It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
from
wystswolf

We are everything — except allowed.
You say paint me
and I begin not with your body but with the way you arrive
like light through a window I didn’t know was there
Your arms, you call them too much
but to me they are the place a life could rest
the shape of holding made visible
We stand at the edge of something
not lack... never that
but a fullness we dare not spill
You say we have to
and I know you are right
so I gather myself like breath like prayer
and love you within the boundary
as if that were a kind of holiness
Still
there are moments
when you slip and say take me
and something in me answers like it has always known how
But I don’t
I stay
with you
in this quiet choosing
this almost
this us that exists without breaking
You see me
and it feels like a first time
not for being known, but for being kept
gently fully without demand
So I will paint you
again and again
in every light we’re given
and call it love
because it is
even here.
especially here.
from
The happy place
Aaah the spring sun is shining strongly on the dusty streets and pave walks, but in the brownish looking parks, it is possible to spot bright green grass
And I was today eating lunch where there was a buffet of pancakes, pizza, Indian food and some sort of schnitzel with potatoes and gravy, together sending a powerful message that you don’t need to choose; you can have everything at once (there was also sushi and kebab but not as part of the buffet).
And I walked with a belly full of world’s food and my back straight, gazing at the horizon.
from Littlefish
I’ve been questioning my reality a lot lately.
Not in a dramatic way. Just in this quiet, constant way where things don’t fully line up, and I can’t tell if that’s normal or if I’m the only one noticing it.
There’s so much happening—so many opinions, so many extremes—and everyone around me seems… calm. Or certain. And I don’t feel that way.
It makes me feel a little off. Like I’m missing something. Or maybe like I’m seeing something I’m not supposed to.
Or maybe I’m just overthinking it.
I don’t know.
I was raised in an environment that encouraged questioning things. Critical thinking, avoiding absolutes, not just accepting something because it’s said confidently. And I’m grateful for that.
But what’s been harder is realizing that questioning is only comfortable when it stays within certain boundaries.
When I started questioning things that sit underneath those boundaries—the shared foundation—it didn’t feel the same.
It went from being encouraged to being dismissed.
From “think for yourself” to “you’re not doing enough research.”
From curiosity to concern.
And maybe some of that is fair. I know I can fixate. ADHD does that. My brain latches onto something and wants to understand it from every angle.
But it’s always going to be something.
So I don’t really see the harm in learning how to think more deeply. In researching. In being open to ideas that don’t immediately fit into what I already believe.
Not everything is right. Not everything is worth entertaining. I get that.
But if we shut things down the second they make us uncomfortable, we don’t leave any space for actual understanding.
And I keep thinking about how everything that works—really works—has some kind of balance.
In nature, in ecosystems, in anything that’s meant to last.
Nothing exists in isolation. Everything depends on something else that’s different from it.
And when something takes over completely—when there’s no balance—it stops working. It becomes hostile. Things start to fall apart.
I don’t think humans are separate from that.
I think we like to believe we are, but we’re not.
There will always be outliers. There will always be ideas that feel too far, too extreme, or outside what we consider acceptable.
And some of those things do need boundaries. Systems. Protection.
But not everything that challenges us is dangerous.
If we treat it that way, we slowly lose the ability to exist with anything that doesn’t perfectly align with us.
And that doesn’t create safety. It creates fragility.
I think what’s getting harder is that it feels like the middle is disappearing.
Like everything is pulling in opposite directions, and instead of finding balance, we just keep moving further apart.
And I don’t even know what we’re all fighting for anymore.
It feels like we jump from one thing to the next, arguing until there’s no resolution, and then moving on before anything is actually understood.
And every time that happens, the space in the middle gets smaller.
Until it feels like you’re trying to stand somewhere that barely exists.
I don’t have answers.
I don’t even know if I’m thinking about this the “right” way.
But I do believe in balance.
In the idea that no single person, belief, or system can hold everything together on its own.
That it has to be something we participate in. Something we maintain, even when it’s uncomfortable.
Even when we don’t agree.
Even when it would be easier to just pick a side and stay there.
Because I think the only real common ground we have is that we’re all here.
All human. All shaped by different experiences, different environments, different ways of seeing things.
And maybe the point isn’t to eliminate that.
Maybe it’s to learn how to exist with it.
To adjust. To listen. To hold some kind of center, even when everything around it feels like it’s pulling apart.
I don’t know.
I just have a hard time believing that harmony comes from everyone thinking the same thing.
It feels more like something you have to actively keep in tune.
And I’m not sure we’re doing that right now.
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

This Saturday's Sporting Event to follow in the Roscoe-verse will be 3rd-Round Play in the 90th Masters Golf Tournament from the Augusta, Ga. National Golf Course. Weather permitting, of course. And it will be playing on the TV back in my room this afternoon.
Though I've never been a golfer, (my god-awful eye-sight from a young age), I certainly understand the appeal of this beautiful and challenging sport to those who play it and follow it.
And the adventure continues.
from midori/
The Porch
It was a beautiful morning in the countryside with the fresh snow shining softly under the bright sun, the grass on the porch wet with morning dew the soft chirp of birds giving a wave of peace and calmness. There she was sitting on the stairs a hand on her face and other holding a cup of tea, waiting for him as her dress flowed in the air as if wanting to rush to him. She sighed softly. Her heart heavy with feelings she couldn’t explain. She felt a weird tightness in her chest and before she could address it she heard a loud rusty truck pull up in front of her door. “It was him, no it must be him,” she thought as she ran to the door, but fate had other plan. Her heart dropped as she saw his friends get out of the car with firm body but trembling lips and teary eyes. She walked with the little courage she had and stood broken as they handed her his belongings and the country flag. Her voice stuck in her throat as she accepted his belongings. She wanted it to be just a dream to wake up and find him next to her smiling. She had no shoulder to lean on, no songs to sing with, and no one to bake with. His friends left with tears in their eyes their duty stopping them from crying.
She walked inside with weak legs and fell to the ground; she cried and cried till she passed out, fatigue taking over her grief. She had accepted the grief of losing him but one morning everything changed. When she finally woke up, the air smelled of vanilla and sun-warmed pine. He was there, sitting on the edge of the bed, his hand resting on her knee. He looked younger, his uniform gone, replaced by the soft flannel shirt she loved. She didn't ask how the flag left forgotten on the table. She only knew that he was there with her and she was in his arms. They spent the day in a golden haze. They sang their favorite songs until their throats were dry. They baked the cookies, the kitchen filling with the scent of sugar and home. As the sun dipped below the horizon, they sat on the porch, hand in hand, watching the stars pulse like living hearts. She kissed him, and for the first time in her life, she felt no fear of tomorrow. But inside the house, the clock had stopped days ago. The tea she had poured sat black and moldy on the table. The fire in the hearth was nothing but cold, gray ash. In the bedroom, the woman who had cried until she couldn't breathe lay still, her skin as pale as the winter moon, her eyes closed in a sleep that would never break. Outside, the neighbors finally began to knock. Their voices were muffled and worried, echoing through the halls of a silent, empty home. They peered through the windows, seeing only the dust settling on the family photos the grass turning brown and brittle. She didn't hear the sirens or the heavy boots on the floorboards as the door was finally forced open. She didn't feel the cold air rush into the room where she lay. She only felt his hand in hers, pulling her further into the light. Behind them, the house stood hollow—a shell of a life that had finally, quietly, surrendered to the dark.
from folgepaula
You can call me crazy, or liar, or you just believe me.
I will never be able to prove anything I am saying, but some stuff for me are very real. And I only know that because I have felt them.
For instance, I didn’t really understand yoga until it came to me through meditation. I experienced it before I had a teacher. My first contact with involuntary movements happened when I was around 24 or 25. I was listening to mantras quite frequently and I'd meditate quite frequently. One day, it happened.
My body began to unfold into yoga poses and mudras (those hand positions) through completely involuntary movements, as if guided by an unseen hand. I assume that's how a flower feels when it's blooming, it opens not by movement, but by inner energy. It reminds me of a poem from Rumi that says: “What was said to the rose that made it open was said to me here in my chest”. I understood it, Rumi. Thank you.
At first, I was a little.. surprised. I really really assumed it might be connected to having smoked a joint with a friend the night before and thought there was some lingering effect of THC. A few days later, I meditated again, this time completely sober, and it happened once more. The surprise was replaced by a sense of trust. The movements were slow and gentle, guiding me into stretches and positions I never imagined I could elaborate. Whatever was happening was beyond my understanding and control.
So I did what anyone would do: I googled it, hahaha. After digging through questionable forums (no chat GPT at the time), I eventually stumbled upon the word “kriya”. Turns out kriyas are involuntary movements said to happen when kundalini energy rises through the spine. Super common in India, especially in group practices. In my case? It was just me. Alone. No teacher. No vocabulary to express it (the closest was Rumi). No training, clueless. I did not know what a position even was, even less the purpose behind it, but somehow, yoga already knew me.
Two years later, I was dating a guy who had just started a Kundalini yoga teacher training. Yoga was hype then, you could see a wave of people interested, rushing to studios. I did not connect the kryias that happened to me years before to yoga at this time. Because in my mind all I was doing was meditating when movements happened. One day, he came to my flat with a thick book. That particular day, though, we’d had a little argument, so I retreated to the living room to meditate and let things cool down.
I put on some mantras to play and sat on the floor. Within seconds really, it started again. The spontaneous movements were back. He walked in and sat on the couch. I was aware of him, but I stayed immersed in what was happening. After about fifteen minutes, I stopped. When I looked at him, he asked, clearly surprised: “Where did you learn this?”
I tried to explain I knew it would sound crazy, but I honestly honestly did not know what I was doing, it would just happen to me. Stunned, he told me I had just gone through a full sequence of six different postures from the book he’d brought home, without ever opening it. I then saw the sequence laid out in detailed illustrations and precise instructions. They had names and all. Said to activate certain chakras. Anyone who has ever seen yoga material must know what I am talking about. It all made sense now. I told him what I could assume is this indian practitioner (I do not remember his name) went through the sequence of spontaneous movements and decided to reverse engineer it by drawing them down into a sequence and teach them to westerns under the name of “Kundalini yoga”. He did not even fake it, he called it exactly by the name I googled years before “kryias”. But westerns, going through it, will probably think a kryia is a sequence of postures you should follow, and not spontaneous movements.
I have very clear in my mind yoga is not a practice of the wise ones, or the experienced ones, it is just out there as a collective knowledge. If it can happen to me, believe me, it can really happen to anyone. I went to multiple yoga studios in São Paulo and a few in Vienna after that, always had nice classes, but very pragmatic too. Not even once the kryias happened to me during those classes.
My yoga class in India was a completely different experience. Absolutely no focus on postures, no books, no attention to details. All we were asked for was to feel. I told my indian teacher that day about what happened to me and how I appreciated his class because I understood his concept. He confirmed that the kryias were indeed completely normal, he would always see people having them during festivals, while in the western world they would be seen almost as a supernatural thing. But according to him, the highest states of consciousness will arise naturally when you are ready, when you purified your heart. It has nothing to do with willingness or performance, because it just reinforces the illusion of separate self. It's a mimimi. When that performative thought does not arise, then you are not there the same way, you are here. You just are.
Another completely different experience: sound baths. Went to two sessions of sound baths in Vienna with a friend because it was an option on my Myclubs signature. It wasn't bad. It was very relaxing. The person hosting the session had a collection of bowls, a gong, and other instruments. She explained all of them to us before starting.
Sound bath experience in India: you would enter the room in complete silence. The teacher, seated with the gentlest smile, greeted each person individually with a silent “namaste”. He had only one small bowl with him, nothing else.
The moment he began, I felt an immediate sensation at the top of my head, as if four different points were being touched. I didn’t hear the sound, I felt it. The experience was so physically real that at one point I really thought someone was lifting my legs and dragging my body across the floor in slow spirals. I slightly opened my eyes, convinced someone was actually holding me. There was nothing, just the decorated ceiling of the room. No one touching me. I smiled inwardly, surprised by my own arrogance in refusing to believe what was happening. I was so disconnected from myself that I doubted the experience, convinced it had to be some kind of trick. As westerns, our belief systems are fragile, we’re conditioned to distrust our own sensations, and only trust logic.
