she’d come. She always says she’ll come.”

The little boy stirred, then settled again against her. Veronica saw the paper in the envelope and knew without needing details that this woman had been trying to keep a door from closing on her life for longer than one morning.

Jesus crouched a little so His voice would not wake the child. “How long have you been carrying everything by yourself and calling it patience?”

The young woman looked at Him sharply. Her eyes filled so quickly it was almost frightening. “I don’t know,” she whispered. “A while.”

Veronica watched Jesus place no performance around compassion. He did not ask for the whole story before offering dignity. He did not require this woman to explain why she had ended up here with a sleeping child and a paper sticking out of an envelope like a blade. He simply treated her as if her weariness mattered before it had been properly documented. Veronica felt something shift again inside herself, and it annoyed her because it felt like tenderness trying to break into a place where only control had been living.

Outside, the air had warmed a little. The traffic near Civic Center had thickened, and the city was fully awake in the way cities do, with urgency that pretends to be purpose. Veronica checked her phone at last. Four missed calls from work. One message from Eli. Two from her brother Tomas.

Her chest tightened.

Eli’s text said, Don’t tell me again that you’ve got this. Just tell me the truth one time.

The first message from Tomas had come at 2:13 a.m. You awake.

The second, at 6:48 a.m. Sorry. Forget it.

Veronica shoved the phone back into her pocket.

“You read them both with the same fear,” Jesus said.

“My son is angry,” she answered.

“And your brother is disappearing.”

She stopped walking. “You say that like it’s new.”

“What is new is that you are running out of ways to lie to yourself about what it is costing you.”

She wanted to defend herself, but the defense had become too familiar. She was tired of hearing it even in her own head. They crossed toward Civic Center Park, and she kept her eyes on the ground because if she looked at Jesus too long, she might say more than she wanted to. Around them, people hurried past with coffee, folders, lanyards, earbuds, and deadlines. A man argued into a headset about numbers. A woman in running shoes carried a garment bag and looked like she had already lived two days before noon. The city was crowded with people managing private emergencies while pretending to participate normally in public life. Civic Center always seemed to gather that kind of energy and hold it in the open.

They sat for a while on a bench where Veronica could see the City and County Building across from the park. She had walked by this area a hundred times and never really seen the faces around her. Now each one seemed to carry a story that had almost tipped over. A man in paint-stained jeans stared at his hands like he was trying to remember what kind of worker he still was. A woman in office clothes pressed two fingers hard against the bridge of her nose while reading an email. A teenager in a school hoodie kicked at the edge of the pavement with a force that had nothing to do with his shoe. Jesus saw them all without staring. That unnerved Veronica more than if He had singled one person out. It was the steadiness of His attention. Nothing in Him was scattered. Nothing in Him needed to perform concern. He was present with a kind of wholeness Veronica had almost forgotten people could carry.

“Did you ever think,” she said after a long silence, “that maybe some people just don’t have enough in them? Maybe that’s the truth. Maybe some of us start with enough and then life just keeps taking.”

Jesus turned toward her. “Life takes. So do grief and fear and years of carrying too much. But you are not empty because you were made badly. You are worn because you have been trying to be both wall and shelter.”

She laughed once, and this time there was pain in it instead of sarcasm. “That sounds right.”

“It is also unsustainable.”

She leaned forward, elbows on knees. “My brother called me last month from Lawrence Street and said he was done sleeping where people could steal his shoes. I sent money I did not have because he said he needed a room for one night. Then he vanished again. Yesterday Eli found the transfer on my banking app and lost it on me. Said I would help Tomas destroy himself before I would tell the truth in our own house.” She swallowed hard. “The worst part is he wasn’t completely wrong.”

Jesus did not answer right away. He let the sentence stay in the air where it belonged. “What do you think the truth in your house is?” He asked.

Veronica looked out toward the street. “That I am scared all the time. That I keep thinking if I can just get through one more week, I can make everything feel normal again. That I talk calm when I’m panicking. That I am starting to resent everybody I love because they all need something.”

Her voice had gone thin by the end. She hated hearing that last part spoken aloud. It made her feel like a cruel woman. But Jesus did not flinch.

“Thank you for not dressing it up,” He said.

“That wasn’t meant to be noble.”

“No. It was meant to be true.”

A man sat down on the far end of the bench without asking. He wore a clean shirt and a tie loosened at the neck. Not homeless. Not careless. Just wrecked. He kept his briefcase on his lap with both hands as if it might otherwise blow away. Veronica glanced over once and then tried to look away respectfully, but the man spoke before she could.

“I can’t go back in there,” he said, looking ahead.

Neither Veronica nor Jesus asked in where. The man answered anyway.

“I told my wife I was at work.” He laughed under his breath, ashamed of how thin the lie sounded once spoken. “I got laid off forty minutes ago. Twenty-one years. They gave me a packet and thanked me for my professionalism.” His face hardened on that last word. “I have three kids. One in college. My youngest needs braces. I sat in my car for ten minutes and couldn’t make my hands stop shaking, so I parked and came over here because I couldn’t stand the idea of going home and becoming the thing that ruined the afternoon.”

Jesus looked at him with the same quiet attention He had given Veronica. “You are not the worst thing that happened to you today.”

The man’s eyes reddened instantly. “That is easy to say when you are not the one walking through the front door.”

“You are right,” Jesus said. “Walking through the front door will still be hard. But fear is already writing the evening for you, and fear is a cruel author.”

The man breathed out slowly, like something in him had been braced for judgment and found none. “So what do I say?”

“The first true sentence,” Jesus answered. “Not the polished one. Not the strong one. The true one.”

The man nodded without looking at either of them. Veronica thought about the man from the library and his email. She thought about her own son asking for truth one time. The pattern was becoming impossible to miss, and it made her feel seen in a way that was both comforting and merciless.

Her phone buzzed again. This time it was Eli calling.

She stared at the screen until it almost stopped. Then she answered.

“What,” she said, too sharp at first.

A pause. City noise on his end. Then Eli said, “I’m not at school.”

“I guessed.”

Another pause. “I’m downtown.”

Fear rose so fast it made her legs weak. “Where.”

“Union Station.”

She closed her eyes. “Why.”

“I don’t know,” he snapped. Then softer, “I just didn’t want to go where I was supposed to go.”

She pressed her fingers against her forehead. “Are you alone?”

“Yes.”

“Stay there.”

He did not answer.

“Eli.”

“I’m here,” he said. “Just don’t come down here acting like it’s all handled. I can’t do that today.”

The line went dead.

Veronica stood too fast. Her whole body had changed temperature. “I have to go.”

Jesus rose with her.

“He’s angry,” she said. “And stupid. And seventeen. And if Tomas is anywhere near there—”

“He needs truth more than your panic,” Jesus said.

“That is very convenient for you to say while I am trying not to lose my mind.”

“Yes,” He said softly. “Which is why I am saying it now.”

She wanted to yell. Instead she started walking fast, and He matched her pace without strain. Downtown kept moving around them, indifferent and loud. Veronica’s mind ran ahead into every bad outcome. Eli leaving. Eli finding Tomas. Eli saying the one thing she could not bear. Eli looking at her the way people look at adults when they realize the adults do not actually know what they are doing. On the way, Jesus said nothing for almost a full block, and then, just as Veronica felt her thoughts beginning to tip into chaos, He spoke.

“You think this day is exposing your failure.”

“It is.”

“No. It is exposing how long you have been carrying what was never meant to be carried by force.”

She did not answer.

“You believe that if you tell the truth, the whole structure falls.”

“What if it does?”

“Then it was not holding. It was hiding.”

That made her angry because it was true, and truth always seemed to arrive without helping with logistics first. Still, she kept walking beside Him.

When they reached Union Station, the building was full of movement. Travelers dragged suitcases across the floor. Commuters cut through with practiced speed. A couple argued in the middle of the hall without lowering their voices. Someone laughed too loudly near the coffee counter. The great room held that strange public mix of motion and pause, people arriving, leaving, stalling, escaping, waiting for messages, pretending not to be waiting for messages. Veronica’s eyes scanned every corner so fast she almost missed Eli at first. He was sitting against a wall near the side of the hall, backpack at his feet, elbows on knees, staring at nothing. He looked older when he was angry and younger when he did not know he looked lost. Both were happening at once.

She started toward him and then slowed, because Jesus had slowed.

“What now?” she asked, voice tight.

“Now,” He said, “you stop trying to win the moment.”

Veronica looked at her son across the room. Eli had not seen them yet. Her chest hurt. She thought of the hallway the night before. She thought of the way he had said one time like he was not asking for perfection, only relief from being managed. Around them, Denver kept moving through the station as if nobody’s heart were breaking. Jesus stood beside her with the same stillness He had carried in the dark at the park, and Veronica realized with sudden force that this day was not about getting back control. It was about the end of pretending control had ever been the thing saving them.

Then her phone buzzed one more time.

This time it was Tomas.

She opened the message and felt the blood leave her face.

Don’t bring Eli to look for me. I’m at Lawrence. I messed up again.

Veronica stared at the words until they blurred. She looked from her son across the hall to Jesus beside her, and for the first time all day she did not ask Him what to do because some part of her already knew the answer would not be clean, quick, or comfortable. It would be true. That was what frightened her. That was also what she had needed all along.

She lifted her head and saw Eli looking at her from across the room. He had finally noticed her, and in the second before either of them moved, his face held the whole ugly mixture that had been living between them for months. Relief. Anger. Exhaustion. Love that did not know where to go. Veronica put her phone down at her side and walked toward him more slowly this time. Jesus stayed beside her until they were close enough for Eli to see Him clearly, then He stopped just a little behind, not stepping out of the moment, but not crowding it either. Eli stood up when his mother reached him, though it looked more like instinct than decision.

“You came fast,” he said.

“You called.”

He gave a small shrug. “You say that like it means something.”

“It does.”

He looked away. His jaw tightened. There were shadows under his eyes she had missed in the rush of being offended by his attitude. He had not just been angry lately. He had been tired in a way no seventeen-year-old should be tired.

Veronica opened her mouth with the old habit ready to come out, the one that would smooth things, shorten things, control the damage. She had it almost formed before she stopped herself. For one hard second, she felt like she was stepping off a ledge with no rail.

“I do not have this handled,” she said.

Eli looked back at her so fast it almost hurt to see. “What?”

“I said I do not have this handled.” Her voice shook now, but she kept going. “I have been trying to make everything sound smaller than it is. I thought if I kept you calm, I could figure it out before it touched you more than it already had. But it already touched you. It has been touching you for a long time.”

The anger in his face did not vanish. It changed shape. It lost some of its armor.

He stared at her and said, “Then why do you keep doing that?”

“Because I am scared,” she answered, and there it was again, the truth making room even while it cost her something. “Because every time I look at what things really are, I feel like I am about to let the whole house fall on top of us. Because if I say it out loud, then I have to hear it too.”

Eli breathed in through his nose and let it out slowly. “You think I don’t already hear it?”

That hit her harder than accusation would have. She nodded once because denying it would have been cowardly now. “I know you do.”

He kicked lightly at his backpack with the side of his shoe. “I can hear you in the kitchen when you think I’m asleep. I hear when you stop talking if it’s Tomas. I know when you look at your bank app. I know when there’s no groceries but you say you’re not hungry.” He swallowed and looked off toward the big windows. “I’m not stupid.”

“I know you’re not.”

“No, you say that now.” He rubbed one hand over the back of his neck. “What I’m tired of is feeling crazy because you keep saying calm stuff in a house that doesn’t feel calm at all.”

Veronica felt tears pushing up, but this time she did not fight them because fighting them would have turned the whole moment into performance again. “You’re right.”

That seemed to unsettle him more than if she had argued. He had prepared for defense. He had prepared for guilt. He had prepared for being told he was making things worse. He had not prepared for honesty.

Jesus stepped closer then, not as an interruption, but because the truth had made enough room for Him to speak. He looked at Eli with the same calm He had carried all day, and Eli, who would normally have recoiled from some strange man stepping into family business, did not move away.

“You have been carrying watchman’s eyes,” Jesus said.

Eli frowned slightly. “What does that mean?”

“It means you stopped being only a son. Part of you has been standing guard all the time.”

Eli’s face changed. He looked embarrassed by how exactly that named what he had not known how to say. “Yeah,” he said after a moment. “Something like that.”

“That is heavy work for a grown man,” Jesus said. “It is even heavier for a boy who still needs to breathe.”

Eli looked down. Veronica realized in that moment that she had spent months worrying about rent and Tomas and work and pride and appearances, and somehow had not fully let herself see what fear had done to her son’s posture, to his sleep, to the way he listened for danger inside ordinary evenings.

She stepped closer to him. “I’m sorry.”

He did not answer right away. His eyes were wet now too, which he hated, and she knew he hated it because he got that hard look boys get when they think feeling too much is somehow a public mistake. But he did not turn away.

“Where is he?” Eli asked quietly.

Veronica looked at the phone still in her hand. “Lawrence Street.”

He nodded once, like he had expected that.

“You knew?” she asked.

“I guessed.” His voice had lost some of its edge. “He always goes where everything already looks broken. Makes it easier for him not to be the worst thing there.”

Jesus looked at him, and there was no surprise in His face, only sadness without despair. “That is one of shame’s favorite lies.”

Eli glanced at Him. “Who are you?”

Jesus answered without drama. “I am the One standing here while the truth is being said.”

It was not the kind of answer most people would have known what to do with. But this had not been a normal day for a long time now. Eli looked at Him, then at his mother, and finally said, “Okay.” It was not belief exactly, not in the full grown sense, but it was not rejection either. It was the kind of okay people say when something in them recognizes presence before it fully understands it.

They left Union Station together. Outside, the afternoon had started tipping toward evening in that Denver way where the light can still look clear even when the day is already moving on. Traffic rolled through downtown. People crossed with bags and phones and coffee and the private burdens that never show on maps. Veronica walked between her son and Jesus with the feeling that her life had begun telling the truth faster than she had planned. She did not feel better yet. She felt exposed. But there was a strange relief under it, like a room finally opening a window after months of stale air.

As they headed toward Lawrence Street, Eli shoved his hands into his hoodie pocket and asked, “Are we helping him again or are we just finding him?”

The question went straight through Veronica. It was not cruel. It was tired.

She answered carefully because Jesus had burned through her shortcuts already. “I don’t know yet.”

“That’s the problem,” Eli said. “It’s always that. We don’t know, and then somehow it turns into you giving him what we don’t have.”

“I know.”

He looked at her, frustrated all over again. “Then why does it keep happening?”

She opened her mouth and stopped. Jesus answered before she could soften it into something safer.

“Because love without truth becomes fear wearing a kind face,” He said.

Neither of them spoke for a few steps after that.

Veronica finally said, “I thought if I stopped helping him, I’d be the one who buried him.”

Jesus looked ahead as they walked. “You are not strong enough to keep another man alive by lying to him.”

The sentence was so clean it almost felt sharp. Veronica let it work on her. She had spent years translating guilt into obligation and calling it mercy because the other version felt too hard. Now the words sat in her chest like something undeniable. She had not been saving Tomas. She had been trying to outrun her own terror of losing him. That was not the same thing.

Lawrence Street had its usual mix of movement and weariness when they got there. Delivery trucks passed. People stood near walls with backpacks, blankets, cigarettes, tired faces, and that particular guarded posture people learn when too many days have been fought in public. There was no single look to human collapse. Some people still wore work boots. Some had clean jackets. Some looked like they had once expected a completely different life and had simply run out of distance between who they were and what had happened. The city moved around them, efficient and mostly uninterested. Veronica hated that part most. Not that people were cruel all the time, but that suffering could become ordinary scenery in a place with glass towers and lunch meetings and tourists asking for directions.

They found Tomas half a block down, sitting on the low edge of a building wall with his knees up and his forearms laid across them. His hair was longer than she remembered. His cheeks were hollow. He still had the same eyes their mother had given both of them, but shame had done something to the way he held them. He kept them lowered as if eye contact itself could bill him for what he owed. Beside him was a duffel bag that looked too light to contain anything like a life. He saw Veronica first and shut his eyes once like a man bracing for impact. Then he saw Eli and his whole face tightened.

“I told you not to bring him,” he said.

“I’m not a package,” Eli shot back. “She didn’t bring me. I was already downtown.”

Tomas rubbed both hands over his face. “Great.”

Veronica stood in front of him and felt every old role trying to rush back into place. Older sister. Rescuer. Interpreter. Shield. Furious witness. The one who cleaned up the emotional blood after everybody else bled out in public. She could feel the old script reaching for her. Jesus stood close enough for her to remember she did not have to let it drive again.

“Tomas,” she said, and her voice came out steadier than she felt. “Look at me.”

He didn’t.

“Tomas.”

He finally lifted his eyes. She could smell the stale sweat on his clothes. Not drunk right now. Not high in any obvious way. Just used up and ashamed and already angry at being seen like this.

“What,” he said.

“You said you messed up again.”

He gave a small laugh that carried no humor at all. “That narrows it down.”

“Tell me what happened.”

His head dropped back against the wall. “I had a bed for two nights. Then I didn’t. I had work for four days unloading a truck. Then I didn’t. I had a guy who said he could help me get into something more stable if I paid him back from the first check. Then he disappeared.” He shrugged like none of it mattered even while every line in his face said it did. “That enough detail for you?”

“Why did you text me not to bring Eli?”

At that, he finally looked at his nephew properly, and the self-hatred in it was almost harder to watch than open despair. “Because I’m tired of being what he sees when he thinks about growing up wrong.”

Eli flinched at that, not because it was inaccurate, but because honesty has a way of uncovering tenderness people were using anger to protect.

Jesus stepped forward then. Tomas saw Him and frowned. “Who’s this?”

“The only person here not pretending,” Eli muttered.

Tomas stared between them. “That doesn’t answer the question.”

Jesus did not introduce Himself the way people might expect. He said, “You keep reaching for the edge of destruction because it matches what you already believe about yourself.”

Tomas’s expression went flat and hostile in the space of a breath. “You don’t know me.”