End of last year I joined an energy healing course, which pretty much uses only hands and postures to transmute energy. Yes, look at me, a complete hippie trippy, I know. Anyhow, since then, every time I do the practice, I need to place my hands and I swear I can feel the energy circling from one hand to the other as of an electric chain. My hands who are normally cold get extremely warm before I even start.
Some weeks ago I went to concert at Arena with a friend and in the middle of a song while I just closed my eyes it happened again, the sound was traveling through me and touching me exactly in the middle of my chest. It wasn't even a sound bathing session.
It turns out I still cannot explain many things I had experienced and continue to experience sometimes. And possibly I never will, but one thing I am sure is that this life force or however you rather call it, spills beyond our words and escapes the boundaries of physics.
/Apr2026
from
ThruxBets
2.05 Yarmouth Like the chances of DASHING DONKEY here. Three down-the-field runs over the winter but 9/0/2p in that sphere and much better on the turf with plenty of boxes ticked today; 6/2/4p at the track, won on both ground and at the trip, 11/4/7p on a straight course and jockey has won twice on him. Although this is his highest turf mark, he has done OK off 2lbs higher on the AW LTO and 60 shouldn’t be too much of a hindrance. With four places available I think he has a really strong each way chance. DASHING DONKEY // 0.5pt E/W @ 17/2 4 places (Bet 365) BOG
from
Atmósferas
A esta hora, cuando las nubes en mi mente se transforman en rostros y lugares, música suave y se dispersan luces de arcoiris, claridad. Ahora, cuando el silencio da forma a las secretas sílabas y desaparecen, zorros azules en la noche del tiempo. Momento completo: tienes un altar en mí.
from An Open Letter
So today I from pretty much random coincidence sent a message in my works new grad channel looking for potentially more people to play a board game this Sunday. One of the people that messaged me seemed pretty cool and we have good conversation and they seem like a pretty cool person, and eventually I realized I have met this person before, and she was the girl at an earlier event that I thought was absolutely beautiful and I really wanted a chance to talk to you but I didn’t get much of a chance to. It seemed like she was very interested in getting to know me more, and to hang out, she even asked me if I want us to get drinks tonight which I said no too. I thought it was almost divine intervention that this person is showing up especially because I really wanted to get to know them from the little eye interacted with them earlier, but at the same time after talking a little bit more it became pretty apparent that they are somewhat similar to me in terms of background and mental health issues, except for the fact that they do not have it really under control. They seem to be very much struggling with it and also other general patterns that I remember going through and seeing in myself. I guess this is kind of like a mini test, of me recognizing the red flags and putting the brakes on before I get attached to this person or I have them kind of fall for me just due to codependency. I think the fact that I have my life so visibly together is a big thing that causes women I’ve interacted with as a recent to kind of latch onto me, but maybe it’s also for different reasons who knows.
I know it’s really nerdy and stupid but I wanted to fit a Poisson distribution or whatever to the frequency that I meet people that I feel interested in, because I believe that’s a distribution for random events like this. From that I would be able to fit a distribution and find an expected value and be able to apply things like the secretary matching problem to find unexpected value and variation for that, but I know that I won’t be able to perfectly model anything like this and it’s more just for the love of the game if I’m being honest. I really enjoy all of the art stuff I’ve been doing recently and the creative things, I’ve noticed I almost never gain anymore and I want to do my art stuff or play music and I’m really happy with that.
from Douglas Vandergraph
Before the buses began their routes and before the first rush of tires hissed over wet pavement, Jesus was alone in the gray hour beside the Detroit River. The city was still carrying the last weight of night. The water moved in a dark sheet under the early sky, and the wind coming off it had that raw edge Detroit can hold even when the calendar says winter should already be loosening its grip. He stood where the Riverwalk was almost empty, not far from the place where the path opens wide and the skyline feels close enough to touch, and He bowed His head and prayed in the quiet. His hands were open. His face was still. There was no performance in Him. No hurry. No strain. It was the kind of prayer that looked like rest and strength at the same time. It was the kind of prayer that made the silence around Him feel full instead of empty.
A woman sat two benches away with a paper cup of coffee gone cold between both hands. She had been there long enough for the lid to cave slightly under her thumb. Her name was Celia, and she had not meant to come to the river. She had driven without thinking after another night in her apartment where sleep would not come and the walls seemed to push inward. She was fifty-two, tired in the way that no nap fixes, and carrying the sort of shame people hide because it sounds too small to explain and too heavy to live with. Three days earlier her youngest son had stopped answering her calls. Two weeks before that her sister had told her, with more honesty than kindness, that everyone in the family was exhausted by her spirals and her apologies and her promises that this time she was doing better. Celia had not touched a drink in eleven months, but the urge had come back hard this week. It had not announced itself with drama. It had come like a thought that sounded practical. Just enough to turn the noise down. Just enough to sleep. Just enough to forget what everyone thinks when they hear your name.
She watched Jesus at a distance because there was something about the stillness of Him that made her feel seen without being looked at. Most people in pain know the difference right away. Some attention feels curious. Some feels nervous. Some feels annoyed. This felt like none of those. He finished praying and remained still for a moment longer, as if He was listening to the quiet itself. Then He opened His eyes and turned toward the bench where she sat.
“You have been awake all night,” He said.
It should have sounded strange. It should have made her defensive. Instead it landed in her like truth lands when it has no sharp edge on it.
“I don’t sleep much anymore,” she said.
Jesus came and sat on the far end of the bench, giving her more room than most people would have. “No,” He said softly. “You do not rest much anymore.”
Celia laughed once through her nose, but there was no humor in it. “That’s probably the better way to say it.”
The river moved in front of them. A freighter horn sounded somewhere in the distance. A gull cried overhead and then the sound was gone. Celia stared at the water because looking at Him directly felt like too much. Not because He was severe. Because He was not. Harsh people are easy to keep your eyes on. Gentleness is harder when you have lived too long expecting disgust.
“I messed my life up pretty good,” she said. “You don’t need the details.”
“I know the details,” Jesus said. “I am here for you anyway.”
That nearly broke her right there. Not because it was dramatic. Because it was so plain. People had said many things to her over the years. Advice. Warnings. Boundaries. Encouragement that came with an expiration date. This was different. There was no bargaining in it. No hidden condition.
She let out a breath that shook halfway through. “My son won’t answer. My sister is done with me. I keep trying to be someone I can live with, and I get a little better and then I remember who I was. Then I feel dirty all over again. Like the old me is still the truest thing about me.”
Jesus looked out over the river as she spoke, not turning away from her pain but not pinning her with His gaze either. He knew how to make room for a wound without pressing on it.
“The old you is not the truest thing about you,” He said. “It is one of the loudest memories around you. That is different.”
Celia swallowed hard. She had spent months in meetings hearing that she had to own her past. She knew that language. She agreed with it. Still, ownership had turned into identity somewhere along the way, and identity had turned into a sentence she could not outgrow.
“I don’t know how to stop feeling like the ruin is the real part,” she whispered.
Jesus turned then and looked at her fully. “Because guilt keeps telling you that if you suffer enough, maybe you will have paid for the damage. But guilt is not healing. It is only pain that refuses to stop talking.”
She pressed the heels of her palms against her eyes. The city around them was beginning to wake. A runner passed. A cyclist clicked by. Far off, engines stirred deeper into the morning. Still she felt as if they were sitting in a place outside all of it.
“What if I already lost the people I love,” she said. “What if I did too much damage.”
Jesus did not answer her with the kind of hopeful line people give when they are afraid of the truth. He did not tell her everything would be easy. He did not say people always come back.
“Some wounds take time,” He said. “Some people return slowly. Some never return the way you hoped. But your life is not over because some doors are still closed. You are not disqualified from becoming whole just because trust is healing on someone else’s clock.”
The words moved through her slowly. She did not know what to do with them yet. They did not solve the whole ache in one breath. They did something better. They made space inside it.
Jesus stood. “Come,” He said.
Celia looked up at Him. “Where?”
“Back into the day you were about to hide from.”
She almost refused. She had no reason to follow a stranger through a city she already knew. Yet something in Him made the day ahead feel less like a hallway she had to crawl through and more like a road that might still hold mercy. She rose and fell into step beside Him.
They moved west for a while, then north, walking streets that were beginning to fill. Detroit was waking in layers. Delivery trucks backed into alleys. Steam lifted from grates. People stood at bus stops with that inward look of morning workers carrying private math in their heads. At a stop near Jefferson Avenue, a man in a city jacket paced in a tight rectangle beside the shelter while checking his phone every few seconds. He was in his thirties, broad-shouldered, clean shaven, and already angry before the day had fully begun. His name was Andre. He drove maintenance routes for a property group that managed buildings between Midtown and New Center, and he had learned how to keep every feeling inside him except irritation. Irritation was the one emotion that still made him feel strong. Everything else made him feel exposed.
His daughter’s school had called him late the day before because she had been in a fight. His ex-wife blamed him for their girl’s temper. His boss had warned him this week that one more late arrival would put his job at risk. He had been sending money to his mother, who lived off Seven Mile and had begun forgetting whole conversations. He was out of patience before sunrise and ashamed of how quickly his mind had gone to escape. Not alcohol. Not pills. Just the old fantasy of leaving. Driving until Detroit was a memory and responsibility was someone else’s problem.
When the bus pulled up, the front wheel clipped a deep puddle and sent cold gray water over the curb and onto the cuff of Andre’s pants. It was a small thing. That was the problem. Big pain sometimes makes people brace. Small pain catches them raw. He cursed under his breath, then louder, kicking at the curb hard enough to sting his foot.
Jesus stopped near the shelter. Andre looked at Him with the alert suspicion of a man expecting judgment or interference.
“You are angry,” Jesus said.
Andre gave a short hard laugh. “You don’t say.”
“No,” Jesus answered. “Not about the water.”
That irritated him more because it was true. “You don’t know me.”
Jesus looked at him with a steadiness that did not crowd him. “You are carrying fear that has learned to speak like anger because fear feels too small in your mouth.”
Andre stared. Celia, standing a few feet away, felt her own chest tighten. It was strange to hear Jesus speak the hidden center of somebody else’s life because it made her realize He had spoken hers just as cleanly.
“I’ve got work,” Andre said, but the words had lost force.
“You do,” Jesus said. “And you are tired of feeling one call away from failure.”
Andre looked down at the cracked wet concrete. “That’s everybody.”
“It is many,” Jesus said. “But today it is you.”
A woman with grocery bags glanced over, then looked away. The bus hissed and pulled off. The shelter emptied. Morning widened around them.
Andre rubbed a hand over his mouth. “My kid’s angry all the time. My mom’s forgetting things. I’m behind on two bills. Every day feels like something is coming apart. So yeah, I’m angry. Better than falling apart in public.”
Jesus stepped closer, but not close enough to feel invasive. “Anger can feel like armor. But you have been sleeping in it. That is why everything hurts.”
Andre’s eyes lifted. For the first time there was no fight in them, only fatigue. “What am I supposed to do. Be soft. Cry on the bus.”
“No,” Jesus said. “Tell the truth in front of God before the rage speaks for you again. A hard man is often a scared man with no safe place to kneel.”
Andre’s throat moved. He looked off toward the line of buildings catching the first real light. “I don’t even know how to pray anymore.”
Jesus nodded once. “Then start where you are. Say what is true. Not what sounds holy. Not what sounds strong. Truth is where healing begins.”
Andre stood silent. Then very quietly, so quietly Celia almost missed it, he said, “I’m scared I can’t hold my life together.”
Jesus answered at once. “That is a better prayer than many long speeches.”
The man breathed in sharply and let it out slower. Nothing magical flashed around him. He did not become instantly cheerful. He simply looked less clenched, like someone had loosened a knot one turn. Jesus touched his shoulder once and then moved on. Andre did not follow. He had a bus to catch and a job to keep. But he stood there a long moment after they left, as if the morning had changed shape around him.