“I know shame when it speaks through a man so often that he mistakes it for his own voice.”

Tomas stood up too quickly, almost stumbling, then catching himself before the stumble finished. “I don’t need this.”

“No,” Jesus said. “You need the truth. This is simply what it sounds like when it arrives before you are ready.”

Tomas swore under his breath and started to grab his duffel, but Eli spoke before he could move.

“You always do that,” Eli said.

Tomas looked over at him, annoyed and wounded at once. “Do what.”

“Act like leaving is the same thing as having a point.”

That landed. Veronica looked at her son and saw that whatever today became, it had already crossed into territory none of them could walk back from. Eli was no longer speaking like a kid begging adults to behave. He was speaking like someone who had been living under the weight of adult fallout and had finally stopped agreeing to keep it politely hidden.

Tomas gave a short laugh and shook his head. “You don’t know enough to talk to me like that.”

“I know enough,” Eli said, voice rising. “I know she sends money we don’t have. I know she lies and says we’re okay when we’re not. I know every time your name pops up, the whole apartment changes. I know I’m supposed to act understanding because your life is hard, but our life is hard too.”

Veronica could see Tomas brace himself for defense, for offense, for some old pattern where pain got thrown around like broken glass and everybody left bleeding. Jesus did not allow the moment to slide there.

“Let him finish,” He said.

No one argued with Him.

Eli’s eyes were bright now. “I’m not mad because you’re struggling. I’m mad because every time we think maybe things can breathe, you show up like a storm and everybody has to make room for your disaster again.”

Tomas stared at him in silence. Whatever he had expected, it had not been that. Veronica saw something naked cross his face then, something younger than the rest of him. Not childish. Wounded. Like he had spent so long being the family’s open wound that he had almost forgotten other people felt cut too.

“I know,” Tomas said at last, and his voice had lost its sarcasm. “You think I don’t know that?”

Eli shook his head. “No. I think you know and then still do it.”

That was worse, because it was closer to the truth. Tomas looked down. For a long moment, nobody moved. The street kept breathing around them. A truck rattled by. Somebody laughed from farther up the block. A woman with two plastic bags walked past without looking at any of them because she had her own day to survive.

Then Veronica heard herself say what she had never said cleanly before. “I cannot keep giving you money.”

Tomas lifted his head fast, defensive already. “I didn’t ask for money.”

“No,” she said, “but you sent the text that always comes right before you ask, or right before I offer because I can’t stand the thought of what happens if I don’t. I’m telling you now. I cannot keep doing that.”

His face hardened. “So that’s it. You came down here to make a speech.”

“No.” She shook her head. “I came down here because I love you. And because I’m done calling fear by the name of love.”

Jesus glanced at her then, not with surprise, but with quiet approval that did not flatter. It steadied her.

Tomas laughed once, bitterly. “That’s convenient.”

“It would be convenient if I walked away and told myself you were hopeless.” Her voice got stronger the more honest it became. “This is harder than that. I am not giving you cash. I am not lying to Eli about the damage anymore. I am not pretending every emergency means I can fix you. But I am not walking away from you either.”

He said nothing.

She took a breath. “If you want help, I will stand next to you while you take real help. Not one-night help. Not panic help. Not the kind that keeps everything exactly the same by tomorrow.”

Tomas looked at her like the offer offended him because it required him to be present for his own rescue. “You think I haven’t tried?”

“I think you keep choosing the version that lets you vanish again.”

That one hit. He looked away.

Jesus spoke into the silence with the same calm He had carried all day. “You are tired of collapsing. But collapse has become familiar, and familiar pain can feel safer than unfamiliar healing.”

Tomas pressed both palms against his eyes. “I don’t even know how to start anymore.”

Jesus answered without softness turning false. “Start by ending the lie that you are beyond being reached.”

Tomas lowered his hands. His eyes were red. He looked older than Veronica remembered and younger than she had allowed herself to see. Shame had turned him into somebody even he did not know how to stand beside.

A man from farther down the block called out to Tomas, asking if he was coming. Tomas looked in that direction, then back at Veronica, then at Eli, then finally at Jesus. His whole body carried the pull of old momentum. Leave. Dodge. Delay. Promise later. Vanish before truth asks too much. Veronica could almost watch the battle cross his face.

Jesus did not rush him. He simply said, “You have mistaken open doors for freedom. Some doors lead you back into the same room.”

Tomas looked down at his duffel bag. “And if I can’t do this right?”

Jesus said, “Then do not begin with right. Begin with real.”

Something in Tomas broke then, though not dramatically. He did not collapse to the pavement. He did not make a speech. He just sat back down against the wall, put both hands over his mouth, and cried like a man who had been trying very hard to keep from becoming audible. Veronica felt it in her own chest before she moved. She crouched in front of him, not to rescue him out of the feeling, but to stay there while it came.

Eli stood a few feet away, stiff and unsure. He was not ready to turn into tenderness as fast as grace sometimes asks. Jesus looked at him and said quietly, “Mercy does not erase what it cost you.”

Eli nodded once. That mattered. He needed to hear that he was not required to become instantly soft in order to be good.

After a while, Tomas wiped his face and said, “I’ll go in.”

There was no trumpet in it. No big vow. Just a man saying yes with almost nothing left. Sometimes that is the holiest kind of yes because it is not inflated by confidence.

They walked with him to the Lawrence Street Community Center. The staff there had the practiced eyes of people who had seen too much to romanticize suffering and too much grace to reduce people to their worst week. Veronica handled the paperwork beside Tomas when he stumbled over dates. Eli sat nearby, quiet now, watching his uncle try not to disappear from his own life for once. Jesus stood close, saying very little. He did not need to fill the room. His presence changed rooms without trying. When Tomas had to answer questions he clearly hated answering, Jesus did not spare him the dignity of being involved. That struck Veronica deeply. Jesus was merciful, but His mercy was never infantilizing. He never treated broken people like furniture someone else had to move.

At one point Tomas looked over at Veronica and whispered, “You really weren’t going to hand me cash.”

“No,” she said.

A strange half-smile touched his face. “Good.”

That almost undid her. Not because it solved anything, but because it meant some buried part of him was more relieved by truth than by rescue. He knew what panic money did. He knew the road it bought. He had just not known how to ask for something harder.

When the intake process was done for the evening and Tomas had a place to be that was not the sidewalk, the day had already sunk toward dusk. The light outside the building had gone softer. Denver can look almost painfully clear at that hour, like the mountains have come closer just to remind the city how small human noise really is. Tomas stood by the door with his duffel and looked at Veronica, then Eli.

“I don’t know what I’m supposed to say,” he admitted.

Jesus answered from beside them. “Then say only what is true.”

Tomas nodded slowly. He looked at Eli first. “I am sorry you had to grow around my damage.”

Eli swallowed. He did not rush toward forgiveness or away from it. “Okay,” he said quietly, which was more honest than pretending the wound had closed in one sentence.

Then Tomas looked at Veronica. “I have used your love like it had no bottom.”

She closed her eyes for one second because hearing him say it out loud was both painful and clean. “I know.”

“I am sorry.”

She nodded. “I know that too.”

It was not a movie ending. Nobody became easy. Nobody floated away healed in a single exchange. But something real had shifted. The lies had lost ground. That mattered more than a dramatic scene ever could.

When Tomas went inside, Veronica stood on the sidewalk and felt the strange emptiness that comes after a long-held emergency changes form. She was not relieved exactly. Too much remained uncertain. But the panic in her chest was no longer driving the car. She looked at Eli. He looked wrung out.

“Are you hungry?” she asked.

That almost made him smile. “Yeah.”

“There’s not much at home.”

“I figured.”

She let out a breath that was nearly a laugh. “I’ve got enough for something small.”

Jesus looked at both of them and said, “Come.”

They ended up walking a while before eating because nobody seemed ready to turn the day into a normal meal yet. They moved west toward Confluence Park as evening settled over the city and the air cooled again. The river caught the fading light in broken strips. Cyclists passed. Couples walked dogs. Friends sat on the grass pretending life was simpler than it was. The city did what cities do at dusk. It held beauty and damage in the same frame without explaining either one. Veronica used to think peace meant the damage had finally gone quiet. Now she wondered if peace might be something else, something stronger, something that could stand beside pain without being swallowed by it. (denvergov.org)

They sat for a while near the water. Eli had finally started speaking like a teenager again in brief, ordinary pieces, which felt almost holy after the day they had just walked through. He complained about a teacher. He said something dry about public transit. He asked Veronica if she had really slept in the car, and when she admitted she had, he muttered, “That’s bleak,” in a tone that somehow made both of them laugh for the first time all day. The laugh was small and tired, but real. It came from a place that had room to breathe again.

After a little while, Eli looked at Jesus and asked, “How did you know all that stuff?”

Jesus smiled faintly, not as a performance, but like someone amused by how little people know about how deeply they are seen. “Because nothing true about you is hidden from Me.”

Eli held His gaze longer this time. “That should sound creepy.”

“It would,” Jesus said, “if I wanted to use what I see against you.”

Eli nodded slowly. “But you don’t.”

“No.”

The boy looked out at the water again. “I don’t know what to do with that.”

“You do not need to do anything with it tonight,” Jesus said. “Let it be true before you try to organize it.”

Veronica listened and felt something inside her soften that had been hard for longer than she knew. She had spent so much of life managing, arranging, softening, delaying, translating, preventing. The possibility that truth could be allowed to stand before it was solved felt almost foreign. It also felt like rest.

They got cheap food from a small place nearby and ate without making the meal carry too much symbolism. Veronica liked that. Sometimes people ruin sacred days by trying to narrate them into neat lessons before the blood has even dried. This was not neat. Her rent was still due. Her job still expected her in the morning. Tomas had not suddenly become reliable. Eli still carried strain that would not vanish overnight. But the lies had cracked, and Jesus had stood in the middle of the cracking without leaving. That changed the shape of everything.

As the last of the light thinned out of the sky, Eli got quieter again. “Mom.”

“Yeah.”

He looked down at the wrapper in his hands. “I’m still mad.”

“I know.”

“But I’m not mad the same way.”

She looked at him and waited.

He shrugged. “I think I was starting to feel like if I got scared, then you’d break more. So I just stayed angry instead.”

Veronica closed her eyes briefly at the honesty of that. “I’m sorry.”

“I know.” He breathed out. “I just need you to not talk to me like I’m too little to know when life gets weird.”

“I won’t.”

That promise frightened her because now she knew what it cost to keep it. It would require courage tomorrow too. But it also felt like a threshold she did not want to cross back over.

Jesus stood then, and they both looked up at Him. Evening had nearly given itself over to night. The lights of downtown had started to glow more clearly. Cars crossed the bridges. The city looked beautiful from a distance, which cities often do, and she thought about how many people were sitting in apartments and cars and shelters and hospital rooms and rented bedrooms and break rooms trying to hold themselves together with whatever scraps they still had. Jesus had seen them before dawn. He saw them now.

Veronica rose to her feet. “Are you leaving?”

“For tonight,” He said.

The words carried no coldness. Just certainty.

She felt sudden fear at the thought. Not because she thought He had only belonged to the day, but because people who bring truth and peace at once are hard to let out of your sight once you know how much you need them.

“I don’t know how to do tomorrow,” she admitted.

Jesus looked at her with that steady calm that had undone her since morning. “Tomorrow is not asking you to perform peace. It is asking you to walk in truth and let Me stay near.”

She nodded, tears rising again.

He turned to Eli. “You do not need to become hard to survive what you have seen.”

Eli looked down and then back up. “I’m trying not to.”

“I know.”

Then Jesus looked at both of them, and the weight of His presence seemed to gather every hard thing the day had uncovered without making any of it heavier. “Go home,” He said. “Tell the truth. Leave room for grace. Refuse shame’s script. Begin again where you are, not where pride wishes you were.”

There was nothing theatrical in the way He said it. That made it stronger.

Veronica wanted to ask a hundred more questions. Instead she said the only thing that felt honest. “Thank You.”

Jesus gave a small nod, then turned and walked a little way off toward the quieter edge of the park where the sound of the river could be heard more clearly than the traffic. He did not vanish. He did not become unreal. He simply moved with the same grounded stillness He had carried all day, as if heaven did not make a man less present on earth but more so. Veronica stood with Eli and watched Him until they could no longer hear His steps over the water.

Then, at a distance, beneath the deepening Denver sky, Jesus knelt in quiet prayer.

The city went on around Him. Sirens in the distance. A train somewhere farther off. Voices from the path. Tires on the bridge. Light from buildings. Weariness behind windows. Hunger behind jokes. Shame behind confidence. Grief behind schedules. He prayed there as He had prayed before dawn, calm and near and full of quiet authority, carrying into the Father’s presence the people this city overlooked, the people this city used, the people this city hurried past, the people trying to seem fine, the people too tired to seem anything at all. He prayed for mothers who had started confusing control with peace. He prayed for sons standing guard before they were old enough to name what they were guarding. He prayed for brothers who had mistaken collapse for identity. He prayed for the laid-off man on the bench, for the mother with the sleeping child in the library, for the man writing his first honest sentence to his daughter, for the woman sleeping in a cold car because home felt heavier than night. He prayed as if none of them were lost in the crowd. He prayed as if no ache was too ordinary to be holy once brought before the Father. He prayed as if the truth had not come to condemn the weary, but to bring them out of hiding.

And down by the river, while the night settled fully over Denver, peace did not arrive as denial. It arrived as presence. It arrived as truth without abandonment. It arrived like a hand on the shoulder of a city that had forgotten how much of its pain was being carried unseen.

Veronica stood still for a long time before finally turning toward home with Eli beside her. Nothing had become simple. But something had become clean. The fear that had run her house no longer got to call itself wisdom. The shame that had wrapped itself around her brother no longer got to speak as if it were the deepest truth about him. The anger in her son no longer had to be the only language available for his hurt. She knew tomorrow would bring bills and conversations and awkwardness and the slow work of rebuilding trust. But she also knew something she had not known that morning while a car seat and a cold dawn held her together by almost nothing. She knew that Jesus could step into a city day without noise, walk through the ordinary wreckage people hide inside, and bring the kind of truth that did not crush the weak but called them back to life.

And somewhere behind them, still kneeling in quiet prayer as the city lights trembled on the water, Jesus remained exactly who He had been all day. Calm. Present. Compassionate. Observant. Carrying quiet authority. Near to the bruised. Unhurried before the broken. Unmistakably central.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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

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from 💚

Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil

Amen

Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!

Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!

 
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from 💚

Places Unreturn

There was just enough of time Sparkling gems and pewter The distance old And I’d estimate the difference A round of murder And the posters in esteem For third’s well to Jupiter and home A place the way to Mars And Koryo kept its fame Inscribed to the worry Qumranet in crossing- and bitter court We worry just because- there are rumours- that Kim Jong isn’t home And failing to appear This gong of laws- and frail Women For SSK and duty The size of lunar promise Away with arts- and marching But China keeps its key The fortunes have become- Bitter Rome To press this cold agrand And firing to mission This night amiss and worry blue But the diatribe we keep And early May For threat of war The substance revue And in French Allons et merci Let us meet the run The homage of forget That men lie dead and weeping For the substance that they are Torment of epiphany That a man deserves a jet And he will heal the world For victims’ better show And lighting then The mercy And gladhanding with the news But paradigm ashore We read the news And Kim Jong un- Fried to bits by Peter Beaucoup et en cette place For Winter Show Holding rightful armour And there for there- The children of Korea In mercy plan A state to Laurie By far the greatest day For Lyne in Canada Gifting Holy candles To beams of light enable And the dowry No shores alight but Peter And mercy Knights with Rome This overtaken tau Repeats on all economy Flouting twisted gold- to make better here For sunrise at the North And distance come Exactly to the word That patience waits And we will save the world- as we did.

 
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from Roscoe's Story

In Summary: * Pretty steady rain falling outside and 700WLW Cincinnati Radio playing here in my room, bringing me their pregame show ahead of tonight's MLB Game between the Reds and the Rays. Plans are to stay with this station for the call of the game, then wrap up the night prayers and head to 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= 151/91 (65)

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

Diet: * 06:10 – 1 banana * 07:20 – crispy oatmeal cookies * 08:30 – 1 peanut butter sandwich * 12:00 – tuna and cooked vegetables * 17:15 – 1 fresh apple

Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:30 – listen to local news talk radio * 05:15 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 05:40- read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap. * 09:30 – start my weekly laundry * 13:00 – watching a JMC Broadcasting interview: Delta Force Vet on Aliens, Demons & The War Nobody Talks About | Chuck Sellers while folding laundry * 16:45 – listening to 700WLW, Cincinnati's News Radio now broadcasting the “Inside Pitch” pregame show ahead of tonight's MLB Game between the Cincinnati Reds and the Tampa Bay Rays. Plan is to stay with this station for the radio call of tonight's game.

Chess: * 15:50 – moved in all pending CC games

 
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from Douglas Vandergraph

Before the city had fully decided to wake up, while the gray over Elliott Bay was still soft and unfinished, Jesus stood alone at Pier 62 with His hands loosely folded and His head bowed. The water moved below Him in slow dark folds. A gull cried once and then went quiet. Far off, a ferry made a low sound that seemed to come through the mist more than through the air. The city behind Him held its lights like a tired person keeping their eyes open by force. He prayed there without hurry. He did not pray like someone trying to get through a task before the day began. He prayed as if the day itself was resting inside the Father’s hands before any person took one anxious breath, before any bus door folded open, before any phone lit up with bad news, before any heart started bracing itself for one more ordinary hurt.

The wind came in cool from the water and pressed gently against His coat. He did not move away from it. He prayed for people in apartments above coffee shops who had slept badly and would still smile before work. He prayed for the man already tying his apron in a bakery kitchen because debt never lets the clock stay still. He prayed for the woman walking out of a hospital after twelve hours on her feet, with her back hurting and her face arranged in that practiced calm people wear when they no longer expect anyone to ask how they are. He prayed for the son who had promised himself he would call his mother back and still had not. He prayed for the mother who had been forgiven by God but had not yet found a way to believe that meant anything in the rooms where her own failure still lived. He prayed for the city with the quiet patience of someone who loved it without needing it to impress Him.

When He lifted His head, the morning had brightened just enough to separate the water from the sky. He stayed a moment longer, looking over the bay and then back toward the buildings, as if listening for something beneath the traffic that had not started yet. Then He turned from the railing and began walking inland, leaving the water behind with the same unforced steadiness He had brought to it. By the time He reached the long rise toward First Hill, the streets had begun to fill with delivery trucks, early commuters, and people holding paper cups like small sources of courage.

At Harborview, the shift was changing. The place always seemed to carry more than one kind of exhaustion. Some people came into it afraid. Some left it stunned. Some wore badges and scrubs and moved with the clipped focus of people who had learned how to keep going even when the inside of them felt scraped thin. Marisol Vega came out through a side entrance near the loading area with her coat half on and her work shoes still squeaking slightly from the floors she had mopped before dawn. She had been up all night. The skin beneath her eyes had gone that bruised color tiredness gives when it stops asking permission to show itself. She stood under the awning because it looked like rain and pulled her phone from her pocket with the kind of reluctance people have when they already know a screen can wound them before it speaks.

There was a message from Sofia.

I’ll be at King Street at 6:40 tonight. I can give you ten minutes before I head back. Please don’t make it a whole thing.

Marisol read it once, then again, then a third time, as if the words might settle into something less sharp if she kept staring at them. Ten minutes. Please don’t make it a whole thing. Her daughter had not called her Mom in a message for almost a year. Sometimes Sofia used her name. Sometimes she used nothing at all. Marisol had learned not to correct that. You did not get to demand tenderness from someone you had once frightened in her own home.

She typed back, erased it, typed again, erased it again. Too eager looked desperate. Too calm looked fake. Too long would feel like pressure. Too short would feel cold. The old panic rose in her throat, the one that used to send her reaching for the wrong thing years ago when she had still been losing days at a time and telling lies with such speed she almost believed them herself. She had been clean for six years now. Six years, three months, and eleven days. The number lived in her body like something carved there. It mattered. It did not matter enough to erase what came before.

She finally sent, Okay. I’ll be there.

The message sat there after it went, small and exposed. She slipped the phone back into her pocket and pressed both hands around her paper cup even though the coffee had already gone lukewarm. She told herself to breathe. She told herself there were twelve hours between now and then. She told herself not to cry under the awning outside the hospital where people carried worse things than a text message every day. None of it helped. Her chest felt tight and hollow at the same time.

“You look like you’re trying not to fall apart in public,” a voice said gently beside her.

She turned fast. Jesus was standing a few feet away, close enough to speak quietly, far enough not to crowd her. There was nothing dramatic in the way He appeared there. No one around them stopped. No sound dropped out of the world. He simply stood in the morning like someone who belonged in it. His face held that calm attention some people spend their whole lives searching for without knowing what they are hungry for. He was not staring at her. He was seeing her. That was different, and Marisol felt the difference at once.

She gave a tired little laugh that was more air than sound. “I’m not trying not to. I’m doing a pretty average job.”

He nodded as if she had told the truth and that mattered. “That’s still trying.”

She looked away toward the street. A bus rolled past, spraying a fine line of water from the curb. “You ever get one message and the whole day changes shape?”

“Yes,” He said.

There was something in the way He answered that made the word feel larger than agreement. Marisol rubbed her thumb against the seam of the cup. “My daughter wants to see me tonight. For ten minutes.” She tried to smile, but the smile broke before it formed. “That should be good news, right?”

“It is.”

She turned back to Him, almost irritated by how quickly He had said it. “It doesn’t feel good.”

“It can still be good.”

The sentence landed inside her without forcing anything open. She stared at Him for a moment. “You don’t know me.”

“I know enough to see that you are afraid of making the wrong move before the day has even started.”

Marisol let out a slow breath. A man in navy scrubs brushed past them on his phone. Somewhere behind the doors, a metal cart rattled. She wanted to ask this stranger how he had read her that quickly. She wanted to ask why his voice made her feel less alone and more exposed at the same time. Instead she said, “I haven’t slept. I did a double shift because rent is rent, and now I have twelve hours to ruin ten minutes that haven’t even happened yet.”

He looked at her with a quiet warmth that did not pity her. “Then let the twelve hours be what they are. You do not have to live all ten minutes before they arrive.”

Marisol almost said that easy for you to say, but the words died before she spoke them because something in Him made cheap resistance feel childish. Not wrong. Just thin. She looked down at her work shoes. One lace had come loose. “I don’t want to go home yet.”

“Then don’t.”

She frowned. “What am I supposed to do all day? Wander downtown like a crazy person?”

“You could walk.”

She gave Him a sideways look. “That sounds like something someone says when they don’t have bills.”

A smile touched His mouth, small and real. “It is still a good answer.”

She should have walked away. She knew that. She was tired enough to make poor judgments, and Seattle was not a city where you followed calm strangers because they spoke like they already knew the part of you that stayed hidden. But He was not asking her to trust Him with something theatrical. He was standing beside a hospital on a gray morning and speaking with the steadiness of someone who had nowhere to prove Himself. It unsettled her in a way that made room inside her instead of shrinking it.

So she started walking.

They went downhill first, away from the hospital and toward the still-building movement of downtown. The city smelled faintly of wet pavement and roasted coffee and the cold breath of the bay coming between blocks. Marisol kept telling herself this was temporary, that she would peel away after the next corner, but every time she thought it, Jesus would say something small that felt like it belonged exactly where the hurt was.

She told Him Sofia was twenty-one now and living south of the city with a friend while finishing school. She told Him there had been months when Sofia was younger when Marisol had said she was going to work and had instead disappeared into places she never wanted to describe in full. She told Him about the night she had pawned a bracelet that had belonged to Sofia’s grandmother and then spent three days pretending she had misplaced it. She told Him about rehab, meetings, relapse, rehab again, the way shame could make even honest people start speaking like liars because they were always trying to get ahead of what others might say. She did not spill it all at once. It came in pieces between intersections, between the hiss of buses pulling up and the small silence after crosswalk signals chirped.

Jesus did not rush to answer every confession. Sometimes He let a thing be said without stepping on it. Sometimes He asked one question that opened more than advice could. “When did you decide your daughter would only ever see who you were at your worst?” He asked as they passed a man unlocking a café door.

Marisol kept walking, then slowed. “I didn’t decide it. I just know how memory works.”

“That is not the same thing.”

She shoved her hands into her coat pockets. “You break trust with a kid badly enough, memory gets final.”

“Not always.”

“You keep saying things like that.”

“Because you keep speaking as if the wound is the only thing alive.”

She looked at Him sharply. The words stung because they were too close to true. She had done so much work to stay sober, to keep jobs, to pay what she could, to stop lying, to answer calls, to show up. Yet somewhere underneath all of it she still believed that the truest thing about her had already happened, and everything good since then was just delayed evidence that she was no longer at her worst. That belief had become so familiar she rarely noticed it was there.

By the time they reached the Seattle Central Library, the morning had thickened into full day. People moved in and out through the entrance with backpacks, umbrellas, tote bags, children, laptops, tired eyes, half-finished breakfasts. Marisol stopped outside and looked up at the glass and steel above them. “I used to come here when Sofia was little,” she said. “She loved it. Said it felt like a spaceship built for books.”

“And you?”

“I liked that nobody asked questions if you stayed quiet.”

Jesus glanced toward the doors. “Do you want to go in?”

She shrugged. “I don’t know what I want.”

“That is honest too.”

Inside, the air held that library mix of paper, fabric, old dust, and heat from too many people sheltering from weather or life or both. Marisol had not realized how tired she was until the warmth hit her. They moved through the first floor slowly. A man slept bent over a table with his head on folded arms. A teenager in a rain jacket was whispering angrily into an earbud. Two little boys argued over a graphic novel with the raw seriousness only children can bring to something small. Near the information desk, a woman in a library badge was trying to help an older man reset a password while also watching a toddler who had wandered six feet from his grandmother and was delighted with his own brief freedom.

Jesus noticed everything without seeming pulled thin by any of it.

Marisol noticed that.

A younger staff member emerged from a side area carrying a stack of books and wearing the expression of someone trying to remain polite while her insides were already used up for the day. She set the stack down too hard, muttered an apology under her breath, and closed her eyes for one second like she regretted even that much visible strain. Jesus walked over to the desk. Marisol stayed back, not wanting to intrude, but she watched.

“Long morning?” He asked the woman.

She gave the kind of laugh service workers give when they are trying to avoid telling the truth and telling it anyway. “You could say that.”

“What happened?”

The woman hesitated. She looked maybe twenty-eight, maybe younger because of the way worry and youth can sit beside each other without blending. “Nothing dramatic. A man passed out in one of the chairs upstairs. We called someone to check on him. He’s okay, I think. I just…” She stopped and looked down at the books. “My brother used to disappear like that. You’d find him sleeping in places he should not have been sleeping. Everybody would act annoyed first and human second. I hated that. Then today I heard my own voice sounding annoyed before anything else. I’m just tired of being around need all the time.”

Jesus did not flinch from her honesty. “Need is hard to stand near when you have your own.”

Her mouth tightened. Something in her face softened after that, not because the day had improved, but because someone had named the truth without accusing her. She nodded once. “Yeah.”

He thanked her for being there anyway. Not in the grand way people sometimes praise strangers because they are uncomfortable with pain. He thanked her like her staying mattered. When He stepped back, the woman was blinking quickly and straightening the books again with more care.

Marisol looked at Him. “You do that a lot?”

“What?”

“Talk to people like you can hear the thing under the thing.”

He met her gaze. “People speak it more than they know.”

They moved farther in. Marisol stopped near a window and watched rain begin to bead against the glass. It had started lightly, not enough to change the city, just enough to place a thin veil over the streets below. She thought about Sofia at eight years old, curled into her side on a library beanbag chair, mispronouncing dinosaur names with complete confidence. She thought about the years after that, the years when the girl had stopped leaning and started watching. Kids who live around instability learn to read rooms before adults do. Sofia had learned Marisol’s moods, her lies, the false brightness in her voice, the delay before an answer that meant her mother was deciding which version of the truth to give. Children should not have to become interpreters that young.

“I used to think if I got sober and stayed sober, eventually the past would look smaller,” Marisol said quietly.

Jesus stood beside her without speaking.

“It didn’t,” she went on. “It got clearer. That’s the part nobody tells you. You get clean and suddenly you can see what you did with both eyes open.”

He nodded. “Yes.”

She turned to Him, almost angry again because He had agreed too easily. “That’s not encouraging.”

“No,” He said. “It is not. But clarity is not punishment. It is the beginning of truth.”

Marisol swallowed. The rain on the glass had started running in crooked lines. “What if truth just proves I ruined the best part of my life?”

He was quiet for a moment. Then He said, “The best part of your life is not behind God but in front of Him.”

She looked away immediately because tears had come too fast, and she hated crying where strangers could see. A little girl ran past them carrying three books to her chest, and her grandmother called softly for her to slow down. The ordinary tenderness of that nearly undid Marisol. She pressed two fingers hard against the bridge of her nose.

They left before noon. The rain had eased to mist. Jesus led nothing. He suggested nothing like a command. He simply kept walking at a pace that allowed the day to unfold without feeling chased. They drifted toward Pike Place Market because the city naturally drew that way, and by the time they crossed into the press of people and flowers and produce and storefront windows, Seattle had become fully itself. Tourists were already angling phones toward signs. Workers moved faster than the crowd. Fish smell mixed with coffee and fried food and damp pavement. Somewhere someone laughed too loudly, and somewhere else a child cried because the day had become too much too early.

Marisol almost said she wanted to leave. Crowds made her feel visible in the wrong way. But then she saw a flower stand bursting with color against the gray day and remembered that Sofia used to stop dead in front of flowers as a child, no matter where they were going. Not because she was especially sentimental. She just liked bright things with no apology in them.

“I should bring something,” Marisol murmured.

“For your daughter?” Jesus asked.

“She’ll probably hate that.”

“Do you want to bring something?”

Marisol stared at the buckets of tulips and ranunculus and small white blooms she could not name. “I don’t know. I can’t tell anymore which things are loving and which things are me trying to manage how I’m seen.”

Jesus looked at the flowers too. “Then do not buy something to manage her. Buy something because love is still allowed to have hands.”

That sentence sat in her chest. She stepped closer to the stall. The woman working there was older, maybe in her sixties, wrapped in a dark sweater with a pencil tucked into her hair. She had the alert, practical face of someone who had spent years reading customers in seconds. She watched Marisol study the flowers and waited without pushing.

“My daughter’s meeting me tonight,” Marisol said finally, embarrassed by how raw her own voice sounded. “We haven’t been good in a while.”

The vendor nodded as if that was a language she knew. “Then don’t get the perfect arrangement. Perfect is suspicious. Get something that feels like you mean it.”

Marisol laughed in spite of herself. “That is strangely helpful.”

The woman handed her three stems of pale yellow tulips and tucked in one deep red ranunculus. “These. Enough to say I came with something in my hand. Not enough to say I rehearsed the moment.”

Marisol looked up. “You’re good at this.”

“No,” the woman said, glancing toward another customer reaching for change. “I’m old. That’s different.”

Marisol paid, then stepped aside. She stood holding the small wrapped bouquet like it was more fragile than flowers had any right to be. Jesus watched her with a softness that made her think He cared about this tiny choice, not because flowers were important, but because frightened people often reveal themselves through small acts first.

They continued through the market. Near a produce stand, a young man in an apron dropped a crate hard enough to bruise the fruit inside, then swore under his breath. An older man beside him snapped, “Maybe wake up before you come to work tomorrow.” The younger man muttered back something sharp, and the older man’s jaw set in that familiar adult way that says I have no room left for your pain because mine is already eating me alive.

Jesus stopped.

He did not step in like someone seizing a scene. He simply bent, picked up an apple that had rolled beneath the edge of the stand, and handed it to the younger man first. Then He looked at the older one and said, “You are both more tired than this argument.”

The older man blinked as if he had been interrupted by his own conscience. The younger one stared at the apple in his hand. Neither answered. Jesus went on, “You do not have to use each other as the place where the morning breaks.”

No lecture followed. No crowd gathered. The two men stood there with the sudden silence that comes when anger gets named as grief wearing work clothes. By the time Marisol and Jesus moved on, the older man was quietly telling the younger one to go wash up and take five minutes.

Marisol shook her head. “How do you keep doing that?”

“Doing what?”

“Making people stop pretending.”

He glanced at her bouquet. “You stopped pretending hours ago.”

“That’s different.”

“Only because it feels like your own.”

They found a place to sit where the sound of the market softened but never disappeared. Marisol had not eaten since sometime around three in the morning, so Jesus bought bread from a counter nearby and split it with her as if the gesture needed no explanation. She was too hungry to resist out of pride. The bread was warm enough in the middle to make her unexpectedly emotional again, which annoyed her. There should have been a limit to how vulnerable exhaustion could make a person.

She told Him then about the worst night with Sofia. Not the broad version she gave in meetings. The real one. Sofia had been thirteen. Marisol had promised to pick her up from a school music event. She had meant to. She had even written it on the back of an envelope and put the envelope in her bag. Then she had vanished into a binge so fast and stupid it barely deserved the word choice. Sofia had waited outside the school nearly an hour before a teacher finally called Marisol’s sister. When Marisol came home the next day, ashamed and sick and defensive, Sofia was sitting at the table with her backpack still on like she had forgotten to take it off. The girl had not yelled. That was the part that stayed with Marisol. She had only looked at her mother with a face too old for thirteen and said, “I know when you’re gone even if you’re standing here.”

Marisol had never gotten fully past that sentence. Sometimes she heard it while washing dishes. Sometimes while making up a bed. Sometimes while walking to work before sunrise. It lived in her like a nail.

When she finished, Jesus did not rush to cover the story with comfort. He let the grief of it stand between them. At last He said, “And yet your daughter texted you.”

Marisol stared at Him. “That’s what you take from all that?”

“It is what is still living in the story.”

She looked down at her hands. Her knuckles were rough from cleaning chemicals and winter air. “You really think a text message means something that big?”

“I think ten minutes can hold more mercy than fear expects.”

The afternoon wore on. The sky never cleared, but the city gained that silver brightness rainy places sometimes hold without becoming cheerful. By late day they were walking south again, toward King Street Station. The closer they got, the quieter Marisol became. The bouquet had started to feel too warm in her hand from being held so long. She kept checking the time and then hating herself for checking. At one light she almost turned around and said she could not do it. At another she thought about texting Sofia that something had come up. Cowardice was always most persuasive right before the moment that could expose it.

Jesus never grabbed her arm. He never cornered her with holy language. He simply stayed near.

At the station, the evening rush had begun its slow gathering. People rolled suitcases over the floor. Announcements echoed overhead. The building held that strange mix of motion and waiting that train stations always keep, as if departures and delays are only different words for the same ache. Marisol stood just off to one side of the main flow, clutching the flowers and trying not to scan every face too hard.

“She may not come,” she said, not looking at Him.

“She may.”

“She may look at me like I’m a problem she promised herself she would handle quickly.”

“She may.”

Marisol let out a brittle laugh. “You’re not helping.”

He turned toward her then, and His voice dropped into that simple weight she had not been able to shake all day. “I am not here to help you control the moment. I am here to help you stand inside it without leaving.”

Something in her broke open at that. Not publicly. Not in a dramatic way. But enough that she stopped trying to arrange herself into a woman who deserved to be seen. She just stood there breathing through the fear, tired to the bone, carrying flowers that suddenly looked painfully hopeful in her hand.

A train announcement sounded above them.

People shifted.

A family passed with backpacks and an exhausted child half asleep on her father’s shoulder.

Then, through the movement near the entrance, Marisol saw her.