By the time Jesus and Celia reached Eastern Market, the city had grown louder. Vans unloaded produce. Forklifts beeped and backed. Men in hoodies and heavy work gloves shouted to one another across pallets and rolling carts. Murals rose in huge color against brick. The smell of coffee, onions, damp pavement, bread, diesel, and earth mixed together in the air. The market was not at full Saturday swell. It was a workday morning, which meant there was less browsing and more labor, and that suited the hour.
Inside one of the sheds, a young woman was stacking boxes of greens with quick impatient movements. Her name was Marisol. She was twenty-six and had come to Detroit from southwest Texas at nineteen with a boyfriend who said the city would give them both a chance to start over. The boyfriend was long gone. The start-over had become rent payments, two jobs, and a son who asked each night when she would be done working so much. Marisol did not cry often because crying made her feel delayed. Delay meant trouble. Trouble meant bills. Bills meant panic. She had become efficient at moving from one demand to the next without letting her own heart speak.
Her boss, who was not cruel but was careless, had changed her schedule again without warning. The new hours meant she would miss the meeting at her son’s school that afternoon. It was the third time. The teacher had already started using that patient voice adults use when they think a parent is trying but not enough. Marisol hated that voice. It took real struggle and made it sound like poor time management.
She set down a crate too hard and split one corner. Apples rolled out, thudding and scattering over the cement floor. Her boss shouted from across the aisle. Not viciously. Just loud, because loud had become normal. Marisol’s face flushed hot with anger and embarrassment. She dropped to one knee and started grabbing apples with a speed that was almost violent.
Jesus crouched beside her and picked one up before it rolled under a table.
“Thank you,” she muttered, not looking at Him.
He handed it to her. “You are carrying more than fruit.”
Marisol almost snapped back, but she was too tired to bother. “Everybody here is carrying something.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “But you have begun to believe that if you stop moving, everything you love will collapse.”
That hit so close to the center that she looked up in spite of herself. He did not look like anyone she knew. There was nothing flashy about Him. Yet He sat in the mess on a market floor like He belonged there more than people who had spent years on those blocks.
“I don’t have time for weird,” she said.
“This is not weird,” Jesus said. “This is your soul asking for breath.”
Celia stood a few yards away near a stack of boxes, watching. She had followed in quiet all morning. Something in her wanted to step in and defend Marisol from the intrusion of a stranger, but Jesus never sounded intrusive. He sounded like someone answering pain before it had the strength to ask.
Marisol shoved an apple into the crate. “My son has a meeting today and I’m going to miss it because I have to be here and then I have to be somewhere else after this. I’m always somewhere else. I’m always behind. My whole life is one long apology.”
Jesus rested His forearms on His knees. “You are not failing because you are stretched thin.”
She laughed bitterly. “That sounds nice. Doesn’t change the fact that I’m still missing it.”
“No,” He said. “But it changes the lie growing inside you.”
She stopped moving for a second. “What lie.”
“That love only counts when it is never interrupted by pressure.”
Her eyes filled faster than she expected, which made her angry. “He deserves better than a mother who is always tired.”
“Your son deserves love,” Jesus said. “And he has it. He deserves presence where you can give it. He deserves truth from you instead of the smile people wear when they are breaking. He does not need a perfect mother. He needs a real one who has not abandoned her heart.”
Marisol looked away quickly and reached for another apple. Her hand shook.
“My dad used to promise things and not show up,” she said. “I swore I would never be that kind of parent.”
Jesus nodded. “You are not your father.”
“I still miss things.”
“Yes,” He said. “Because you are human and burdened. Not because you do not love.”
She sat back on her heels. Around them the market kept moving. Men hauled pallets. Someone laughed loudly down the row. A radio played from a truck with the door open. Life did not pause for her little collapse on the floor. That was almost the worst part. Pain often feels loneliest when the world keeps going like nothing happened.
Jesus took the broken corner of the crate in His hand and pressed it back into place enough to hold for now. Then He stood and held out a hand to help her up. She stared at it for a second, then took it. His grip was firm and warm.
“Call the school at lunch,” He said. “Tell the truth. Not the ashamed version. The true version. Then tonight, when you are with your son, do not give him leftovers of yourself. Give him ten minutes with your full heart. Ten minutes of full presence is heavier than an hour of distracted guilt.”
Tears slipped down before she could stop them. She wiped them angrily. “Why are you talking like you know me.”
“Because I do,” Jesus said.
She laughed once through tears, then shook her head like she did not know what else to do with that. Jesus stepped back. Marisol watched Him leave and did not call after Him. She only stood a little straighter and breathed a little deeper, as if some sentence she had been carrying in secret had finally been answered.
Celia walked beside Jesus again as they left the market. They moved toward Midtown as late morning brightened. The city shifted block by block. Old brick. Glass. Murals. Closed storefronts. New cafés. Churches that had outlasted generations. Empty lots that still held stories. The beauty of Detroit had never been neat. It was stitched from survival and memory and hard-won tenderness. It wore scars in public.
They passed along Woodward Avenue where the traffic had thickened and the sidewalks moved with students, workers, delivery drivers, and people with nowhere exact to be but every reason to keep walking. Near the Rosa Parks Transit Center, a teenage boy sat on a low wall with his backpack open between his feet and a chemistry book on his knees. He was not reading it. He was staring straight ahead at nothing. His name was Jalen, and he was seventeen. He had skipped first period by pretending he missed the bus, then skipped second by simply not going in at all. He had once been the kind of student teachers used as an example. Lately he had become the kind they discussed in hallways with lowered voices.
His older brother had been killed the previous summer in a shooting that still felt unreal in the family because grief can make facts feel slippery. Since then his house had been full of silence and sudden anger. His mother moved like someone trying not to break in front of witnesses. His uncle talked about manhood as if it meant shutting every door inside yourself. People kept telling Jalen he needed to stay focused and make something of himself, which only made him feel more alone because he could barely make himself get out of bed some mornings. He had stopped telling anyone that he was afraid he was disappearing while still alive.
Jesus slowed near him. Jalen looked up once, ready to ignore Him, then looked again.
“You should be in school,” Jesus said.
Jalen smirked faintly. “You a truancy officer now.”
“No,” Jesus answered. “But I know when someone is sitting inside a pain he does not have words for.”
Jalen shrugged. “I got words. I just don’t use them on strangers.”
Jesus sat on the wall beside him without asking permission in the entitled way adults often do. He sat like someone who understood the sacredness of private suffering.
“You miss your brother in ways that make you angry at yourself,” Jesus said.
The smirk vanished. Jalen’s whole body went still.
“You think if you laugh one day, you betrayed him. If you care about school, you left him behind. If you keep living, maybe you did not love him enough.”
Jalen stared at Him as if the city had suddenly dropped away. His lower lip tightened, then he forced it steady. “Who told you that.”
“No one had to,” Jesus said. “Grief has patterns. So does love.”
Jalen looked down at the open backpack. “People keep acting like I’m messing my future up. They don’t get it. Everything after he died feels fake. Like I’m walking around in somebody else’s life.”
Jesus let those words settle. He was never in a hurry to fill space just because pain had spoken.
“What was his name,” Jesus asked.
“Malik.”
Jesus nodded. “Malik mattered.”
Jalen’s face broke at that. Not because it was eloquent. Because most people had moved on to advice. They had skipped the holy work of saying the lost one’s name.
“He was loud,” Jalen said with a crooked breath that almost became a laugh. “Always talking. Always acting like he knew everybody.”
“He made room in the world with his presence,” Jesus said.
“Yeah,” Jalen whispered. “He really did.”
Traffic roared close by. A bus pulled in and out. A woman dragging a rolling bag crossed in front of them. Somewhere a siren lifted and fell. The city carried on, but in that strip of wall and pavement and morning light, time felt slower.
“I don’t know how to do this,” Jalen said. “I don’t know how to miss him and still be here.”
“You do not honor the dead by dying in pieces,” Jesus said. “You honor love by staying alive with courage.”
Jalen swallowed and stared at the ground. “What if I can’t.”
Jesus turned toward him. “You can do today. Do not speak to yourself in lifetimes when all you have been given is this hour.”
The boy pressed a fist against his mouth. Celia, standing several feet away now, felt tears rise again. Every person Jesus met seemed to hear the sentence their heart had been waiting for, not because it was polished but because it was exact.
Jalen spoke through his hand. “I’m so tired.”
“I know,” Jesus said. “Grief is heavy even when you are young.”
For the first time that day, the boy cried openly. Not loudly. Not with collapse. Just with the quiet helplessness of someone who had been holding too much for too long and no longer had the strength to keep it sealed. Jesus sat beside him until the worst of the trembling passed.
Then He said, “Go back tomorrow.”
“Tomorrow,” Jalen repeated.
“Yes,” Jesus said. “Not because school is everything. Because you are still here, and your life has not been canceled.”
Jalen nodded without looking up. It was not a dramatic promise. It was barely more than a movement. Still it was real.
Jesus rose. Celia thought they would move on again, but this time Jesus remained where He was for a moment, His eyes scanning the faces flowing through the transit center, the workers, the students, the older men leaning into conversation, the woman talking to herself as she walked, the man sleeping with his head tipped back on a bench. He looked at all of them with the ache of someone who loved without rationing it.
By early afternoon the sky had flattened into that silver light Detroit sometimes wears so well that it makes the buildings look both worn and noble at once. Jesus and Celia walked west toward Corktown. They passed Michigan Central, rising enormous and restored, with all the strange symbolism that comes from a place once left hollow now being filled again. Celia noticed the station because she knew its story, at least in broad strokes. People had used it as proof of loss. Then later as proof of hope. Cities do that. They carry metaphors whether they want to or not.
Near a side street, not far from where old houses stood beside redevelopment and memory beside ambition, they came upon a man trying to restart a delivery van that kept turning over without catching. He was in his late fifties, thick in the middle, wearing a Tigers cap and a faded sweatshirt from a roofing company that had gone out of business years earlier. His name was Leonard. His van was half full of secondhand appliances he repaired and resold because it was the only work left that felt like his own. The problem was not only the van. The problem was that his wife had been in Henry Ford Hospital for six days after a stroke, his savings were almost gone, and he had not told her how bad things were because he wanted at least one person in the marriage to feel less afraid.
He slammed the heel of his hand against the steering wheel once, then sat there with both hands hanging uselessly between his knees. When he finally got out, he did it slowly, like a man stepping out into weather he did not want.
Jesus approached him.
Leonard looked up with the flat irritation of a man bracing for unwanted help. “Unless you know engines, I’m not in the mood.”
Jesus glanced at the van. “It is not only the engine that has left you stranded.”
Leonard almost barked a laugh. “You one of those.”
“One of what,” Jesus asked.
“One of those men who talks in riddles when a person needs cash.”
Jesus smiled faintly. “No. But I am one of those who tells the truth when a man is about to collapse under what he has hidden.”
Leonard looked away at the station, at the street, anywhere but Jesus. “Look, I got a lot going on.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “And you have made a habit of carrying it alone so no one sees your fear.”
That landed harder than Leonard wanted. He reached into the van for a rag that did not matter and wiped hands that were not dirty just to have something to do.
“My wife is sick,” he said, still not looking at Him. “I got jobs I need to finish. The van won’t start. Money is bad. That about cover the mystery.”
Jesus stood beside him in the wind. “Not quite.”
Leonard shut the van door harder than needed.
“No,” Jesus said. “That does not cover the part where you are more ashamed of needing help than you are afraid of breaking.”
Leonard’s jaw tightened. He hated how direct that felt. “I’m not ashamed.”
Jesus waited. He did not argue like a man trying to win. He stood there long enough for the lie to feel lonely.
Leonard looked down at the pavement. “Maybe a little.”
“You were taught that strength means silence,” Jesus said. “So now even your love has become private suffering.”
That sentence moved through Leonard slowly. He had grown up with men who could fix things, carry things, endure things, bury things. They did not speak openly unless anger had already done the translating for them. When his wife Elaine cried, he put a hand on her shoulder and then looked for something practical to do. When money got tight, he hid the numbers. When fear rose in him at two in the morning, he stared at the ceiling and told himself other men had it worse. He had confused restraint with courage for so long that he no longer knew how to separate them.