Sofia was taller than she had been the last time they met, though that was not really true. It was only that distance had a way of changing how a mother saw her own child. Her hair was pulled back. Her face looked older in the serious ways young faces sometimes do when life has asked them to become careful too soon. She wore a dark jacket and held her phone in one hand as if it were both shield and habit. She stopped just inside the station and looked around once. Her expression was guarded, not hard. That hurt more.

Marisol’s first impulse was to wave too quickly, smile too brightly, start talking before the distance had even closed.

Jesus did not touch her, but she felt His presence beside her like a hand laid over panic.

So Marisol stayed still.

Sofia’s eyes found her.

And for one suspended second, with the station noise carrying on around them and the whole city still moving outside, mother and daughter looked at each other across the space that all the missed years had made.

Sofia started walking toward her without hurrying. Marisol had imagined this moment in too many wrong ways all day. In some versions her daughter came in angry and sharp. In others she came in soft and ready. The real thing was harder because it was simpler. Sofia just looked careful. That care had cost her something. Marisol felt it before a word was spoken.

“Hi,” Sofia said when she reached her.

Her voice was level. Not warm. Not cruel. Just level.

“Hi,” Marisol said back.

She did not step forward. She did not reach for her. Every instinct in her wanted to repair the distance with motion, but something steadier held her still. The flowers suddenly felt foolish in her hand. “I brought these,” she said, and then immediately hated how awkward it sounded. “You don’t have to take them. I just…”

Sofia glanced at the tulips and the single deep red flower wrapped in paper. A faint change came over her face, almost too small to read. “They’re nice.”

Marisol held them out. Sofia took them, more out of politeness than affection, but she took them. That mattered enough to make Marisol’s throat tighten.

There was a pause after that, the kind that can either become another failure or become the narrow doorway people finally choose to walk through. Jesus stood just behind and to the side, not withdrawing, not inserting Himself. Marisol felt the quiet strength of His nearness and understood that this was the moment He had meant. Not the moment she controlled. The moment she stayed in.

“You said ten minutes,” Marisol managed.

Sofia nodded. “Yeah. My train boards later than I thought. I’ve got maybe twenty now.”

The sentence should not have felt like grace, but it did. Marisol looked at her daughter’s face and saw the child still faintly living inside the woman, saw the old hurt still doing its careful work there too, and for one dangerous second she almost rushed into apology before listening. Old guilt loves monologues because monologues let us manage what others get to say. Jesus had been cutting that instinct down all day.

So Marisol asked, “Do you want to sit somewhere?”

Sofia looked around the station. “Not in here.”

They crossed the street and found a bench near the edge of the plaza where the evening air smelled faintly of rain and train brakes and the city cooling into night. Cars moved past without tenderness. People came and went carrying bags, headphones, plans, fatigue. Seattle did what cities do. It kept going while something fragile tried to live inside it.

For a few seconds neither of them spoke.

Then Sofia said, “I almost didn’t come.”

Marisol nodded once. “I know.”

“You do?”

“I would’ve almost not come too.”

That surprised Sofia enough to make her look over. “Why?”

Marisol gave a tired breath of a laugh. “Because I’ve spent most of the day afraid I’d ruin it before it started.”

Sofia looked back down at the flowers resting across her lap. She turned the stems once in her hand. “That sounds about right.”

The old shame rose again, but this time Marisol did not let it grab the whole conversation. “I’m not going to fight you tonight,” she said. “I’m not going to explain away anything. I’m not going to act like time by itself fixed something I broke.”

Sofia kept her eyes on the flowers. “Then why are we here?”

Marisol opened her mouth and found that the prepared words she had been building all day were suddenly gone. That was terrifying. It was also cleaner. “Because you reached out,” she said finally. “And because I wanted to see you. Not to convince you of anything. I just wanted to see you.”

Sofia let that sit between them. “I’m thinking about moving.”

Marisol felt her whole body go alert. A year ago she would have responded badly. She would have made the moment about herself and called that honesty. She would have said things like Why didn’t you tell me or I’m your mother or You can’t just disappear, as if her title had not once been the very thing Sofia had needed distance from.

Instead she asked, “Where?”

“Portland maybe. Or farther.” Sofia rubbed her thumb against the paper around the bouquet. “A friend of mine has an aunt in Eugene with a place opening up this summer. Nothing’s decided. I just… I wanted to tell you before I did something. Not after.”

Marisol swallowed. The sentence cut in two directions. Sofia was giving her a kind of respect. Sofia was also naming how little certainty existed between them. “Thank you for telling me.”

Sofia gave her a quick look, like she had expected more resistance than that. “That’s it?”

“I don’t know what else I have the right to say first.”

Sofia’s expression changed again, more noticeably this time. It was not softness yet. It was the beginning of her guard having to reconsider what it was guarding against.

“You always say weirdly decent things now,” Sofia said. “It’s confusing.”

Marisol almost smiled. “I say a lot less now. That helps.”

A faint breath of humor moved between them and disappeared, but it left something lighter in its wake.

Sofia leaned back against the bench and stared toward the station windows. “I didn’t call you here just to tell you I might move.”

Marisol waited.

“I’ve been mad at you,” Sofia said. “You know that.”

“Yes.”

“I’ve been more than mad.”

“Yes.”

“I don’t even know if mad is the right word anymore. Sometimes it just feels like there’s this wall in me where you’re concerned. Like I don’t have to think about everything if I keep the wall there.” She paused, jaw tightening. “And then something stupid happens. Somebody at school forgets to show up for a group project, or some guy says he’ll call and doesn’t, or I hear someone slurring words in the grocery store, and all of a sudden I’m thirteen again. I’m waiting outside in the dark. Or I’m at the apartment listening for the way your key hit the lock because I could tell from that sound whether I needed to be invisible.”

Marisol closed her eyes for one second. The air felt cold in her lungs. She did not defend herself. She did not say I know because nobody knows another person’s memory by saying they know. She just listened while her daughter laid down the truth she had carried for years.

Sofia kept going now that she had started. “I hate that you still affect me. I hate that I can be doing fine and then something tiny happens and it all comes back. I hate that people talk about forgiveness like it’s clean. Like you decide one day and then your nervous system magically joins in.”

Marisol turned toward her fully. “It isn’t clean.”

Sofia looked at her hard. “No. It isn’t.”

Rain began again, so light at first it barely registered. People passing by lifted hoods or walked faster. The city around them went on conducting its small transactions of movement and obligation. Jesus was near enough for Marisol to feel but far enough to leave the bench to them. She had the strange sense that He was guarding the moment not by controlling it, but by refusing to let fear own it.

“I don’t need you to forgive me tonight,” Marisol said quietly. “I don’t need you to promise me anything. I’m not asking for that.”

Sofia’s shoulders dropped a little, and Marisol realized how braced her daughter had been against exactly that demand. “Then what are you asking?”

Marisol looked down at her hands. They trembled slightly from fatigue and the effort of not reaching for control. “I’m asking you to hear one thing. Just one. And then you can leave with it or not.”

Sofia gave a small nod.

“When I was in that life,” Marisol said, “I told myself lies that helped me survive being who I was. Not because they were true. Because they kept me from seeing the whole truth at once. I told myself I loved you even when I wasn’t acting like it, and I used that sentence to excuse things love never excuses. I told myself you were resilient, like that made it fine for you to absorb what should have crushed me instead. I told myself I had time. More than anything, I told myself I had time. I was wrong about all of it.” Her voice shook, but she kept going. “The clearest thing I can tell you is this. You were never hard to love. You were not too much. You were not the reason I was broken. You were a child, Sofia. You were a beautiful child, and I failed you while you were loving me the best way you knew how.”

Sofia did not move for several seconds. Her face had gone still in that dangerous way stillness sometimes precedes tears or anger. Marisol forced herself not to fill the silence. Her chest hurt. The rain tapped softly against the bench and darkened the concrete beneath their shoes.

Finally Sofia said, very quietly, “Nobody says it like that.”

“Then they should.”

Sofia laughed once, but it cracked in the middle. She pressed her lips together and looked away. “You don’t get to suddenly be good at this.”

“I know.”

“That’s frustrating.”

“I imagine so.”

Sofia shook her head, and when she looked back there was water in her eyes she had not agreed to. “Do you know what the worst part was?”

Marisol almost answered yes and stopped herself. “No.”

“That I kept hoping anyway.” Sofia stared down at the tulips now, blinking hard. “Every time. Every school thing. Every promise. Every night you said you’d be back. I hated myself for hoping after a while, because it made me feel stupid. But I kept doing it. Kids do that, I guess. They keep handing their hearts back to people who drop them.”

Marisol bent forward and pressed both hands against her knees just to keep herself from breaking into pieces on the bench. The sentence did not accuse more than it revealed. That made it worse. “You were not stupid.”

“I know that now.” Sofia’s voice softened. “I didn’t then.”

Marisol turned and looked at her daughter with the helpless love of someone who knew too late what she had not protected. “I’m so sorry.”

Sofia did not answer right away. When she finally spoke, her voice had lost some of its edge. “I believe you are.”

They sat with that. It was not absolution. It was not a repaired history. It was one true sentence laid carefully between them, and it changed the air enough for both of them to breathe.

After a while Sofia asked, “How long have you been sober now?”

“Six years, three months, and eleven days.”

Sofia looked at her. “You still count every day?”

“Not because I’m proud,” Marisol said. “Because I remember what it costs to stop.”

Sofia nodded slowly, like that answer made more sense to her than a celebratory one would have. “Aunt Elena says you never miss meetings.”

“I try not to.”

“She said you clean at the hospital now.”

“I do.”

“She said people there like you.”

Marisol gave the smallest shrug. “I show up. It turns out that matters more than I used to think.”

Sofia looked past her toward the station again. “It does.”

The rain thickened just enough that they had to move. They crossed under an overhang and stood there with strangers who were sheltering for a minute before continuing wherever they had planned to go. One of those strangers was an older man with two grocery bags and a limp that forced him to set one bag down every few feet. He was trying to keep the paper from splitting in the damp. Jesus stepped forward before Marisol even noticed Him move, took one of the bags without fanfare, and asked where the man was headed.

“Just over to the bus stop,” the man said, defensive in the way people get when help finds them before they ask for it.

Jesus nodded as if the answer were enough. “Then I’ll walk with you.”

The man squinted at Him, looked at the bag in His hand, and then at the bus stop across the street. “Suit yourself.”

It was such an ordinary exchange that Sofia stared. Marisol did too. There was something about seeing Jesus in the smallness of that moment, carrying a damp grocery bag beneath a station overhang while traffic hissed past, that struck both of them deeper than grandeur would have.

“He’s with you?” Sofia asked quietly.

Marisol looked at Jesus, then back at her daughter. She could have said I met Him today and meant one thing. She could have said yes and meant another. Instead she answered with the truth that felt truest. “Yes.”

Sofia frowned, but not because she was mocking her. It was the look of someone sensing that something strange and beautiful might be standing nearby and not yet knowing what to call it. “Who is he?”

Marisol felt a tremor go through her, not from fear now, but from recognition that had been building all day beneath every step and word and silence. She had known it before she could say it. She had felt it before she could bear to name it. The calm authority. The way nothing hidden stayed fully hidden near Him. The way He moved toward shame without flinching and toward pain without feeding on it. The way His sentences seemed simple until they opened like doors inside the heart.

“He’s Jesus,” she said.

Sofia looked at her for a long second, ready perhaps to dismiss that, yet unable to do it because Jesus was at that moment reaching into His own pocket to hand the older man bus fare he pretended not to need. Nothing about Him looked interested in spectacle. He simply looked more real than the rest of the evening.

“That’s not funny,” Sofia said softly.

“I’m not joking.”

Sofia turned back toward Him. “Why would He be here?”

Marisol felt the answer before she formed it. “Because He doesn’t miss quiet things.”

The sentence hung there between them. Sofia’s face shifted again, and Marisol saw the child in her for just a second, the child who had once believed that God saw everything and had then struggled to know what to do with all the things He seemed not to stop.

Jesus came back after seeing the man to the bus stop. He stood under the overhang with them as if the rain had never been an interruption. Sofia met His eyes directly this time, wary and drawn at once. “If you’re really Him,” she said, “then you know I don’t know what to do with that.”

“Yes,” He said.

That was all. No insistence. No demand for immediate belief properly arranged. Just yes.

Sofia folded her arms, more to hold herself than to close herself off. “My mom says weirdly true things around you.”

Jesus smiled faintly. “She has done that without Me too. She only believes she has not.”

Sofia looked down to hide a sudden emotion that nearly became a laugh. Marisol had not heard anyone speak of her with that kind of mercy in years. Not indulgence. Mercy. A telling of the truth that did not pin her forever to the worst of it.

“My train leaves in thirty minutes,” Sofia said after a while.

Jesus nodded.

Sofia looked at her mother again. “There’s a tea place near Uwajimaya I like. I was going to stop there before heading back. You can come if you want.”

The invitation was so modest that it would have looked small to anyone else. To Marisol it felt like the sky opening one careful inch. “I’d like that.”

So the three of them walked south and then west into the Chinatown–International District, where the evening lights were coming on in windows and signs and the rain had polished the sidewalks dark. The neighborhood held that dense, layered life some parts of a city keep better than others. People were closing shop, opening shop, carrying boxes, locking gates, greeting friends, ignoring strangers, arguing softly near doorways, checking watches, smoking under awnings, hurrying home. Nothing in it announced itself as sacred. That was why the sacredness of it mattered.

Inside the tea shop the windows fogged at the corners from warmth. There were only a few tables open. Sofia chose one near the back. Jesus sat with them as naturally as if He had been expected there from the start. They ordered drinks, and while they waited, Sofia turned the paper-wrapped bouquet slowly between her hands.

“I still don’t know if I forgive you,” she said to Marisol.

Marisol nodded. “You don’t have to know tonight.”

“I’m not saying that to punish you.”

“I know.”

“I’m saying it because I’m tired of pretending I’m further along than I am.”

Marisol looked at her daughter and saw not harshness but integrity. “That’s more honest than most people ever get.”

Sofia’s eyes flicked to Jesus, as if checking whether He approved of that answer. He did not give approval like a teacher at a desk. He gave something better. Presence.

“What if I don’t ever get all the way there?” Sofia asked, and though she was looking at Marisol, the question bent toward Him.

Jesus answered. “Forgiveness is not the lie that the wound was small. It is the refusal to let the wound become your only future.”

Sofia was quiet after that. The drinks arrived. Steam rose between them. Outside, headlights passed in blurred bands through the wet window. Inside, cups touched saucers, milk hissed somewhere behind the counter, and someone near the front laughed at a story that had nothing to do with any of them.

“My counselor says something kind of like that,” Sofia said eventually. “Not like that. Less… whatever that was.”

Jesus took no offense at being translated into counseling language. “Then she is helping you.”

Sofia wrapped both hands around her cup. “I’ve been afraid that if I let the wall down, even a little, everything from before gets to rush back in.”

Marisol waited again instead of pleading.

Jesus said, “Walls keep pain out until they keep life out too.”

Sofia stared into her tea. “That sounds true enough to be annoying.”

This time she did laugh, properly, and Marisol felt the sound like sunlight breaking through cloud after days of gray. Not because it solved anything. Because it existed.

They talked after that in a way they had not in years. Not without difficulty, but without the old performance. Sofia asked practical questions first, the kind people reach for when the deeper ones still feel too exposed. What was Marisol’s schedule like now. Did she still live in the same apartment. Was Aunt Elena still helping her with taxes because numbers made her panic. Marisol answered plainly. She did not embellish stability. She did not hide struggle. She did not angle every answer toward proving herself changed. Slowly the conversation widened.

Sofia admitted school was harder than she let on. She said she was tired all the time. She said everyone her age seemed either wildly certain or expertly pretending. She confessed that sometimes she feared becoming her mother and sometimes feared becoming so guarded against that possibility that she would never let anyone close enough to damage her at all. Marisol listened with a tenderness that had ripened through grief. She did not rush to reassure away what ought to be heard fully.

“I used to think adulthood would feel more solid,” Sofia said, eyes on the cup in her hands. “But half the time it just feels like everyone’s improvising with nicer shoes.”

Jesus smiled. “That is often accurate.”

Sofia smiled back before she could stop herself. When she noticed, she looked startled, as if her own face had betrayed a loyalty she had not consciously granted. Then the surprise passed, and she let the expression stay.

At one point Marisol said, “I kept every drawing you made as a kid.”

Sofia looked up sharply. “You did not.”

“I did.”

“Even the horrible horse one?”

Marisol actually laughed then, the sound rusty from disuse in moments that mattered. “Especially the horrible horse one. It looked like a haunted dog.”

Sofia covered her mouth, half scandalized and half delighted. “You told me it was elegant.”

“I lied for art.”

It was such a small exchange, but it did what healing often does when it first becomes visible. It arrived not as a speech but as shared recognition. A real memory. A sentence not built entirely around damage. Marisol could feel how careful it still was. She could also feel that careful was no longer the same thing as closed.

Time kept moving anyway. It always does. Sofia checked her phone and exhaled. “I have to go in a few minutes.”

Marisol felt the ache of that without panicking now. A few minutes was not abandonment. A few minutes was a few minutes.

They rose from the table and stepped back outside. The rain had almost stopped. The air smelled washed and metallic and alive. They walked back toward the station more slowly than before, as if none of them wanted to force the ending into a shape it did not have to take.

Near the entrance, Sofia stopped. She still held the flowers. Some of the petals had loosened slightly from the damp, but the bouquet had survived the evening better than Marisol expected.

“I’m not promising anything huge,” Sofia said. “I don’t want to do that thing where a night feels meaningful and then tomorrow I’m expected to become a different person.”

“I’m not asking you to,” Marisol said.

Sofia nodded. “But I can text you this week.”

Marisol let out a breath that shook. “I’d like that.”

“And if I do move, I’ll tell you before I go.”

“Thank you.”

Sofia looked at her for a moment, then stepped forward and hugged her. It was not long. It was not the full, falling-into-you embrace of a child running home. It was the hug of a young woman testing whether her heart could tell the truth without lying to itself. Marisol held her carefully, like something both beloved and free. When they stepped apart, both of them had tears they were not pretending otherwise about.

Then Sofia turned to Jesus. She did not seem fully comfortable doing that, but sincerity is often uncomfortable at first. “I don’t know what I believe yet,” she said.

He met her with the same steady warmth He had carried since the morning. “I know.”

“But if you really are who she says…”

“Yes.”

Sofia looked down, then back up. “Then don’t let me become hard.”

The city noise kept moving around them. A train horn sounded somewhere farther off. People passed carrying their own burdens and evenings and names. Jesus answered her simply. “Keep bringing Me the places that want to close.”

Tears slipped down Sofia’s face then, quick and embarrassed. She brushed them away with the heel of her hand. “Okay,” she whispered, though it sounded less like an agreement and more like the first breath after one.

She boarded a few minutes later. Marisol and Jesus watched from the platform side as she found a seat by the window. Before the train pulled away, Sofia lifted one hand in a small awkward wave. Marisol lifted hers back. There were no promises in that wave, no guarantees, no rewritten history. There was something better than false certainty. There was truth still choosing not to leave.

When the train disappeared, Marisol stood very still.

The station grew ordinary again in the way places do once a moment has passed through them and left no visible sign except inside the people who lived it. She wiped her face and let out a sound halfway between a laugh and a sob. “I thought if tonight mattered, it would feel bigger.”

Jesus looked at her with quiet kindness. “It was bigger.”

She glanced at Him. “You know what I mean.”

“Yes,” He said. “You expected thunder. Mercy often comes closer than that.”

They began walking again without urgency. The city had entered that hour when lights matter more than daylight and every person seems to be heading either toward rest or away from themselves. They moved north through Pioneer Square, where brick buildings held the damp evening and streetlamps turned the wet sidewalks amber. At Waterfall Garden Park the small cascade was still running, tucked behind its walls like a secret the city had agreed not to ruin. Jesus paused there, and Marisol paused with Him.

The water fell with a sound gentler than the day had been. She listened to it and felt the shape of the hours settling inside her. Harborview. The library. The market. The station. The tea shop. The train. None of it had fixed her life. None of it had erased the years. But something had shifted lower than emotion. She no longer felt like a woman spending every good day trying to outrun the truest thing about her. The truest thing about her was no longer only what she had done wrong. The truest thing was that Jesus had walked beside her through the city without recoiling, without flattering, without letting her hide, and without leaving.

“I kept thinking all day that if I made one wrong move, I’d lose her again,” Marisol said.

Jesus watched the falling water. “You are not holding your daughter together with perfect sentences.”

She let that settle. “Then what am I doing?”

“Learning to love without using fear as a guide.”

Marisol stood there in the damp evening and felt how long fear had been making her choices in the costume of wisdom. It had told her when to speak, when to apologize, when to stay distant, when to overdo tenderness, when to prepare for rejection before anyone had rejected her. Fear had made her life feel responsible. It had also made it cramped.

They left the park and kept walking west until the air changed again and brought the water back into the night. By the time they reached the waterfront, the city had thinned. The day’s noise had not vanished, but it no longer pressed at the edges of every thought. Ferries moved across black water lit by scattered reflections. The wind off Elliott Bay had sharpened. Marisol tucked her hands into her coat and looked out where the lights ended.

“I don’t want to forget this tomorrow,” she said.

“You will not keep it by gripping it,” Jesus answered.

She smiled faintly. “There you go again.”

He looked at her. “What do you think you must remember?”

Marisol was quiet for a long moment. Then she said, “That shame is loud and mercy is not. That doesn’t make shame more true.”

His face softened. “Yes.”

She looked down at the boards beneath their feet, then back at the water. “And that my daughter isn’t the only one who kept hoping.”

“No,” He said. “She is not.”

The sentence moved through her slowly. She had thought hope belonged to the innocent. She had thought those who had done the damage were left mostly with regret and gratitude if they were lucky. But Jesus had spent the day showing her something else. Repentance was not the death of hope. It was hope learning to tell the truth. She could live from there. Not easily every day. Not cleanly at once. But truly.

They walked a little farther in silence. At last Marisol stopped. She knew with a strange certainty that the day was ending, not because there was nothing left to say, but because enough had been given for one day and anything more would begin to feel like possession. She turned to Jesus with the humility of someone who had been found more completely than she knew how to deserve.

“Will I see You tomorrow?” she asked.

He smiled, and in that smile was both nearness and something far beyond the city around them. “I will be no farther than truth.”

Tears rose again. She did not fight them. “I don’t even know how to thank You for today.”

“You already are.”

She let out a small breath, half broken, half healed. “What do I do now?”

“Go home,” He said. “Sleep. Wake. Tell the truth. Stay near Me. Let small mercies remain small when they are small. They are not less holy for it.”

Marisol nodded. The answer was so plain it almost hurt. She had spent years imagining that change would come dressed like drama because the life she had wrecked had been dramatic in all the wrong ways. Jesus was handing her something quieter and harder and better. A faithful tomorrow. Then another. Then another. Not glamorous. Not dazzling. Just real.

She looked away for a second, because the city lights on the bay had blurred through tears. When she looked back, He had moved a few steps away, not vanishing, not performing mystery. Just giving her the dignity of choosing to go on in what He had already given.

Marisol stood there for a while after that, feeling the cold, hearing the water, breathing with less panic than she had at dawn. Then she turned and started toward the bus stop that would take her home. She did not feel finished. She felt alive. There was a difference.

Jesus remained by the water as the night deepened over Seattle. The ferries moved. The wind pressed lightly at His coat. The city that had carried so many hidden burdens through the day now glowed in windows and towers and streets, each light holding someone’s fatigue, someone’s longing, someone’s private war, someone’s hope they would barely admit aloud. He looked toward the buildings, toward the hospital on the hill, toward the library glass catching the last of the evening, toward the market settling into night, toward the station where a young woman sat by a train window with flowers on her lap and thoughts she could no longer keep entirely walled off.

Then, in the quiet at the edge of the water, He bowed His head and prayed.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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from /twosadwhiteroses/

20:29GMT Heya! A couple of days ago, I discovered an artist called 'Beklis Ayon'. There is an accent on the 'o', but my keyboard doesn't have that. Her art is very interesting to me, it struck me when I first saw it in the Tate modern because of just how creepy and unique it is, I feel like I really understand her message. There's something personal that strikes me as I research her more and more, the aura. Maybe it's the eyes. I get told all the time how creepy and awkward my eyes are, how they bulge too much and how if I focus too hard, they look scary. Maybe it's the resemblance I feel towards Princess Sikan. Or maybe, I've had too much wine. I have to go back to hell soon, wish me luck!

-TSWR (PS, don't read HONDA BABY on ao3)

 
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from Douglas Vandergraph

There is a kind of pain that does not come from rebellion or carelessness. It comes when you have already been trying to hold your life together with both hands and life still finds a way to shake you. It comes when you have been praying more, not less. It comes when you have been watching your words, trying to stay kind, trying to do right by people, trying to keep your mind from going dark, and then something hard still lands on your chest. That kind of suffering has its own sound to it. It is quieter than panic but heavier than sadness. It does not always make you cry right away. A lot of the time it just makes you stare at the ceiling a little longer at night and feel tired in a place sleep does not reach. What makes it so hard is not only the pain itself. It is the thought that slips in beside it and asks why this is happening when you are already trying your best.

That question can make even honest people feel ashamed. It can make people feel like they are failing spiritually just because they are confused. A lot of good people think they are supposed to suffer silently if they love God enough. They think real faith should make everything neat inside. They think a mature believer should know how to carry pain without asking too many questions. So they hide the harder thoughts. They clean up the language of their own sorrow. They say they are fine when they are not fine. They thank God with their mouth while feeling wounded in their heart and then wonder why everything inside them feels split in two. The truth is that many people are not struggling because they do not love God. They are struggling because they do love Him and they do not know what to do with the fact that life still hurts this much.

It is one thing to suffer after you ignored every warning and walked straight into a wall. At least then there is a reason you can point to. Cause and effect can be painful but it makes sense. What breaks a person open in a deeper way is when they cannot trace the pain back to some obvious choice. They were trying to be faithful in the middle of ordinary life. They were trying to trust God with their family, their work, their mind, their health, their future, and then something still broke. It might have been a loss you did not deserve. It might have been a prayer that kept going unanswered. It might have been a betrayal that came from someone you loved. It might have been the slow suffering of waking up every day and fighting a private battle no one really sees. What makes that kind of pain so hard is that it does not just hurt your heart. It tempts you to believe that your effort meant nothing.

A lot of us carry a quiet agreement in our heart that we never say out loud. We would never frame it this way in church or in a Bible study or in a conversation where we are trying to sound mature, but it is there all the same. It says that if we do our best, God will make things gentler. If we stay sincere, life will stop hitting quite so hard. If we keep our heart right, God will keep the worst things back. It is not always a proud thought. A lot of the time it comes from exhaustion. It comes from wanting the world to feel safe again. It comes from the childlike part of us that wants goodness to lead to ease. Then suffering comes anyway and the agreement falls apart. Now it is not only your circumstances that hurt. Now your inner picture of how this was supposed to work has cracked too.

That crack is where a lot of hidden disappointment lives. People do not always talk about disappointment with God because it feels dangerous to admit. They would rather say they are confused than say they feel let down. They would rather use careful language than tell the full truth about how lonely it feels when you have been faithful and life still seems merciless. Yet disappointment is often sitting there under the surface doing its work. It is in the way prayer starts to feel careful instead of open. It is in the way you hesitate before asking for anything because you are tired of hoping. It is in the way you read promises now with more caution than joy. It is in the way your heart still turns toward God, but it does so with a limp. You have not walked away. You still believe. You still want Him. But something in you has become quieter, and not in a peaceful way.

That is where this subject becomes more personal than people usually let it be. The hardest suffering is not always loud. Sometimes it is the slow strain of continuing to show up while carrying questions you do not know how to settle. It is waking up and going to work while feeling like your spirit is bruised. It is helping other people while you are running low inside. It is trying to be grateful while something in your life remains painfully unresolved. It is reading Scripture and still feeling tender in the place where relief has not come. It is trying not to become cynical when you see people who care less and seem to have an easier road. It is trying not to compare your private ache with somebody else’s visible ease. It is trying not to let your pain rewrite the whole story of God in your mind.

What makes this even more complicated is that suffering often pulls old wounds into the room with it. The present pain is rarely just the present pain. It lands on top of all the other moments in your life when you already felt unseen, already felt left alone, already felt like you were trying harder than the people around you and still ending up with less peace. Hard seasons have a way of waking up buried things. They bring old fear back to the surface. They stir old rejection. They touch the places where you already wondered if your needs mattered. Then the question about suffering becomes bigger than the current moment. It starts to feel like a pattern. It starts to feel personal. It starts to sound like maybe pain keeps finding you because this is just what your life is. That is when a hard season stops feeling like an event and starts feeling like an identity.

Many people never say that part out loud. They will tell you they are tired. They will tell you they are under pressure. They will say they are walking through a lot right now. What they often will not say is that the suffering has begun to affect the way they see themselves. They have started to wonder if they are the kind of person life keeps overlooking. They have started to wonder if they were built to carry more than other people. They have started to wonder why peace seems to stay just outside their reach. When that happens, pain is no longer just something you experience. It becomes a lens. It starts coloring how you interpret silence, delay, unanswered prayer, and even ordinary setbacks. A late answer feels like neglect. A closed door feels like rejection. A long season feels like proof that you are somehow harder to rescue.

That is why this question matters so much. It is not a cold theological puzzle. It is a heart question. It is the kind of question people ask when they have tried to be good, tried to stay soft, tried to keep trusting, and now feel like their soul is dragging. They are not asking because they want an argument. They are asking because they are tired of hurting. They are asking because they need to know whether there is any way to stay close to God without pretending the pain is small. They are asking because they have already heard the quick answers and none of those answers helped. Quick answers usually make suffering feel lonelier. They rush past the actual ache. They try to explain in a sentence what someone is living with in their body every day. A soul in pain does not need a neat line first. It needs honesty.

Honesty begins with admitting that suffering can make faithful people feel deeply disoriented. There are seasons where you do not doubt God exists, but you do not know what He is doing. There are seasons where you still believe He is good, but you cannot feel that goodness landing anywhere near the thing that hurts. There are seasons where you keep praying because you do not know where else to go, but your prayer has more ache in it than confidence. That does not make you weak. It does not make you ungrateful. It does not mean your faith is fake. It means you are trying to bring a real heart to a real God while living in a real world that wounds people. Sometimes that is as holy as faith gets. Not polished certainty. Not loud triumph. Just honesty that keeps turning toward Him without having all the peace back yet.

There is something else people often miss when they talk about this subject. Trying your best can wear you down in its own way if you are not careful. Not because doing your best is bad, but because many people quietly attach their worth to how well they are holding up. They think the noblest thing they can do is keep pressing forward without admitting how much it costs them. They become dependable to everyone and inaccessible to themselves. They become the one who keeps going. The one who stays composed. The one who knows how to speak faith. The one who remains steady. Then suffering lands and exposes how fragile that whole arrangement was. Now you are forced to face the fact that being strong did not save you from breaking. Being faithful did not protect you from sorrow. Being disciplined did not remove your need to be held by God instead of just performing for Him.

For some people that is the beginning of a quieter and truer faith, though it rarely feels beautiful when it starts. It feels humiliating first. It feels like losing your script. It feels like not being able to say the right things anymore. It feels like praying without eloquence. It feels like opening the Bible and not knowing what to do with the distance between the words and your feelings. It feels like carrying questions you cannot resolve and still waking up with enough tenderness to say, God, I am here. That is not the kind of faith most people celebrate publicly. It does not look impressive. It does not sound victorious. Yet there is something deeply real about the soul that keeps coming to God with no performance left. A stripped down heart is not a failed heart. In some ways it is the first heart that is finally telling the whole truth.

The truth is that suffering reveals where we have confused God with the life we hoped He would give us. That is hard to say because the life we hoped for was often not sinful. It was usually simple. We wanted some rest. We wanted some peace. We wanted the people we love to be okay. We wanted a little relief from carrying so much. We wanted to stop waking up braced for bad news. We wanted the effort we have been making to turn into something softer. None of that is ugly. None of that is wrong. Still, when our hope locks itself onto those things too tightly, pain can make it feel like God Himself is slipping away when really it is our imagined version of safety that is breaking apart. That loss hurts more than people know how to describe. It feels like standing in the ruins of expectations that were never foolish, but still were not promised in the way we thought.

This is why suffering can make people feel older inside. Not older in years, but older in the eyes. There is a certain look that comes into a person when they have hoped hard and been hurt anyway. They still smile. They still care. They still show up. But they are slower to assume things will turn out well. They are slower to speak too confidently. A little caution has entered the room. A little sorrow has taken a chair by the window. That is not always unbelief. A lot of the time it is pain learning how to live beside faith. People carry both more often than they admit. They carry love for God and disappointment. Trust and fatigue. Hope and hesitation. Hunger for Him and fear of being hurt again. Real faith does not mean you never feel those tensions. Real faith often means you stop lying about them.

When I think about the people who suffer this way, I do not think of rebels. I think of tired mothers trying to keep their heart open while the house is heavy. I think of fathers carrying pressure they never learned how to speak about. I think of people sitting in cars before work asking God for strength just to get through the day without falling apart. I think of lonely believers who have been praying for change for years and still have not seen the answer they begged for. I think of people who have made real efforts to heal, to forgive, to grow, to stay faithful, and who still feel like they are moving through mud. I think of the person who loves God and is also deeply discouraged. Those are the people behind this question. Not cynical spectators. Not careless wanderers. People who are trying to keep their soul alive while they hurt.

That is why shallow answers feel cruel even when they are well meant. They tend to speak past the actual experience. They tell you everything is happening for a reason as though reason is the thing your heart needs most. They tell you God is teaching you something as if the lesson is always the main point. They tell you to count it all joy before they have even sat beside your grief for five honest minutes. They offer meaning too fast and presence too slowly. Yet one of the most painful parts of suffering is the loneliness that comes when people rush to explain what they have not really bothered to witness. There is a reason the heart closes when it feels handled instead of seen. There is a reason people often withdraw when they are hurting deeply. They are not always rejecting comfort. Many times they are protecting the last tender parts of themselves from being simplified.

A better place to begin is to admit that suffering does not always arrive with a clean explanation attached to it. There are moments in life where you can trace what happened and learn from it. There are also moments where you cannot do that honestly. Something broke and you do not know why it had to break this way. Someone walked away and you do not know why love was not enough to keep them near. A door stayed closed and you do not know why God did not open it when you begged Him to. There are losses that do not resolve into tidy insight on the timeline we would choose. There are seasons that do not tie themselves into a neat lesson by the end of the chapter. You can force meaning too early if you are desperate enough. Many people do. Yet forced meaning rarely comforts the soul for long. It usually just covers grief with spiritual language and leaves the deeper ache untouched.

It may be that one of the most painful parts of mature faith is learning that trust is not the same thing as having everything explained. There are long stretches where trust looks less like certainty and more like staying. It looks like not running from God just because you do not understand Him right now. It looks like opening your life to Him without pretending you are okay. It looks like letting Him see the bruised places instead of hiding them behind gratitude that has become more performance than truth. It looks like telling Him that you are tired of being strong. It looks like admitting you do not know how much longer you can carry this and still wanting Him in the room. That kind of faith is not loud. It does not draw attention to itself. It is often hidden from almost everyone. Yet heaven may see more beauty in that quiet honesty than in all the polished words we use when life is easy.

There is something tender that begins to happen when a person finally stops arguing with the fact that they are hurt. Not because they have given up, but because they are done denying what is already true. This is not self-pity. It is not spiritual weakness. It is a kind of humility. It says I cannot heal what I keep refusing to name. I cannot bring my whole self to God if I only bring the cleaned up parts. I cannot ask Him to meet me in my suffering if I am still pretending it has not reached that deep. For many people this is the turning point they resist the longest. They would rather solve the pain than sit honestly inside it for even a little while. Yet pain ignored does not become peace. It usually becomes distance. It becomes numbness. It becomes anger that leaks out sideways. It becomes weariness with no language around it. Sometimes the beginning of healing is not relief. It is truth.