“What am I supposed to do,” he said. “Walk into my wife’s hospital room and tell her I’m scared. Tell her I don’t know how we’re going to cover this. Tell her I’m one dead battery away from losing what little work I have left.”
Jesus looked at him with a compassion that did not soften truth. “Yes. Speak like a husband, not like a wall.”
Leonard let out a breath that almost sounded angry, but underneath it was grief. “She’s the one lying there after a stroke. I’m supposed to be the steady one.”
“You are supposed to be true,” Jesus said. “Steady without truth becomes distance. A person can feel alone beside someone who never says what is real.”
The wind moved between the buildings and carried the smell of wet concrete and machine oil. Celia stood a few feet away, watching Leonard’s face change by small degrees. That morning had already given her more than she knew what to do with. Still there was something healing in seeing another person reached in the place where they had been guarding themselves. It made mercy feel wider than her own pain.
Leonard rubbed both hands over his face. “I don’t have anybody lined up to rescue me here.”
Jesus nodded toward the van. “Open the hood.”
Leonard frowned. “You really do know engines.”
“I know enough.”
There was no flourish in it. Leonard pulled the hood release and stepped out front. Jesus lifted the hood and leaned in with the quiet focus of someone paying attention to what others overlook. Leonard came beside Him. So did Celia. Jesus did not turn the moment into a spectacle. He touched a cable that had loosened more than Leonard realized, adjusted what needed adjusting, then looked at Leonard and motioned for him to try again.
The engine turned, coughed, then caught.
Leonard stood with one hand still on the open driver’s door, staring at the running van with the stunned blankness of a man who had braced for one more failure and run into mercy instead. He laughed once, but it broke in the middle.
“Thank You,” he said quietly.
Jesus lowered the hood. “Go see your wife.”
Leonard swallowed. “I was headed there after one more stop.”
“No,” Jesus said gently. “You were headed there after one more delay because it is easier to deliver refrigerators than tell the truth.”
Leonard looked at Him a long second, then gave the smallest nod. It was the nod of a man who knew he had been found out and was relieved by it. He climbed into the van, then stopped before closing the door. “What do I say.”
Jesus answered without hesitation. “Say, ‘I am frightened, but I am with you.’ Then stay.”
Leonard nodded again. This time there was water in his eyes. He shut the door and pulled away more slowly than he had arrived.
For a while after that, Jesus and Celia walked in silence. The city had shifted into the weary middle of the day when people become aware of how much day is left. The clouds hung low and bright without warmth. A train clanged somewhere far off. A siren flared and faded. Detroit did not hide its roughness, but it did not surrender its dignity either. It kept standing. It kept carrying people who had not had an easy life and still got up anyway.
Celia finally said, “Do You always know the sentence people need.”
Jesus kept walking, His hands loose at His sides. “I know the wound beneath the speech.”
She looked ahead at the street and the layered lines of old houses, brick buildings, fences, and utility poles. “What if someone doesn’t want to be reached.”
Jesus nodded once. “Many do not. Pain can become familiar enough that healing feels like a threat.”
Celia thought of her own habits, the way she had returned to guilt because guilt was known terrain. She had trusted self-punishment more easily than mercy because at least punishment felt deserved. Mercy felt too open, too generous, too possible to be safe.
“Was I like that,” she asked.
“Yes,” Jesus said.
It should have embarrassed her, but He did not say it with accusation. He said it like a physician naming what had been hurting her.
“And now?”
“You are still deciding,” He said.
That was honest enough to stop her from pretending. She loved that about Him, even when it cut. He never flattered pain. He did not crown people with fake transformation while they were still trembling in the doorway of it.
They made their way back east for a time, then north again, moving with no visible hurry and yet never seeming lost. Near the edge of Midtown, they passed a corner where a small line had formed outside a neighborhood pantry operating from a church annex. The building was modest and the line was quiet, not because the people were ashamed but because weariness has a way of lowering the volume of public life. Hunger does not always look dramatic. Sometimes it looks like calm voices, folded arms, and people pretending the wait is ordinary.
A woman near the back of the line stood with a little girl in a bright pink coat who kept leaning against her leg. The woman’s name was Tasha. She was thirty-four and carried herself with the alert stillness of somebody who had learned to remain functional while scared. She had worked at a call center in Southfield until the contract ended three weeks earlier. Since then she had been stretching unemployment, skipping meals, moving money around between utilities, and telling her daughter that certain things at the grocery store were not healthy when the truth was they were not affordable. She had not told her parents how bad things were because they had helped too many times already. Pride was part of it. Exhaustion was the rest. When life corners people long enough, asking for help can feel more humiliating than going without.
The little girl tugged at her sleeve. “Mama, how much longer.”
“Not long,” Tasha said, though she had no idea.
Jesus slowed. Celia saw the change in His face before He turned. It was slight, but by now she recognized it. He had felt the weight of another hidden ache.
He stepped toward the line and stopped beside Tasha without disrupting the people around her. “You have been doing the math over and over in your head,” He said. “And every version still leaves you short.”
Tasha looked at Him with immediate suspicion. She shifted slightly so the child was more behind her than beside her. “Excuse me?”
“You are not failing,” Jesus said. “You are frightened and tired.”
Her face hardened. “I don’t need a sermon.”
“This is not a sermon.”
“It sounds like one.”
Jesus looked at her daughter, who was now peeking around the side of her coat, then back at Tasha. “No. This is Me telling you that lack is trying to teach you shame, and shame is lying.”
She stared at Him. “You don’t know anything about me.”
“I know that you have eaten less this week so she would not notice,” Jesus said, glancing gently toward the girl. “I know you have stood in your kitchen after midnight with your phone in your hand trying to decide who you can ask without feeling smaller. I know you have been saying, ‘We’re okay, we’re okay,’ because you are afraid that if you say otherwise, the fear will become too real.”
The words went through her like light through thin fabric. She looked away fast, swallowing hard, angry at how close He had come.
“I’m handling it,” she said.
“You are surviving it,” Jesus answered. “That is not the same.”
The little girl leaned against Tasha’s leg again and looked up at Jesus with the unguarded curiosity children still carry before life teaches them to doubt kindness. “Are you my mama’s friend?”
Jesus smiled. “I am.”
Tasha shut her eyes for one second. The line in front of them moved a step. Nobody around them seemed to hear the full exchange. Mercy often arrives without public applause.
“I don’t want my daughter to remember this,” Tasha whispered.
Jesus answered gently. “She will remember more than the strain. She will remember whether fear made your heart hard or tender.”
That landed deeper than any practical advice could have. Tasha had been so busy trying to protect her daughter from material lack that she had not noticed what scarcity was doing to the tone of their life. She had become brittle. Short. Elsewhere even when present.
“I don’t know how to do this without becoming somebody I hate,” she said.
Jesus looked at her for a long moment. “Then stop hiding from love that could help you.”
She laughed softly in disbelief, but tears came with it. “Love doesn’t pay rent.”
“No,” Jesus said. “But isolation will make your burden heavier than it needs to be. Call your mother tonight. Tell the truth. Not half the truth. And when you get home, let your daughter see peace on your face even if the numbers are still hard. Children do not need a rich parent. They need a parent who has not surrendered hope.”
Tasha wiped her cheek quickly. “Hope is expensive.”
Jesus nodded. “So is despair.”
There was no answer to that. The line moved again. The church volunteer at the door waved the next few people forward. Tasha reached down and squeezed her daughter’s hand. Something in her had softened, not because the problem was solved, but because the loneliness around it had cracked. She looked back once as she moved up, but Jesus was already walking on.
Celia fell into step beside Him again. “How do You say exactly the thing that opens them.”
Jesus glanced at her. “I do not begin with what they are doing. I begin with what is hurting.”
Celia held that quietly. It was the opposite of how most people dealt with one another. They judged behavior and guessed at pain. Jesus touched pain first and let behavior reveal itself afterward.
By late afternoon, the light had begun to thin toward evening. Not darkness yet, but the day was turning. They crossed through a quieter residential pocket where porches leaned with age and yards held a mixture of care, fatigue, and endurance. A basketball thudded in a driveway. Somewhere a dog barked behind a fence. Somewhere else a television played too loudly through a cracked front window. Life in cities is often intimate without being close. People hear each other’s existence without knowing each other’s hearts.
On a side street not far from a small park, they came upon a man sitting on the front steps of a duplex with both elbows on his knees and a trash bag full of clothes at his feet. He was not old, maybe forty-one, but discouragement had aged his face beyond his years. His name was Darrell. He had been living there with his cousin for four months after a breakup and a string of missed rent payments put him out of his own place. That arrangement had now collapsed under the weight of resentment, unpaid promises, and too much pride in too small a space. Fifteen minutes earlier his cousin had told him he had to go. Not next week. Not after dinner. Now. Darrell had walked out without arguing because he had no strength left for one more loud scene. He was wearing his work boots, though his shift at the auto parts warehouse had ended hours ago, because he had nowhere to go and no reason to take them off.
Jesus stopped at the sidewalk. Darrell looked up with the dull flat stare of a man already numbed by too much humiliation.
“You feel emptied out,” Jesus said.
Darrell gave a dry laugh. “That’s one way to put it.”
“You are more wounded by rejection than by losing the room.”
That made Darrell’s eyes sharpen. He had not expected accuracy. He had expected either pity or distance.
“My whole life is temporary,” he said. “Jobs. Places. People. I keep ending up as the person somebody gets tired of.”
Jesus came closer and sat one step below him without invitation and without presumption, like someone willing to share the ground. Celia stood near the gate, not wanting to intrude on the ache of the moment.
“You have begun speaking about yourself as if abandonment is your truest name,” Jesus said.
Darrell shook his head. “It kind of is.”
“No.”
The word was quiet, but it carried more force than a raised voice.
Darrell looked at Him. No one had contradicted his self-hatred that directly in a long time.
“You have been left by people,” Jesus continued. “You have disappointed people. You have made choices that helped break trust. All of that is true. None of it gives you the right to reduce your whole life to one wound.”
Darrell looked down at the trash bag between his boots. “I’m tired of trying to start over.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “Because you keep calling every next step a beginning when what you really need is to stop dragging old verdicts into new rooms.”
Darrell sat very still. The park across the street was nearly empty now. The bare trees held the last thin light. Somewhere nearby a child called out and another answered. Ordinary sounds. A city doing what cities do while private lives split open behind doors.
“I don’t even know where I’m sleeping tonight,” he said.
Jesus nodded toward the bag. “But that is not the deepest reason you are afraid.”
Darrell’s throat tightened. “No.”
“You are afraid that this confirms what you already believe. That you are the kind of man people eventually put outside.”
He looked away so fast it was almost a flinch. That sentence had been living under every other fear in him for years. Under the breakup. Under the late rent. Under the fights. Under the drinking he told himself was controlled because it was not as bad as it once was. Under the jokes he made at work so nobody would know how hollow he felt after clocking out.
“What am I supposed to do,” he asked, barely above a whisper.
“Tell the truth without turning it into a sentence,” Jesus said. “Find a place to sleep tonight. Then tomorrow call the man at the warehouse who offered you weekend hours and said his church helps people get back on their feet. You dismissed him because receiving help feels like losing dignity. You were wrong.”
Darrell blinked. “How do You know about him.”
Jesus did not answer the question directly. “Pride has cost you enough.”
That hurt because it was true. Darrell looked at the house behind him, then at the bag, then at Jesus. “I hate needing people.”
“Need is not the same as weakness,” Jesus said. “You were made for dependence on God and honest fellowship with others. Isolation did not make you noble. It only made you easier to break.”
Darrell put both hands over his face and sat there breathing for several seconds. When he lowered them, his eyes were wet. “I’m so tired of being embarrassed.”
Jesus looked at him with that same unhurried mercy He had shown all day. “Then stop confusing humility with humiliation. Humility opens the door. Humiliation only locks you in a room and names it truth.”
Darrell let those words settle. They did not erase his situation. The trash bag was still there. The room was still lost. But the story inside the loss had changed. He was not being cast out by God. He was being interrupted before he disappeared into another old lie.