The truth may be that you have been carrying more than you were ever meant to carry alone. The truth may be that your best has slowly become your identity and you are exhausted from holding yourself together. The truth may be that you are not just sad about what happened now. You are sad about everything it touched from before. The truth may be that you still love God, but you no longer know how to approach Him without bringing disappointment into the room. There is no point in hiding that from Him. He already sees it all. He sees the weariness you disguise. He sees the small resentments that shame has kept you from naming. He sees the hope that flickers and the fear that steps on it before it can grow. He sees the way you still turn toward Him even now. That matters more than you realize. A heart that still turns toward God while in pain has not lost everything. It may be closer to Him than it feels.

That is where this conversation needs to go next, because the question is not only why suffering happens. The deeper question is what becomes of a soul that keeps suffering while trying to remain faithful. What happens to a heart that is doing its best and still gets bruised? What kind of faith survives when easy answers stop working and old expectations fall apart? That is where the truest part of this subject begins. Not with explanations that stand at a distance, but with the quieter work God does in a person who has stopped pretending and started bringing Him the whole of their ache.

What many people discover in that place is that suffering does not always first change what they believe about God. It changes what they believe they are allowed to bring to Him. Before the pain, they came with gratitude, plans, requests, hopes, and clean thoughts. After the pain deepens, they often start hiding the messier things. They hide the anger because they think it sounds disrespectful. They hide the disappointment because they think it sounds unfaithful. They hide the fear because they think they should be further along by now. They hide the weariness because they have become so used to being the strong one that even God now gets the edited version. What they do not realize is that edited prayer slowly becomes distant prayer. When you keep trimming away the truest parts of your heart, it is hard to feel deeply known. The room grows quieter, but it is not peace. It is caution. It is self-protection wearing religious clothes. It is a soul standing near God while still keeping a hand on the door.

There is a painful kind of loneliness that can grow inside believers who are suffering and still trying to do everything right. It is not only that other people do not fully understand. It is that they themselves no longer know how to speak plainly. They have become fluent in acceptable language and weak in honest language. They know how to say they are trusting God. They know how to say they are walking through a season. They know how to say God is good. Those things may all be true, but they do not always touch the center of the wound. Underneath those sentences might be a much more private cry. It might be that they feel overlooked. It might be that they are hurt that relief has not come. It might be that they are frightened by how numb they have become. It might be that they are tired of waking up with the same burden and acting like that is spiritually normal. A heart can go a long time without truth and still keep functioning. It just cannot stay tender that way.

Tenderness matters more than most people know. Many people measure spiritual strength by how little pain seems to affect them. They think maturity means remaining untouched. Yet some of the strongest souls are the ones that have been hit hard and have still refused to turn into stone. They are not always cheerful. They are not always impressive. They may be slower now. They may be quieter. They may need more time to recover from things than they used to. Yet there is still softness in them. They still care. They still grieve. They still notice when others are hurting. They still bring their tired heart to God instead of shutting it down completely. That kind of softness costs something. It costs you when you have been disappointed. It costs you when people misunderstand your pain and give you slogans instead of presence. It costs you when you are tempted to protect yourself by becoming colder than you really are. The soul that stays tender after suffering has fought a battle most people never see.

I think there are seasons when suffering exposes not only our wounds but the false jobs we have given ourselves. Many people quietly believe it is their job to make sense of everything before they can rest. They think peace must be earned through understanding. They go over every conversation, every closed door, every unanswered prayer, every silence, trying to find the missing piece that will finally let their heart unclench. Yet there are pains that do not yield to analysis. There are losses that stay painful even after you understand as much as you possibly can. There are seasons where you can gather every detail, trace every event, name every pattern, and still feel the sorrow sitting there. It is humbling to realize that some suffering remains because it is suffering, not because you have failed to decode it. The heart can wear itself out trying to solve what it really needs help carrying. That is one reason people become so tired. They are not only living through pain. They are trying to master it so they do not have to feel helpless. That effort becomes its own burden.

Helplessness is one of the hardest feelings for people who are sincere. It threatens the image they have built of themselves as responsible, faithful, steady people. It forces them to face the fact that love, effort, discipline, and prayer do not give them control over every outcome. You can do your part and still watch something fall apart. You can seek God and still find yourself in a season you never would have chosen. You can be careful and still get wounded. There is grief in that. Not just grief over the event itself, but grief over your own limits. The older many people get, the more they begin to understand that being good at carrying life is not the same thing as being able to keep life from breaking your heart. That realization can either harden a person or deepen them. It depends on whether they let helplessness drive them into bitterness or into a truer dependence on God.

That dependence does not always feel noble when it begins. It often feels embarrassing. It feels like being reduced. It feels like finding out you are more fragile than you wanted to believe. It feels like your usual strengths are not enough for this season. A lot of people resist that stage because they have spent years building an identity around competence. They are the one who knows how to endure. The one who figures it out. The one who keeps moving. The one who is there for everybody else. Yet suffering has a way of quietly taking the tools out of your hand and showing you that survival itself is not the same thing as peace. It shows you that you can be outwardly functional and inwardly worn thin. It shows you that what you called strength may have partly been fear in disguise. Fear of slowing down. Fear of feeling too much. Fear of admitting need. Fear of discovering that under all your faithful effort is a human being who wants to be comforted.

There is no shame in wanting comfort. That should not have to be said, but for many people it does. Somewhere along the way they started believing that comfort was for weaker people. They do not mind giving it, but they struggle receiving it. They know how to sit with someone else in pain. They know how to show tenderness to another person who is breaking. They just do not know how to hold that same posture toward themselves. So when suffering comes, they become hard with their own heart. They tell themselves to get perspective. They tell themselves to be grateful. They tell themselves other people have it worse. They tell themselves to stop feeling so much. They rush to correct themselves before compassion ever gets a chance to arrive. Then they wonder why their soul feels so tired. It feels tired because it has been asked to survive on pressure instead of mercy.

God is not like that with us, though many people imagine He is. They imagine Him standing at a distance with folded arms waiting for them to become less emotional, less needy, less affected, less confused. They imagine Him disappointed by the very weakness He already knew would be part of being human. They imagine that if they really trusted Him, they would stop aching so much. Yet the life of faith is not a process of becoming less human. It is a process of bringing our full humanity into the presence of God instead of hiding it from Him. Grief, confusion, disappointment, and weariness do not shock Him. Need does not repel Him. A trembling heart is not too messy for Him. If anything, one of the quiet tragedies in many people’s spiritual life is that they spend years hiding from God in the very places where He most wants to meet them. Not because He loves weakness for its own sake, but because He knows that truth is the doorway through which real comfort enters.

Real comfort is different from quick relief. Relief says the pain is gone for the moment. Comfort says you are not alone in it. Relief changes circumstances. Comfort steadies a heart. Relief is wonderful when it comes, but it does not always come when we ask for it. Comfort can be present even while the hard thing remains. That matters because some of the deepest suffering people carry is not something that vanishes after one prayer or one insight. Some burdens are slow. Some losses leave a long echo. Some disappointments take time to stop bleeding into everything else. If a person thinks God is only near when relief arrives, they may miss the quieter ways He is holding them in the meantime. Sometimes His nearness looks like not letting your heart die. Sometimes it looks like giving you enough grace to endure another day without losing yourself completely. Sometimes it looks like meeting you in the very honesty you were afraid would offend Him.

I have seen people grow closer to God not when life finally made sense, but when they finally stopped trying to make their pain acceptable before bringing it to Him. They stopped rehearsing the polished version. They stopped acting like every prayer needed to land on a triumphant note. They started speaking like sons and daughters instead of performers. They started saying they were disappointed. They started saying they were worn out. They started saying they did not know how much more they could take. They started saying they needed help in more than a general way. That shift may sound small, but it can change everything. There is a difference between praying at God and praying with your actual heart. One keeps control. The other risks relationship. One hides behind right words. The other lets itself be seen. That second kind of prayer can feel frightening at first because it leaves no place to hide. Yet it is often the place where love begins to feel real again.

You may have noticed that suffering often creates a strange hunger for what is genuine. Things that once felt impressive stop feeling nourishing. The louder forms of certainty lose some of their appeal. Cliches start sounding empty. Performance grows harder to tolerate. You find yourself longing for words that have lived somewhere. You want honesty. You want truth that has breath in it. You want hope that has walked through some fire. Pain does that. It reduces your appetite for polished noise and makes you crave substance. In a hidden way, that can be grace. Not because suffering itself is beautiful, but because it pushes you away from what is hollow. It teaches you to recognize the difference between spiritual appearance and spiritual reality. It makes you value gentleness over image, presence over explanation, truth over polish, quiet faithfulness over dramatic display. A wounded heart often sees through things it once admired. That loss of illusion is painful, but it can also make room for something more real.

There is another part of this many people quietly experience. Suffering can make them feel guilty for still having needs after they have already been trying so hard. They tell themselves they should be stronger by now. They think that since they have come this far, they should not still be this affected. They feel ashamed that one more disappointment can still hit so deep. Yet effort does not erase need. The fact that you have been trying does not remove your humanity. Sometimes the people who are trying the hardest are the ones most in need of gentleness because they have been carrying more than anyone knows. They have been showing up while depleted. They have been obeying while tired. They have been loving while under strain. They have been pressing forward with private weights no one sees. When suffering comes on top of that, of course it hurts. Of course it shakes them. There is no shame in reaching the edge of what you can carry. That edge is where many people finally learn that grace is not a reward for the strong. It is the lifeline of the honest.

I think one of the more beautiful things God does in a long, hard season is He slowly untangles our worth from our outcomes. In easier times, many people tie their value to how well things are going, how steady they feel, how useful they are, how much progress they can see. Then suffering interrupts all of that. It keeps them from feeling productive in the ways they prefer. It limits them. It humbles them. It shows them how quickly identity built on performance can begin to tremble. This can feel devastating at first, because the old measures stop working. Yet beneath that loss is a better invitation. It is the invitation to be loved without earning the feeling of being lovable. It is the invitation to discover that God’s care is not based on your ability to keep everything moving. It is the invitation to stop treating your hard season like proof that you are failing and begin seeing it as a place where deeper belonging can grow.

Belonging matters more than answers in some seasons. A person can survive mystery better than they can survive abandonment. That is why the enemy of the soul works so hard to make pain feel personal in the worst way. He wants suffering to feel like rejection. He wants delay to feel like neglect. He wants hardship to feel like evidence that you are outside the circle of care. If he can do that, pain becomes larger than pain. It becomes an accusation. It begins speaking into your identity. It tells you that you are harder to love, slower to rescue, easier to overlook. That lie has undone many people more than the suffering itself. Not because the pain was small, but because the lie made it feel final. The truth is that God’s nearness is not measured by how quickly every wound closes. Sometimes His nearness is what keeps your soul from agreeing with the lie that your life is disposable. Sometimes His presence is the hidden force preserving your heart while the season itself remains unresolved.

When you live long enough, you begin to see that some of the most changed people are not the people who got the easiest road. They are the people who walked through some dark valleys and kept letting God teach them how to remain open. They are usually gentler than before. They are less arrogant about life. They are slower to judge. They are more careful with other people’s pain. They do not rush to explain suffering because they know what it feels like to sit inside a night that would not move. They have learned that a person can be full of faith and still feel undone. They have learned that tears are not the opposite of trust. They have learned that some victories are invisible for a long time. A softer heart in a harder life is a kind of miracle. It does not get celebrated the way outward success does, but heaven sees it. God sees it. A person who keeps love alive in the middle of pain has not lost nearly as much as the world thinks.

That does not mean suffering becomes easy to welcome. No honest person wants to romanticize it. There are things you will never call good in themselves. There are losses you would undo in a second if you could. There are nights you would not choose again. There are prayers you still wish had been answered differently. Faith does not require you to call the wound beautiful. It asks something more difficult and more human than that. It asks whether you will let God stay near even where life has been ugly. It asks whether you will keep talking to Him from the real place instead of the rehearsed one. It asks whether you will let Him care for the version of you that feels tired, disappointed, afraid, and small. People sometimes imagine mature faith means rising above those feelings. Many times it means bringing those feelings into the light and refusing to let them become your secret life.

The secret life of pain is where many people slowly disappear from themselves. Outwardly they remain present. Inwardly they withdraw. They become efficient but not alive. They become functional but not free. They stop expecting comfort. They stop believing peace could actually reach them. They settle into endurance without intimacy. That is not the kind of survival God wants for His children. He is not interested in keeping you barely standing while your interior world grows colder and more disconnected. He cares about the hidden person you are becoming in the middle of this. He cares whether your heart remains accessible to love. He cares whether your pain is turning into truth or hardening into self-protection. He cares whether you are learning to receive what He gives, not only accomplish what you think is expected of you. That is one reason suffering can become a crossroads. It will often reveal whether your relationship with God has room for tenderness or only for duty.

Duty can carry a person for a while. It can keep habits in place. It can keep you reading, praying, serving, staying disciplined, showing up. Those things matter. Yet duty alone cannot heal a bruised soul. At some point the heart needs affection, not only instruction. It needs nearness, not only direction. It needs to know that God is not simply managing its growth but caring for its ache. Some people resist that because affection feels vulnerable. They would rather receive assignments than tenderness. Assignments keep things clean. Tenderness touches the places they have kept guarded. Yet if you never let God love you where you are hurting, you will keep trying to become strong enough to deserve what He has been offering freely all along. That road is exhausting. It leaves people endlessly working toward rest instead of receiving rest as part of the way forward.

One of the quieter changes that can happen in a hard season is that you begin to stop asking only, Why is this happening, and you begin to ask, What would it look like to stay honest and loved here. That second question does not solve the first one, but it changes the air around it. It moves the focus from explanation to relationship. It makes space for the possibility that God may be doing something deeper than giving you immediate clarity. He may be teaching your heart how to live without disguises. He may be teaching you that being held is not the same thing as being spared from every wound. He may be drawing you into a faith that is less based on outcomes and more rooted in communion. That kind of faith is usually quieter than the faith people advertise. It does not always produce dramatic language. It often looks like staying. It looks like speaking truth to God on ordinary days. It looks like receiving enough mercy to keep going without pretending that going is easy.

You do not need to become a mystery to yourself in order to survive suffering. You do not need to harden every tender place just because life has been rough. You do not need to punish your own heart for being affected. You do not need to turn honest questions into moral failures. You can tell the truth about how hard this has been. You can tell the truth about how weary you are. You can tell the truth about where hope has become difficult. You can tell the truth about wanting relief. None of that disqualifies you from closeness with God. If anything, it may be the very path back into it. He is not asking you to meet Him as a cleaned up version of yourself. He is asking you to come as the person who is actually living this life. The person who is trying. The person who is hurting. The person who still turns toward Him, even if it is with trembling hands.

That matters more than you know. There is a holy stubbornness in the soul that keeps turning toward God while suffering has not yet loosened its grip. It may not feel impressive, but it is precious. It may not look like triumph, but it is faithful. A person who still reaches for Him after disappointment, after delay, after weariness, after nights of silence, is not a small thing. That is not a weak believer. That is someone whose faith has kept breathing under pressure. God sees that. He sees the effort no one else notices. He sees the days when you kept going with almost nothing in the tank. He sees the restraint it took not to give your pain the final word. He sees the tears you never explained to anyone. He sees the prayer that barely came out. He sees the way you still wanted Him in the room even when you did not know what to say.

Maybe that is where you are right now. Maybe you are not in a dramatic collapse. Maybe you are just quietly tired. Maybe you are still functioning, still doing what needs to be done, still keeping promises, still trying to honor God, but inwardly you feel worn. Maybe you are carrying a disappointment that has lasted longer than you ever thought it would. Maybe you are weary of hearing easy lines from people who do not know what this has cost you. Maybe you are trying to keep your heart soft and finding that harder than anyone would guess. If so, let me say something plainly. Your pain does not make you less sincere. Your confusion does not make you less faithful. Your need does not make you less spiritual. You do not have to earn the right to be comforted. You do not have to become easier to love before God comes near. He is already near. Sometimes the hardest thing is not persuading Him to come close. It is believing He is gentle enough to meet you exactly where you are.

If this season has done anything good, maybe it is this. Maybe it has shown you how little performance can actually carry a human soul. Maybe it has shown you that the deepest part of you does not need another script. It needs truth. It needs mercy. It needs a God who is not frightened by unvarnished sorrow. It needs the kind of love that can sit with you while answers remain incomplete. That kind of love is not weak because it does not rush. It is strong enough to stay. It is patient enough to witness your pain without trying to erase your humanity. It is faithful enough to keep holding you while your heart learns again how to rest. In a strange way, suffering can strip away the image of God you could manage and leave you face to face with the God who is real. Not distant. Not irritated. Not cold. Real. Present. Compassionate. Strong enough for the truth.

So if you are trying your best and life still hurts, do not add self-condemnation to the weight you are already carrying. Do not decide that your tears mean you are doing faith wrong. Do not let this hard chapter convince you that God has stepped away or that your effort was meaningless. Sometimes your best does not prevent suffering. Sometimes your best is what keeps you turned toward God while suffering does its worst. That is not nothing. Sometimes the quiet victory is that pain did not get to make you cruel. Sometimes the miracle is that you are still here with an open Bible, a tired heart, and enough honesty left to whisper one more prayer. Sometimes growth looks less like feeling strong and more like refusing to disappear. Stay there. Stay near Him in the truest way you can. Speak plainly. Rest when you can. Let mercy be more believable than accusation. Let God be kinder than the voice in your head that tells you to toughen up. This season is not the whole story of your life, and this pain is not the truest thing about you.