Jesus rose and held out a hand. After a moment, Darrell took it and stood.
“Go,” Jesus said. “Do not wander to prove you can survive alone.”
Darrell nodded. Then, as if he could not help it, he asked, “Who are You.”
Jesus looked at him with gentle steadiness. “The One who still comes toward people when they believe they have become too much trouble to keep.”
Darrell stared at Him a second longer, then picked up the bag. He was still a man without a room for the night, but he no longer looked like a man already buried under the meaning of it. He started walking toward the busier avenue at the end of the block, not fast, just forward.
The sun had dropped low enough now that windows carried a last pale fire before evening took them. Jesus and Celia walked on. She had been quiet for a long while, but inside her something was shifting from observation to decision. Mercy had been meeting everyone else with clarity. She could feel it asking something of her too.
At last she said, “If I call my son, what if he doesn’t answer.”
Jesus kept walking. “Then you will still have spoken truth.”
She stopped. He stopped too and turned back toward her.
“I have said sorry so many times,” she said. “I don’t even know if it means anything anymore.”
“It means less when apology is used to beg for relief from consequence,” Jesus said. “It means more when it comes with no demand attached.”
Celia felt heat rise in her face. She knew He was right. Too many of her apologies had been tangled with panic. She wanted forgiveness, but she also wanted the unbearable feeling inside her relieved. That made even her remorse partly self-centered.
“So what do I say.”
“Say what is true,” Jesus answered. “Do not perform pain. Do not rehearse your despair. Do not ask him to rescue you from what you feel. Tell him you love him. Tell him you understand why trust heals slowly. Tell him you are still here.”
Celia stood there with her phone suddenly feeling heavy in her coat pocket. She had avoided this call because she did not know how to bear silence or coldness on the other end. She had imagined voicemail as a kind of judgment. Yet after everything she had watched all day, she knew hiding was no longer innocence. It was fear.
They were near a quieter edge of the neighborhood now, where the traffic noise thinned enough for a person to hear the rustle of a tree and the hum of power lines. Across the street, the last children were being called inside. Porch lights had begun turning on one by one.
Celia pulled out her phone. Her hands shook so badly she nearly dropped it. She looked at Jesus once. He only nodded.
She called. It rang longer than she wanted. Then voicemail answered.
Her whole body sank for a second. She almost hung up. Jesus remained still. Not pressuring. Not rescuing. Just present.
Celia swallowed and spoke.
“Hey, baby. It’s Mom.” Her voice wavered, then steadied a little. “I know you may not want to hear from me right now, and I understand that. I just wanted to say I love you. I’m not calling to make you tell me I’m okay. I’m not calling to make you feel bad for me. I know trust takes time. I know I hurt people when I was living the way I was living. I know healing doesn’t happen because I want it fast.” Tears came, but she kept going. “I just need you to know I’m still here. I’m still trying to live honestly. I’m still loving you. That’s all. You don’t have to call me back tonight. I just wanted to tell you the truth.”
She ended the call and stood there with tears running down both cheeks, breathing like someone who had finally set down something heavy and found her hands empty in a frightening but holy way.
“I don’t know if that changed anything,” she whispered.
Jesus answered softly, “It changed you.”
They walked again, and now the city felt different to Celia. Not easier. Not brighter in some artificial way. More real. She had spent so much of her life moving between guilt and fear that she had almost forgotten there was another way to stand inside a day. Truth without panic. Love without control. Grief without self-erasure. Need without hiding. She had seen it all afternoon in person after person, and now it had touched her too.
Evening finally settled in earnest. The storefront lights came on. Traffic thickened for the homeward rush. The air turned sharper as darkness gathered. Jesus led them back toward the river. Celia did not ask how He always seemed to know where to go. With Him the city felt both specific and symbolic, like every block held real lives and eternal weight at the same time.
When they returned to the Detroit Riverwalk, night had begun laying itself over the water. The skyline across the river glimmered. Light streaked on the surface and broke with the movement of the current. The wind was colder now, but cleaner somehow, as if the whole long day had burned down to its essential things.
They walked in silence for a while. Then Celia noticed someone standing near the railing ahead of them. It was Leonard. He was alone, hands in his coat pockets, shoulders lowered in a way that looked less defeated than tired. When he turned and saw Jesus, he came toward them with that tentative look people wear when they are not sure whether what happened earlier belonged to ordinary life or to something holier.
“I went,” Leonard said.
Jesus nodded. “And.”
Leonard looked out over the river before answering. “I told her the truth. Not every number. Not all the details. Just the truth. That I was scared. That I didn’t know how all of it was going to work. That I was tired of acting steady when I felt like I was coming apart.” He laughed softly and wiped once at his eye. “She squeezed my hand and told me she’d been lonely beside me for months. Can You imagine that. I’m sitting there thinking I’m protecting her, and she’s been feeling alone right next to me.”
Jesus looked at him with no trace of surprise. “Truth often opens a room that effort could not.”
Leonard nodded. “I stayed. We talked. Really talked. First time in a while. She cried. I cried, which I wasn’t planning on. Then her sister showed up, and for once I didn’t act like I had everything handled.” He shook his head a little. “I don’t know what happens next. Bills are still there. She still has rehab ahead. But it doesn’t feel like I’m carrying a coffin by myself anymore.”
“That is because you are not,” Jesus said.
Leonard looked at Celia and gave a small respectful nod, then turned back to Jesus. “Whoever You are, thank You.”
Jesus answered him the same way He had answered so many wounded people that day, with the kind of simplicity that lands harder than explanation. “Go home with truth. Stay there.”
Leonard let out a breath and smiled through it. Then he walked off toward the parking area, not healed from every burden, not untouched by fear, but no longer held together by silence.
A few minutes later Celia’s phone buzzed in her hand. Her heart jumped so hard she thought for a second she might not be able to look. She did. Her son’s name was on the screen.
Her knees nearly gave way. Jesus did not rush her. She answered with a trembling “Hello.”
There was a pause on the line, then her son’s voice, careful and tired and familiar. “Hey, Mom.”
She closed her eyes. “Hey, baby.”
“I got your message.”
“I figured.”
Another pause. She could hear traffic on his end, maybe through a windshield, maybe a parking lot. Life continuing around him the way it had continued around her all day.
“I don’t have a big speech,” he said. “I just… heard what you said.”
“That’s okay.”
“I’m still angry about some things.”
“I know.”
“And I’m not ready to pretend everything’s fixed.”
“I’m not asking you to.”
The pause that followed felt different. Less defensive. Less crowded.
He finally said, “I’m glad you called honest.”
That sentence entered her like light. Not total reunion. Not everything repaired. Honest. It was enough to hold.
“I love you,” she said.
“I love you too.”
They did not stay on long. The call was small by worldly standards. But grace often comes in first small openings. When she lowered the phone, she was crying again, though now it was from relief mixed with grief and wonder.
“He called me back,” she whispered.
Jesus smiled faintly. “Yes.”
Celia laughed through tears, then covered her mouth with one hand. “I thought I had ruined everything.”
“You had wounded much,” Jesus said. “That is not the same as ruining all possibility.”
She looked out at the river, at the lights, at the darkness carrying its own strange peace. “What do I do now.”
Jesus answered, “Live the next true thing. Then the next.”
There was no dramatic ending to the day. No crowd gathered. No one announced Him. The city kept moving around them as cities always do. Somewhere behind them music drifted from a passing car. Somewhere farther off a siren cut through the night and disappeared. A couple walked by with their hands in their pockets against the cold. The river kept going, dark and steady.
Celia turned toward Jesus to say something else, but the words did not come. She had spent the day watching Him meet bruised hearts with exactness. Andre with his anger dressed as armor. Marisol with her exhausted love and hidden shame. Jalen with grief that made living feel like betrayal. Leonard with his fearful silence. Tasha with her private scarcity and the loneliness of trying to protect her child without asking for help. Darrell with the old verdict of being the one people eventually put outside. And then her, all day long, her too. He had moved through Detroit not as a tourist passing through brokenness, but as the Lord of mercy walking into the ordinary ache of human lives and naming the wound beneath the noise.
She realized then that what made Him unmistakable was not only what He knew. It was how near He was willing to come. He was not impressed by polished people and not repelled by failing ones. He did not harden at the smell of fear, shame, anger, grief, or need. He came toward all of it. He spoke plainly. He stayed present. He carried a peace that did not deny suffering and an authority that did not need to raise its voice.
Jesus stepped nearer the railing and looked out over the black water. Celia stood beside Him for a while without speaking. The city behind them glowed with all its restless life. The river moved with a sound so low it was almost silence. Night had fully come.
At last Jesus bowed His head.
There on the Riverwalk, as the lights shimmered over the water and Detroit carried its burdens into another darkened evening, He entered quiet prayer again. There was no strain in Him. No spectacle. Just that same deep stillness with which the day had begun. His hands were open. His face was calm. And as Celia stood nearby in the cold night air, listening to the hush of the river and the low murmur of a city that never stopped needing mercy, she understood something she had not known that morning. God had not stayed far from the places where people were tired, ashamed, frightened, stretched thin, grieving, proud, lonely, or nearly undone. He had come near enough to walk the streets, near enough to notice what others missed, near enough to tell the truth without crushing the heart that heard it, near enough to stand inside an ordinary Detroit day and fill it with the kind of hope that does not shout because it does not have to.
And while Jesus prayed, the city remained what it was: wounded and beautiful, burdened and alive, restless and loved. The people He had met would still wake to unfinished problems. Rent would still be due. Bodies would still ache. Trust would still heal slowly. Grief would still visit in waves. But now somewhere in each of those lives, a lie had been interrupted. Shame was no longer the only voice. Fear was no longer the only interpreter. Silence was no longer the only form strength could take. A mother had spoken without begging. A husband had told the truth. A young man had been reminded that staying alive was itself an act of courage. A weary worker had been told that interrupted love was still real love. A frightened woman had been warned not to let scarcity turn her heart hard. A rejected man had been told he was more than the pattern that had wounded him. And in that widening chain of mercy, one quiet day in Detroit became more than a day. It became a witness.
Celia did not interrupt Him. She stood with tears drying on her face and let the quiet do its work. For the first time in a long time, she did not feel the need to explain herself to God before standing near Him. She did not feel the need to prove remorse, or dramatize pain, or bargain for one more chance. She simply stood there loved. It was almost too simple to trust. But that was the miracle of it. So much of what had broken her had been complicated. Mercy was not.
The wind moved over the river and through her coat. Somewhere across the water, lights burned in tower windows. Behind her, footsteps passed and faded. Jesus remained in prayer, steady and deeply present, and the longer she stood there, the more the whole day seemed to gather itself into one living truth. He had not come looking for polished people with clean stories and easy faith. He had come looking for the bruised, the guarded, the embarrassed, the weary, the ones who had stopped asking because disappointment had trained them not to. He had found them in markets and bus shelters and hospital roads and pantry lines and front steps and city streets. He had found them before they knew what to say. He had found them where ordinary life had pressed so hard on the soul that hope had begun to feel impractical.
When Jesus finally lifted His head, there was no dramatic signal. Just a deep peace in His face, the kind that makes a person believe heaven does not panic the way earth does. He turned slightly toward Celia. She did not need more words. Not then. The day had already spoken enough.
Together they stood one moment longer beside the river, under the Detroit night, in the quiet after prayer.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph
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from
Shad0w's Echos
#nsfw #Izzy

“OMG, they are really naked… wow.” Izzy was leaking. Her eyes were wide. Her pussy throbbing. She was in full overload. Suddenly her mom called. Her left eye twitched again. She doesn't want interruptions from what she was seeing on her screen.
“I think I should go to my desk and use my laptop. That screen is bigger.” Izzy thought to herself. She was comfortable on the couch on her phone, but she got tired of those jolts back to her old life that didn't matter.
She was naked in her own place now. She was free. She got up and giggled. She saw that she left a wet spot on the couch. This new slick and slimy feeling was caused by the naked women on her screen. She had to see more. No more control anymore. No more purity. Just her naked and porn.
Her phone was left on silent and forgotten. She padded fully nude to her desk and laptop, pulling on her nipples, feeling the electric pleasure course through her body.
“This throbbing feeling feels so good; I don't want it to go away just yet. I need to see more.”
For obvious reasons, she decided to stick with X since it was free to sign up. She made a modest anonymous account (just the bare minimum) and looked for the Instagram models and was surprised a few did have full nudity on their X pages.
Izzy was absolutely fascinated. Their bodies, their outfit choices, their poses. And of course things slowly escalated from there in such a short time. Izzy didn't fully realize this, but with porn being so in your face in the modern era, it wasn't long before sensual nudes led to more lewd and obscene content. She didn't mind.
“This is what adults do. Is this what they watch? I want to be an adult like them. I'll keep watching.”
Izzy so desperately wanted to make up for lost time.
“I don't care if this is sinful. I don't want to watch anything else.”
She had a full-body high of arousal.
Hours passed by as Izzy leaked all over her office chair, humping slowly as she liked and followed more and more black women owing their pleasure. She saw so much going into their pussies. Things she didn't even know what they were. She studied their bodies. She liked them shaved down there. She could see everything.
Oddly, she didn't care too much for men and their penises. Every time she saw a naked black man on her screen, she thought about Marco, and then she got sad and didn't want to watch men anymore.
“I only want to see porn that looks like me. I like watching porn that looks like me. I like seeing naked black women. I need to see more naked black women,” Izzy said to herself.
Then she said out loud. “I really do like watching porn.”
Izzy finally realized the gravity of her situation. In just a short amount of time, she has gone from a pious, pure church virgin to a bi-curious naked budding porn addict. She smiled.
“I want to change. I want this to get worse. I need to see more. I need to watch more women like her,” Izzy said out loud. Each affirmation was confirming the fire between her legs. She wanted to touch herself, but she didn't want to ruin it. She didn't want the feeling to go away, but she had so much more porn to watch.
“I don't need TV. I'll just pay for internet and watch porn. It's been a few hours already, and I cannot stop.”
Then she stumbled upon her first goon caption.
A curator called Shad0wgoone had entered her feed and she was absolutely captivated. He mostly did hypnotic writing captions, but what she read was a call to arms to fully own her pleasure. His selection of women as well as his hypnotic mantras really did something to her. She started scrolling nonstop.
He said so many things that were so porn-positive::
It’s not a big deal. You stay inside and put good things inside your pussy. You watch your screens and tell your brain it’s good sex. It’s not a big deal. It’s gooning.
You didn’t realize how much you need masturbation to regulate yourself. You need this more than ever. You NEED to do this to feel normal. YOU NEED PORN.
Some seek out partners and date. You sought out porn and now your life is better. Porn is your constant companion that will never hurt you.
The last caption really hit home. But he was right. Izzy gasped. “OMG… Porn really is better than people. It feels soo. right.” Izzy felt like she found home.
“I'm going to get more addicted to porn. I need this. I can't wait to start gooning for real.”
Izzy continued to deny her urge to touch herself.
“Not yet, I just started doing this; I'll know when it's the right time.”
The naked naive woman stayed glued to her screen for the rest of the night, staring at hundreds of naked women on her screen. Her nipples were hard. Her breath was shallow, and her pussy was throbbing. She loved it all.
from
SmarterArticles

At 2:49 AM Eastern Time on 20 October 2025, a DNS race condition inside Amazon Web Services' US-EAST-1 region triggered a cascade that would, over the next fifteen hours, ripple across seventy-five AWS services and knock more than 3,500 companies offline in over sixty countries. Snapchat vanished. Fortnite went dark. Banking applications froze mid-transaction. And in bedrooms across the United States, owners of Eight Sleep's Pod 5 Ultra smart beds discovered that their $5,049 mattresses had locked themselves into upright positions or cranked their heating coils to uncomfortable temperatures, with absolutely no way to override the settings. The app that controlled their beds needed a server farm in Northern Virginia to function. Without it, people were quite literally trapped in furniture that had forgotten how to be furniture.
It was absurd. It was also a warning.
We have built a civilisation that routes an extraordinary share of its daily operations through a vanishingly small number of cloud data centres. Your payment terminal, your city's traffic management system, your hospital's patient records, your child's baby monitor, and yes, your bed, all phone home to the same handful of server clusters operated by Amazon, Microsoft, and Google. When those clusters stumble, the consequences are no longer limited to a slow-loading webpage. They cascade through supply chains, public services, financial markets, and the physical objects in your home. The question is no longer whether a single cloud failure could trigger a societal crisis. The question is how close we have already come.
To understand the fragility, you first need to understand the architecture. AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud collectively control more than 62 per cent of the global cloud market. In Europe and the United Kingdom, AWS and Microsoft alone command roughly 70 per cent. An estimated 94 per cent of enterprise services worldwide depend on at least one of these three providers. This is not a distributed system in any meaningful sense. It is a funnel, and nearly everything flows through it.
The October 2025 AWS outage demonstrated this with uncomfortable clarity. The failure started in DynamoDB's internal management system, where a subtle DNS race condition caused resolution failures. Within hours, the damage had spread to EC2 compute instances, Lambda serverless functions, S3 storage, and RDS databases. But the truly unsettling revelation was structural: US-EAST-1 serves as the control plane for AWS infrastructure globally. Organisations that had carefully architected their applications to run in European or Asian regions discovered that their supposedly distributed infrastructure still depended on a control plane sitting in Northern Virginia. A single region, a single DNS glitch, and the scaffolding beneath a significant portion of the global internet buckled.
The financial toll of such events is staggering and accelerating. The average cost of downtime across industries rose to $8,600 per minute in 2025, up from $5,600 in 2022. Large enterprises averaged $23,750 per minute of disruption. Across the Global 2000, IT outages collectively drain an estimated four hundred billion dollars annually. The October AWS outage alone generated more than four million outage reports within its first two hours, a measure not just of technical impact but of how many distinct services, businesses, and individuals had routed their operations through a single provider's infrastructure.
But the monetary figures, enormous as they are, obscure the deeper problem. Money can be recovered. Trust in infrastructure is harder to rebuild, particularly when people discover that the systems governing their physical safety have a dependency chain that terminates at a single server rack in a single building in a single state.
The Eight Sleep incident during the October 2025 outage became something of an internet parable, the kind of story that makes you laugh until you think about it for more than thirty seconds. Eight Sleep's Pod 5 Ultra uses water-cooled coils managed through a cloud-connected application. The system tracks biometric data, adjusts temperatures throughout the night, and positions the adjustable base to reduce snoring. It is, by any measure, an impressive piece of engineering. It is also, as October 2025 revealed, entirely dependent on servers it does not own and cannot control.
When AWS went down, users lost access to the temperature controls entirely. Reports flooded social media: beds locked at dangerously high temperatures, adjustable bases stuck in elevated positions, alarms silenced. One user described the experience as sleeping in a sauna. Matteo Franceschetti, the company's chief executive, apologised publicly and promised to “outage-proof” the technology. Within twenty-four hours, Eight Sleep shipped an emergency “outage mode” using Bluetooth connectivity, allowing basic local control without an internet connection.
The speed of the fix only deepened the question: why had local control not been the default from the start? The answer, of course, is economic. Cloud connectivity enables continuous data collection, biometric tracking, firmware updates, and subscription revenue models. Local processing is less profitable. It does not generate the steady stream of user data that feeds product development and investor presentations. The result is a consumer landscape where the most intimate objects in your home require permission from a distant server to perform their basic functions. Your bed needs the internet to be a bed. Your lights need the cloud to switch on.
Eight Sleep was not an isolated case. The Sengled smart lighting outage from 18 to 22 June 2025 left thousands of households without control of their bulbs for four solid days. Not dimming. Not colour adjustment. Simply on or off, and even that was unreliable. German networking company Devolo announced the complete shutdown of its Home Control smart home platform's cloud servers on 31 December 2025, rendering its entire product ecosystem effectively non-functional from that date forward. Users could no longer change configurations, add devices, or access the system through any interface. Integration with Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant ceased entirely. Devices that people had purchased, installed, and relied upon became inert plastic overnight, not because they were broken but because a company decided to stop running a server.
These are not edge cases. They are the predictable outcome of an industry that has systematically traded user autonomy for recurring revenue. Gartner projects that by the end of 2026, 34 per cent of device operations will be processed locally rather than in the cloud, up from 15 per cent the year prior. The Matter protocol and local AI hubs represent early attempts to build smart home infrastructure that does not require a round trip to Oregon to turn on a kitchen light. That trajectory acknowledges the problem, but hardly solves it. Two-thirds of your smart home still needs to call home. And for the devices that fail when the cloud fails, the consequence is not just inconvenience. It is a fundamental breach of the implicit contract between consumer and product: the thing you bought should do the thing it was sold to do.
If the AWS outage of October 2025 demonstrated the risks of cloud concentration at the infrastructure layer, the Cloudflare outage of 18 November 2025 exposed a different but equally troubling dependency. Cloudflare handles roughly 20 per cent of global web traffic, serving as the content delivery network and security layer for millions of websites and applications. At 11:20 UTC, a change to the permissions of one of Cloudflare's database systems caused the database to output multiple entries into a configuration file used by its Bot Management system. The file doubled in size and was propagated across the entire network.
The result was immediate and vast. X (formerly Twitter), ChatGPT, OpenAI's suite of tools, Spotify, Discord, Zoom, Canva, Uber, and League of Legends all went down or experienced severe degradation. Public transit systems, e-commerce platforms, and banking interfaces were disrupted. The outage lasted approximately five to six hours before full recovery at 17:06 UTC. Crucially, this was not a cyberattack. It was a configuration change, the kind of routine database maintenance that happens thousands of times per day across the industry. A single permissions error in a single database cascaded into the disruption of services used by hundreds of millions of people.
What made the Cloudflare outage particularly revealing was the nature of the services it knocked offline. ChatGPT and Claude AI both experienced disruptions, meaning the AI assistants that an increasing number of professionals, students, and businesses rely upon for daily work simply stopped responding. The episode illustrated a dependency chain that most users had never considered: your AI assistant depends on a cloud provider, which depends on a content delivery network, which depends on a database permission being set correctly. Remove any link in that chain and the entire service collapses. The layers of abstraction that make modern technology convenient also make it opaque, and opacity breeds fragility.
If a malfunctioning bed is an inconvenience and a broken AI chatbot is a productivity hit, a frozen payment system is something closer to a crisis. During the CrowdStrike incident of 19 July 2024, a faulty content update to the company's Falcon Sensor software caused 8.5 million Windows computers to crash simultaneously. The damage reached across airlines, hospitals, banks, and payment processors. Visa and Mastercard transaction systems experienced disruptions in some regions. The financial losses exceeded ten billion dollars globally, with Fortune 500 companies alone absorbing more than five billion dollars in direct costs. Insurers estimated payouts of approximately 1.5 billion dollars.
The CrowdStrike failure was not a cloud outage in the traditional sense. It was a security software update that exposed a different kind of single point of failure: the monoculture of endpoint protection. CrowdStrike held roughly 18 per cent of the global market, which meant that a bug in one company's update pipeline could, and did, bring commercial aviation and hospital systems to a halt on the same morning. The Library of Congress documented the impacts to public safety systems, noting that the outage affected emergency services infrastructure across multiple jurisdictions.
Payment infrastructure sits at the intersection of all these vulnerabilities. According to a 2024 survey, 76 per cent of global respondents run applications on AWS, and the service powers more than 90 per cent of Fortune 100 companies. When AWS experienced its October 2025 outage, UK banks were among those knocked offline, joining a long list of financial institutions that discovered their resilience planning had not accounted for the failure of a service they had treated as permanently available. The dependency is not hypothetical. It is operational, structural, and deeply embedded in the architecture of modern commerce.