You are still loved in it. You are still seen in it. You are still being held in ways you may not understand yet. One day you may look back and see that the deepest work was not happening around you as much as within you. It was the work of learning that God can be trusted with the parts of you that do not shine. It was the work of discovering that being weary did not make you unwanted. It was the work of finding out that His presence can survive your questions. It was the work of becoming honest enough to be healed where you actually live instead of where you pretend to live. Until that becomes clearer, keep bringing Him the real thing. Keep bringing Him the unedited heart. Keep bringing Him the ache, the fatigue, the disappointment, the longing, and the little bit of hope you still have. That is enough for today. The God who meets people in truth knows what to do with that.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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from Steven Noack – Der Quellcode des Lebens

Ich muss gestehen, dass ich bei diesem Text lange gezögert habe, wo ich anfangen soll.

Die Worte fehlen nicht. Sondern weil das, was ich eigentlich sagen will, so einfach ist, dass ich Angst habe, es durch zu viel Reden kaputtzumachen.

Also mache ich es kurz und stelle die These gleich an den Anfang: Die Leere, die sich bei vielen Menschen irgendwann meldet, nachdem sie materiell angekommen sind, aber innerlich die Leere. Sie ist der Nullpunkt, an dem das andere, tiefere Leben überhaupt erst anfangen kann. Der Rest dieses Textes ist eigentlich nur die lange Version dieser einen Zeile.

Ich schreibe das aus zwei Gründen.

Erstens: Ich habe diese Leere selbst erlebt. In verschiedenen Formen, über längere Zeit. Und ich habe lange gebraucht, um zu verstehen, was sie eigentlich wollte. Ich habe sie zuerst bekämpft. Dann versucht, sie wegzuoptimieren. Dann mit Projekten zugedeckt. Und irgendwann habe ich aufgehört und das war der Moment, in dem sich etwas verändert hat.

Zweitens: Ich lese seit vielen Jahren Texte, die genau über diese Sache reden. Zwei davon will ich hier einweben, weil sie mir wirklich geholfen haben. Der eine ist ein Korpus namens Das Gesetz des Einen, eine Sammlung eigenartiger Gespräche aus den frühen 1980er Jahren. Der andere ist Laozis Tao Te King, das rund 2.500 Jahre älter ist. Beide sagen im Kern dasselbe. Sie sagen es nur anders.

Ich nenne die Quellen direkt, weil ich finde, man sollte nicht um sie herumschleichen. Wenn ein Gedanke trägt, trägt er auch, wenn man weiß, wo er herkommt.

Warum überhaupt “Nullpunkt”

In der Physik ist der Nullpunkt nie wirklich Null.

Das wissen die meisten, die mal bei irgendwas mit Quantenmechanik vorbeigeschaut haben. Ein System kann theoretisch bis zum absoluten Nullpunkt heruntergekühlt werden, und trotzdem bleibt da noch Energie. Nullpunktenergie nennt man das. Es ist kein Messfehler und kein Artefakt, es ist eine Eigenschaft der Realität selbst: Auch in der absoluten Ruhe ist noch etwas, das schwingt.

Ich finde das Bild hilfreich, weil es genau beschreibt, was viele Menschen spüren, wenn sie ihre materiellen Ziele erreicht haben. Sie sind zur Ruhe gekommen. Aber anstatt das als Fülle zu erleben, erleben sie da unten etwas, das weiter schwingt. Eine Unruhe im Stillstand. Ein leises, nicht abstellbares Signal.

Das kann man als Defekt interpretieren. Oder als Hinweis darauf, dass da unten etwas ist, das die ganze Zeit schon da war und nur deshalb übersehen wurde, weil die Oberfläche so geschäftig war.

Laozi und das Rad

Laozi hat für diesen Punkt ein Bild, das er in verschiedenen Varianten wiederholt, weil er offenbar gemerkt hat, dass wir es nicht auf Anhieb verstehen.

Er sagt: Schau dir ein Rad an. Speichen, Nabe, Felge. Wir denken, das Wesentliche sei das Feste, das Material, die Substanz. Aber ein Rad dreht sich nicht wegen der Speichen. Es dreht sich wegen des leeren Raums in der Mitte, durch den die Achse läuft. Ohne diese Leere geschieht überhaupt nichts.

Derselbe Gedanke mit einem Krug: Was ihn brauchbar macht, ist nicht der Ton, der Hohlraum, den der Ton umschließt. Und mit einem Zimmer: Gelebt wird nicht in den Wänden, sondern in dem Raum, den sie einschließen.

Laozis Pointe sinngemäß: Das Vorhandene macht nützlich. Das Nicht-Vorhandene macht wirksam.

Wenn du das ernst nimmst, dann ist die Leere, die du an einem sonnigen Sonntagnachmittag irgendwo zwischen zwei Projekten spürst, vielleicht gar nicht das Gegenteil deines Lebens. Vielleicht ist sie die Nabe. Der Nullpunkt. Der Ort, um den sich alles andere überhaupt erst organisieren kann.

Warum die Leere dich eventuelle eingeholt hat

Jetzt wird es konkreter.

Menschen, die irgendwann an diesen Punkt kommen, haben fast immer eine ähnliche Biografie. Sie haben gelernt, dass Disziplin trägt. Dass Fokus Ergebnisse bringt. Dass Wille Wirklichkeit formt. Das ist keine Einbildung, das stimmt tatsächlich. Genau mit diesen Eigenschaften haben sie erreicht, was sie erreicht haben.

Nur haben diese Eigenschaften einen Wirkungsbereich. Und der hat eine Grenze.

Im Gesetz des Einen gibt es einen kurzen Dialog, der mich seit Jahren begleitet. Jemand zählt vor seinem Gesprächspartner alles auf, was er an spirituellen Werkzeugen kennt. Disziplin, Selbsterkenntnis, Willensstärkung und fragt, ob das eigentlich alles sei. Die Antwort kommt fast unterbrechend:

Das ist Methode. Das ist nicht das Herz.

Sechs Worte. Aber sie sitzen.

Die Aussage ist nicht, dass Methode schlecht sei. Methode ist großartig. Methode baut Brücken, heilt Körper, führt Firmen, schreibt Bücher, zieht Kinder groß. Alles, was wir in der äußeren Welt hinkriegen, kriegen wir mit Methode hin.

Die Aussage ist: Es gibt einen Bereich im Menschen, den Methode nicht erreicht. Nicht weil die Methode zu schwach wäre, sondern weil sie dort nichts zu tun hat. Du kannst dich tracken, optimieren, verfeinern und dabei an dem Ort vorbeilaufen, um den es eigentlich geht.

Das Herz ist so ein Ort. Die Stille ist einer. Und auch die Leere, von der wir hier reden.

Einatmen und Ausatmen

Hier wird Laozi nochmal wichtig.

Die westliche Ratgeberliteratur liebt Gegensätze. Alt gegen neu. Falsch gegen richtig. Das war früher, das ist jetzt, du musst umschalten. So funktioniert Buchmarketing, aber so funktionieren Menschen nicht.

Laozi denkt anders. Bei ihm gibt es keine Gegensätze, die einander abschaffen. Es gibt Pole, die einander bedingen. Tag und Nacht. Yang und Yin. Einatmen und Ausatmen. Keiner davon ist der Bessere. Keiner kann ohne den anderen.

Dein bisheriges Leben war vielleicht ein langes, konsequentes Einatmen. Ziele setzen, erreichen, wachsen, bauen. Das war richtig. Das bleibt richtig. Das wird auch wiederkommen.

Aber irgendwann braucht jedes Einatmen das Ausatmen, sonst platzt der Mensch.

Was sich jetzt als Leere meldet, ist vielleicht einfach das Ausatmen, das du dein ganzes Leben lang aufgeschoben hast.

Und das Eigenartige am Ausatmen ist, dass du es mit den Mitteln des Einatmens nicht erreichst. Du kannst nicht intensiver einatmen, um besser auszuatmen. Du kannst nur aufhören, weiter einzuatmen. Dann passiert das Ausatmen von selbst.

Was passiert, wenn du aufhörst?

Ich meine das ernst. Was passiert wirklich, wenn du einen Nachmittag lang aufhörst? Nicht bewusst entschleunigst. Nicht produktiv ruhst. Nicht auf einer Yogamatte liegst und innerlich an morgen denkst. Sondern wirklich: aufhörst.

Bei den meisten, die ich kenne, kommt als Erstes Panik. Dann Unruhe. Dann der Impuls, doch wieder etwas zu tun. Und erst nach dieser ganzen Welle, wenn man sie einfach ziehen lässt, kommt etwas anderes zum Vorschein. Etwas Leises. Etwas, das wir unser Leben lang übertönt haben, weil wir beschäftigt waren.

Wu wei

Es gibt im Tao ein Wort, das sich schwer übersetzen lässt: wu wei. Wörtlich: Nicht-Handeln. Gemeint ist aber nicht Faulheit und nicht Resignation.

Wu wei ist das Handeln, das nicht gegen den Strom drückt. Ein Segler, der den Wind nicht bekämpft, sondern mit ihm fährt. Eine Wunde, die heilt, weil der Körper in Ruhe gelassen wird. Ein Gespräch, das sich ergibt, weil man aufhört, es zu steuern.

Wu wei ist das Gegenmittel gegen eine Erschöpfung, die viele erreichte Menschen kennen, ohne sie benennen zu können. Diese Erschöpfung kommt nicht vom vielen Tun. Sie kommt vom ständigen Tun gegen. Gegen den Widerstand. Gegen die Zeit. Gegen die innere Unruhe. Gegen die Leere.

Wenn du aufhörst, gegen deine Leere anzukämpfen, passiert etwas Seltsames: Sie wird weicher. Sie wird weniger bedrohlich, als sie aus der Entfernung war. Und manchmal, das ist meine eigene Erfahrung, merkst du irgendwann, dass sie dir die ganze Zeit etwas mitteilen wollte, das du nur deshalb nicht hören konntest, weil du zu laut warst.

Das, was unter allem liegt

Im Gesetz des Einen steht ein Satz, der mich beim ersten Lesen geärgert hat, weil er zu einfach klang. In meiner Übertragung:

In jedem noch so kleinen Teil von dir wohnt das Ganze. Mit all seiner Kraft.

Das ist Poesie, dachte ich damals. Hübsch, aber unpraktisch.

Inzwischen denke ich anders darüber. Der Satz sagt nämlich etwas sehr Konkretes: Was dir in der Leere fehlt – die Fülle, der Sinn, das Ganze – ist keine Substanz, die dir zugefügt werden müsste. Es ist etwas, das unter Schichten liegt. Du hast es nicht verloren. Du hast es nur, irgendwann im Lauf deines sehr bemühten Lebens, mit anderem zugedeckt.

Wenn das stimmt und ich sage bewusst wenn, du musst das nicht glauben, um etwas davon zu haben, dann verändert sich die Richtung. Wenn das Ganze bereits in dir wohnt, ist die naheliegende Bewegung nicht, weiter zu suchen. Sondern still zu werden. Lange genug, dass sich das, was unten liegt, langsam hochtasten kann.

Und die Leere ist genau der Raum, in dem das möglich wird. Sie ist kein Feind dieser Bewegung. Sie ist ihre Voraussetzung.

Was deine Sehnsucht wirklich will

Noch ein Satz aus denselben Texten, den ich mag, weil er so unpathetisch ist:

Sehnsucht ist der Schlüssel zu dem, was du empfängst. Vielleicht verstehst du deine Sehnsucht nicht.

Der zweite Teil ist der wichtige.

Vielleicht hast du lange gedacht, du wolltest Erfolg. Freiheit. Sicherheit. Anerkennung. Ruhe. Und dann hast du genau das bekommen und etwas in dir sagt leise: Das war es nicht.

Das heißt nicht, dass du dich geirrt hast. Es heißt, dass die Oberflächenschicht deiner Sehnsucht die war, die du benennen konntest. Darunter lag eine tiefere Schicht, die keinen Namen hatte. Die konnte sich nur als diffuses mehr bemerkbar machen, und dieses mehr wurde in deiner Sprache zu mehr erreichen. Was du aber wirklich wolltest, war etwas anderes. Etwas, das sich mit Erreichen nicht kriegen lässt.

Die Leere ist der Moment, in dem diese tiefere Schicht zu Wort kommt. Sie ist nicht wütend auf das, was du bekommen hast. Sie sagt nur: Jetzt bin ich dran.

Was wäre, wenn du sie einmal fragen würdest, was sie will? Nicht taktisch, nicht weil du es hinterher in ein Journal eintragen willst. Sondern aus echter Neugier. Und was wäre, wenn die Antwort nicht sofort käme und du das aushieltst?

Drei Bewegungen, keine Lösungen

Ich schreibe das hier nicht, weil ich dir einen Weg verkaufen möchte. Ich weiß nicht, was für dich richtig ist. Ich kenne deine Leere nicht. Ich kenne nur meine eigene, und ich schreibe aus dem, was sie mich gelehrt hat, langsam, widerwillig, selten in geraden Linien.

Wenn du an dem Punkt bist, den dieser Text beschreibt, biete ich dir am Ende drei kleine Bewegungen an. Keine Lösungen. Eher Haltungen, die du ausprobieren kannst, ohne dass etwas davon abhängt.

Die Erste: Lass die Leere einmal neben dir sitzen, ohne sie in etwas verwandeln zu wollen. Sitz mit ihr wie mit einem stillen Gast, der noch nicht entschieden hat, ob er reden will. Frag sie nichts. Arbeite nichts auf. Lies keinen Ratgeber. Beobachte einfach, was nach zehn Minuten passiert. Nach einer Stunde. Nach einem Abend.

Die Zweite: Hör auf, dein bisheriges Leben gegen dein zukünftiges auszuspielen. Dein Wille, deine Disziplin, deine Systeme, die bleiben ein Teil von dir. Sie werden wiederkommen, wenn sie gebraucht werden. Im Moment dürfen sie ausruhen. Einatmen und Ausatmen gehören zum gleichen Atem, und du bist weder zur Hälfte das eine noch zur Hälfte das andere. Du bist beides.

Die Dritte und wichtigste: An dir ist nichts zu reparieren. Ich weiß, das ist schwer zu glauben, wenn man jahrzehntelang gelernt hat, sich selbst als Optimierungsprojekt zu betrachten. Aber es stimmt. Du bist nicht kaputt. Du bist am Ende einer Phase. Die nächste beginnt, sobald du das, was ist, eine Weile unbearbeitet neben dir sitzen lässt.

Und irgendwann, wenn du wirklich still geworden bist, merkst du vielleicht, dass diese Leere, die du so lange für deinen Feind gehalten hast, einfach ein Raum war. Ein Raum, in dem jemand auf dich gewartet hat, der sich in dem ganzen Lärm deines erfolgreichen Lebens nie hat zeigen können.

Vielleicht bist das du selbst. Vielleicht ist es etwas, für das du noch keinen Namen hast.

So oder so: Dieser Nullpunkt ist kein Ende. Er ist ein Anfang. Und das Einzige, was man tun muss, um ihn als solchen zu erleben, ist, aufzuhören, ihn für einen Fehler zu halten.


Zu den Quellen, die ich oben schon erwähnt habe: Die kursiv gesetzten Sätze sind meine freie Übertragung aus dem Gesetz des Einen, einer Gesprächssammlung aus den Jahren 1981 bis 1984. Laozis Tao Te King ist rund zweieinhalbtausend Jahre älter und sagt in wesentlichen Punkten erstaunlich Ähnliches. Wer neugierig geworden ist, findet den Weg zu den Originalen leicht selbst.

 
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from Dear Anxious Teacher

I hope that each of you have a supportive mentor. This should be a special time at the start of your career where you get to meet students for the first time in this role. Dress professional, bring a notebook, and I hope you get a chance to observe for a few days to feel comfortable in the room. Observe everything in the classroom from the student-teacher interactions, the student behavior, the teacher’s rapport with the student, classroom management style, lesson delivery and pacing, forms of assessment, etc. There is so much more to take in but getting comfortable and getting your confidence is the first big step. You may feel nervous and have anxiety about teaching a new group of students.

With my student teachers, I recommend walking around when students are working independently to start building comfort for both you and them. Getting to know them will make this first lesson go so much easier. Greeting the students and some small talk will go very far with them. Offering help or assistance is another great idea to help you feel more comfortable. So get on your feet and ask the cooperating teacher if it’s okay to walk the aisles and check out their work. Keep a smile on your face.

Ask your cooperating teacher to start small. Ask if you could begin with the Do Now activity. This 3-5 minute review at the beginning of class is a short way to start building your confidence. Watch your cooperating teacher perform it a few times before trying it yourself. Don’t be afraid to make a mistake. It happens. Hopefully the cooperating teacher is okay with you trying their own before you start creating your own.

After a week or so, start to prepare a lesson under the guidance of your cooperating teacher. Now every cooperating teacher is different. Some will give you all the support in the world, and others will expect you to be a great teacher with new knowledge of the teaching world. For me, I was clueless and needed a lot of support. Ask the teacher what topic or content should be taught. If you can get a topic, great! If not, I recommend picking your own topic. If you don’t know what to teach, please get a copy of the state learner standards in your content and try addressing one of the standards or learner objectives. Once you understand the learner objective, start preparing your lesson.

If you are unfamiliar with the standard or have to learn the content yourself first, spend time on YouTube channels or Google researching and understanding the topic. I have been there plenty of times. This might be a reeducation for yourself, or maybe the content is entirely new.

Break your lesson down by the following structure: Do Now (anticipatory set), instructional portion (keep short 10-12 minutes), guided practice (student practice activity), and finally independent practice portion of the lesson. This is the I Do, We Do, You Do method of teaching. Your lesson should close with some kind of exit ticket. Guided Practice could be 10 minutes. Independent Practice could be 10-15 minutes. An exit ticket at the end could be another 5 minutes. Nailing your timing will take time and an eye on the clock.