Nordic countries and Estonia have begun exploring offline card-payment backup systems, a recognition that payment resilience must be designed deliberately rather than assumed. The Ponemon Institute's 2024 Cost of Data Center Outages report found that the average cost of a data centre outage is approximately $9,000 per minute, with financial services among the most severely affected sectors. The EU's Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA), which came into effect in January 2025, now requires banks, insurers, and investment firms to prove that their digital operations are resilient, auditable, and accessible to regulators. DORA specifically addresses third-party ICT risk, requiring financial entities to identify and manage dependencies on critical technology providers. It is a start, but regulation follows disaster more often than it prevents it.
The healthcare sector presents perhaps the most concerning frontier of cloud and AI dependency. In 2024, 71 per cent of non-federal acute care hospitals in the United States reported using predictive AI integrated into their electronic health records, up from approximately 66 per cent in 2023. Among hospitals affiliated with multi-hospital systems, adoption reached 86 per cent. These systems handle billing, scheduling, risk stratification, and increasingly, clinical decision support. They are not optional add-ons. They have become load-bearing elements of hospital operations.
The CrowdStrike outage of July 2024 provided a stark preview of what happens when those systems fail. A study published through the National Center for Biotechnology Information documented that 759 US hospitals experienced network disruptions during the incident. Of the nearly 1,100 internet-based services examined across those hospitals, 239 (21.8 per cent) were characterised as corresponding with direct patient care functionality. These were not administrative inconveniences. They were disruptions to systems that clinicians relied upon to access patient records, manage medications, and coordinate care.
The paradox of healthcare AI adoption is that it simultaneously improves operational efficiency and increases systemic vulnerability. Hospitals with mature predictive AI deployments have realised measurable improvements in billing accuracy, scheduling efficiency, and outpatient risk stratification. But those gains come with a dependency: if the cloud infrastructure supporting those AI systems fails, the hospital does not revert to a slightly less efficient version of itself. It reverts to paper processes that many current staff have never been trained to use. The institutional memory of how to operate without digital infrastructure is eroding precisely as the digital infrastructure becomes less reliable.
Rural and independent hospitals face a different version of this problem. With only 37 per cent adoption of predictive AI compared to 86 per cent at system-affiliated facilities, they are less exposed to AI-specific failures but also less equipped to absorb any technology-driven disruption. The digital divide in healthcare creates a fragmented landscape where a single infrastructure failure affects institutions unevenly, complicating coordinated emergency responses.
On 28 April 2025, at 12:33 Central European Summer Time, the power systems of continental Spain and Portugal experienced a total blackout. In just five seconds, Spain lost approximately fifteen gigawatts of capacity, equivalent to 60 per cent of its national electricity demand. The remaining generation was insufficient to meet load, and the grid entered a cascading failure that left 31 gigawatts of demand disconnected. Power was interrupted for about ten hours across most of the Iberian Peninsula, and considerably longer in some areas.
The European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity (ENTSO-E) published its final expert panel report in March 2026, identifying a combination of interacting factors: oscillations, gaps in voltage and reactive power control, rapid output reductions, generator disconnections, and uneven stabilisation capabilities. The interaction between market design (schedule changes driving fast power ramps), grid code implementation (fixed power factor mode for renewables), protection coordination (settings diverging from requirements), and system architecture (insufficient reactive power reserves and manual switching of critical assets) created cascading failures that unfolded faster than human operators could respond. The Iberian system simply lacked the inertia needed to absorb the initial generation-loss shocks, and automatic protection mechanisms cascaded into a total system collapse.
The Iberian blackout was not caused by artificial intelligence. But it was a product of the same underlying dynamic that makes AI-dependent infrastructure so fragile: systems designed for efficiency and automation that lacked the inertia, redundancy, and human-override capability to absorb unexpected shocks. As more grid management functions migrate to AI-driven optimisation platforms hosted in cloud environments, the attack surface and failure surface both expand. A power-grid optimiser that destabilises supply, whether through a software bug, a corrupted model, or a compromised update, could reproduce the Iberian scenario in a system that has even less manual fallback capability than the one that failed in April 2025.
In August 2025, a corrupted update in a widely used open-source AI optimisation library triggered cascading failures lasting over twelve hours. Healthcare, finance, aviation, and emergency response systems were among those affected. The incident demonstrated that AI infrastructure does not need to be sophisticated to be dangerous. It merely needs to be ubiquitous. And ubiquity, in a world where a handful of open-source libraries and cloud providers underpin the majority of AI deployments, is exactly what we have achieved.
The United Kingdom offers a particularly instructive case study in cloud concentration risk. The UK's cloud market is dominated by AWS and Microsoft, and the UK government's “One Government Value Agreement” with AWS led to a tenfold increase in spending on the platform, from approximately 100 million pounds to over one billion pounds since the agreement was originally signed in 2020. The National Preparedness Commission has argued that cloud dominance in the UK demands immediate Competition and Markets Authority action, framing concentration not as a market efficiency issue but as a national security concern.
The concern is not merely theoretical. During the October 2025 AWS outage, government and major banking services in the UK reported intermittent issues, demonstrating that when public infrastructure depends on a handful of cloud providers and regions, outages can compromise access to essential services. Microsoft's suspected suspension in May 2025 of the International Criminal Court Chief Prosecutor's email services further illustrated how dependence on a single US-based provider can create political vulnerabilities that extend well beyond technical uptime. When a foreign government's diplomatic communications or a court's prosecutorial operations can be disrupted by a single company's decision, the sovereignty implications are impossible to ignore.
Across Europe, American technology companies control more than 70 per cent of cloud infrastructure. The EU has responded with a series of regulatory instruments that collectively represent the most ambitious attempt yet to address digital dependency. The Data Act, which entered into force in January 2024, contains provisions to prevent vendor lock-in, requiring cloud providers to remove unjustified technical or contractual barriers to switching and mandating the phasing out of switching fees by 2026 to 2027. The Network and Information Security Directive 2 (NIS2), effective from October 2024, addresses cybersecurity and operational resilience for essential services, imposing requirements around risk management, supply chain security, and breach reporting. The European Commission is preparing to propose a Cloud and AI Development Act, expected in the first quarter of 2026, which may set standards for cloud computing services and promote investment in European data centres.
In the United Kingdom, the Cyber Security and Resilience Bill, introduced to the House of Commons on 12 November 2025, updates previous cybersecurity legislation and is expected to become law in 2026. These regulatory efforts acknowledge the problem. Whether they solve it depends entirely on enforcement and on whether governments are willing to accept the short-term costs of diversifying away from established providers. The track record is not encouraging. Convenience and cost savings have consistently won against resilience in procurement decisions, and the structural incentives that created cloud concentration remain firmly in place.
One of the more uncomfortable lessons of recent outages is how thoroughly they have dismantled the promise of multi-region resilience. Cloud providers market regional redundancy as a safeguard: distribute your workloads across multiple regions, and no single failure can bring you down. The October 2025 AWS outage revealed this as, at best, a half-truth. Because US-EAST-1 serves as the global control plane, organisations running workloads in Frankfurt or Singapore still found themselves dependent on infrastructure in Northern Virginia. The redundancy was architectural fiction, a comforting story that collapsed the moment the underlying assumption was tested.
This pattern recurs with dispiriting regularity. Google Cloud's Identity and Access Management outage on 12 June 2025 lasted only one hour and thirteen minutes, but because IAM is the gateway through which every Google Cloud product authenticates, the single failure immediately disabled a wide range of services worldwide. Azure's Front Door outage in October 2025 similarly cascaded: the failure of a global content delivery and application delivery service knocked out Microsoft 365, the Azure Portal, and enterprise customers including Alaska Airlines for more than eight hours. In late July 2025, Azure's East US region experienced allocation failures that Microsoft reported resolved by 5 August, though some users continued to report problems days afterwards.
Azure outages were the longest on average in the 2024-2025 period, lasting a mean of 14.6 hours per incident. Google Cloud disruptions averaged 5.8 hours. AWS incidents averaged 1.5 hours but, as the October 2025 event demonstrated, their impact was amplified by the sheer volume of services depending on a single region. Between August 2024 and August 2025, the three major providers together experienced more than 100 service outages. Global network outages increased by 33 per cent from January to May 2025, rising from 1,382 to 1,843 incidents. Critical cloud outages increased by approximately 18 per cent in 2024. The trend line is not ambiguous. The systems are getting more complex, more interdependent, and more prone to cascading failure.
Smart city infrastructure amplifies these risks further. Traffic management, water systems, power distribution, and emergency services increasingly depend on cloud-hosted platforms for coordination and optimisation. When those platforms are locked into a single provider's ecosystem, the city inherits all of that provider's failure modes. Individual subsystems such as traffic control, power distribution, and water management should, in principle, operate independently while coordinating through shared data layers. In practice, vendor-led platforms have created long-term lock-in, and fragmented governance has slowed the development of cross-domain interoperability. The networked nature of smart city technologies, with a growing number of interconnected sensors, cameras, and control nodes, also expands the attack surface. A failure in one subsystem can propagate to others through shared dependencies that were invisible during normal operations.
The instinct, after each major outage, is to call for better engineering. More robust DNS configurations. Improved testing protocols. Redundant control planes. These are necessary but insufficient responses. The deeper challenge is structural. We have allowed a civilisation-scale dependency to concentrate in a handful of private companies whose primary obligation is to shareholders, not to the public infrastructure that has come to rely on them.
The remedies being discussed span a wide range of ambition and feasibility. At the consumer level, the push towards local processing and edge computing represents a partial answer. At the enterprise level, genuine multi-cloud strategies (not merely multi-region deployments within a single provider) could distribute risk more effectively, though they carry significant cost and complexity overhead. At the regulatory level, the EU's Digital Operational Resilience Act and the UK's forthcoming Cyber Security and Resilience legislation represent early attempts to mandate resilience rather than merely recommend it. Experts have recommended mandating AI system redundancy for critical infrastructure, funding global audits of open-source AI dependencies, and establishing an international AI incident response coalition.
But the most fundamental shift required is conceptual. We need to stop treating cloud infrastructure as a utility that simply works and start treating it as what it is: a concentrated, commercially operated system with known failure modes and structural single points of failure. Traditional utilities have regulators, redundancy requirements, and public service obligations. Cloud providers, despite hosting infrastructure that is arguably more critical to daily life than the electricity grid was fifty years ago, operate under a fraction of that oversight. The gap between the criticality of these services and the regulatory framework governing them is one of the defining mismatches of our era.
The Iberian blackout of April 2025 unfolded faster than human operators could respond. The AWS outage of October 2025 revealed that global control planes create global vulnerabilities. The CrowdStrike failure of July 2024 showed that software monocultures can cascade across every sector simultaneously. The Cloudflare outage of November 2025 demonstrated that a single configuration error in a content delivery network can simultaneously disable AI assistants, social media platforms, ride-hailing services, and public transit systems. Each incident was different in its specifics but identical in its lesson: systems optimised for efficiency at the expense of redundancy will eventually fail, and when they do, the failure will propagate along every dependency chain that was invisible during normal operations.
The question posed at the outset, whether we have built a civilisation so dependent on AI infrastructure that one failure could cascade into a societal crisis, has an answer that is both reassuring and deeply troubling. We have not yet experienced a full-scale societal collapse from a cloud or AI infrastructure failure. But we have experienced dress rehearsals, and each one has been larger, longer, and more consequential than the last. The Eight Sleep bed that overheated in October 2025 is a punchline. The payment system that froze, the hospital that lost access to patient records, the power grid that collapsed in five seconds: those are not punchlines. They are data points on a curve that bends towards a reckoning we have not yet decided to prevent.
The infrastructure we depend on is only as resilient as its weakest dependency. Right now, that dependency is a DNS record in Northern Virginia.

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
from Matt
Well, they’ve finally done it. Through raw force of will and more money than god, the nerds have finally done something that will “make the world a better place.” By that, I mean they’ve pooped out something will finally change the world in big ways, for better and worse.
As an early AI critic, I say this now, because the spicy autocomplete app finally excreted some text I could use, in the form of computer code that actually compiles. The AI hype prophesy made only five short years ago, that “it’ll be better tomorrow,” has finally come true.
This isn’t a sudden change of heart; a moment when I get down and pray to the matrix-math machine so it might take pity on my mortal soul the day it starts flying killer drones. No, I just saw the stupid clanker mimic human language into usefulness, and ya know, it got me thinking our illustrious techbros are onto something.
So what are we really talking about? Particularly, it’s the thing that every marketer calls “AI,” when they really mean GenAI or generative AI, or more specifically Large Language Models (LLMs) and the garbage heap of products powered by them that can excrete text, images, audio, and so on for us all to feast upon (collectively, “slop”).
It’s an important distinction if we’re getting deep into it, but for simplicity here, I’ll follow our intrepid marketers and just call it all “AI,” too.
So today, the AI helped me “vibe code” a few apps into existence, and to my surprise, it did well. Finally.
Back in 2023, I’d heard from all the prompt jockeys (first descendents of web3, next in a proud line of cryptobros) that I’d be “left behind” if I didn’t get on the AI train back then. Well it turned out the train is still in the station in 2026, and with like two google searches I learned about all I needed to make it work well.
So then I told the chatbot what to do and it pooped out a website that… looked pretty good! (Obviously, I’ve graduated from a lowly prompt jockey to a Prompt Engineer! 💪💪)
Then I went back and forth, telling the machine to fix its bugs, and it eventually predicted-out a functional web app written in my language of choice.
It compiled. It didn’t assault my human ability to see. Suddenly, I felt the raw power of the el-el-em surge through me — I was 10X codemaxxing, mogging my brogrammers of yore still toiling around, writing each line by hand like peasants.
So I kept going. Next, I told it to make a little command-line utility for me. I found some advice on reddit, which said to use “plan mode” first, so you can check the dumb computer’s work. So I did that.
Within a few minutes, it evacuated a fully-functional app onto my screen, all in one go. The ramifications of this hit me in the face like a bag of wet hot dogs as I was rendered blind by the future suddenly dawning on me — I am obsolete. I am nothing. From here on out, it’s only vibes and loving the machine. I love the machine!!1!
It’s nice that the dumb toaster works now. I mean, using it for these low-stakes projects was actually enjoyable. I got to be dumb, lazy, and brainless, and the computer slopped out a whole bunch of sloptastic work for me. What’s not to love?
But while it seems useful for coding things that don’t really matter, the experience hasn’t changed my distaste for the thing. In fact, as my slop-coded apps grew in complexity, my rosy view of the thing grew dimmer.
I quietly ran into some of its inherent limits, and simply had to guess when it would screw up next, all while I grew more (falsely) confident in its output. Most bugs didn’t hatch from bad code, which I always reviewed, but in more insidious ways that would crawl out when I did more extensive testing. It crapped out functional code that looked fine, but for example, every once in a while would include silly little logical errors that any competent human wouldn’t have written in the first place.
Basically, as much as I’d love to, I won’t be lobotomizing myself to forget two decades of programming experience just so I can rent out a brain from our new AI overlords.
A common refrain is that “coding is dead” — a view earnestly declared by AI adherents every year, but one that apparently we’re finally getting to, at least in practice.
We still need code, and we need people who understand how it works. But at this point, I don’t think it matters whether the tech does what it's promised. Right now, there are enough executives in corporate America just itching to lay off 40% of their workforce and then make the rest use the dumb toaster, regardless of if it makes toast. (Then, of course, they’ll expect all employees to “10X their output.”)
It’s not just the private sector, either — there are enough people in government blindly buying the hype (or looking to profit from it) that they’re joining in on the fun, cramming AI into all the holes it doesn’t belong in. And people will just have to deal with it, as more machines that can't be held accountable affect their very real lives.
So in this way, it’s clear the sentiment “coding is dead” is more of a declaration of intent than an observation. We see this when AI’s most fervent bros are downright gleeful to declare the “death” of movie production or writing or making music, most often so they can be the ones to control how all this culture gets made, all within their little AI app, naturally.
These crucial human creations and pastimes aren’t exactly dead. But a lot of people in the world sure are in a rush to kill it — usually so they can have it for themselves.
No matter which direction it all goes, we are at a turning point — most interestingly (not really) of putting all our faith and future into a handful of tech companies again.
It’s nice that LLMs can stochastically generate some useful code and speed up my development process. But right now, there’s a whole lot of CapEx turning forests into data centers across the country. So when exactly do these AI companies make all that back? Then what does a poor, lowly sloplicker like me do when my little chatbot friend suddenly costs 10X as much?
It’s the age-old story you don’t even have to go to business school to understand: every tech startup heavily subsidizes their product in its early days, making it free or cheap, to try and capture the market before their competitors do. This can go on for many years, as the company lights a whole bunch of investor cash on fire. But one day the bill comes due, and as a user, suddenly your AI girlfriend is a lot more expensive, and ignores your calls until you upgrade to the Deluxe plan.
Perhaps most of all, we can’t forget that some of the biggest companies building our AI “future” right now are run by the very same people that brought us the ad-based surveillance economy we swim in today. As much as we all love targeted advertising and being harvested like cattle for our attention, do we want to also give them a direct view into our every conversation that the average user perceives as “private,” between just them and the magical robot?
This brings me to my final point: the importance of mockery.
At this point, I do believe our AI-generated / -powered / -mediated future is “inevitable,” just as our formidable AI bros foretold. The hole-cramming will continue until we stop calling the corporations “Microslop”, apparently.
Ah, but “Microslop” is the point.
These companies gave us a great gift by rolling out their minimum-viable research projects and proceeding to force-feed us ✨ sparkles ✨. If they didn’t, we wouldn’t already have such rich language to describe this world-eating, anti-human tech that threatens to further enshittify our world. For example, “slop,” as a unique AI product, was Merriam-Webster’s word of the year in 2025. “Hallucinate,” that cute euphemism for “outputting bullshit,” was Cambridge Dictionary’s word of the year in 2023. This gives me hope.
And I believe the mockery should continue. Because while we’re all dazzled ✨ by how the clanker can clank code, poop out emails, and excrete surreal audiovisual material, it’s also misdiagnosing people, substituting humans in an already lonely world, and creating deepfakes. It’s being made mandatory in the workplace, despite its many fundamental shortcomings as a technology. (If it was so revolutionary and beneficial to people, wouldn’t people just use it on their own?)
But there is a wonderful cultural tradition on the internet, a final bastion born from decades of tech “innovation,” where we get to collectively laugh at an invention that is idiotic on its face, from NFTs to the Metaverse. Many people have rightly had a similar allergic reaction to AI, and perhaps even more so because of its sheer arrogance — the way it was thrust upon the world, built and extracted entirely from the stolen work of humans, and with literally only one value proposition: eliminating the very jobs people need to live.
In the face of so much power and capital behind this project, mockery is an important check. And so, I say anyone with any sense left should employ exactly this, for as long as we can, as this technology threatens to rule over more of our lives for the foreseeable future. Against an unstoppable effluent of hype and slop, it may be all we have.
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M.A.G. blog, signed by Lydia
Lydia's Weekly Lifestyle blog is for today's African girl, so no subject is taboo. My purpose is to share things that may interest today's African girl.
Blue & Brown: The Corporate Girl’s Soft Power Combo. Let’s talk about a colour duo that doesn’t scream for attention—but still owns the room: blue and brown.
Denim Blue for Casual Corporate Fridays
Casual Friday in Accra is not for lazy dressing. It’s for strategic chic.
Pair: Dark blue structured denim, Brown blazer, Brown loafers or block heels, Statement bag.
It says, “Relaxed—but still CEO in training.”
Bonus tip: Add a brown belt to pull everything together. That detail? Elite behaviour.
Royal Blue + Cognac = Statement Maker
Got a presentation? Speaking on a panel? Hosting a corporate event?
Royal blue dress.
Cognac heels.
Cognac structured bag.
The richness of the brown tones down the boldness of royal blue, creating balance. You look powerful, but polished.
And under Accra lights? Stunning.
Haute couture (is French for high sewing, high dress making ). This immediately takes us to the Paris runways during the Paris fashion week where world famous brands like Chanel, Dior, Hermès, Louis Vuitton, and Saint Laurent, are the absolute “must sees”, alongside modern favorites such as Jacquemus, Sézane, and Balmain. Chanel will spend an easy 1-2 million Dollar just for that show. Lucky we are in Ghana where 4-8000 GHC towards the organizers is more the norm. Add your own expenses and you end up paying 6-12000 GHC to show your collection here, less than 1000 $. But then of course that is Accra, not Paris. So what is haute couture and who invented it? Haute couture is the creation of exclusive, custom-fitted clothing made entirely by hand from high-quality fabrics by expert artisans. It represents the pinnacle of fashion artistry, with garments tailored to specific clients and often taking hundreds of hours to complete. So that will cost a bit. A Chanel haute couture dress starts around $40,000 – $80,000 for day-wear pieces, while bridal or heavily embroidered gowns can run $100,000 – $250,000. The advantage is that you won’t bump into someone wearing the same dress. (If you do? Just stand next to the person and say you are twins). And now the surprise: Haute couture was started in Paris in 1858 by Englishman Charles Frederic Worth, who started the house of Worth and showed custom labeled collections on live models, a first at that time. Not related to Woolworth.

PFAS. There’s big talk about pfas (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) these days, overshadowing the alarm about microplastics. In practice there’s not much difference between the 2, they ought not be there but they are there and everywhere, and in a big way. The long and the short of it is that both microplastics and pfas enter our body through the air we breathe and the food we eat, and will give a big cancer surge, that’s the way our body reacts to foreign particles it does not recognize. But you can reduce the risks a bit by trying to stay away from these things as much as you can. Buy less things packed in plastic and use less plastic, and stay away from the pfas. Where are these pfas? For our day to day here we can say they are in non stick frying pans. Now here’s the catch: Europe is panicking so much now that they’ll soon forbid these non stick frying pans altogether, forbid anything which has pfas in them. So that non stick frying pan factory will close down.
Will it? In Africa pfas are not forbidden and I guess it will take some time before we wake up to the problem and take action. So get ready for cheap non stick frying pans. Not kidding, already agrochemicals /pesticides which are forbidden in Europe continue to be produced in Europe for? Export to Africa. They forbade the use of these chemicals, but not the production. Shall we say it was just an oversight? No kidding indeed, there really is nothing to laugh about in this matter.

Sunday evening football. Not being a real football fan I do enjoy the Sunday evening football resumés where you can see plenty goals in a short time without having to sometimes watch for 1 hour 45 minutes for a 0-0 score. And the camera often goes very close up on the scorer's face, and then sometimes you see the quick repeated eye blinking. Like people using drugs. Really? There too?

Airport food prices. I recently had to travel to Germany to prepare for the Berlin Fashion week (2-5 July). At our airport, recently renamed from Kotoka International Airport to Accra International Airport I had a beef burger at “the Pub”, run by Servair. I paid 110 GHC, the beef burger was Ok, the price was OK and the service was OK. Because I had already gone through immigration I was “international’, so no taxes and Vat on that burger. A mini club goes for 35 GHC and 3 samosas for 45 GHC, but they were fried in not hot enough oil which made them fatty and sticky. In Europe I passed through Amsterdam Schiphol Airport. I always find that airport a bit scary, knowing that it is at 4 meters below sea level. Hungry as I was I decided to buy a chicken with mayonnaise sandwich. But I didn’t, it was to cost 8.90Euro, 225 GHC. I know that food at airports is more expensive, but this….

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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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In violet few
These are the days of the patriarch For serenity knew Lifetimes of literature and praise Smacking of hierarchy Only the sullen pray And here on account, a sundial for the weary If this is our code, we have won the atmosphere And a battle of only a little while, is over- and underwater A place to carol In time we are deep And free of the supposed past That aches for our dawn Opposed to the entry trail Suppositioned in ruin But Rome is made vulgar In essence the House Sparrow Which makes tragic news While we wave to be livid And in this archway to the movement Eucharist is our way And nothing else but the clouds Minions of form And only the anachronistic Would seek for our record Of taking up these resources Defending your rights Discovering news Upper to the smoke of wayside And hearing every ruse From Kingston to Rallye And proportions to Will These are the appeals In no sacristy alone But our welcome clergy In rightful peace Opposing all war And noticing in full Eleven redeemed And simple prophet- Leo.