Exit Tickets function to help you gain a read on your students grasping of the new content. I like to do thumbs up, down, or sideways in front of their chests or 1, 2, 3 (with their fingers) by their shoulders with a multiple choice question on the board. A simple multiple choice question with an ABC answer choice. Selecting students in different parts of the room is effective to if ending the class on a question. Work the left side, the center, and the right side of your class by maybe asking the same question. You would think asking the same question is pointless, but you’ll soon find out students sometimes don’t pay attention to other students. This will help reinforce the concept you’re teaching. You can use post-it notes or give them a small piece of paper. I have also used Google Forms to collect an exit ticket from the students. I prefer hand gestures to actual paper methods as to avoid a mess and extra paperwork. You could also count the exit ticket as a participation grade of some sort if you like or toss in the garbage. Read them quick to measure how your lesson went.

Afterwards…ask your cooperating teacher for advice and constructive criticism. Question wait times, delivery, voice, intonation, visuals, lesson pacing/time, and any general thoughts on the lesson should be considered. When receiving the advice, try to implement and work on anything suggested for your next lesson.

It’s totally okay to make mistakes and for your lesson to fall flat. This happens to everyone. After teaching your first lesson, reflect on what went great and what you need to work on. Don’t beat yourself up. Give yourself a “pat on the back” for accomplishing your first lesson.

 
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from wystswolf

Security is not the absence of attack, but the presence of God.

Wolfinwool · Isaiah 54-55

Isaiah 54

Isaiah 54

Jehovah says:

“Shout joyfully, you barren woman who has not given birth! Become cheerful and cry out for joy, you who never had birth pains, For the sons of the desolate one are more numerous Than the sons of the woman with a husband.

Make the place of your tent more spacious. Stretch out the tent cloths of your grand tabernacle. Do not hold back, lengthen your tent cords, And make your tent pins strong.

For you will spread out to the right and to the left. Your offspring will take possession of nations, And they will inhabit the desolated cities.

Do not be afraid, for you will not be put to shame; And do not feel humiliated, for you will not be disappointed. For you will forget the shame of your youth, And the disgrace of your widowhood you will remember no more.”

“For your Grand Maker is as your husband, Jehovah of armies is his name, And the Holy One of Israel is your Repurchaser. He will be called the God of the whole earth.

For Jehovah called you as if you were an abandoned wife and grief-stricken, Like a wife married in youth and then rejected,” says your God.

“For a brief moment I abandoned you, But with great mercy I will gather you back.

In a flood of indignation I hid my face from you for a moment, But with everlasting loyal love I will have mercy on you,” says your Repurchaser, Jehovah.

“This is like the days of Noah to me. Just as I have sworn that the waters of Noah will no more cover the earth, So I swear that I will no more become indignant toward you or rebuke you.

For the mountains may be removed And the hills may be shaken, But my loyal love will not be removed from you, Nor will my covenant of peace be shaken,” says Jehovah, the One having mercy on you.

“O afflicted woman, storm-tossed, uncomforted, I am laying your stones with hard mortar And your foundation with sapphires.

I will make your battlements of rubies, Your gates of sparkling stones, And all your boundaries of precious stones.

And all your sons will be taught by Jehovah, And the peace of your sons will be abundant.

You will be firmly established in righteousness. You will be far removed from oppression, You will fear nothing and have no cause for terror, For it will not come near you.

If anyone should attack you, It will not be at my orders. Whoever makes an attack on you will fall because of you.”

“Look! I myself created the craftsman, Who blows on the charcoal fire, And his work produces a weapon. I myself also created the destructive man to bring ruin.

No weapon formed against you will have any success, And you will condemn any tongue that rises up against you in the judgment. This is the heritage of the servants of Jehovah, And their righteousness is from me,” declares Jehovah.

Isaiah 55

Jehovah says:

“Come, all you thirsty ones, come to the water! You with no money, come, buy and eat! Yes, come, buy wine and milk without money and without cost.

Why do you keep paying out money for what is not bread, And why spend your earnings for what brings no satisfaction? Listen intently to me, and eat what is good, And you will find great delight in what is truly rich.

Incline your ear and come to me. Listen, and you will keep alive, And I will readily make with you an everlasting covenant In harmony with the expressions of loyal love to David, which are faithful.

Look! I made him a witness to the nations, A leader and commander to the nations.

Look! You will call a nation that you do not know, And those of a nation who have not known you will run to you For the sake of Jehovah your God, the Holy One of Israel, Because he will glorify you.

Search for Jehovah while he may be found. Call to him while he is near.

Let the wicked man leave his way And the evil man his thoughts; Let him return to Jehovah, who will have mercy on him, To our God, for he will forgive in a large way.”

Jehovah declares:

“For my thoughts are not your thoughts, And your ways are not my ways.

For as the heavens are higher than the earth, So my ways are higher than your ways And my thoughts than your thoughts.

For just as the rain and the snow pour down from heaven And do not return there until they saturate the earth, making it produce and sprout, Giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater,

So my word that goes out of my mouth will be. It will not return to me without results, But it will certainly accomplish whatever is my delight, And it will have sure success in what I send it to do.

For you will go out with rejoicing, And in peace you will be brought back. The mountains and the hills will become cheerful before you with a joyful cry, And the trees of the field will all clap their hands.

Instead of thornbushes the juniper tree will grow, And instead of the stinging nettle the myrtle tree will grow. And it will bring fame to Jehovah, An everlasting sign that will never perish.”


#biblereading #bible #isaiah

 
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from miskarafael

Pitkästä aikaa Tampereella. Istuskelen Laukontorilla kahvilla auringossa ja katselen lauantain menoa. Tänään puodeista löytyy ainakin tuohikoreja sekä kuusamolaista muikkua. Kotoisaa pöhinää ja houkuttelevia tuoksuja. Pohdiskelen kaikenlaista. Mistä ihmiset tulevat, mihin he ovat matkalla ja mitä he mahtavat maailmasta ajatella.

Pidän habituksen tutkailusta. Ihmisten olemus kertoo paljon. Ilme, kävelytahti tai se, että vilkuileeko torilla kojuja vai painaako vain menemään. Tai pukeutuminen. Siihen kiinnitän eniten huomiota. Formi vai funktio. Mitä omalla pukeutumisellaan yksilö haluaa viestiä muille.

Mennään esimerkillä. Ohi käveli äsken kaksikko. Noin kuusikymppinen ja parikymppinen. Varmaankin äiti ja tytär. Molemmilla oli tuulipukua päällä. Helly Hansenin takkia ja mustaa housua. Lisäksi valkoiset juoksukengät ja tuulihousujen lahkeiden päälle vedetyt tennissukat. Trendejä seuraavaa sakkia selkeästi.

Ensiksi tuulipuvuista, sitten trendeistä.

Eli miksi pukeudutaan urheilullisesti jos ollaan menossa vaan käyskentelemään kaupungille ja torille juomaan kahvit? Tai ainakin kaksikon flegmaattinen hengailu torilla antaa sellaisen kuvan.

Teoriahörhönä lähestyn tätä bourdieuläisittäin. Funktio vs. formi. Tässä tapauksessa on painotettu funktiota. tuulitakki menee säähän kuin säähän. Juoksukengissä on mukava tallustaa. Eikä tuulihousut oo moksiskaan vaikka sattuisi istumaan toripenkillä linnunpaskaan.

Pukeutuminen on välttämättömyys, mutta samaan aikaan myös performanssi, jolla sanotaan jotakin. Rakennetaan itsestä narratiivia muille. Tuulipuvulla ja juoksukengillä – uskoisin – halutaan viestiä, että ollaan urheilullisia. Pidetään terveellisiä elämäntapoja arvokkaina. Että ollaan kultivoituneita siten, että valitaan pitkäjänteisyys ja niin sanottu korkeampi nautinto vaikka karkkien ja sipsien sijaan. Jotain tällaista kenties.

Ja tämä itsestä rakennettava narratiivi saa erilaisia ulottuvuuksia sosiokulttuurisessa tilassa. Sitä ei tulkita tyhjiössä narratiivin rakentajan näkökulmasta, tai objektiivisesti. Narratiivi rakentuu ja se tulkitaan aina suhteessa ympäröivään maailmaan. Ja subjektit tulkitsevat sitä erilaisista lähtökohdista eri tavoin. Jokaisen oma positio vaikuttaa tulkintaan. Ja näitä positioita ja niistä muodostuvia yhtenäisiä tulkintoja voidaan luokitella sosiokulttuurisiin luokkiin sitten.

Ehkä tutkijana jokin päivä.

Enivei.

Omia keloja tuulipuvusta. Mitä torilla käyskentely tuulipuvussa herättää mussa itsessäni? Itseasiassa kun asiaan kiinnittää laajemmin huomiota, niin oikeastaan aika moni on sonnustautunut tuulipukuun tai muihin urheilullisiin vetimiin. Se kertonee jotakin suomalaisesta sielunmaisemasta. Siitä funktionalistisesta ajattelusta. Tai ehkä suomalaisittain tätä pitäisi kutsua pragmatismiksi. Sama asia, menee hiustenhalkomiseksi.

Tuulipuku kertoo myös siitä, että millaista pukeutumista pidetään kaupunkitilaan soveliaana ja tavoiteltavana. Trendikkyys ja urheilullisuus ainakin tällaisia.

Mutta miksi? Uskoisin, että tekijöitä on monta. Eletään alati individualisoituvassa maailmassa, jossa itsensä kehittäminen – hyveiden kultivointi – on nostettu jalustalle. Se näkyy kaikkialla. Mainoksissa, kuvituskuvissa, elokuvissa ja lehdissä. Oikeastaan kaikessa mediassa. Eli millaisia ihmisiä valitaan ja nostetaan esille?

Laihoja. Terveitä. Hymyileväisiä. Kilttejä. Säyseitä. Keskiluokkaisia. Sellaisia kunnon kansalaisia. Esivallalle myönteisiä ja harmittomia.

Ja tietysti tällaista ihannetta tavoitellaan. Kaikki haluavat elää hyvää elämää. Olla terveitä ja onnellisia. Kokea kuuluvansa johonkin.

Sitten trendeihin. Tai tyyliin. Molempiin. Mun mielestä käytännöllisyys ja helppous on tylsää. Yksilöllisyys ja persoonallisuus katoavat tuulitakkien mereen.

Tää onkin yksi postmodernin ajan kiehtovimmista ristiriidoista: Yksilöllistyvässä maailmassa on koko ajan tärkeämpää luoda omaa identiteettiä ja brändiä – erottua massasta. Ja kaikki tää samaan aikaan on bulkkituotannon ja konsumerismin maailmassa yhä haastavampaa.

Kaikki tasapaksuistuu. Nesteytyy (ks. Bauman ja notkea moderni). Mietitään vaikka Stockmannia, joka oli aikoinaan Suomessa muodin ja trendien suunnannäyttäjä. Kiehtovien, rohkeiden ja uusien kledjujen paikka. Mutta jokin muuttui. Stocka jäi jumiin. Rupesivat pelkäämään persoonallisuutta. Nykyään Prismasta saa samannäköistä pukimetta kuin Stockalta. Suomalaisen vaatetuksen kentän selkeät rajat hajosivat ja on sulautunut yhdeksi mötikäksi.

Tietysti tää on vibailuun perustuva anekdootti ja yksinkertaistus. Mutta Stocka on juuttunut pahasti vuoteen 2016. Pelätään erottautua. Tai sitten vaan keskitytään talouslukuihin. Pitäydytään siinä, mitä myydään eniten. Ja sitä kautta häviää kaikki poikkeava, kenties kiinnostavakin. Jää vain massoja tyydyttävä tasapaksuisuus. Normaalijakauman 95%.

Ja juuri se tasapaksuisuus pelottaa mua. Eniten sen vuoksi, mitä se edustaa mulle: Ihmisten pelkistämistä kuluttajiksi, jotka ottaa kaiken vastaan mitä vain annetaan. Paskaa kurkusta alas ja ei olla moksiskaan, jopa kiitetään. Haluan olla muutakin kuin ratas kapitalistisessa myllyssä. Haluan olla yksilö, elää merkityksellistä elämää ja tehdä merkityksellisiä juttuja.

Mietin kapitalismin roolia tässä kaikessa. Se individualismi ja tarve erottautua. Vähemmän on vanhan liiton pieniä kotimaisia firmoja. Käsintehtyjä nahkarotseja tai semmoista. Ei pienet toimijat pärjää globaaleille jäteille, joilla on halvat hinnat, verkkokaupat ja mahdollisuus mainostaa kaikkialla. Että yhä harvempi iso toimija kerää valtaa.

Se kuuluu kapitalismin mekanismeihin olennaisesti. Kilpailussa suurempi ja menestyvämpi toimija ostaa pienemmän ja heikomman pois. Näennäisesti kuluttajalla on valinnanvaraa, mutta isot konglomeraatit operoivat kymmeniä tai satoja brändejä. Illuusio vapaasta valinnasta.

Mutta se, että pukeudunko perintönahkatakkiin vai tuulipukuun ei hirveästi muuta mun asemaa kapitalismin rattaissa. Kiinnostavaa on kuitenkin, että miksi ollaan sisäistetty pukeutumisen arvottamista, vaikka kaikki ollaankin saman järjestelmän alla samassa asemassa. Ajetaan arvottamalla kiilaa ihmisten väliin.

Habitukseen perustuvaa arvotusta ja syrjimistä lienee ollut aina. Joskus 60-luvulla ei päässyt Suomessakaan ravintoloihin, jos ei miehellä ollut puvuntakki ja solmio päällä tai naisella hame ja sukkahousut. Eivätkä naiset päässeet ilman miesseuraa ravintolaan. Että pukimevaatimukset toimivat ekstensiona taloudellisten ja sosiokulttuuristen hierarkioiden ylläpitämiselle.

En pidä tuulipukumeiningistä tai tasapaksuisuudesta. Kaipaan kiinnostavaa yksilöllisyyttä. Lienen sisäistänyt kapitalistisen hierarkisen ajattelun. Toisaalta haluan oikeuttaa positioni itselleni. Että arvottaminen ikään kuin tuntuu jossain määrin luonnolliselta. Siihen on vain kasvanut. Ja oppinut tarkastelemaan itseään negatiivisten kokemusten takia. En pidä omaa tyyliäni mitenkään kovin poikkeuksellisena, uniikkina tai riikinkukkomaisena, mutta kuulemma “tollanen vitun vassari”-henki musta huokuu.

Ehkä tällasten kokemusten takia just on oppinut arvottamaan. Oppinut, että millaisen habituksen omaavia kannattaa välttää. Etenkin jos joku on humalassa. Homottelua ja turpaanvetouhkauksia on tullut pitkien hiusten takia. Että sitten on oppinut luokittelemaan todennäköisiä uhkia. Ja sit laajemmin tutkailemaan ja arvottamaan. Jokin primaali aspekti tässä lienee. Me ja muut-, lauma- ja hahmontunnistusmeinki.

Kai se on inhimillistä laatikoida. Evolutiivinen funktio on havaittavissa edelleen. Tietää kelle kannattaa kääntää selkä aamuöisellä nakkikiskalla.

Ja luokitteleehan ihmiset itsejään habituksellaan. Halutaan olla osa ryhmää. Alakulttuurit on tällaisia. On punkkaria, räppäriä, rokkaria ja niin edelleen.

Pukeutuminen ekstensoi ihmisten maailmankuvaa ja arvomaailmaa. Tuo ne esiin. Ja vaikka ei ajattelisikaan, että mitä laittaa päälleen ja mikä narratiivinen merkitys sillä on, niin siinä implisiittisesti kertoo itsestään. Että ultrapikamuotiin itsensä verhoava tulee paljastaneeksi oman sosiokulttuurisen positionsa: tiedostamattomuutensa ja arvoarvostelmansa. Tai mittatilauspukuun pukeutuva viestii varallisuudestaan ja tarpeesta tuoda esiin yksilöllisyyttä.

Takaisin torille ja tuulipukumereen.

Miksi suomessa ei keskimäärin pukeuduta? Kai se on historia. Täällä ollaan oltu vahvasti agraariyhteiskunta vielä 1940-luvulla. Funktio on laitettu formin edelle. Myöhäinen kaupungistuminen ja teollistuminen lienee vaikuttanut siihen, että täällä ei ole vielä muodostunut samanlaista pukeutumiskulttuuria kuin Keski-Euroopassa.

Maantieteellisellä sijainnilla lienee lusikkansa tässä sopassa. Pohjolan perukat on eristäytyneitä verrattuna Manner-Eurooppaan. Ja vaikka globalisaatio ja internet ovatkin vähentäneet sijainnin, etäisyyden ja ajan merkitystä rajojen muodostajina, niin eivät maantieteelliset kulttuuriset rajat ole kadonneet mihinkään. Vaikka sekoittuneisuutta onkin. Ei kaikkea voi redusoida maantieteeseen tai muihin materialistisiin seikkoihin.

Että kulttuuriset ja historialliset konventiot vaikuttavat myös. Niihin pitäisi pureutua paremmin. Paremman puutteessa tulee takerruttua historialliseen materialismiin ja strukturalismiin.

Loppuun vielä pukeutumisen arvottamisesta. En pysty tätä ilmiötä täysin neutraalisti tarkastelemaan, vaan oma kaupunkilainen, leppoisa keskiluokkaisuus kyllä näkyy ja kuuluu. Toisaalta kaikki tulkitaan omien taustojen perusteella maailmaa. Sitä sisäistää tällaisia konventioita ja hierarkioita. Muiden arvottamista. En pidä siitä. Miksi teen niin? Se häiritsee. Ihmisiä, tuntevia ja arvokkaita olentoja kaikki ollaan. Eikä pukeutuminen loppupeleissä kerro ihmisestä tai hänen hyvyydestää. Turkista tai ultrapikamuotia pitäisi pyrkiä ymmärtämään. Ei tuomitsemaan.

 
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from Ernest Ortiz Writes Now

Last weekend was a bit stressful as both my kids threw up all over the couch cushions, bathroom floor, and on me. They’re okay, thank God. While they got it out of their system they had to eat again so they don’t go hungry. Always be super careful of what ingredients are in your food before feeding your children.

#children #food #ingredients #sick #stayathomedad #vomit

 
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